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COP 26: How much is the developing world getting to fight climate change?

BBC - Wed, 2021-09-22 01:24
Are rich countries living up to their climate promises to the developing world?
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Junk credits: One-fifth of Australian carbon offsets could be “hot air”, report finds

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2021-09-22 00:01

Serious concerns have been raised around the integrity of Australian carbon offsets issued to 'avoided deforestation' projects.One-fifth of carbon offset units issued through federal government's Emissions Reduction Fund may have no basis in emissions reductions, new research finds.

The post Junk credits: One-fifth of Australian carbon offsets could be “hot air”, report finds appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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*Senior Research Analyst, Carbon Markets & Climate Change, Zulu Forest Sciences – London

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2021-09-21 23:54
*PREMIUM LISTING – We are a small team of giants. You’ll join a diverse team of scientists, engineers, asset managers and innovators with over 200 years of combined experience in conservation, silviculture, biometric modelling, project finance and entrepreneurship, including advisory roles for the World Bank, United Nations, Food and Agriculture Organisation, and some of the fastest growing technology companies in the world today.
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Manager/Expert sur les Solutions Technologiques en Matiere de Carbone, EcoAct – Paris

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2021-09-21 23:42
Dans un environnement Collaboratif, vous souhaitez vous Engager au sein d’une équipe motivée, dynamique et orientée vers le Futur, ainsi que partager votre Expertise pour participer au développement de la Société et de ses filiales.
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Britain’s energy crisis has been years in the making, thanks to the Conservatives | Ed Davey

The Guardian - Tue, 2021-09-21 23:30

Since 2015 policies to insulate Britain’s homes and diversify our energy supply have stalled

  • Ed Davey is leader of the Liberal Democrats and former energy and climate change secretary

Rocketing heating bills owing to dramatic gas price rises are just the latest chapter in Britain’s mounting cost of living crisis. From food price-hikes to increasing transport costs, this new bout of inflation is hitting essential goods – and that means the poorest people will be hit the hardest. So no one should be surprised that Boris Johnson has dismissed these problems. He wants us to think it’s all a global problem, with nothing unique to the UK. And he wants us to think it will all be over quickly.

Of course, the reality is somewhat different. While rising gas prices are a global phenomenon, British consumers will be hit hard because energy policy in the last six years has been an unmitigated disaster – with fewer homes being insulated and with measures for diversifying the UK away from overdependence on gas needlessly stalled. Within the last 18 months alone, the Conservatives have launched, mismanaged and then scrapped a Green Home Grant scheme; their flagship policy to help people cut their heating bills failed totally, and nothing has been put in its place.

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‘Earth looks fragile from space’: Jeff Bezos pledges $1bn to conservation

The Guardian - Tue, 2021-09-21 23:26

Donation from $10bn Bezos Earth Fund will go towards biodiversity hotspots in Congo Basin and Andes

Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon, has said he realised just how fragile the Earth was when he looked back down at it from space, while committing $1bn to conservation projects around the world.

The money , made through the $10bn Bezos Earth Fund that he formed last year, will go towards the conservation of nature in biodiversity hotspots such as the Congo Basin, the tropical Andes and the Pacific Ocean. It will help finance a goal to protect 30% of the world’s oceans and land by the end of the decade, a draft target in Paris-style UN agreement on nature being negotiated.

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Johnson says he has changed his mind on the climate – but he’s still dragging his feet | Adrienne Buller

The Guardian - Tue, 2021-09-21 23:15

Outright denial has been replaced by something that may turn out to be even worse: delay

As he flew to New York yesterday to speak to the UN general assembly about the Cop26 climate conference, Boris Johnson was asked to defend old comments made by his newly appointed trade secretary, Anne-Marie Trevelyan. Trevelyan had made statements on Twitter in the past decade promoting climate-denial literature, denying climate change was happening at all, and denigrating climate scientists and activists as “doom-mongers” and “fanatics”.

Johnson insisted that these views – despite coming from a minister whose role has serious climate implications – weren’t really such a big deal. In fact, he was himself guilty of similar statements not so long ago. He reminded the public that were we to “excavate some of [his] articles from 20 years ago”, it wouldn’t be difficult to find sentiments that “weren’t entirely supportive of the current struggle”, as he generously put it. “Facts change,” he added, “and people change their minds.”

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GWSA September auction sets new all-time high as prices surge above RGGI levels

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2021-09-21 23:06
Massachusetts Global Warming Solutions Act (GWSA) allowance prices surged nearly 30% in the final auction of the 2021 compliance year, with the settlement eclipsing the most recent quarterly auction price in the Northeast US RGGI cap-and-trade programme.
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UPDATE – RWE in line for windfall EUA profit if coal closures are advanced -report

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2021-09-21 22:40
German utility RWE’s early hedging of its EUA exposure for the period to 2030 may earn it significant financial rewards if the country’s coal phaseout is brought forward from its scheduled 2038 deadline, according to media reports.
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Euro Markets: Midday Update

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2021-09-21 22:14
EU carbon allowances were relatively calm on Tuesday as the market stabilised after Monday's volatility, with traders looking ahead to tomorrow's expiry of the Sep-21 options contract.
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Voluntary offset taskforce names governance board, promises indigenous representation

