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Major infrastructure firm releases biodiversity statement
Australia Market Roundup: Woodside accused of greenwashing net zero claims, ACCU traded volumes down
First Peoples’ land overlaps with 130 imperilled bird species – and this knowledge may be vital to saving them
The good news: 25 Australian birds are now at less risk of extinction. The bad news: 29 are gone and 4 more might be
South Australia enjoyed 82 pct wind and solar for entire December quarter. So it can be done
The post South Australia enjoyed 82 pct wind and solar for entire December quarter. So it can be done appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Wind in the west, solar in the east as NSW and Qld set new output records
The post Wind in the west, solar in the east as NSW and Qld set new output records appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Redflow gets green light to supply 15MWh battery for California microgrid
The post Redflow gets green light to supply 15MWh battery for California microgrid appeared first on RenewEconomy.
How a Melbourne company helped break the Top End’s solar farm stalemate
The post How a Melbourne company helped break the Top End’s solar farm stalemate appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Woodside climate strategy “hoodwinks” communities
The post Woodside climate strategy “hoodwinks” communities appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Water chiefs' bonuses to be blocked over pollution
Households need a fair go on the grid for solar, batteries and EVs
The post Households need a fair go on the grid for solar, batteries and EVs appeared first on RenewEconomy.
England brings in biodiversity net gain rules to force builders to compensate for loss of nature
From this week, developments must result in more or better natural habitat than before, in a move hailed as one of the world’s most ambitious
England is launching a biodiversity credit scheme this week that attempts to force all new road and housebuilding projects to benefit nature, rather than damage it.
The “nature market”, called biodiversity net gain (BNG), means all new building projects must achieve a 10% net gain in biodiversity or habitat. If a woodland is destroyed by a road, for example, another needs to be recreated. This can happen either on site or elsewhere.
Continue reading...Heart attacks, cancer, dementia: Four essential reads on the health effects driving US EPA’s fine particle air pollution standard
The post Heart attacks, cancer, dementia: Four essential reads on the health effects driving US EPA’s fine particle air pollution standard appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Maritime emissions to surge as ships speed up to bypass Red Sea danger
Woodside dramatically expands oil and gas exploration spend despite net zero pledge
Australia’s largest oil and gas producer stands accused of distracting from credible action to cut emissions by greenwashing its fossil fuel plans
Australia’s largest oil and gas producer, Woodside Energy, has expanded its focus on fossil fuel exploration and increased its direct greenhouse gas pollution since announcing it had an “aspiration” of reaching net zero emissions.
Woodside’s spending on looking for new oil and gas reserves was $160m in 2019 and dipped to $96m in 2021 – a year affected by the Covid-19 pandemic – before rising to $418m in 2022, according to a report by the Australian Conservation Foundation.
Continue reading...Permaculture showed us how to farm the land more gently. Can we do the same as we farm the sea?
EPA again OKs use of toxic herbicide linked to Parkinson’s disease
Agency’s draft report backs paraquat’s safety but lawsuit’s plaintiffs say EPA ignored evidence of Parkinson’s risk
The US Environmental Protection Agency is doubling down on its controversial finding that a toxic herbicide is safe for use across millions of acres of American cropland, despite what public health advocates characterize as virtual “scientific proof” the product causes Parkinson’s disease.
The agency in 2021 reapproved paraquat-based herbicides for use, but a coalition of agricultural and public health groups sued, charging that the EPA had ignored broad scientific consensus linking the substance to Parkinson’s.
Continue reading...Fluffy the alligator snapping turtle found in Cumbrian tarn – video
An alligator snapping turtle, with a jaw experts say can break through bone, was spotted living by a lake in Cumbria.
The animal is native to swamplands of the southern US such as Florida, has a hard and rugged shell as well as a sharp and wide jaw.
Vets said despite not being used to the cooler climate in the UK, the turtle, who has been named Fluffy, was relatively healthy, although a little lethargic when first brought in. The turtle will soon be moving to a specialist wildlife centre in Cornwall
Continue reading...Scuttling his flagship green policy, Sir Keir Starmer has imperilled his credibility | Andrew Rawnsley
This sorry saga is not encouraging if it is a precedent for how Labour will handle the hard choices that it will face in government
I know a dead pledge when I see one, and I’m looking at one now. Labour’s green prosperity plan is history. It’s kicked the bucket, run down the curtain and joined the choir invisible. This is an ex-pledge. It has suffered the same fate as the Norwegian Blue in Monty Python’s Dead Parrot sketch.
The abandonment of the commitment to invest £28bn a year to accelerate the transition to a carbon-free economy is not a routine political volte-face. This was Sir Keir Starmer’s signature pledge, one launched with tremendous fanfare as his flagship policy in 2021. There has not been a larger, more contentious or more excruciating U-turn during his time as Labour leader.
Continue reading...Pity SUV drivers, fast being priced out of their badges of contempt for the planet | Catherine Bennett
With the royals as ambassadors for these luxury cars, there’s little hope for the rest of us
If you have tears – that is, any not used up on MPs struggling to get by, parents forced to choose between skiing and private schools, second homeowners who feel unwelcome, Etonians shut out of Oxbridge, and people cut adrift with unusable city wood burners – prepare to shed them on the latest affluent but afflicted minority: Range Rover owners unable afford their car insurance.
Thanks in large part to the Daily Mail, which has been prioritising their plight, a series of distressing cases has recently come to light. One owner, it reports, gave up after being quoted £14,000 to insure his £100,000 Range Rover Sport, and instead “bought himself a new Mercedes GLE”. Insurers, who say the vehicles are too likely to be stolen, seem to be deaf to the suffering of owners whose only fault was to buy an obese status symbol coveted by many hard-working criminals, as well as by Prince Andrew.
Continue reading...