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INTERVIEW: VCMI to road test flexibility claim with companies, aims to launch by year end
UK carbon consultancy partners with Salesforce to develop emissions reporting tool
EU ban on carbon offsetting claims to start applying in two years
Unilever steps up absolute emissions targets across value chain by 2030
Exponential biochar carbon removal growth to split in two directions, report finds
Gray whale sighted off New England 200 years after species’ Atlantic extinction
Scientists confirm cetacean’s presence but cite impact of climate change which has made North-west Passage ice-free in summer
Scientists have confirmed the presence of a whale off New England that went extinct in the Atlantic Ocean two centuries ago – an exciting discovery, but one they said that illustrates the impact of climate change on sea life.
Researchers with the New England Aquarium in Boston found the gray whale while flying 30 miles south of Nantucket, Massachusetts, on 1 March. The whale, which can weigh 60,000 pounds (27,215kg), typically lives in the northern Pacific Ocean.
Continue reading...EU co-legislators clinch deal on new CO2-saving rules for European airspace
FEATURE: SBTi tackles existential question of how to decarbonise oil and gas
University proud of space station astronaut
University proud of space station astronaut
Asbestos-contaminated mulch found at 75 sites across Sydney, watchdog finds
Focus turns to criminal investigation after NSW Environment Protection Authority completes its trawl through the supply chain
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Mulch contaminated with asbestos has been found at 75 sites across greater Sydney, with the New South Wales environmental watchdog turning focus to its criminal investigation after the completion of contact tracing.
The NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) will on Thursday announce it has finished tracking mulch through the complex supply chain after asbestos was first discovered by a parent in mulch at a park in the inner west more than two months ago.
Continue reading...Dublin-based coffee group purchases first biodiversity credits in Ireland
Italian court fails to intervene in civil society’s climate litigation
UPDATE – ANALYSIS: UK draft property bill to invite legal clarity for UKA, voluntary credit disputes
Focus on smaller protected areas for more cost-effective conservation outcomes, study says
Euro Markets: Midday Update
‘We’re totally pay as you can’: the UK restaurant prioritising people and planet
The Long Table in Gloucestershire is a not-for-profit that rescues food waste, sources local produce and pays the real living wage
A Gloucestershire restaurant is rethinking relationships with customers, suppliers and the entire food economy to fuel an ambitious “pay as you can” model that feeds allcomers, regardless of ability to pay.
In the past year, The Long Table has fed about 20,000 people at below-cost price – many for no charge at all, no questions asked – while rescuing 3.4 tonnes of food destined for the bin and paying local suppliers fair prices for the rest.
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