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Rooftop solar takes even bigger bites out of diminishing coal pie: But can it be controlled?

RenewEconomy - Fri, 2023-09-01 10:15

Amid all the song and dance over the market operator’s 10-year reliability outlook, and the revelations of the stunning incompetence of the federal government owned Snowy Hydro, it’s not surprising that the march of rooftop solar barely got a mention. On Wednesday, the Australian Energy Market Operator revealed two fascinating graphs that underline not just […]

The post Rooftop solar takes even bigger bites out of diminishing coal pie: But can it be controlled? appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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CP Daily: Thursday August 31, 2023

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2023-09-01 08:56
A daily summary of our news plus bite-sized updates from around the world.
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Global carbon markets provide lessons for controlling industrial sector leakage under New York cap-and-invest scheme, experts say

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2023-09-01 08:44
Numerous approaches from international carbon markets exist for tackling leakage and competitiveness concerns from energy-intensive, trade-exposed industries (EITEs) subject to New York state’s forthcoming programme, a webinar heard Thursday.
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WCI Markets: CCAs recover early week losses, WCAs recede into and through Q3 auction

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2023-09-01 08:42
California Carbon Allowance (CCA) prices recovered in the latter part of the week along with an upswing in broader macro sentiment, while Washington Carbon Allowances (WCAs) continued to recede into and post the state’s third cap-and-trade auction.
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Snowy Hydro 2.0 eyes return to tunnelling after delays and cost blowouts

The Guardian - Fri, 2023-09-01 07:05

Chief executive says pumped hydro project remains ‘critical’ to energy transition away from fossil fuels

Snowy Hydro’s bogged tunnel boring machine could resume work within weeks – a key step to getting the “critical” pumped hydro project now expected to cost $12bn back on track.

Dennis Barnes, Snowy’s chief executive, says the revised contract with the builders of the 2.0 project – Italy-based WeBuild – is still in its “final stages” but he expects it to be signed off soon.

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Fewer of us are cycling – here's how we can reverse the decline

The Conversation - Fri, 2023-09-01 06:01
Early in the pandemic, when there was much less traffic on the roads, people took to their bikes. But since then, fewer people are cycling, with rates now lower than in 2011. Matthew Mclaughlin, Adjunct Research Fellow, The University of Western Australia Peter McCue, PhD Candidate, School of Population Health, UNSW Sydney Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Labor’s new Murray-Darling Basin Plan deal entrenches water injustice for First Nations

The Conversation - Fri, 2023-09-01 06:00
Once again, First Nations in the Murray-Darling Basin have been shortchanged in water reform and shortchanged in the water market. It’s time to listen and actually deliver tangible outcomes. Grant Rigney, Indigenous Knowledge Erin O'Donnell, Senior Lecturer, Melbourne Law School, The University of Melbourne Fred Hooper, Indigenous knowledge holder, Indigenous Knowledge Lana D. Hartwig, Adjunct Research Fellow, Australian Rivers Institute, Griffith University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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REDD developers must make co-benefits transparent to boost integrity, stakeholders argue

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2023-09-01 03:38
Community and biodiversity benefits can help demonstrate integrity in REDD forest protection projects but developers need to get better at disclosing them, community-focused groups argued this week.
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Malta seen halting EUA trading account applications after influx from shipping sector

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2023-09-01 03:30
Malta has paused accepting applications for carbon trading accounts amid an influx of applications, market participants told Carbon Pulse this week, noting that that the demand was mainly from non-EU shipping companies trying to prepare for the sector’s imminent entry into the EU ETS.
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Maritime data firm, European utility team up to offer EU ETS management solution for shippers

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2023-09-01 03:20
A maritime data firm has teamed up with one of Europe’s biggest utilities to unveil a web-based EU ETS management solution for shippers being brought into the bloc’s carbon market.
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Carbon credit retirements tumble in August in wake of ICVCM release

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2023-09-01 03:01
Corporates have shied away from the voluntary carbon market since the release of the ICVCM's framework for assessing methodologies eligible for its Core Carbon Principle (CCP) integrity labelling, with retirements and demand for REDD avoided deforestation dropping sharply in August.
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Iceland allows whaling to resume in ‘massive step backwards’

The Guardian - Fri, 2023-09-01 02:30

Activists say that whales will still suffer agonising deaths despite new regulations and monitoring

Animal rights groups and environmentalists have described as “hugely disappointing” the news that Iceland has given the green light for commercial whaling to resume, after a temporary ban introduced this year came to an end.

