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Kmart Group urged to join industry textile recycling scheme or face regulation, government says
Group which owns Kmart and Target has not signed up to initiative that would impose 4 cent levy on garments to fund research
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The federal government has called on one of Australia’s biggest retailers, Kmart Group, to support an industry-led textile recycling scheme, or risk regulation.
Spearheaded by the Australian Fashion Council (AFC), the Seamless initiative is designed to tackle clothing waste through a levy system to increase the number of garments being resold, repaired, reworn and recycled.
Continue reading...Base Carbon explains $1.7 million loss, outlines road ahead
*Senior Advisor, REDD+, Fauna & Flora International – Cambridge, UK
Southwest Airlines unveils ‘Nonstop to Net Zero’ sustainability strategy to help decarbonise operations by 2050
Canadian offset financer reports net income in Q3 as cost reduction efforts advance into strategic review
US federal agency awards $1 mln grant towards coastal wetlands carbon measurement
Washington releases draft language on reporting requirements for cap-and-invest auction revenue recipients
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ICROA appoints members of inaugural independent advisory committee
EU agrees law to curb methane emissions from fossil fuel industry
Rules would require firms to report emissions, find and fix leaks, and limit wasteful venting and flaring
The EU has struck a deal that will force the fossil fuel industry to rein in dangerous methane pollution.
Under the proposed law, the first of its kind, coal, oil and gas companies would be required to report their methane emissions and take steps to avoid them. The measures include finding and fixing leaks, and limiting wasteful practices such as venting and flaring gas by 2027.
Continue reading...French govt paper urges range of financing options for nature-based solutions
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International ‘climate club’ to launch at COP28 conference, says EU climate chief
Capturing Cop28 chief’s oil firm emissions would take centuries – study
Analysis deems technology promoted by Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber ‘dangerous red herring’
Climate-wrecking emissions produced by the oil company of the Cop28 president, Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber, would take hundreds of years to remove using the carbon capture technology he has been promoting.
With just weeks to go until the crucial Cop28 climate summit, Al Jaber, who is the boss of United Arab Emirate oil company Adnoc, has been backing carbon capture as one solution to the climate crisis.
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