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COP26: US to stop methane leaks from oil and gas wells
We are in Glasgow to demand justice for those most affected by the climate crisis | Bernard Ewekia, Jakapita Kandanga, Edwin Namakanga, Maria Reyes and Farzana Faruk Jhumu
The Rainbow Warrior has brought us to Cop26 to speak up for the sidelined citizens of the global south. We can’t be ignored
- The writers are members of the climate action group Fridays for Future MAPA
How can you hold climate talks without including the most affected people? You can’t. How can you make decisions on the best way to adapt to climate impacts without talking to those forced to adapt? You can’t. And how can you deliver climate justice by continuing to ignore those that are suffering the most? You can’t.
As the Cop26 climate summit gets under way, and the so-called leaders of the world take centre stage to deliver yet more empty promises, we – five youth climate activists from five of the most affected areas across Africa, Asia, Central America and the South Pacific – have arrived despite attempts to shut us out.
This article was written by five Fridays for Future MAPA (Most Affected People and Areas) youth climate activists: Bernard Ewekia, 25, from Tuvalu; Jakapita Kandanga, 24, from Namibia; Edwin Namakanga, 27, from Uganda; Maria Reyes, 19, from Mexico; and Farzana Faruk Jhumu, 22, from Bangladesh
Continue reading...Cop26 activists demand Biden declare climate emergency at protest held by Indigenous leaders – video
American activists from the group Build Back Fossil Free gathered outside the Cop26 entrance in Glasgow as Joe Biden arrived on Monday, to demand he take executive action to block fossil fuel projects and declare a climate emergency. The group included black and Indigenous leaders whose communities are on the frontline of fossil fuel extraction, facing the consequences of air pollution and contaminated drinking water and land across the US
- Cop26: Biden urges action on climate change and vows US will ‘lead by example’
- UN climate talks in Glasgow Cop26: India targets net zero by 2070 – as it happened
Investors top up VER fund to bet on ‘undervalued’ carbon
Chinese verifier caught faking ETS data a second time
Minister who uses wheelchair denied entry to Cop26 venue
Israeli minister hits out at ‘outrageous’ treatment after having to wait for two hours
An Israeli minister has described how she was denied entry to the Cop26 summit because as a wheelchair user she was unable to access the Glasgow venue, criticising the refusal to accommodate her as “outrageous”.
Karine Elharrar, Israel’s energy and water resources minister, who has muscular dystrophy, waited for two hours outside after organisers refused to let her enter the compound in the vehicle in which she had arrived, she said.
Continue reading...Millions in carbon project investments on hold after Australia proposes restrictions
We need radical policies to reach net zero. Here's a fairer way to do them | Polly Toynbee
A personal carbon allowance was first proposed a decade ago – but leaders haven’t been brave enough to take up this idea
Are we doomed, or is there still a chance to save civilisation? It’s easy to veer between despair and slender hope, when the UN says emissions that need to fall by half this decade are only on course for a cut of about 7.5%. How helpless we feel when big emitters refuse to attend Cop26. What an unconvincing “one minute to midnight” call to action from Boris Johnson, who is cutting foreign aid and the cost of domestic flights while mulling a new coalmine and a Shetland oilfield. The absurd Brexit fishing spat makes a mockery of exhorting other world leaders to lift their sights to the horizons of the climate crisis.
The scale of what’s needed is politically unfathomable. Yet Johnson pretends answers can be conjured up “without so much as a hair shirt in sight”. In thundering, prophetic form, a recent article from George Monbiot set him right: the world’s richest 1% emit 35 times what each individual should use to ensure global heating does not exceed a 1.5C rise. The super-rich use their fortunes to shape the political agenda, diverting our attention from the true climate culprits with the “micro consumerist bollocks” of ditching coffee cups and plastic bags. “We will endure only if we cease to consent,” Monbiot writes – and he’s right.
Polly Toynbee is a Guardian columnist
Continue reading...BBC earns £300,000 from Saudi oil firm despite net-zero pledge
Fossil fuel advertising on overseas output jars with DG’s call to ‘dial up the focus on sustainability’
The BBC received about £300,000 in advertising revenue last year from Saudi Arabia’s national oil company, Aramco, despite BBC director general Tim Davie calling on every arm of the broadcaster to “dial up the focus on sustainability” and reduce net greenhouse gas emissions.
Although the BBC does not carry advertising in the UK, much of its overseas output is supported by commercials.
Continue reading...COP26: Pledge to end deforestation as Queen urges 'rise above politics'
Toyota announces the bZ4X: the carmaker’s first mass-produced electric vehicle
New vehicle a change for Toyota, which has to date relied heavily on hybrid technology
Toyota has released details about its first mass-produced electric vehicle in a significant step for the world’s second-biggest carmaker.
The bZ4X is an SUV with optional rooftop solar panels that will be sold in both front-wheel or all-wheel-drive variants.
Continue reading...Biden to unveil pledge to slash global methane emissions by 30%
US-led alliance includes 90 countries but China, India and Russia have not joined the methane pact
US president Joe Biden will try to underscore his green credentials by unveiling an action plan to control methane, regarded by the administration as the single most potent way to combat the climate crisis in the short term.
Leading an alliance of 90 countries, including for the first time Brazil, he will on Tuesday set out new regulatory measures to limit global methane emissions by 30% from 2020 levels by the end of the decade.
Continue reading...Tackling deforestation must be at the heart of our response to the climate crisis | Zac Goldsmith
The UK has built a coalition of 100 countries committed to ending the destruction of forests by the end of the decade
- Zac Goldsmith is the UK’s international environment minister
This morning, at the all-important Cop26 climate conference in Glasgow, the prime minister is urging world leaders to commit to take radical action to reverse the catastrophic degradation of the world’s forests. It is hard to exaggerate the importance of what he is asking.
Put simply, there is no credible response to the climate crisis – or to so many of the biggest challenges we face – that does not involve protecting and restoring nature on a massive scale.
Zac Goldsmith is the UK’s international environment minister
Continue reading...NSW government seeks offers for renewable hydrogen hubs
NSW seeks expressions of interest in new renewable hydrogen hubs as it seeks to roll out up to $3 billion in government support.
The post NSW government seeks offers for renewable hydrogen hubs appeared first on RenewEconomy.
“Remarkable:” South Australia reached 100 pct renewables nearly every day in October
Wind and solar reached 100 per cent of more of local demand in South Australia in every day in October, bar two.
The post “Remarkable:” South Australia reached 100 pct renewables nearly every day in October appeared first on RenewEconomy.
How Australia’s coal country past is scuppering its renewable energy future
Australia needs to massively scale up renewables to reach net zero, but they are handicapped by a system designed for fossil fuels.
The post How Australia’s coal country past is scuppering its renewable energy future appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Australia hits record share of 35 per cent renewables in month of October
Australia's main grid achieved a record 35 pct renewables share in October, half way to the federal government's expected 69 pct share by 2030.
The post Australia hits record share of 35 per cent renewables in month of October appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Australia is about to be hit by a carbon tax whether the prime minister likes it or not, except the proceeds will go overseas
Can Australia parlay “dumb luck” of mineral riches to lead world in battery recycling?
Australia has all the minerals needed for battery storage, does it also have the nous to be world-leading, end-to-end battery supply chain?
The post Can Australia parlay “dumb luck” of mineral riches to lead world in battery recycling? appeared first on RenewEconomy.