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Solar farm developer commits to protecting biodiversity as UK project sparks criticism
Scottish highland estate to generate biodiversity credits
Aviation knuckles down on increasing green fuel supply as United grows SAF fund
Germany seeks cancellation of spare EU carbon permits freed up by coal exit -media
Mexico strengthens ties with local communities to ramp up voluntary land conservation
Carbon intensity, not colour, will determine future of low-carbon hydrogen -report
Euro Markets: Midday Update
US stingray falls pregnant despite having no mate
Carbon removal credits trade on CBL platform for first time
Bank-backed voluntary carbon network appoints former BP chief as chair
Top tips for electrifying everything, and reducing power bills
Some top tips on how to electrify your home and make it more energy efficient
The post Top tips for electrifying everything, and reducing power bills appeared first on RenewEconomy.
UN migratory species meeting announces global habitat connectivity initiative
Voluntary carbon standard to explore mining sector potential for permanent removals
Why is Labour still using the self-defeating, discredited ‘maxed out credit card’ analogy? | Yanis Varoufakis
It is one thing to U-turn on a modest green transition programme. It is another to do so using mendacious Tory economic paradigms
Rarely has a lacklustre policy been abandoned for a reason so bad that it threatens to inflict long-term damage on a society. Independently of whether the £28bn green investment programme was the right policy for the next Labour government to commit to, Rachel Reeves’s reasons for ditching it were an undeserved gift to the Tories and a partial vindication of their disgraceful flirtations with an austerian, anti-green political narrative.
Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today shortly after her U-turn on Labour’s headline £28bn green transition programme, the shadow chancellor explained her decision by claiming that, under Jeremy Hunt, the Treasury is “planning on maxing out the credit card”, adding for good effect that the Tories are “maxing out the headroom ahead of the next general election” thus limiting “what an incoming Labour government will be able to achieve”. By comparing the state’s coffers to an overladen credit card, Reeves endorsed an insidious fallacy.
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What will Spain look like when it runs out of water? Barcelona is giving us a glimpse | María Ramírez
Angry farmers, worried tourism workers and unprepared politicians – Catalonia is on the frontline of a drought-stricken future
Walking through Barcelona these days, you can’t miss the signs and billboards picturing a red plastic bucket and the message “Water doesn’t fall from the sky” (l’aigua no cau del cel in Catalan). The ads are part of a campaign to get people to save water. Since the beginning of February, Barcelona and 200 other towns in Catalonia have been in an official drought emergency. That means more than 6 million people in the region live with restrictions. Daily water usage per inhabitant is limited. Parks are unwatered, fountains are dry and showers at swimming pools and beaches are closed. Farmers can’t irrigate most of their crops and must halve their water usage for livestock or face fines.
It’s not just Catalonia. The European Drought Observatory’s map of current droughts in Europe shows the entire Spanish Mediterranean coast in bad shape, with red areas indicating an alert similar to those in north Africa and Sicily. Catalonia may be going through the worst drought on record for the area, but the southern region of Andalucía has faced continuous drought since 2016. Last year, Spain’s droughts ranked among the 10 most costly climate disasters in the world, according to a report by Christian Aid.
María Ramírez is a journalist and deputy managing editor of elDiario.es, a news outlet in Spain
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