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Clean Cooking Alliance launches accelerator programme to boost carbon finance in West Africa
WWF announces two biodiversity tech pilots
Britain's addiction to cars is built on a financial house of cards | Tom Haines-Doran
Saving the industry means saddling consumers with ever more debt. The fumes of 2007 are in the air
During lockdown in 2020, the local council in my neighbourhood of Levenshulme – a suburb of red-brick terraces in Manchester – proposed a low-traffic neighbourhood scheme. The plan generated substantial backlash among a segment of the community, leading to all kinds of rows and questionable behaviour on Facebook and elsewhere.
A central claim of the objectors was that people such as me who generally supported the measures were middle-class hippies intent on disrupting ordinary, working-class people who needed their cars in their day-to-day lives. At times, it seemed to touch on conspiracy theory. Supporters were cast as canny “gentrifiers”, who saw the planters being proposed to block traffic flow as an opportunity to increase the value of their properties.
Continue reading...‘The antidote to despair is action’: Lesley Hughes on motivation through a climate crisis - video
Lesley Hughes was one of the first scientists to warn that global heating could lead to species extinctions. Now one of Australia’s most influential climate science advocates, Hughes speaks with Guardian Australia about the importance of hope in the face of a crisis. ► Subscribe to Guardian Australia on YouTube
This video is part of Weight of the World: a climate scientist's burden. The series features three pioneering Australian climate change scientists – Graeme Pearman, Lesley Hughes and Ove Hoegh-Guldberg. The series tells the story of how the three scientists made their discoveries, how they came under attack for their science and the personal toll it has taken on them. And importantly, how they stay hopeful.
See the other pieces in our series Weight of the world: a climate scientist’s burden
‘Where did I go wrong?’ The scientist who tried to raise the climate alarm
Podcast: The climate scientists who saw the crisis coming – Weight of the world, part 1
EU lawmakers reject proposal to limit bloc’s use of pesticides
Banks should support national biodiversity strategies, UNEP says
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Bowen dumps RET for 32 GW of auctions in massive policy shift to supercharge renewables
Chris Bowen will let the long-standing renewable energy target die, choosing instead a massive auction program seeking 32GW of new capacity to meet 82 pct renewable target.
The post Bowen dumps RET for 32 GW of auctions in massive policy shift to supercharge renewables appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Endangered eastern black rhino born at Chester zoo – video
Staff at Chester zoo filmed the moment an endangered rhino gave birth to a female calf. The eastern black rhino was born on 12 November, unusually in daylight hours. The zoo said the species is listed as critically endangered, with fewer than 600 of the rhinos remaining in the wild across Kenya, Tanzania and Rwanda
Continue reading...Emissions simulator platform launched to simplify international climate compliance for ship operators
Backlash forces EPA to pause toxic PFAS waste imports to US from Netherlands
North Carolina residents push back against environmental agency bringing 4m lbs of ‘forever chemical’ waste to region
The federal US government has paused the importation of millions of pounds of toxic PFAS “forever chemical” waste from the Netherlands following intense backlash from residents near a North Carolina facility that would receive the substances.
Local media last month revealed the Environmental Protection Agency had quietly approved a permit for chemical manufacturer Chemours to import about 4m lbs of waste over the next year, sparking fears of further pollution in a region already thoroughly contaminated by the company’s operations.
Continue reading...German climate tech firm launches corporate biochar pre-purchase platform
UBS, Swiss Re sign $2-mln partnership with Indonesian nature venture builder
Alignment needed on best ‘insetting’ practices to reduce Scope 3 emissions, says report
Japan adds J-Credit methodology for beef cattle feeding
Danish shipping giant signs green fuel deal with Chinese clean energy firm
Canadian miner welcomes US lawmakers’ push for deep seabed mining
EY report claims nature-positive Australia could see A$47 bln in benefits
Twenty-five billion reasons for ministers to support urgent consumer energy reform
Australians have invested $25 billion in solar and batteries, with plenty more to come. We need policy and regulations to complement the investment.
The post Twenty-five billion reasons for ministers to support urgent consumer energy reform appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Low motorway bridges defeat Bluescope’s plans to make wind towers at Port Kembla
The steelmaker says plans to make wind turbines at Port Kembla scrapped because bridges are too small - but it still hopes to provide steel to other makers.
The post Low motorway bridges defeat Bluescope’s plans to make wind towers at Port Kembla appeared first on RenewEconomy.