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World Bank to investigate its own development project in Tanzania for human rights abuse

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2023-11-24 06:42
The Board of Executive Directors at the World Bank has approved a recommendation to investigate the lender's own development project in Tanzania after allegations that more than 20,000 people are being violently evicted and their cattle illegally seized to make way for the expansion of the Ruaha National Park.
Categories: Around The Web

INTERVIEW: Global Carbon Council poised to add adjusted credits from Oman, UAE

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2023-11-24 06:06
Global Carbon Council (GCC) has received letters of authorisation from Oman and the UAE for projects to offer correspondingly adjusted (CA) carbon credits on its registry, as part of expansion plans that involve adding a CCS methodology and gaining eligibility for phase one of CORSIA, a senior executive at the carbon credit certifier has told Carbon Pulse.
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Moonlight basking and queer courting: new research reveals the secret lives of Australian freshwater turtles

The Conversation - Fri, 2023-11-24 05:02
Australian freshwater turtles are a vital part of healthy waterways, but we don’t know enough about them. A new roundup of turtle research aims to buck the trend. Deborah Bower, Associate Professor in Zoology and Ecology, University of New England Donald McKnight, James Cook University Eric Nordberg, Senior Lecturer (Applied Ecology and Landscape Management), University of New England James Van Dyke, Associate Professor in Biomedical Sciences, La Trobe University Michael B Thompson, Emeritus Professor in Zoology, University of Sydney Ricky Spencer, Associate Professor of Ecology, Western Sydney University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

US coal power plants killed at least 460,000 people in past 20 years – report

The Guardian - Fri, 2023-11-24 05:00

Pollution caused twice as many premature deaths as previously thought, with updated understanding of dangers of PM2.5

Coal-fired power plants killed at least 460,000 Americans during the past two decades, causing twice as many premature deaths as previously thought, new research has found.

Cars, factories, fire smoke and electricity plants emit tiny toxic air pollutants known as fine particulate matter or PM2.5, which elevate the risk of an array of life-shortening medical conditions including asthma, heart disease, low birth weight and some cancers.

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EU confirms raise in contribution to global climate finance for 2022

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2023-11-24 04:29
The EU contributed €28.5 billion in climate finance to developing nations from public sources last year, up from €23 bln in 2021, according to figures approved by the Council of member states on Thursday that also outlined a further €11.9 bln mobilised from private sources. 
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Gold Standard seeks views on new method to spur a just transition from coal

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2023-11-24 03:46
Carbon credit certifier Gold Standard on Thursday launched a consultation on a new methodology for phasing out coal power while ensuring a just transition to clean energy, adding to the voluntary carbon market initiatives seeking to accelerate the world's exit from the emissions-intensive fossil fuel.
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Biodiversity Pulse: Thursday November 23, 2023

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2023-11-24 03:22
A twice-weekly summary of our biodiversity news plus bite-sized updates from around the world. All articles in this edition are free to read (no subscription required).
Categories: Around The Web

Indigenous and local communities better for forest protection and restoration than tree planting -study

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2023-11-24 03:02
Forests managed by Indigenous and local communities have better outcomes for carbon, biodiversity, and livelihoods than tree planting alone, a study published on Thursday in a scientific journal has found.
Categories: Around The Web

The climate emergency really is a new type of crisis – consider the ‘triple inequality’ at the heart of it | Adam Tooze

The Guardian - Fri, 2023-11-24 02:34

Global conferences such as the upcoming Cop28 may seem like staid and ritualistic affairs. But they matter

Stare at a climate map of the world that we expect to inhabit 50 years from now and you see a band of extreme heat encircling the planet’s midriff. Climate modelling from 2020 suggests that within half a century about 30% of the world’s projected population – unless they are forced to move – will live in places with an average temperature above 29C. This is unbearably hot. Currently, no more than 1% of Earth’s land surface is this hot, and those are mainly uninhabited parts of the Sahara.

The scenario is as dramatic as it is because the regions of the world affected most severely by global heating – above all, sub-Saharan Africa – are those expected to experience the most rapid population growth in coming decades.

