Feed aggregator
Uzbekistan becomes first country to receive World Bank payment for sale of policy-based carbon credits
GEF Council gives green light to $730-mln spending as pressure mounts on GBF Fund to deliver
South Korea to deepen Paris partnership with Vietnam
Climate engineering off US coast could increase heatwaves in Europe, study finds
Scientists call for regulation to stop regional use of marine cloud brightening having negative impact elsewhere
A geoengineering technique designed to reduce high temperatures in California could inadvertently intensify heatwaves in Europe, according to a study that models the unintended consequences of regional tinkering with a changing climate.
The paper shows that targeted interventions to lower temperature in one area for one season might bring temporary benefits to some populations, but this has to be set against potentially negative side-effects in other parts of the world and shifting degrees of effectiveness over time.
Continue reading...EU inaugurates green innovation hub in Seville
Climate activists bemoan scant progress on finance as Cop29 looms
UN says finding funds to tackle climate crisis is ‘a steep mountain to climb’, as talks end with little agreement
Finding the finance needed to stave off the worst impacts of the climate crisis will be “a very steep mountain to climb”, the UN has conceded, as two vital international conferences failed to produce the progress needed to generate funds for poor countries.
With less than five months to go before the Cop29 UN climate summit in Azerbaijan in November, there is still no agreement on how to bridge the near-trillion dollar gap between what developing countries say is needed and the roughly $100bn a year of climate finance that flows today from public sources in the rich world to stricken developing nations.
Continue reading...South Korea releases national biogas development strategy
Experts, investors baulk at Australian opposition’s proposals on nuclear, capping renewables
Australian ministers agree 2030 biodiversity targets, include OECMs in Nature Repair Market
Millions of mosquitoes released in Hawaii to save rare bird from extinction
Conservationists hope insects carrying ‘birth control’ bacteria can save honeycreeper being wiped out by malaria
Millions of mosquitoes are being released from helicopters in Hawaii in a last-ditch attempt to save rare birds slipping into extinction.
The archipelago’s endemic, brightly coloured honeycreeper birds are dying of malaria carried by mosquitoes first introduced by European and American ships in the 1800s. Having evolved with no immunity to the disease, the birds can die after just a single bite.
Continue reading...Week in wildlife – in pictures: bears’ dinner party, a Kentish wildcat kitten and racing marmots
The best of this week’s wildlife photographs from around the world
Continue reading...Restore Nature Now: thousands to march in London calling for urgent action
Mainstream groups including National Trust and RSPB will join hunt saboteurs and direct action activists for first time
Crabs, badgers and scores of dragonfly wings will be among the fancy dress worn by thousands of people joining more than 350 environmental groups marching through London on Saturday to demand the next government does not “recklessly” ignore the nature crisis.
For the first time, mainstream organisations including the National Trust and the RSPB will stand beside hunt saboteurs and direct action activists in the Restore Nature Now march, as campaigners call on the next government to take “bold” steps to tackle the biodiversity crisis.
Continue reading...Happy 200th anniversary climate change – thank goodness for Peter Dutton | First Dog on the Moon
Nuclear power? Really!?
- Sign up here to get an email whenever First Dog cartoons are published
- Get all your needs met at the First Dog shop if what you need is First Dog merchandise and prints
Indonesia’s Pertamina lays out transition plan in sustainable finance framework
‘I fear when we stop, no one will replace us’: Madagascar’s forest guardians – in pictures
Community conservation groups are fighting to protect woodlands from illegal logging, farming and fires, but limited resources are a constant challenge and the task is getting ever more difficult
- Safidy Andrianantenaina is a Madagascan photographer and recipient of the revolutionary storyteller grant, a Photographers Without Borders and On the Edge joint project
Solar hits new global peak in northern summer solstice, and Australia still leads per capita
The post Solar hits new global peak in northern summer solstice, and Australia still leads per capita appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Dutton’s plan to nuke Australia’s renewable energy transition explained in full
The post Dutton’s plan to nuke Australia’s renewable energy transition explained in full appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Big cars, red meat, household gas: Consumers still have crucial role to play in cutting emissions
The post Big cars, red meat, household gas: Consumers still have crucial role to play in cutting emissions appeared first on RenewEconomy.
The same party that legislated for offshore wind farms now wants to ban them. It’s nuclear in reverse
The post The same party that legislated for offshore wind farms now wants to ban them. It’s nuclear in reverse appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Wind turbine towers and blades could be built in Australia under new supply chain plan
The post Wind turbine towers and blades could be built in Australia under new supply chain plan appeared first on RenewEconomy.