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BRIEFING: Green is the colour of growth for new Labour government, says expert panel
Climate expert Chris Stark appointed to lead UK clean energy taskforce
‘Mission control centre’ to work with energy companies and regulators towards goal of clean and cheaper power by 2030
Labour has appointed one of the country’s foremost climate experts to lead a “mission control centre” on clean energy.
Chris Stark, the former head of the UK’s climate watchdog, will head a Covid vaccine-style taskforce aimed at delivering clean and cheaper power by 2030.
Continue reading...Poland seeks EU ETS exemption for electricity supplied to Ukraine
DATA DIVE: Retirements in voluntary carbon market hold up in H1 2024 offering tentative signs of resilience
Q3 RGGI auction volumes dip slightly amidst strong compliance demand
Renewables firms already planning new onshore windfarms in England
At least six energy companies prospecting for first windfarms in almost a decade after Labour lifts limits
Renewable energy companies have begun work on new onshore windfarms in England for the first time in almost a decade after the new government reversed restrictions the Conservatives had put in place on turbines.
At least half a dozen renewables developers have begun identifying potential sites for full-scale windfarms in England after the Labour party swept to power last week with the promise to make Britain a clean energy superpower.
Continue reading...NatureMetrics automates marine eDNA sampling
Environment and health issues to remain united in one European Parliament committee -lawmaker
NGOs urge the EU to address biodiversity goals in its next budget
IMO to help developing countries decarbonise shipping
Tech giant signs largest direct air capture offtake deal to date
Methane offset developer pre-sells units to EDF Trading
INTERVIEW: Environment Bank markets portfolio as voluntary biodiversity credits
BRIEFING: Pylons, costs, public opinion among the challenges facing UK’s new clean power goal
‘Antidotes to despair’: five things we’ve learned from the world’s best climate journalists
From climate crisis being a crime story to presenting basic weather news in the context of climate change, here are some lessons from journalists
Mark Hertsgaard and Kyle Pope of Covering Climate Now (CCNow) hail the winners of their organization’s annual global climate journalism awards, and here describe some lessons they have taken from the more than 1,250 entries.
Mark Hertsgaard is executive director and co-founder of Covering Climate Now, a global journalism collaboration committed to more and better coverage of the climate story, and the Nation magazine’s environment correspondent
Kyle Pope is executive director of strategic initiatives and co-founder of Covering Climate Now, and a former editor and publisher of the Columbia Journalism Review
Continue reading...Global green economy hits market cap of $7.2 trillion, second only to tech sector
European carbon removals accelerator enters Indian market
The ‘wood wide web’ theory charmed us all – but now it’s the subject of a bitter fight among scientists | Sophie Yeo
The debate about the degree to which forests and fungi communicate raises the painful question of confirmation bias
- Sophie Yeo is editor of Inkcap Journal
You have probably heard the theory, that the health of forests depends on common mycorrhizal networks. Trees send resources to their neighbours through strands of hyphae, which act as an underground arboreal postal service, connecting root systems within the soil. Mature trees preferentially provide their offspring with resources, ensuring the survival of their own.
Not ringing any bells? Try switching “common mycorrhizal network” with “wood wide web”, the more familiar term that has described this phenomenon in hundreds of more mainstream places: novels, magazines, films and television series. The wood wide web is one of those rare things – a scientific theory that has captured the popular imagination.
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