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UAE stock exchange to launch carbon credit trading pilot

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2023-11-24 02:33
A UAE-based stock exchange will debut a pilot programme for trading carbon credits at COP28 aimed at institutional investors, according to a release Thursday.
Categories: Around The Web

Raw sewage discharged into Chichester harbour for over 1,200 hours in a month

The Guardian - Fri, 2023-11-24 01:02

Campaigners say Southern Water outflows into protected wildlife site are an ‘assault on the environment’

Raw sewage has been discharged into Chichester harbour for more than 1,200 hours in the past month, in what campaigners described as “an assault on the environment”.

The protected harbour in West Sussex, which is a designated area of outstanding natural beauty (AONB), has been subjected to the discharges since 24 October.

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UK farm almost sold out of biodiversity net gain units

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2023-11-24 00:35
An English farm has committed almost all of its biodiversity net gain (BNG) units in sales to local housing developers, Carbon Pulse has learned.
Categories: Around The Web

Brazilian food giant has the biggest impact on deforestation, corporate ranking finds

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2023-11-24 00:18
A Brazilian food producer was found to have by far the most negative impact on global deforestation rates, according to a global corporate ranking released Wednesday that also awarded negative scores to several major financial institutions for their lending policies.
Categories: Around The Web

EU launches first auction for green hydrogen alongside bumper Innovation Fund call

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2023-11-23 23:08
The European Commission launched its first EU green hydrogen auction on Thursday with €800 million up for grabs for European projects, while also opening up this year's €4 billion call for proposals for net zero technologies under the bloc's ETS-financed Innovation Fund.
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UK national parks seek new company partnerships and private finance as nature-based credit prices forecast to rise

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2023-11-23 22:53
An organisation representing the UK’s 15 national parks is looking to secure fresh partnerships with the private sector for nature restoration opportunities and investment, as new research suggests that the price of UK nature-based carbon credits could rise to £150 ($188) per tonne by the end of the decade.
Categories: Around The Web

Euro Markets: Midday Update

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2023-11-23 22:43
European carbon permits traded around their recent support levels on Thursday morning as an "arm-wrestle" between bulls and bears focused Dec-23s in a narrow channel, while energy markets were modestly firmer amid a lack of strong demand indications even as temperatures seem set to decline.
Categories: Around The Web

Nearly 40% of conventional baby food contains toxic pesticides, US study finds

The Guardian - Thu, 2023-11-23 22:00

None of the organic products sampled contained the chemicals, which present a dangerous health threat to babies, researchers say

Nearly 40% of conventional baby food products analyzed in a new US study were found to contain toxic pesticides, while none of the organic products sampled in the survey contained the chemicals.

The research, conducted by the Environmental Working Group (EWG) non-profit, looked at 73 products and found at least one pesticide in 22 of them. Many products showed more than one pesticide, and the substances present a dangerous health threat to babies, researchers said.

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UK-based carbon exchange to launch Indian platform in December

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2023-11-23 21:53
A UK-based carbon exchange on Thursday has announced its plan to launch its India chapter in December in collaboration with an Indian environmental solutions provider.
Categories: Around The Web

ECOSYSTEM MARKETPLACE – Shades of REDD+: Harmonized Biodiversity Claims as a Solution for Fragmented Biodiversity Markets

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2023-11-23 21:25
GPT Since the adoption of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, there's been growing interest in market-based approaches for biodiversity conservation, but significant challenges remain in establishing a global market for biodiversity credits due to their complexity and context-specific nature. As Charlotte Streck writes, alternative solutions like national and local schemes and standardized biodiversity claims are being explored to address these challenges.
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Consumerism is the path to planetary ruin, but there are other ways to live | Kate Soper

The Guardian - Thu, 2023-11-23 21:00

A slower paced life with less work and more community focus – if enough people share the dream, we can make it happen

Faced with the now undeniable impacts of climate crisis created by humans, political leaders in wealthier countries incline towards one of two competing responses. They either question the urgency and feasibility of meeting net zero targets and generally procrastinate (the rightwing tendency); or they proclaim their faith in the powers of magical green technologies to protect the planet while prolonging and extending our present affluent ways of living (a position more favoured on the left and centre).

Common to both approaches is a wrongheaded presumption that we can carry on growing while managing to hold off the floods and fires of growth-driven capitalism. Both also take it for granted that the consumerist lifestyle is essential to the wellbeing of rich societies and the ideal to which less developed economies should aspire.

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