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Sunshine state reaches more than 60 pct renewables for first time – in winter
The Sunshine state posts a new record for renewables in the middle of the winter, thanks to the growing contribution of wind energy.
The post Sunshine state reaches more than 60 pct renewables for first time – in winter appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Great Solar Business Podcast: Solar supply and demand for 2022
Lliam Ricketts from Supply Partners explains what’s going on upstream with the solar supply chain. Recorded at Energy Next.
The post Great Solar Business Podcast: Solar supply and demand for 2022 appeared first on RenewEconomy.
BC municipality gains windfall from low-carbon credit sale
Spanish energy giant Iberdrola to enter Australian offshore wind market
Spanish energy giant Iberdrola reveals it has its eyes on potential offshore wind projects in Australia.
The post Spanish energy giant Iberdrola to enter Australian offshore wind market appeared first on RenewEconomy.
VAT cut in consumer energy bills could result in higher emissions, UKA prices -think-tank
Manchin, Schumer strike deal on climate-adjacent US budget bill
California compliance offset issuances tick up, as prices draw closer to allowance values
Untangling the web: The knotty issues raised within IC-VCM consultations
Climate change killed 40 million Australian mangroves in 2015. Here's why they'll probably never grow back
Soil abounds with life – and supports all life above it. But Australian soils need urgent repair
Asian gas leak offset project sees rating downgraded
The Guardian view on Russian gas: a compelling reason to go green | Editorial
Vladimir Putin’s cynical extortion makes as eloquent a case for the clean energy transition as any environmental idealist
When Vladimir Putin launched his invasion of Ukraine, he gambled that it would be won quickly and that the west would acquiesce in a fait accompli. He underestimated Ukrainian resilience and European readiness to punish Kremlin aggression with sanctions. That forced Mr Putin into a longer game. Now he is betting that European reliance on Russian gas exports will corrode western solidarity, leading to a degrading of sanctions and restored tolerance of Moscow’s territorial aggressions.
To hasten that scenario, Russia has cut the flow of gas through the main east-west pipeline. The Kremlin’s message of strategic extortion is not subtle: go softer on the war and have a cosier winter; stay tough and freeze. European solidarity is just about holding. Earlier this week EU members agreed a deal to cut gas usage by 15% as part of a phased move away from reliance on Russian supplies. But the deal is diluted by opt-outs and exceptions for various countries. Hungary, the EU state that is cosiest with the Kremlin, has not signed up at all.
Continue reading...Economic downturn splits VCM market into two, surplus in offsets grows
James Lovelock: Influential green thinker dies aged 103
Falls in Europe’s crop yields due to heatwaves could worsen price rises
From Spain to Hungary, output of staples such as corn forecast to fall by up to 9%, adding to impact of Ukraine war on food security
Yields of key crops in Europe will be sharply down this year owing to heatwaves and droughts, exacerbating the impacts of the Ukraine war on food prices.
Maize, sunflower and soya bean yields are forecast by the EU to drop by about 8% to 9% due to hot weather across the continent. Supplies of cooking oil and maize were already under pressure, as Ukraine is a major producer and its exports have been blocked by Russia.
Continue reading...James Lovelock talks about his Gaia hypothesis and climate change in 2014 interview – video
James Lovelock, the creator of the Gaia hypothesis, has died on his 103rd birthday. The climate scientist originated the theory that life on Earth is self-regulating. Lovelock often warned the global population of the stark reality of climate change and was committed to his work in his one-man laboratory in an old mill in Cornwall since the mid-1960s
Continue reading...ANALYSIS: Best strategy for Canadian oil and gas CO2 pricing divides experts
Greece floats idea for EU-wide plan to compensate industry for demand cuts
I sat on a wet towel, my stepfather sent apocalyptic texts, but our long-term response to the UK's heatwave must be action | Emma Beddington
As our brains return, briefly, to room temperature, it’s time to think about what we do next
A week after The Great British Bake In, it’s 13C and drizzling here: North Yorkshire is (temporarily) healing. I have been giddily sending pictures of pewter skies and cagoule sightings to my sister who, unwisely for a red-headed northerner, lives in steamy Paris. The whole business feels like a collective fever dream, but, of course, it wasn’t: as melted roads and scorched verges, drifts of autumnal leaves and warnings of an imminent drought declaration demonstrate, and as thousands of climate scientists testify hourly with weary urgency.
So, as our brains return to room temperature, it’s time to work out how to respond next time. Nationally, structurally, our lack of preparedness for extreme heat is a disaster in waiting, as more wearily urgent experts keep telling us. But, given the far more pressing business of choosing the ugliest possible font for leadership contest materials, and Dominic Raab explaining we should “enjoy the sunshine” shortly before much of the A2 caught fire, it looks like we’ll be thrown back on our own resources.
Continue reading...A new nuclear power station needs a vast supply of water. But where will Sizewell C get it from? | Will Atkins
Plans for the site have got the go-ahead. The knock-on effect for Suffolk’s rivers and seawater will soon be clear
Last week, the government gave the go-ahead for a new nuclear power station to be developed on the Suffolk coast. Providing low-carbon electricity for about 6m homes, Sizewell C will stand alongside two existing stations, Sizewell B and the decommissioned Sizewell A. I live close enough to see the 60-metre tall, white dome of Sizewell B almost every day. When I want to torture myself, I look at developer EDF’s “construction phase visualisations” of the 1,380-acre building site, with its towering spoil heaps and forest of cranes, and wonder if this is what it will take to save the planet.
What might not have been immediately obvious in the coverage of the government’s decision was that the Planning Inspectorate, tasked with assessing such projects, had recommended that permission be refused. The problem, the examiners explained, was fairly simple: EDF couldn’t say exactly where it would obtain one of the main substances needed to make a nuclear power station work, that substance being water.
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