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CP Daily: Thursday January 4, 2023
Biggest male funnel-web spider dubbed ‘Hercules’ found north of Sydney
Spider measuring record 7.9cm across is almost as big as largest female collected in 2021, which was named Megaspider by Australian Reptile Park
With fangs that could pierce a human fingernail, the largest male specimen of the world’s most venomous arachnid has found a new home at the Australian Reptile Park where it will help save lives after a member of the public discovered it by chance.
The potentially deadly Sydney funnel-web spider dubbed “Hercules” was found on the Central Coast, about 80km north of Sydney, and was initially given to a local hospital, the Australian Reptile Park said in a statement.
Continue reading...Washington releases Q1 auction volumes, reveals 2023 revenue from first year of cap-and-invest
WCI Markets: CCAs rally late in week, WCA sluggishness persists post holidays
Canadian carbon credit financier to engage with 29 US municipalities on decarbonisation projects
Manager, Climate Aligned Industries, Carbon Dioxide Removal, RMI – US (Remote)
Canadian offset financier prunes board in ongoing cost cuts
Washington extends date of third emergency rulemaking on carbon market allowance reserve auctions
US DOE offers $2.5 bln carbon management funding opportunities
*Director, Market Strategy & Engagement, Native – US (Remote)
Become a beach scientist this summer and help monitor changing coastlines
German nEHS, EU ETS carbon permit sales hit record €18 bln in 2023
EU stakeholders divided over updated ETS free allocation rules
French asset manager moves to exclude pesticide manufacturers
Exchange-traded funds cut EUA holdings to lowest in 30 months amid price decline
German emissions fall to lowest level in 70 years on weak industrial output and coal demand slump -report
INTERVIEW: Forest carbon accelerator aims to emulate the mass momentum of Silicon Valley
Experts seek clear role for novel carbon removals in EU 2040 climate targets
UK needs to do more work to reach 30×30 nature goal, scientists say
UK farmers say tighter environmental rules put them at risk of being undercut
Eco-friendly British produce could become unaffordable luxury if low quality imports still allowed, say farmers
Tightening environmental standards for British farmers while importing food produced to lower standards risks making eco-friendly food an unaffordable luxury item, farmers have said.
At the Oxford Farming Conference on Thursday, the environment secretary, Steve Barclay, announced that the government would consult on a new labelling scheme that would single out food produced to UK standards, allowing consumers to choose more environmentally friendly food.
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