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US airline offers SAF and offset credits to passengers
Wisconsin Democrats introduce suite of proposals to advance climate action
Plants are likely to absorb more CO₂ in a changing climate than we thought – here's why
UPDATE – UK government to invest £4.5 bln in green industry grants and subsidies
Loan from German development bank injects new life into South Africa’s JETP
Standard sees first biochar carbon credits awarded to an African project
Premature to allow soil carbon credits under UN’s CORSIA aviation offsetting scheme, green group argues
Attempt to squeeze carbon farming practices into EU’s carbon removal bill likely to be shot down -sources
Article 6 body adopts inclusive carbon removals guidance, but pushes significant technical work to future
Energy Charter Treaty risks another reform failure despite national withdrawal moves -think-tank
UAE project developer exploring blue carbon credit potential in Vietnam
FEATURE: Generating biochar credits from bamboo offcuts is next frontier for plantations
Euro Markets: Midday Update
EU agrees to ban exports of waste plastic to poor countries
Rules, still subject to formal approval, stop exports to non-OECD countries and limit them elsewhere
The EU has struck a deal to stop ships of waste plastic landing in ports of poor countries.
European lawmakers and member states agreed on Friday to ban exports of plastic rubbish to countries outside the OECD group of mostly rich countries from the middle of 2026. The deal comes as diplomats meet in Nairobi, Kenya, to hammer out a global treaty on plastic pollution.
Continue reading...Growing number of Tory MPs join push for carbon levy on UK imports
Charges said to be needed to prevent UK companies being undercut by overseas manufacturers
The prospect of higher taxes is not usually viewed with joy by British businesses, or Conservative MPs – but when it comes to carbon, that is precisely what many are asking for.
A growing number of manufacturers, Tory MPs and experts are calling for charges to be levied on the carbon emissions associated with imports. They believe the levy is needed to create a level playing field that would enable UK companies to invest in cutting their greenhouse gas emissions, without finding themselves undercut by lower-cost but higher-carbon imports from overseas.
Continue reading...US industry disposed of at least 60m pounds of PFAS waste in last five years
Estimate in new EPA analysis is probably ‘dramatic’ undercount because ‘forever chemical’ waste is unregulated in US
US industry disposed of at least 60m pounds of PFAS “forever chemical” waste over the last five years, and did so with processes that probably pollute the environment around disposal sites, a new analysis of Environmental Protection Agency data finds.
The 60m pounds estimate is likely to be a “dramatic” undercount because PFAS waste is unregulated in the US and companies are not required to record its disposal, the paper’s author, Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (Peer), wrote.
Continue reading...Carbon removal fund secures advance contracts for $46.6 mln in direct air capture units
CN Markets: CEAs extend losses despite improved trading volume ahead of November deadline
UK among nations condemned for ‘epic’ mackerel overfishing disaster
Seafood companies and retailers threaten to boycott north-east Atlantic catch after two-decade failure to agree sustainable quotas
A coalition of British seafood companies and retailers, including Young’s, Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Aldi and Waitrose, has condemned the “collective failure” of the UK, Norway and other states to reach agreement on the sustainable fishing of mackerel in the north-east Atlantic.
Lack of political agreement over a decade has led to an “overfishing disaster of potentially epic proportions”, conservationists say, leading to 44% more fish being caught than is sustainable.
Continue reading...EU criminalises environmental damage ‘comparable to ecocide’
Directive punishes most serious cases of environmental damage, including habitat loss and illegal logging
The European Union has become the first international body to criminalise wide-scale environmental damage “comparable to ecocide”.
Late on Thursday, lawmakers agreed an update to the bloc’s environmental crime directive punishing the most serious cases of ecosystem destruction, including habitat loss and illegal logging, with tougher penalties.
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