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Climate change will affect solar power and grid stability across Australia – here’s how
Newly published UNSW research is the first to quantify climate change’s impact on solar resource reliability in Australia over the next century.
The post Climate change will affect solar power and grid stability across Australia – here’s how appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Welsh Water admits illegally spilling sewage for years
CP Daily: Wednesday October 18, 2023
Taxes are important but it’s too early to tax electric vehicles in an Australian market still in its infancy | Scott Dwyer
Targeting EV drivers is not good for consumers nor the country’s targets for decarbonising transport – something more coherent and jurisdiction wide is needed
The looming electrification of road transport is something that motorists, fleet managers, bus operators, logistics companies, transport agencies, automotive manufacturers, and all levels of governments are grappling with.
Wednesday saw a landmark case showing just how precarious it can be with a major setback for the Victorian government and any other states thinking of introducing road user taxes for electric vehicles.
Continue reading...Canada’s carbon contracts for difference should shun oil companies and CCUS, green groups say
RFS Market: RIN prices rebound from 3-year lows on supply, economic question marks
Record rooftop solar output slashes wholesale electricity prices
Record levels of solar is taking pressure off the grid and pushing down prices, but regulator says there is a "pressing need" for new investment" in large scale wind and solar.
The post Record rooftop solar output slashes wholesale electricity prices appeared first on RenewEconomy.
LCFS Market: Oregon credit prices shed 10% in October as losses hit multiple programmes
Young crown-of-thorns starfish can survive heatwaves. That's yet more bad news for the Great Barrier Reef
The original and still the best: why it's time to renew Australia's renewable energy policy
Wrexham’s 480-year-old sweet chestnut crowned tree of the year
Tree that’s withstood storms and firewood collectors wins contest highlighting those in urban areas
A 480-year-old sweet chestnut that has withstood storms, firewood collectors and, increasingly, parties and picnics beneath its boughs has been crowned tree of the year.
The stately ancient tree in Wrexham’s Acton Park fought off competition from 10 other urban trees in the Woodland Trust competition, which this year highlighted city trees which are widely enjoyed by the public but are often still vulnerable to destruction.
Continue reading...Nature restoration carbon projects see strong pipeline growth in 2023, retirements still down, says analytics firm
Methane emissions certifier to enable trades on Xpansiv’s platform
TNFD nature recommendations more solid than ESRS, says head of EU biodiversity group
Developers give final go-ahead to €1.3 billion EU carbon storage project
Asset owners alliance announces first annual emissions drop
Capitals Coalition: Partner with SMEs to improve nature action
We know how harmful toxic chemicals can be to people. So why has the EU dropped plans to block them? | Geoffrey Lean
Industry lobbying and rightwing politicians are involved in this decision. The pushback against green policies must be resisted
- Geoffrey Lean is a specialist environment correspondent and author
Can there be a better example of snatching defeat from the jaws of victory? In a disclosure that threatens to go relatively unnoticed, it emerges that at the last minute, vital steps to protect Europeans from toxic chemicals have fallen foul of the growing political backlash against green measures. Continent-wide rules that would have banned the use of dangerous substances have been delayed and may now be abandoned altogether, with huge consequences for human health and the chemical industry.
As exclusively reported by the Guardian, the European Commission has dropped plans to regulate chemicals from its latest work programme after lobbying by industry and opposition from rightwing politicians. The measures – whose details had been virtually finalised ready for publication – would, among other things, have outlawed all but essential use of thousands of hazardous substances believed to cause more than a quarter of a million cancers in Europe each year.
Continue reading...Flame retardant pollution threatens wildlife on all continents, research finds
More than 100 species, from frogs to killer whales, contaminated with long-lasting chemicals with serious health effects
More than a hundred species of wildlife found across every continent are contaminated with highly toxic flame retardants, and the pollution is probably responsible for population declines in some species, a new analysis of published research shows.
The dangerous chemicals have been detected in everything from sea urchins to bobcats to Arctic foxes, and at alarming levels in endangered species such as red pandas, chimpanzees and killer whales.
Continue reading...