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Commercial forestry investor starts to factor carbon into its returns where there is market certainty -conference
Pair of insurance partnerships announced to provide security to carbon credit buyers
Carbon credit issuances tumble in September, ahead of first CCP labels
Firms will hesitate to invest in UK after Sunak’s climate U-turns, says Mark Carney
Former Bank of England governor says businesses prioritise countries with clean power and consistent strategies
Rishi Sunak watering down the UK’s climate commitments has damaged Britain’s position on the world stage for business investment, according to the former Bank of England governor Mark Carney.
In highly critical comments, Carney indicated that global companies would now think twice about locating their activities in the UK after Sunak pushed back key net zero deadlines and sanctioned new oil and gas drilling.
Continue reading...The Tories say 15-minute cities are sinister. That’s nonsense – here’s the truth | Kate Soper and Martin Ryle
Rishi Sunak’s risible rhetoric about a divide between motorists and ‘woke’ spoilsports is easy to counter – but Labour shows little sign of wanting to do so
Following hard on the prime minister’s defence of the drivers who are supposedly victimised by London’s Ulez extension, and Penny Mordaunt’s rubbishing of 20mph speed limits in Wales (currently in force in parts of her own constituency), we now have the transport secretary, Mark Harper, denouncing “sinister … so-called 15-minute cities”.
This dismissal of measures that provide safer, pleasanter and more sustainable urban living is being pressed in the name of “freedom”: the freedom of city-dwellers to live unharassed by meddling environmentalist do-gooders; the freedom, in Sunak’s words, of drivers “to use their cars to do all the things that matter to them” – a liberty supposedly under threat from the “anti-motorist” Labour party.
Kate Soper is emeritus professor of philosophy at London Metropolitan University. Her most recent book is Post-Growth Living: For an Alternative Hedonism. Martin Ryle writes about politics and the environment. He is the author of the book Ecology and Socialism
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...Scaredy cats? Wild animals fear humans more than lions, study finds
The sound of ‘super predator’ human voices instils more terror around the waterhole than the big cats’ roar, researchers discover
The lion has long been regarded as the world’s most fearsome terrestrial carnivore, but the “king of beasts” has been toppled by humans, new research shows.
Elephants, rhinos and giraffes are all now more afraid of people than other apex predators, according to a scientific paper that supports the idea that humans are the world’s “super predator”.
Continue reading...EU ETS will need 200 Mt of carbon removals by 2050 to neutralise emissions -analysts
EU co-legislators forced to go back to basics on nature restoration law
Latest Green Climate Fund raise surpasses $9 bln as multiple donors announce last-minute pledges
Similar numbers of male and female turtles hatched at Coral Sea site give hope for survival of species
Sex determination of sea turtles is temperature dependent, with the proportion of female hatchlings increasing when nests are warmer
Similar numbers of female and male green and hawksbill turtles are hatching in the Coral Sea’s Conflict Islands, new research suggests, despite global heating increasingly leading to “extreme feminisation” of sea turtles.
Sea turtles are particularly susceptible to the effects of global heating because their sex determination is temperature dependent, with the proportion of female hatchlings increasing when nests are warmer.
Continue reading...The 2023 Australian bird of the year is …
… to be announced at 12.30pm AEDT. Follow our live blog from 11.30am for the red carpet, emotional speeches and all the reaction
- Find all our bird of the year content
- Download your Australian birds poster as a jpeg or pdf (large file)
The campaigns are over. The votes are in. The scrutineers are in the tally room.
The winner of the 2023 Guardian/BirdLife Australian bird of the year will be announced at 12.30pm AEDT on this website, after voters culled a field of 50 down to 10 for the final day of voting on Thursday.
Find all our bird of the year content
Guardian Australia has produced a glorious A3 poster of Australian birds that can be downloaded here as a high-resolution jpeg or pdf to be printed out. (The pdf is a large file so may take a while to load.)
Continue reading...EU to phase out F-gases by 2050, pushing standards worldwide to follow
Investor outlines much-needed changes in rapidly evolving biodiversity market
GreenCollar issues first NaturePlus credits, releases details on standard
Ukraine minister underlines need to introduce ETS as soon as possible in light of EU CBAM -media
‘Exceptional year’: Mont Blanc shrinks by another 2 metres
Mountain’s peak has been measured every two years since 2001 and height has varied by almost 5 metres
Mont Blanc, the tallest mountain in the Alps, has shrunk by 2.2 metres since 2021 to its lowest height in recent memory.
The mountain, which is capped by a ridge of ice covering the rock, was measured by a team of surveyors from the Haute-Savoie regional administration, aided by a drone.
Continue reading...ICVCM names new CCO as McDonnell joins Australian insurance giant
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Hundreds of potentially toxic road runoff outfalls polluting England’s rivers
Exclusive: No regulator is monitoring scale of impact of dangerous chemicals on wildlife or public health
A toxic cocktail of damaging chemicals created by road pollution is flowing into England’s rivers and no regulator is monitoring the scale of its impact on wildlife or public health.
More than 18,000 outfalls, such as pipes, and about 7,700 soakaways managed by National Highways discharge rainwater potentially contaminated with heavy metals, hydrocarbons, microplastics and other chemicals from the main road network into rivers and on to land.
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