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California market participants support tightening LCFS stringency, caution on several ARB proposals
NA Markets: CCA prices hit 2-mth high on ambitious Newsom climate proposal, RGGI drags
Australia’s biggest solar contractor stung by floods and high labour costs
Biggest solar contractor says torrential rains in Australia and high labour costs have crimped its margins, but cost pressures are easing.
The post Australia’s biggest solar contractor stung by floods and high labour costs appeared first on RenewEconomy.
California cap-and-trade review bill proceeds to Assembly floor vote
Beyond net-zero: we should, if we can, cool the planet back to pre-industrial levels
To lock out foot-and-mouth disease, Australia must help our neighbour countries bolster their biosecurity
NZ's first climate adaptation plan is a good start, but crucial questions about cost and timing must be answered
The impact of drought in England: water restrictions, fire risks and farming hardship
Experts warn of current and future impact of drought as ministers are expected to make official declaration
England is likely to be declared officially in drought on Friday, a move that will allow water companies to impose tough restrictions on water use as temperatures remain high across swathes of the UK.
Hosepipe bans are likely to follow in areas that have not yet declared them, with people being urged to save water by not washing their cars, using lawn sprinklers or filling large pools.
Continue reading...Police failures, soaring waiting lists, pool closures: one day’s news in Tory Britain | Polly Toynbee
Look at the condition of Britain’s public services and despair – this is where the ‘small state’ gets you
Public opinion is moving only in one direction, jolted by each day’s worsening news. It is certainly not towards the ever-shrinking state offered by the two candidates in the Tory leadership race, as most voters realise that nothing but the state protects them from this growing omnicrisis.
Shocking news pours in at an accelerating pace. One day’s inbox can scarcely contain the avalanche of reports on failing public services and households stricken by debt.
Continue reading...RWE to restart all three reserve lignite plants, expects scant earnings from them
Swiss mountain pass will lose all glacier ice ‘in a few weeks’ for first time in centuries
Bare rock is emerging between Scex Rouge and Tsanfleuron glaciers as they melt at an accelerated rate
The thick layer of ice that has covered a Swiss mountain pass for centuries will have melted away completely within a few weeks, according to a local ski resort.
After a dry winter, the summer heatwaves hitting Europe have been catastrophic for the Alpine glaciers, which have been melting at an accelerated rate.
Continue reading...Value Chain Certification Officer, SustainCERT – US/Europe (flexible)
UK weather: drought expected to be declared in parts of England on Friday
Drought group preparing to meet as Met Office issues highest fire risk warning for much of England
An official drought could be declared for parts of England on Friday as rising temperatures and tinderbox conditions prompted the Met Office to issue its highest warning under its fire severity index.
The National Drought Group – made up of civil servants, the Environment Agency, water companies and other groups including the National Farmers’ Union – is due to meet on Friday to discuss the longest dry spell since 1976.
Continue reading...EU industry steps up switch to oil and coal, analysts warn this is not enough
Tiny Vanuatu aims to set example with enhanced Paris emissions pledge
Euro Markets: Midday Update
AEMO spent $130m on emergency reserves to keep lights on in coal dependent states
AEMO reveals that $130 million was spent in the last year on emergency reserves to ensure the lights didn't go out in the country's two most coal dependent states.
The post AEMO spent $130m on emergency reserves to keep lights on in coal dependent states appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Burning imported wood in Drax power plant ‘doesn’t make sense’, says Kwarteng
Drax has taken £5.6bn in subsidies from energy bill payers but business secretary says practice is ‘not sustainable’
The importing of wood to burn in Drax power station “is not sustainable” and “doesn’t make any sense”, the business and energy secretary, Kwasi Kwarteng, told a private meeting of MPs this week.
The remarks are significant as the burning of biomass to produce energy is an important part of the UK government’s net zero strategy and has received £5.6bn in subsidies from energy bill payers over the last decade. Scientists and campaigners have long argued that burning wood to produce electricity is far from green and can even increase the CO2 emissions driving the climate crisis.
Continue reading...Cumbria coalmine decision delayed again as critics condemn ‘zombie’ No 10
Campaigners told new deadline for decision on first new deep coalmine in more than 30 years is 8 November
A much-anticipated decision on whether the UK’s first new deep coalmine in more than 30 years should go ahead has been delayed again.
The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (LUHC) has written to Friends of the Earth to inform the organisation that the new secretary of state, Greg Clark, has set a new deadline of 8 November to rule on whether the coalmine should be granted planning permission.
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