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INTERVIEW: Britain needs an economy-wide ‘carbon regulator’ to harmonise future climate policy
One of world’s biggest offshore wind project grinds to a halt over costs
One of the world's biggest offshore wind projects has been halted because of a big jump in costs, raising questions about the UK's renewable plans.
The post One of world’s biggest offshore wind project grinds to a halt over costs appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Fortescue Future buys up “fast moving” US green hydrogen project
Fortescue Future Industries has spent $US24 million to buy the company behind a proposed green hydrogen project in Arizona in the US.
The post Fortescue Future buys up “fast moving” US green hydrogen project appeared first on RenewEconomy.
‘Highly unusual’: the surfboard-swiping sea otter eluding California authorities
The state’s wildlife department is concerned the friendly fur-covered swimmer has become too acclimated to humans
A five-year-old sea otter who gained notoriety for commandeering surfboards has continued her reign as a viral sensation as she’s managed to avoid multiple efforts to capture her.
For days, staff with California’s department of fish and wildlife (CDFW) and the Monterey Bay aquarium have attempted to catch otter 841 – but she has given them the slip each time.
Continue reading...EU approves steel industry aid from Germany and France
Judge rejects challenge to Surrey Hills oil and gas exploration plans
Campaigners lose judicial review of decision to approve plan by UK Oil & Gas to drill on agricultural land
Fossil fuel prospectors have cleared another hurdle on their path to drill for oil and gas near an area of outstanding natural beauty (AONB) in the Surrey Hills after campaigners lost a judicial review of the plan.
Opponents of the plan to sink an exploration well near the village of Dunsfold argued it was inconsistent with a decision to refuse a similar application on the basis of the greenhouse gas emissions it would produce.
Continue reading...I thought the government’s plan to protect Britain from extreme heat would be bad. It’s worse than that | Bill McGuire
Politicians seem to have no idea of the action required if we want to keep a functioning society and economy
- Bill McGuire is professor emeritus of geophysical and climate hazards at UCL
It’s hard not to wonder if the government is living on another planet. One that isn’t in the grip of the highest temperatures ever recorded, where tens of thousands of people are not dying every summer in blistering heatwaves, where the oceans aren’t boiling. This is the only explanation for the colossally inadequate national climate adaptation programme released this week.
There is so much wrong with it that it’s hard to know where to begin. The programme actually constitutes the third of three five-year plans, and therein lies the main problem. You can’t plan in five-year chunks for climate mayhem that is set to last for decades, probably centuries. If it is to make living in Hothouse Britain safer and more bearable, any plan worth its salt has to look much further ahead and take in the bigger picture.
Continue reading...Gas boiler lobby trying to delay UK’s heat pump plans, leak shows
Trade association, which promotes hydrogen for home heating, called for clean heat market mechanism to be pushed back to 2026
Lobbyists for the gas boiler industry are trying to delay the introduction of new government measures to speed up the take-up of heat pumps, a leaked document shows.
The move, in a draft document obtained by the DeSmog investigative journalism group and seen by the Guardian, appears to be part of an intensive two-year lobbying effort by a key gas boiler industry organisation, which has been critical of heat pumps, and promoted hydrogen for home heating to government and opposition parties, despite strong evidence of its unsuitability.
Continue reading...Euro Markets: Midday Update
EU climate chief Timmermans to leave Commission to run in Dutch elections
Carbon rating agency secures $3.75 mln in funding as investor cash continues to pour into sector
Community aspect remains crucial in MRV even as technology adoption increases -expert
World will miss 1.5C warming limit - top UK expert
Biodiversity Pulse Weekly: Thursday July 20, 2023
Vattenfall reports dip in EU fossil-based generation, stops UK offshore wind farm plan
Dove partners with investor-led collective to protect Southeast Asian rainforests
Japanese startup to create carbon credits in Bangladesh through rice farming projects
Australian carbon project developer launches pilot cookstove project in Laos
Gold Standard awards first finance programme approval to impact fund
To understand the right’s climate backlash, look no further than its monstering of Natural England | George Monbiot
MPs and newspapers alike are attacking the public body charged with conserving the English countryside for doing just that
Several grisly bloodsports, legal or otherwise, are enjoyed in the English countryside. But none is as popular as shooting the messenger. Rather than attend to our environmental crisis, politicians, lobbyists and the media prefer to hunt the people seeking to address the problem. No quarry is pursued as keenly as the government’s conservation agency Natural England.
This weekend, a full-spectrum attack was launched in the billionaire press. The Sunday Telegraph raged against the agency’s call for “nutrient neutrality”. This means that new housing or business developments should not increase the amount of shit in our rivers. The paper also attacked Natural England’s advice that when new homes are built there should be no net increase in air pollution. It quoted a mysterious “insider” accusing the agency of “green activism”. What’s the betting that this “insider” is a property developer? A similar attack was launched in the Times on Monday.
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