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INTERVIEW: AI-powered building optimisation can cut energy use by 20-30%
Nutrient credit partnership launches in UK with biodiversity net gain target
Euro Markets: Midday Update
'It is a shame': Starmer laments lack of Tory support for climate measures – video
The prime minister, Keir Starmer, has hit out at the lack of Conservative support for climate targets and said it shows 'just how far the party has fallen'. 'It’s a shame,' he said. 'When Cop was in Scotland, there was a real unity across the house about the importance of tackling one of the most central issues of our time,' Starmer said in Commons after returning from the G20 and Cop29
Continue reading...Fury at climate talks over ‘backsliding’ on fossil fuels
International law firm buys water, carbon units from project in Egypt
As we wait for national legislation, let’s launch a Green New Deal from below | Jeremy Brecher
Local and state initiatives can act as ‘proof of concept’ for transformative climate and jobs legislation
As Trump and Trumpism devastate the American political landscape, how can people counter this destructive juggernaut? For the past five years, I have been studying how people are actually implementing the elements of the Green New Deal through what has become a Green New Deal from Below. This framework, which ordinary people are already putting into practice, is an approach to organizing that can form a significant means for resisting and even overcoming the Trump agenda.
The Green New Deal is a visionary program designed to protect the earth’s climate while creating good jobs, reducing injustice and eliminating poverty. The Green New Deal erupted into public attention as a proposal for national legislation, and the struggle to embody it in national legislation is ongoing.
Jeremy Brecher is the author of the new book The Green New Deal from Below: How Ordinary People Are Building a Just and Climate-Safe Economy. He is the author of more than a dozen books on labor and social movements and the co-founder and senior advisor of the Labor Network for Sustainability
Continue reading...COP29: Fiji unveils carbon market strategy roadmap
COP29: Singapore signs Article 6 Implementation Agreement with Peru
EU Commission pause on EUA auction adjustments bullish for prices -analysts
Verra to open consultation on stewardship credits in early 2025
Asia-focused carbon standards team up to promote voluntary carbon market
COP29: A tale of two registries – Article 6 negotiators head towards crunch in bid to force through carbon markets outcome
COP29: Last chance in Baku for carbon markets to get this right, says Article 6 negotiator
Cop29 climate finance deal hits fresh setback as deadline looms
Outcry after draft text contains only an ‘X’ instead of setting $1tn funding goal to support developing countries
Hopes of a breakthrough at the deadlocked UN climate talks have been dashed after a new draft of a possible deal was condemned by rich and poor countries.
Faith in the ability of the Azerbaijan presidency to produce a deal ebbed on Thursday morning, as the draft texts were criticised as inadequate and providing no “landing ground” for a compromise.
Continue reading...Malaysia’s Selangor examining mechanisms to develop state’s carbon market
LNG imports are a lot dirtier than previously thought, and little better than heavy fuel oil
The post LNG imports are a lot dirtier than previously thought, and little better than heavy fuel oil appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Cop29 live: tense day predicted as negotiators mull over new draft texts
Stakes high as officials discuss summit’s key question of how much rich countries should pay for developing nations to cope with climate crisis and decarbonize their economies
In response to the latest text on climate finance, Laurie van der Burg, Oil Change International Global Public Finance Manager, said it was “a mixed bag with good, bad and ugly options.”
“Rich countries now have a last chance to step up to pay the climate debt they owe to the Global South and unlock a fair and funded fossil fuel phaseout, while barring dangerous distractions. Wealthy nations must support delivering the trillions urgently needed in public finance with the majority provided debt-free, which is currently on the table.”
Speaking at a press conference in Baku this morning, Hoekstra was asked for reaction to the lack of a clear figure on the climate finance - which currently just has an “X” for the target on the new collective quantified goal (NCQG).
“It is clearly unacceptable as it stands,” said Hoekstra, giving little else away.
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