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European utilities push back on “disruptive” electricity market reforms
EU identifies ‘ambition gap’ in national climate action plans
PREVIEW: EU Parliament to debate new Commission, climate-agri nexus, amid Orban stress next week
Japan launches trial of nature coexistence support certificates
‘Not on my watch’: how windfarms became a key issue in NSW local elections
From Port Stephens to Illawarra, candidates are running against renewable schemes because of ‘lack of consultation’
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Part of what’s driving Mark Watson’s pitch for mayor is his opposition to a project he says is the talk of the town and the “biggest issue” in his coastal home’s history.
The former One Nation candidate for the state government is now running as an independent for mayor of Port Stephens. The coastal town just north of Newcastle overlooks the middle of the 1,800-square kilometre offshore windfarm zone off the Hunter, where the Albanese government plans a renewable energy hub to be operating by 2030.
Continue reading...Plans scrapped for UK’s first ‘net zero’ coal mine that would have relied on carbon credits
Swiss group awards letter of support to biogas carbon project in Ghana under Article 6
Indonesia targets $65 bln in earnings from carbon trade by 2028
Biodiversity markets need ‘trust factor’ to scale, tech expert says
How national parks failed nature – and how to fix them
The image of huge, glorious landscapes, where wildlife runs free under the protection of the state, is far from reality
What do you think of when you think of a national park? Is it a wide area of glorious natural beauty, where wildlife runs free under the protection of the state? Or is it a wide area mostly farmed by private landowners, in which nature is faring worse than outside its boundaries, and largely off-limits to the public?
In England, the reality is the latter, and this matters. The country is one of the most nature-depleted nations in the world, in the bottom 10% of nations for biodiversity. “Nature is in freefall in our national parks,” says Dr Rose O’Neill, the chief executive of the Campaign for National Parks (CNP).
Continue reading...Australia’s new hydrogen paper confirms plans for all-green future
INTERVIEW: Forest restoration company gears up for biodiversity credit market
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Rural workers reject nature commodification in run-up to COP16
Von der Leyen backs nature credits to drive restoration
England’s national parks overseen by ‘bloated’, mostly white male boards
Exclusive: Campaigners call for overhaul as Guardian investigation shows nature rarely on agenda
The boards that oversee England’s national parks are bloated, dominated by men and are severely lacking in diversity, a Guardian analysis has found. The analysis also found that farmers outnumber conservation experts by two to one, nature is rarely on the agenda at board meetings and only one national park can account for the ownership of all the land it covers.
Campaigners said a major overhaul of how national parks were governed was “fundamental” to the recovery of nature in the parks and to serving the public, for whom they were set up.
Continue reading...CN Markets: CEA price declines amid shrinking liquidity despite market expansion plans
CAD Trust partners with QAI to advance carbon market data initiatives
Maine officials trying to hide scale of ex-navy base PFAS spill, advocates suspect
Government’s communication called ‘unconscionable’ after one of largest spills of toxic ‘forever chemicals’
A former US navy base in Maine has caused among the largest accidental spills of toxic PFAS “forever chemicals” ever recorded in the nation, and public health advocates suspect state officials are attempting to cover up its scale by reporting misleading and incomplete data.
Meanwhile, state and regional officials were slow to alert the public and are resisting calls to immediately test some private drinking water wells in the area despite its notoriously complex hydrology, which could potentially spread the contamination widely.
Continue reading...High court blocks Cumbria plan for first new UK coalmine in 30 years
Court rules against West Cumbria Mining’s fossil fuel development in Whitehaven
The UK’s first new coalmine in 30 years will not be allowed to go ahead after a ruling in the high court.
On Friday morning, Justice Holgate ruled plans for the facility to be built in Whitehaven, Cumbria will not proceed, in what campaigners called a “victory for the environment”.
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