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UN carbon crediting talks run late as some seek carve-outs for ‘transformative’ projects
In the 1800s, colonial settlers moved Ballarat's Yarrowee River. The impacts are still felt today
WCI Markets: CCAs peak again, Washington linkage decision reverses WCA price gains
‘There is power in a name’: why dozens of American birds are being renamed
American Ornithological Society to change names referencing people or deemed offensive for ones that better describe species
A new rule from the American Ornithological Society (AOS) will cause reverberations around the birding world, and create new names for hundreds of species. The society says it has engaged in conversations with the community of birders, and will focus on first renaming the 70 to 80 species in the US and Canada that are named after people – or have names deemed offensive or exclusionary. Their efforts will start in 2024.
This means Anna’s hummingbird, named after an Italian duchess, and Lewis’s woodpecker, named after explorer Meriwether Lewis, will change. The society drew particular attention to undoing birds whose names are tied to historical wrongs – as in the case of Townsend’s warbler, named after John Kirk Townsend, who robbed Indigenous graves of skulls in the 1800s. This isn’t the first effort in renaming; in 2020, the society changed the name of a bird that once referred to a Confederate army general, John P McCown, to the thick-billed longspur.
Continue reading...Developer says suspended Kariba REDD project is stable for now, denies financial malpractice
Wind and solar meet stunning 87 pct of South Australia’s demand over month of October
South Australia sets stunning new record of 86.7 per cent wind and solar over month of October, while Australia's main grid reaches new peak of 45.1 per cent renewables over the month.
The post Wind and solar meet stunning 87 pct of South Australia’s demand over month of October appeared first on RenewEconomy.
CCUS and DAC can’t bring down US power plant emissions due to EPA rules -Senators
Analysts revise down expectations for EU ETS industrial emissions for 2023
Is nuclear the answer to Australia's climate crisis?
Taming wild northern rivers could harm marine fisheries and threaten endangered sawfish
Financier urges VCMI to simplify its carbon credit buyer integrity code
Washington Department of Ecology director announces preliminary decision on WCI linkage
Biodiversity Pulse: Thursday November 2, 2023
European venture firm releases biodiversity impact measurement approach
US Senators propose bill to tax imports from high-emitting countries
Taxes on fossil fuels, ships, and planes to be important income for new UN climate fund, says legal non-profit
Spring is here and with it come the animal attacks and uncontrollable weeping | Deirdre Fidge
Amid ‘scary outside time’ and cursed early Christmas promotions, there will at least be some good days for drying the washing
Spring has sprung, the grass is riz, I wonder where the birdies is. Well, wonder no more because at any given moment a magpie is planning an attack on you, talons out, sharp beak at the ready, protective instincts in full flight. Luckily, cowering publicly in fear of a bird is just one of the many joys of the current season! Join me in celebrating the annual experiences of spring.
Continue reading...Malaysia’s carbon pricing instrument review to be concluded in 2024 -media
Euro Markets: Midday Update
World ill-prepared to stop climate crisis reversing progress on health, says study
UN meteorological body finds health experts have access to heat warning services in only half of affected countries
The climate crisis threatens to roll back decades of progress towards better health and governments are ill-prepared to stop it, the World Meteorological Organization has said.
Three-quarters of national weather agencies send climate data to their country’s health officials but less than one in four health ministries use the information to protect people from risks such as extreme heat, the report found.
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