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Oxygen discovery defies knowledge of the deep ocean
Scottish government selects Galloway as preferred site for new national park
If approved, the region would become Scotland’s third national park and first to be made official in UK since South Downs in 2010
Galloway has been selected by the Scottish government as the preferred site for Scotland’s third national park.
The region, which came out top from a shortlist of five, will now be the subject of a consultation and an investigation into its suitability before potentially being made official by 2026. The unsuccessful candidate areas were Lochaber, Loch Awe, Scottish Borders and Tay Forest.
Continue reading...Climate tech startup secures $10 mln to expand water-based CDR technology
Canadian firm plans to build $3 bln clean fuel refinery, with CCS and solar
Global renewables generation to outstrip coal power by next year
The post Global renewables generation to outstrip coal power by next year appeared first on RenewEconomy.
UK will struggle to meet its goal for clean power by 2030, research warns
INTERVIEW: Ethanol lobby group pitches ‘fermentation CCS’ as low-cost carbon removal technology
PCX Markets records surging demand for plastic credits
Anti-greenwashing rules should drive EU sustainable finance growth -report
International oil company seeks approval to store carbon under the English Channel
Solar and battery project proposed for gateway to Snowy Mountains
The post Solar and battery project proposed for gateway to Snowy Mountains appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Euro Markets: Midday Update
BRIEFING: EU looking into ways to simplify CBAM as early as 2025 -EU official
Brazil’s Para state opens public consultation on forest concession for carbon projects
Solar and wind ‘will miss 2030 clean energy target without £48bn funding’
Hitting target for zero-carbon electricity system will require ‘step-change’, says analyst Cornwall Insight
Solar and wind power generation will fall well below the target needed to decarbonise Great Britain’s electricity grid by 2030 without an injection of £48bn, according to a forecast from one of the UK’s leading energy analysis companies.
The government has promised to deliver a zero-carbon electricity system by 2030, requiring the doubling of onshore wind, tripling of solar power and quadrupling of offshore wind capacity.
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