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Elon Musk's Starship rocket to make second flight
A cocktail of toxins is poisoning our fields. Its effect on humans? Nobody can tell us | George Monbiot
Many of the chemicals being spread as sewage sludge are untested or can’t be assessed. That’s why I’m suing for answers
It’s an experiment with 8 billion test subjects, no controls and no endpoint. What happens when you release thousands of novel chemicals, most of which have not been tested for their impacts on human health or ecosystems, into a living planet? What are the effects on the development of foetuses, on human brains, other organs, immune systems, cancer rates, fertility? What are they doing to other species and to Earth systems? We seem determined to find out the hard way.
The gap between our actions and our knowledge is astounding. Of the 350,000 registered synthetic chemicals, about a third are impossible to assess, as their composition is either “confidential” or “ambiguously described”. For most of the rest, deployment comes first, testing later. For instance, the health and environmental impacts of 80% of the chemicals registered in the European Union have yet to be assessed. And the EU is as good as it gets. Our own government, as one of the benefits of Brexit, has just decided to downgrade the safety information chemical companies have to provide to an “irreducible minimum”.
Continue reading...CP Daily: Friday November 17, 2023
Canadian legal experts mull over constitutionality of federal carbon pricing exemption for home heating oil
Climate change: Is the world warming faster than expected?
Emitters, speculators once again favour different CCA vintages, while both drop RGAs, WCAs
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.
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