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California watchdog discusses price uncertainty of cap-and-trade as formal rulemaking nears
Native forest restoration firm sells first voluntary carbon credits from global accelerator
RGGI Market: Traders wary of a price plunge after RGAs set new highs
NYCI electricity coverage, facility-specific caps could protect disadvantaged communities and prevent leakage -report
SwitchedOn Podcast: How electricity can be free
The post SwitchedOn Podcast: How electricity can be free appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Solar Insiders Podcast: How millions of batteries can deliver billions in savings
The post Solar Insiders Podcast: How millions of batteries can deliver billions in savings appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Big batteries are solving a longstanding problem with solar power in California. Can they do the same for Australia?
EU climate ministers widely endorse 2040 90% GHG reduction target
VCM Report: Flurry of CCP offers seen, but voluntary carbon market still quiet
Coalition forms to fight for forest-based voluntary projects in EU carbon removals policy
INTERVIEW: Nascent methane certification market set for surge with new EU reporting rules
A cat: ‘They smoked pipes, played dice’ | Helen Sullivan
In more than one image from 1900s Japan, they look hungover
We had gone to Japan, we told our daughter, to get her a maneki-neko: the good luck or beckoning cat. She is almost three. She would stay home with my mother, her grandmother. There is a maneki-neko that lives at the till of a manicure shop near our house, and she likes to stop and greet it. Japanese folklore has cats for many things, and we were grateful for this one. Before we left, we wrote letters outlining our progress towards this goal. I put the letters in envelopes for my mother to give to her, one each day. As the week passed, we would meet a mouse in the street, travel to Kyoto to catch goldfish in the river, buy a pizza – extra cheese – for the keeper of the cats.
Why we had actually gone there was to be cats ourselves: to do precisely what we felt like doing whenever we felt like doing it. We roamed the streets, we sat in sunny cafe windows. We hung out at an onsen, which cats would probably not do. We went to an exhibition about animals in arts and crafts and learned that in the late 1800s, people in Japan would affectionately greet cats and dogs using the honorific -san, like Mr or Miss.
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Continue reading...BRIEFING: Bonn climate talks – a ‘detour’ on the way to Baku?
EU countries reach common stance on green corporate claims
Indoors at breaktime: the school in a London office block
Group that runs Oasis Academy South Bank warns councils prioritise private housing over space for children to breathe
- Children facing a ‘brutal’ loss of time and space for play at state schools
- Revealed: students at top private schools have 10 times more green space than state pupils
Oasis Academy South Bank in Waterloo sits in a densely built-up corner of south London – so densely that the only space found for the school was in a recommissioned office block. There is no playground, no sports pitch, nowhere to play football at break time.
Steve Chalke is the founder of Oasis Charitable Trust, the organisation that runs the school, one of 54 in their charge across England. He admits it is a challenging environment.
Continue reading...Children facing a ‘brutal’ loss of time and space for play at state schools
Shorter playtimes and shrinking outside space in England have serious implications for children’s wellbeing and mental health
- Revealed: students at top private schools have 10 times more green space than state pupils
- Indoors at breaktime: the school in a London office block
- Private schools in England should be made to share their green space, say campaigners
Children are facing a “brutal” loss of space and time for play in school, teachers, unions and academics have warned.
A combination of factors is eating into the time children spend outside, and will have serious implications for their wellbeing and mental health.
A Guardian analysis of the space available to state school children in England has revealed that thousands are attending schools with very little outside space, with government data showing that more than 300 schools have under 1,000 sq metres and at least 20 have no outside space. In nearly 1,000 schools, there is under 10 sq metres for each pupil.
New and unpublished research from the UCL Institute of Education seen by the Guardian showed a continued downward trend in the amount of time children have for playtime in the wake of the Covid lockdowns, with the youngest losing the most time.
The demands of the curriculum have increased, and continue to diminish time outside, while staffing shortages are reducing capacity to oversee playtime.
Across England and Wales schools face difficult financial decisions, which are having an impact on the funding to care for grounds. Headteachers in the state sector have said they are in desperate need of funding to improve basic facilities for children.
School buildings are crumbling, as many were built with Raac (reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete) that was not replaced within its usable lifetime, meaning in some cases playgrounds are being used to host temporary classrooms. This is squeezing out the little space some schools have for children to spend time outside.
Continue reading...Climate sidelined at latest gathering of G7 leaders
Biodiversity among top concerns for companies under CSRD requirements, PwC survey shows
Global credit market could slash costs of ocean conservation by 98%, study says
‘It can feel like a detective story’: birders asked to help find 126 ‘lost’ bird species
The birds have not been seen for at least a decade – some for more than 100 years – but the authors of a new list of missing species have not given up hope
The coppery thorntail and New Caledonian lorikeet are among the 126 birds “lost” to science, having not been seen for a decade or more, according to the most comprehensive list of missing species composed to date.
The new tally is based on millions of records collected by enthusiastic birders and amateur scientists documenting wildlife in some of the planet’s most remote locations. To be part of the dataset, the bird must not have a recorded sighting in at least a decade, and not be assessed as extinct or extinct in the wild by the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
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