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No-kill, lab-grown meat to go on sale for first time
Singapore’s approval of chicken cells grown in bioreactors is seen as landmark moment across industry
Cultured meat, produced in bioreactors without the slaughter of an animal, has been approved for sale by a regulatory authority for the first time. The development has been hailed as a landmark moment across the meat industry.
The “chicken bites”, produced by the US company Eat Just, have passed a safety review by the Singapore Food Agency and the approval could open the door to a future when all meat is produced without the killing of livestock, the company said.
Continue reading...World’s biggest offshore wind farm reaches financial close
Norwegian energy company Equinor and Irish renewables developer SSE Renewables reach financial close on first two phases of massive Dogger Bank Wind Farm.
The post World’s biggest offshore wind farm reaches financial close appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Europe’s biggest battery project – 640MWh – approved in the UK
UK government grants planning consent to Scottish company InterGen to develop largest battery storage project in UK and Europe, and one of the largest in the world.
The post Europe’s biggest battery project – 640MWh – approved in the UK appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Hidden secrets that Angus Taylor tried to bury in Australia’s latest emissions data
A sugar hit of COVID-hit transport, growing renewables and suspicious revisions - all the hidden bits in Australia's new emissions data
The post Hidden secrets that Angus Taylor tried to bury in Australia’s latest emissions data appeared first on RenewEconomy.
The Coalition will lose more former heartland seats to independents without a climate plan | Malcolm Turnbull
Progressive female independents hold three once-safe Liberal seats. Their victories are templates for further change
On 11 November, Joe Biden received congratulatory phone calls from Scott Morrison and Japanese prime minister Yoshihide Suga. The office of the president-elect published brief summaries, readouts, of the calls.
This is diplomacy at its most conventional. But a friend of mine in Washington picked up a not so subtle difference in the two readouts.
Continue reading...CP Daily: Tuesday December 1, 2020
California offset usage declines at 2019 compliance deadline, as indirect emissions fall
Climate Policy Officer, ECVC – Brussels
PREVIEW: Traders foresee Q4 RGGI auction settling close to secondary market
Whitebark pine trees are dying across the US west. Could a federal proposal protect them?
The high-elevation tree – a key source of food for grizzly bears – is vulnerable to climate crisis, beetles and disease
Climate crisis, voracious beetles and disease are imperiling the long-term survival of a high-elevation pine tree that’s a key source of food for some grizzly bears across the US west.
Whitebark pine trees can live up to 1,000 years and are found at elevations up to 12,000 feet (3,600 meters), conditions too harsh for most trees to survive. The trees grow in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Washington, Oregon, California, Nevada and western Canada, but have been all but wiped out in some areas.
Continue reading...WCI auction supply rises slightly in 2021 as programme sets floor price at $17.71
UK campaigner wins court hearing in campaign to price GHGs from incinerators
Director of Carbon Finance, CarbonCure – Halifax, Nova Scotia
Why there's a lot more to love about jacarandas than just their purple flowers
Puerto Rico: Iconic Arecibo Observatory telescope collapses
EU aviation carbon market revenues can spur innovation, support cleaner fuels -report
Scientists identify deep-sea blob as new species using only video
- Duobrachium sparksae is a type of ctenophore, or comb jelly
- Video identification without specimen ‘can be controversial’
Scientists have for the first time identified a small gelatinous blob in the deep sea as a new species, using only high-definition underwater cameras.
Continue reading...Germany grants awards in oversubscribed first coal plant closure tender
Verra proposes new carbon unit to scale up finance before offset issuance
Wildflower meadows to line all major new UK roads in boost for biodiversity
Highways England scheme to encourage species-rich grasslands could create hundreds of miles of rare habitats after decades of loss
Native wildflower meadows will line the verges of all new large-scale road projects under an initiative by Highways England, the Guardian can reveal.
Nodding blue harebells, clusters of yellow kidney vetch and flashes of bird’s-foot-trefoil could soon become the norm on stretches of the road network in England with the infrastructure provider committing to the creation of biodiverse grasslands as standard on all new major schemes.
Continue reading...