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CP Daily: Monday July 24, 2023
Australia is touted as a future clean energy 'superpower' – but research suggests other nations will outperform us
How desperate US prisoners try to escape deadly heat
Bowen: “It’s too late to avoid the climate emergency”
Bowen says recent events show that it is too late to avoid the climate emergency, but efforts should be made to avoid the worst.
The post Bowen: “It’s too late to avoid the climate emergency” appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Paris to bring back swimming in Seine after 100 years
Electric cars are the future, but is the UK ready?
*Compliance Officer, Verra – Remote (Worldwide)
Canada eliminating most fossil fuel subsidies next year, becomes first in G20 to publish approach
Brussels seeks input on existing methodologies for certifying industrial carbon removal practices
California gasoline sales stagnate, diesel recedes in April
Alibaba notches 13% cut in emissions, highlights progress towards Scope 3+ goal
Could the law of the sea be used to protect small island states from climate change?
Building houses in factories for the Commonwealth Games was meant to help the housing crisis. What now?
RGGI Market: RGAs extend to year-highs with steepest weekly transaction volumes for 2023
MPs urge Sunak to attend Cop28 and stay true to net zero
All-party climate group says backing away from green policies would be catastrophic for the economy
A cross-party group of influential politicians has urged Rishi Sunak to set an example by attending the UN climate summit this November, as both major parties come under pressure over their net-zero policies.
The group of MPs and peers wants him to commit to attending Cop28 in Dubai, and to appoint a secretary of state as special envoy for the climate ahead of the UN general assembly in September, where preparations will be made for Cop28.
Continue reading...Climate contributions, not offsets, constitute best approach to raising global ambition -report
Pyromaniac Rish! torches climate policy while Europe burns
PM sees short-term advantage in smothering green policies while studiously ignoring signs of climate collapse
After Uxbridge, le deluge. In Manchester at least. In parts of Greece it was wildfires. For Rishi Sunak it was just a bonfire. A bonfire of green policy. The world was not quite warm enough. What the UK needed was a culture war.
Who would have guessed that the result of one byelection in west London could have such far-reaching consequences? The message Labour took from Uxbridge was that maybe Sadiq Khan would like to rethink his Ulez scheme with a general election due in less than 18 months. When it should have maybe pointed out during the byelection campaign itself that the clean air scheme had actually been introduced by the Tories. And that the then transport secretary, Grant Shapps, had written to Khan to enforce it. Instead, Labour had tried to disown it entirely, hoping voters would ignore it. Go figure. Let the public die.
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