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2021-09-21 21:53
The private sector Taskforce on Scaling Voluntary Carbon Markets (TSVCM) announced its governance body on Tuesday, adding that it was on track to deliver next year standardising tools being designed to help dramatically increase the volume of carbon credit transactions.
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National oil companies join pledge to reach net zero operational emissions

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2021-09-21 20:59
Brazil's Petrobras and Saudi Aramco have joined ten other oil and gas companies in aiming for net zero Scope 1 and 2 emissions, though the pledge did not include setting a date for when the goals would be reached.
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Do you have a glossy green front lawn? What is this, the 1950s? | Tayo Bero

The Guardian - Tue, 2021-09-21 20:29

Green lawns are terrible for the environment. They’re also embarrassingly old-fashioned and out of style

Americans love front yards with big, carefully manicured lawns. In fact, homeowners spent a record $47.8bn in lawn and garden retail purchases in 2018 alone. Then there’s the water usage: 9tn gallons a year nationwide just on gardening. We consume this water even as parts of the American west are in the grip of a horrific drought that has paralyzed farmers, triggered huge wildfires, and has some states considering water cutbacks.

The reason we spend so much time, money and natural resources on our lawns, as Kristen Radtke recently noted in the Los Angeles Times, is that decades of television and popular culture have cemented in our brains a certain image of the American dream: house in the suburbs, white picket fence, two-car garage, glossy green lawn. The problem isn’t just that that image is difficult to attain for a lot of Americans. It’s that it’s embarrassingly dated.

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Insects are vanishing from our planet at an alarming rate. But there are ways to help them | Dave Goulson

The Guardian - Tue, 2021-09-21 20:19

In Germany, flying insects have declined by 76% in 26 years. In the UK, common butterfly populations have fallen by 46% since 1976. We should be alarmed by this insect apocalypse

Insects have been around for more than 400m years, their ancestors crawling from the oceans to colonise the land long before dinosaurs appeared. They have been enormously successful, evolving into a staggering diversity of more than 1m known species, with perhaps as many as another 4m yet to be described by science. There are more than 300,000 different types of beetle alone. I have been obsessed by insects for all of my life; they are amazing, are often beautiful, and lead fascinating, peculiar lives.

What’s more, the world would not function without these tiny creatures: they pollinate our plants; control pests; recycle all sorts of organic material from dung to corpses, tree trunks and leaves; keep the soil healthy; disperse seeds, and much more. They are a vital source of food for many larger creatures such as birds, bats, lizards, amphibians and fish.

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Urgent climate action is getting lost in the heat of Germany’s election campaign | Hanna Gersmann

The Guardian - Tue, 2021-09-21 20:00

Despite the summer’s floods, frontrunner Olaf Scholz’s ‘moderate’ climate message is holding out against the Greens

Forty years ago, Germans loved to make fun of eco-types who ate muesli, wore shapeless knitted sweaters and packed their groceries in jute bags. Back then, the German Green party was just getting started. Today, things are different: every supermarket has organic food, every fashion chain sells sustainable T-shirts in its stores, and the coronavirus crisis has accelerated the trend towards cycling to get around. The Green party itself has become a viable political force.

Related: The Guardian view on Angela Merkel: farewell to a bulwark of stability | Editorial

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‘Pay me my worth’: restaurant workers demand livable wages as industry continues to falter

The Guardian - Tue, 2021-09-21 19:00

Low wages and poor working conditions – as well as unruly customers – combine to keep the food service labor shortage going

After the traumas of widespread economic shutdowns during the coronavirus pandemic, America’s restaurant industry is largely open for business again as eateries ranging from high-end bistros to fast-food chains are serving hungry customers.

But behind the full tables and busy kitchens is a story of a sector still in trouble amid the impact of the pandemic, marked by staff shortages, low wages and fears that safety protocols are still not enough to cope with a virus that is still a threat as the more contagious Delta variant spreads across the US.

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Australia’s energy superpower status at risk with grid congestion reforms

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2021-09-21 18:51

If proposed reforms to grid congestion go ahead, they will make Australia a bad place for investment in wind and solar.

The post Australia’s energy superpower status at risk with grid congestion reforms appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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Why is there a CO2 shortage and how will it hit food supplies?

BBC - Tue, 2021-09-21 18:45
The food and drink industry is warning of supermarket shortages because of a lack of CO2.
Categories: Around The Web

Japanese shipping firm buys stake in Australian offset developer

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2021-09-21 18:14
Shipping firm NYK Line has taken a minority stake in an Australian offset developer to expand its carbon credit business and gain know-how that can be used in other markets, it said Tuesday.
Categories: Around The Web

Fit washing machines with filters to reduce microplastic pollution, MPs say

The Guardian - Tue, 2021-09-21 16:00

Women’s Institute supports initiative, urging manufacturers to take action on plastic microfibres

Washing machines should be fitted with filters to prevent microplastic fibres from clothes reaching waterways and the sea, the Women’s Institute, campaigners and MPs have urged.

Filters are cheap and can catch almost all of the plastic microfibres produced from washing clothes made from artificial fabrics such as nylon, but there is no obligation in the UK for washing machines to be fitted with the simple devices.

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