Feed aggregator
Analyst downgrades CCA outlook, puts WCAs at Tier 1, and leaves RGGI unchanged
UPDATE – Verra halts credit issuances, launches investigation into Kasigau REDD projects on abuse allegations
US companies announce verification of first credits in livestock-based carbon insetting marketplace
Brazil increases NDC stringency
Half of Europe’s family homes could be energy self-sufficient with solar and storage
Just over half of Europe's single family homes could technically be fully energy self-sufficient with a combination of solar energy and storage systems.
The post Half of Europe’s family homes could be energy self-sufficient with solar and storage appeared first on RenewEconomy.
EU member states signal backing for obligation on oil and gas sector to build up bloc’s CCS infrastructure
INTERVIEW: Microsoft says critical that other carbon removal buyers join effort to scale industry
‘It’s an abomination’: battle brewing over proposed US laws to protect pesticide companies
Exclusive: Even as juries decide against a herbicide maker, proposed industry-backed measures would limit lawsuits and local use restrictions
Cancer patients are celebrating a string of courtroom victories after juries in three US states recently ordered Germany’s Bayer to pay more than $500m in damages for failing to warn about the health risks of its Roundup herbicides. But the consumer wins come as proposed federal legislation backed by Bayer and the powerful agricultural industry could limit similar cases from ever going to trial in the future.
Dubbed the Agricultural Labeling Uniformity Act, the proposed measure would provide sweeping protections for pesticide companies and their products, pre-empting local governments from implementing restrictions on pesticide use and blocking many of the legal claims that have been plaguing Bayer, according to the American Association for Justice (AAJ) and other critics.
Continue reading...UK government invests £65 mln to warm homes with recycled data centre waste heat
Never fly again? Go vegan? It was too hard. But I still cut my emissions by 61% and it made life simpler and better | Jo Clay
When I had a baby, those future generations I’d worried about had a face. It transformed me
- Change by Degrees offers life hacks and sustainable living tips each Saturday to help reduce your household’s carbon footprint
- Got a question or tip for reducing household emissions? Email us at changebydegrees@theguardian.com
I’ve been worried about climate change my whole life. When I was a kid we called it the greenhouse effect and I assumed that, by the time I grew up, someone else would have fixed it. But no one did.
In my 20s I realised that, as one of the grownups, it was my job to fix it. I sought out roles in sustainability and grew increasingly despondent at leaders who denied climate change. Then I had a baby.
Continue reading...Climate crisis talks resume on ‘loss and damage’ funding for poorest countries
World leaders will reconvene in Abu Dhabi before UAE’s Cop28 after talks broke down two weeks ago
Governments will meet this weekend for a last-ditch attempt to bridge deep divisions between rich and poor countries over how to get money to vulnerable people afflicted by climate disaster.
Talks over funds for “loss and damage”, which refers to the rescue and rehabilitation of countries and communities experiencing the effects of extreme weather, started in March but broke down in rancour two weeks ago.
Continue reading...Pineapple leaf tea and potato peel soup: five ways to cut food waste
Cut shopping bills, landfill and carbon emissions by using up peelings and stems where possible
With their spiky crowns of leaves, pineapples are about as close as you can get to a tropical paradise while doing the weekly shop – but now Sainsbury’s has begun selling the fruit shorn of its exotic plumage, all in the name of cutting food waste.
With the fruit’s hardy leaves usually ending up in the bin or a food waste caddy, the move shines a spotlight on waste in the home. So could the leaves, stems and skins of the fruit and vegetables we routinely throw away be put to better use in the kitchen?
Continue reading...Euro Markets: Midday Update
Italian tech company gets EU backing to develop biodiversity credits
UN to seek assurances UK will not renege on net zero pledge
Concerns ahead of Cop28 climate summit that Rishi Sunak among leaders backsliding on green measures
The UN secretary-general, António Guterres, will be seeking assurances from the UK that there will be no reneging on climate promises, after Rishi Sunak’s rowing back on green measures.
The UN is concerned that countries may be backsliding on pledges to cut greenhouse gas emissions sharply, to limit global temperature rises to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels.
Continue reading...India launches energy efficiency programme to distribute induction cookstoves nationwide
Japan pilots biodiversity support certificates to beef up nature spending
CN Markets: CEA retreats from all-time high following government intervention, CCER trades stable
Death Valley tourist swerves to avoid tarantula in road and causes car crash
A man on a motorcycle was injured when the camper van braked suddenly to go around the roaming arachnid
When tarantulas are on the move, it’s best to use caution. That’s the message park officials are trying to get out after a roving arachnid caused a car crash in Death Valley national park last weekend.
Two tourists from Switzerland braked hard after seeing a tarantula scampering across Route 190 in a remote area almost 5,000ft above sea level. A 24-year-old Canadian man on a motorcycle then crashed into the back of the Swiss couple’s rented camper van and had to be transported to a hospital.
Continue reading...