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New solar project in Victoria lands off-take deal with Japanese owned retailer
New solar project in Victoria lands off-take deal with retailer specialising in commercial and industrial customers.
The post New solar project in Victoria lands off-take deal with Japanese owned retailer appeared first on RenewEconomy.
EU gives Fortescue’s Norway green ammonia project a huge leg-up with $331m
One of Fortescue's major green hydrogen and ammonia projects gets access to more than $330 million in funds from the EU - if the project goes ahead.
The post EU gives Fortescue’s Norway green ammonia project a huge leg-up with $331m appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Dates and details firm up for launch of Australia’s first offshore wind auction
Victorian government sets the stage for first round of offshore wind energy auctions, with plan to call for expressions of interest in late 2024 and to award contracts in 2026.
The post Dates and details firm up for launch of Australia’s first offshore wind auction appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Noisy nuisance or natural wonder? Why there's no easy answer to seagulls
Climate groups begin legal actions against Rosebank North Sea oil project
Greenpeace UK and Uplift are seeking a judicial review in the Scottish courts to stop opening of huge new oilfield
Climate campaigners have launched two separate legal challenges to government plans to open a massive new oilfield in the North Sea.
Greenpeace and the campaign group Uplift argue that the decision to press ahead with the Rosebank development – the UK’s biggest untapped oilfield – is incompatible with the UK’s legally binding climate commitments, and say ministers’ original analysis ignored the devastating impact of burning oil from the site.
Continue reading...Study proposes optimal forest management approach for maximum carbon sequestration
Flexibility is key to reach a more sustainable future GridBeyond’s energy report says
Energy Trends 2024 looks at how some markets have taken action to further expand the flexibility available from the demand side to support the grid during peak periods.
The post Flexibility is key to reach a more sustainable future GridBeyond’s energy report says appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Israel Gaza: Hostages shot by IDF put out 'SOS' sign written with leftover food
Private landholders control 60% of the Australian continent – so let's get them involved in nature protection
Shetland is first UK spaceport for vertical rocket launches
Cow rescued from raging river as record rains batter far north Queensland – video
Footage emerging from far north Queensland shows flooded homes, bridges and roads – and an animal being rescued from the Barron River, north of Cairns. One resident, Bazz Goes, documents his walk across the Barron Bridge in Karunda, noting that the water is at the level of the bridge, normally high above the river. 'The police and SES [state emergency service] are over here, and people are actually doing a cow rescue,' Goes says. Authorities on Sunday afternoon warned residents to expect continuous heavy rainfall for at least another day in what they called a 'life-threatening event'
Continue reading...Michelle Mone admits she stands to benefit from £60m PPE profit
Giant Waratah Super Battery project to receive more than $700m to help fill Eraring gap
The Waratah Super Battery project, designed to help fill the gap left by the closure of Eraring by creating a type of giant "shock absorber", will receive more than $700m.
The post Giant Waratah Super Battery project to receive more than $700m to help fill Eraring gap appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Energy shift in action: Brown coal hits new low in Victoria, renewables hit new high in NSW
Rooftop PV sends brown coal output inVictoria to record low, while NSW hits new demand and renewable output records
The post Energy shift in action: Brown coal hits new low in Victoria, renewables hit new high in NSW appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Guardian Australia’s best photos of 2023 – in pictures
From Eurovision super fans to solar eclipses and star celebrities, here is a selection of the finest work by our photographers
Continue reading...Alex Batty: British teen found in France returns to UK
Israel Gaza: Hostages were carrying white cloth when shot, IDF says
Cop28 has singled out fossil fuels as the main climate problem. But do leaders have the will to act? | Adam Morton
The UN summit’s deal heralds the end of coal, oil and gas. The real test is whether producers back it up with action
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From the start, Cop28 appeared beyond the reach of satire. About 100,000 politicians, diplomats, lobbyists, business people, investors, activists, scientists, policy wonks and journalists from across the globe registered for a two-week climate summit hosted by an authoritarian oil state in a city, Dubai, known for skyscrapers and extravagant, energy-hungry consumerism.
The president of the summit, Sultan Ahmed al-Jaber, is the chief executive of the state-owned Abu Dhabi National Oil Company, which is planning a US$150bn oil and gas expansion. The United Arab Emirates is also investing in renewables – its Noor Energy 1 concentrated solar thermal plant is bigger than 6,000 football fields – but a more prominent sight in central Dubai is the world’s biggest gas-fired power plant.
Continue reading...A celebration of birds in Lego and ink – in pictures
Roy Scholten has been interested in birds ever since he can remember. In his 50 Birds series, the Netherlands-based artist and printmaker has created handmade prints of local species including pied flycatchers, skylarks and blue-headed wagtails. Each print is made using Lego letterpress, combining individual building blocks into stamps to recreate the birds’ shapes and patterns, a technique perfected over the past decade by his frequent collaborator, the artist Martijn van der Blom. “Birds are daily reminders of the richness of our natural surroundings. They can fly! How cool is that!” says Scholten. “Sadly most species are in decline, which makes it all the more worthwhile to really look and appreciate them.”
- Works from Scholten and Van der Blom’s book Print & Play are on show at Grafisch Atelier Hilversum in the Netherlands until 4 February 2024
Paris is saying ‘non’ to a US-style hellscape of supersized cars – and so should the rest of Europe | Alexander Hurst
From emissions to road deaths, the trend for ever-bigger SUVs is a disaster. We need regulation to turn the car industry back to smaller vehicles
The United States is in the midst of a full-blown size crisis. No, I’m not talking about the mad rush for Wegovy, which is selling so swiftly that Denmark has to remove data relating to manufacturers Novo Nordisk to measure (the rest of) its economy properly. And no, I’m not talking about … something else. I’m talking about the enormous monstrosities filling up its roads. (Yeah, I see you on the streets of downtown Cleveland alone in your $85,000, 7,000lb Dodge Ram and I can tell you’re not a farmer … maybe that actually says something about the “something else”.)
There are lots of trends, ideas, music and films that cross the Atlantic. Some of them are good. This is not one of them. Neither are the 500 Krispy Kreme “points of access” the American chain is planning to open across France over the next year. (One, OK, fine, for the novelty, but 500 in the next year? In a country that exists in a completely different universe when it comes to pastries?)
Alexander Hurst is a Guardian Europe columnist
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