The Icelandic government said there will be tougher regulations in place – including better equipment, training and increased monitoring – but campaigners said these were “pointless and irrelevant” because whales will still suffer agonising deaths. The hunted whales are shot with grenade-tipped harpoons.

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COMMENT: The market impact of the new EU ETS compliance cycle

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2023-09-01 02:26
The market impact of the new EU ETS compliance cycle explained by Gauthier Bily, CEO of Vertis Environmental Finance.
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Link executive pay to nature targets to spur action, urges Holcim exec

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2023-09-01 02:18
The bonuses of senior leaders at companies should depend on achieving environmental goals on nature as well as climate, according to an executive at Holcim, one of the world's biggest cement producers.
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Arctic soil methane uptake could be greater than previously thought, study finds

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2023-09-01 01:29
The vast Arctic wetlands, which span over 80% of the region's land area, may play a pivotal role in the uptake of the potent greenhouse gas methane, according to a recent study.
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The people of Ecuador just made climate justice history. The world can follow | Steven Donziger

The Guardian - Fri, 2023-09-01 01:15

Voters won a huge battle with the oil industry – proving that we can’t save the planet without robust democracy

Days ago, voters in Ecuador approved a total ban on oil drilling in protected land in the Amazon, a 2.5m-acre tract in the Yasuní national park that might be the world’s most important biodiversity hotspot. The area is a Unesco-designated biosphere reserve and home to two non-contacted Indigenous groups. This could be a major step forward for the entire global climate justice movement in ways that are not yet apparent.

This vote is important not only for Ecuador and for the Indigenous peoples in the Yasuní, who now have hope of living in peace in perpetuity. It is also a potential model for how we can use the democratic process around the world to help slow or even stop the expansion of fossil fuels to the benefit of billions of people.

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When is a vandal not a vandal? When they’re attacking Ulez cameras, say desperate Tory MPs | Polly Toynbee

The Guardian - Fri, 2023-09-01 01:15

Investigating protest and criminal damage is apparently now a waste of police time. Funny that Conservatives didn’t say that about Just Stop Oil protests

This was “crime week” on the Tory grid, but the party of law and order is no more. Tories now do like dictators, passing draconian laws against the freedom to protest but flouting them for protesters of their own political ilk.

Self-styled “blade runners” claim to have so far destroyed 600 cameras of the 3,000 needed to enforce the new Ulez – ultra-low emission zone – now covering all of Greater London. The Mail, Telegraph and Sun have been whooping up the actions of “Captain Gatso” and his balaclavaed vandals as they tear down cameras and cut cables. The Sun reports anti-Ulez exploits along with its “Give Us A Brake campaign to slow down the government’s ruinous race to net zero”. The Telegraph quotes a vigilante describing his night-time vandalism as “unpaid voluntary work for the community”.

Polly Toynbee is a Guardian columnist

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Seven new ‘walking leaf’ insect species discovered

The Guardian - Fri, 2023-09-01 00:12

Researchers used genetic analysis to identify species that cannot be distinguished by appearance alone

Seven new leaf insect species, known as “walking leaves”, have been discovered.

The insects exhibit a sophisticated “twigs and leaf-like” camouflage allowing them to blend into their surroundings without detection, posing a challenge to both predators and researchers.

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James Webb: Telescope reveals new detail in famous supernova

BBC - Fri, 2023-09-01 00:02
Looking like a pearl necklace, the object known as SN1987A is the closest star explosion to Earth.
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Scientists demand end to dingo baiting after research reveals most are genetically pure

The Guardian - Fri, 2023-09-01 00:00

Discovery that most canids in Australia are not hybrids with wild dogs leads researchers to push to change policy and terminology

Scientists are calling on governments to end baiting programs targeting dingoes in national parks, to ditch the “inappropriate and misleading” term “wild dog”, and to proactively engage with Indigenous Australians regarding dingo management.

Dozens of scientists have written to the New South Wales, Victorian and South Australian environment and agriculture ministers to push for changes to dingo policies in light of new scientific research.

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