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California adds 930,000 new offsets as bulk of issuance comes from out-of-state projects
EU Market: EUAs rebound, as fresh investor interest puts €40 in sight
COVID has reached Antarctica. Scientists are extremely concerned for its wildlife
Expanding EU carbon market won’t mean backsliding on ambition -senior official
Ozone layer 'rescued' from CFC damage
We're on a collision course with the planet. But with public support, that can change | Larry Elliott
Smart, activist states could prove as effective at handling the biodiversity crisis as they have at tackling the pandemic
Let’s be honest: few government-commissioned reports make a real difference. Often ministers call on an expert to look into a contentious issue in the hope of kicking it into the long grass, and when a weighty tome duly arrives with uncomfortable recommendations, it is quietly ignored.
It is easy to see how the review into the economics of biodiversity by the Cambridge University academic Prof Sir Partha Dasgupta could be one of those that gathers dust in the Treasury, because it has a tough message. Put simply, Dasgupta says humanity – all 7.8 billion of us – is on a collision course with the planet. Our current economic system is unsustainable and endangers the prosperity of current and future generations.
Continue reading...Australia's climate policy is a mix of delusion and denial. We need to get real | Greg Jericho
Politicians would have us believe we can achieve net zero by just doing the easy things – or that some sectors can be excused
Right now the government is utterly hamstrung on the issue of climate change. After more than a decade of obstruction and doing the least possible, the rest of the world is changing fast and the debate in Australia needs to get real.
As Katharine Murphy put it so well on Tuesday, the government has no real climate change policy to speak of, but they do have a hell of a lot of fighting over pretending that there is.
Continue reading...California senators to scrutinise role of cap-and-trade in climate fight
Bitcoin consumes 'more electricity than Argentina'
Climate action could save 'millions of lives' through clean air, diet and exercise
Meeting Paris goals would bring health benefits aside from tackling global heating, research says
Thousands of lives lost to air pollution, inactivity and unhealthy diets could be saved each year if the UK takes the action needed to tackle climate change, researchers have said.
Across the world, millions of lives could be saved if countries raise ambitions on cutting emissions to limit global heating to well below 2C above pre-industrial levels, as they have committed to in the global Paris climate accord.
Continue reading...Climate policy threat looms large for Australian trade, say researchers
Hundreds of millions in green grants for English homes pulled despite delays
95% of £1.5bn set aside to improve houses unspent due to slowness in making grants and paying installers
The government is apparently withdrawing hundreds of millions of pounds from the green homes grant programme, a move condemned by the renewable energy industry as an alarming failure of its plan for a green recovery.
Ninety-five per cent of the £1.5bn pot provided for householders in England to make their homes less carbon intensive remains unspent due to long delays in giving out grants to householders and making payments to installers.
Continue reading...China eyes big jump in renewables, eyeing Paris goal
'People should be alarmed': air pollution in US subway systems stuns researchers
Riders in major cities, especially New York, encounter particle quantities well above safe levels
People traveling on subway systems in major US cities are being exposed to unsafe amounts of air pollution, with commuters in New York and New Jersey subjected to the highest levels of pollution, research has found.
Tiny airborne particles, probably thrown up by train brakes or the friction between train wheels and rails, are rife in the 71 underground stations sampled by researchers during morning and evening rush hours in Boston, New York City, Philadelphia and Washington DC, the cities that contain the bulk of subway systems in the US.
Continue reading...Meet 'the girls': the last two northern white rhinos on Earth – in pictures
Najin and Fatu are the only two rhinos of their species in existence. Jack Davison visited Ol Pejeta in Kenya to document a story that transcends tragedy
Continue reading...Underwater photographer of the year 2021 winners – in pictures
Underwater photographer of the year, a global annual competition based in the UK, celebrates photography beneath the surface of the ocean, lakes, rivers and even swimming pools
Continue reading...“Not in Nundle!” Hills of Gold wind farm faces mounting local opposition
Tanworth Regional Council pens a nine-page submission in opposition to Engie's 400MW Hills of Gold wind farm – and a new anti-wind acronym is born.
The post “Not in Nundle!” Hills of Gold wind farm faces mounting local opposition appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Governors Domain and Civic Precinct recognised on the National Heritage List
How Coalition’s “brain trust” claimed zero emissions would lead to “humanitarian disaster”
Murdoch press and coalition backbenchers embrace lazy work from Liberal party aligned think tank, designed to scare regional communities over zero carbon targets.
The post How Coalition’s “brain trust” claimed zero emissions would lead to “humanitarian disaster” appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Tesla buys $A2bn bitcoin, and may accept it as payment for EVs
Electric carmaker Tesla invests 8% equivalent of its cash holdings in bitcoin, and said it may accept bitcoin from customers in the future.
The post Tesla buys $A2bn bitcoin, and may accept it as payment for EVs appeared first on RenewEconomy.