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UAE oil firm on course for 40% emissions rise by 2030, say researchers
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Ministers ‘misrepresented’ UK climate advisory body, say scientists
Government challenged to explain claim that UK will need 25% of energy to come from fossil fuels in 2050
UK politics live – latest updates
The UK government has “misrepresented” the Climate Change Committee (CCC) by wrongly claiming it said we would need a quarter of our energy to come from fossil fuels by 2050, scientists have said.
In order to justify signing off new oil and gas licences in the North Sea, ministers have said the country will still require a quarter of its energy to come from gas in 2050, the year the UK is supposed to meet net zero.
Continue reading...Feeding seaweed to cows can cut methane emissions, says Swedish report
Study proposes government commission more research into environmental benefits of cattle feed additives
Sweden is one step closer to making the use of methane-reducing cow feed additives such as seaweed government policy after experts recommended further investigation into the area.
A report by the Swedish Environmental Protection Agency into reduced methane emissions says development in the field has been “rapid in recent years” and is among “a number of new interesting additives with higher potential”.
Continue reading...INTERVIEW: Indian startup bets on plastic credits market despite challenges
Japan, Malaysia pen cooperation on cross-border CCS
Methane emissions from LNG-powered ships double current assumptions, say researchers
The week in wildlife – in pictures
The best of this week’s wildlife photographs, including an endangered rhino, a reindeer herd and a roaring stag
Continue reading...Britain’s pheasant shooting season has begun. And a year-round massacre makes it possible | George Monbiot
Class politics is nowhere more visible than in the protected slaughter of game, with disastrous effects on our countryside
It’s one of the bluntest expressions of class power in the United Kingdom. Like all expressions of class power, it has become normalised until we treat it as a fixed fact of national life. I’m talking about the bronze plague that spreads over the British lowlands every year, wiping out much of our wildlife: pheasants.
This week, the pheasant shooting season began, appropriately coinciding with the Conservative party conference. Killing them requires no physical exertion and a limited skillset, as the birds are driven over the heads of the shooters by people hired to flush them out of the woods. The men (almost all are) with the guns spray shot at the low-flying birds, killing some, wounding some, missing others. One estimate suggests that between 30% and 40% of all the pheasants shot are wounded and not recovered, dying slowly in the woods.
Continue reading...Biodiversity project developer eyes carbon exchange listings after Cercarbono deal
I find myself getting more and more bewildered each day. What is going on? | First Dog on the Moon
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Top grain traders ‘helped scupper’ ban on soya from deforested land
Cargill and ADM led push to weaken new protections for threatened ecosystems in South America, report says
Cargill and ADM, two of the world’s leading livestock feed companies, helped to scupper an attempt to end the trade in soya beans grown on deforested and threatened ecosystem lands in South America, a new report alleges.
Soya is one of the cheapest available types of edible protein, and is in huge demand for feed for animals around the world; as our consumption of meat and dairy has risen globally, the need for soya has soared too.
Continue reading...Cannon-Brookes backs power engineers aiming to solve renewables grid connection log-jam
Cannon-Brookes provides bulk of funds for start-up hoping to help solve the wind and solar connection log jams on Australia's main grid.
The post Cannon-Brookes backs power engineers aiming to solve renewables grid connection log-jam appeared first on RenewEconomy.
The massive battery storage projects that will replace coal and gas, and fossil cars
Battery storage will see changes in chemistries in the push for longer lasting batteries for the grid, and less range obsession for EVs. And even solid state batteries could be a thing by 2030.
The post The massive battery storage projects that will replace coal and gas, and fossil cars appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Energy Insiders Podcast: What price Marinus?
We talk to Caroline Wykamp and Prajit Parameswar from Marinus Link. Plus: Spring renewables surge delivers low prices, new records, and a push for more storage.
The post Energy Insiders Podcast: What price Marinus? appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Wet UK summer brings high hopes for spectacular autumn display
National Trust predicts reversal of last year’s dull October and November, with show starting in Scotland
After a disappointing season last year when the wrong sort of weather at the wrong time made the autumnal colours of the UK’s parks, gardens and woodlands duller than usual, this October and November are expected to be brighter.
The National Trust said on Friday that this autumn, people could look forward to particularly dazzling displays of reds, ambers, butter yellows and russet browns.
Continue reading...Why iron flow batteries could fill the gap between lithium and pumped hydro
Developer of iron flow batteries says Australia is the perfect place for the technology, given its push for renewables and its expertise in minerals processing.
The post Why iron flow batteries could fill the gap between lithium and pumped hydro appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Lignite plants allowed back in Germany to cover for gas, but 2030 coal phase-out remains
The economy ministry says the goal of completing Germany's coal phase-out “ideally” by 2030 remains unaffected by the decision, as do climate targets.
The post Lignite plants allowed back in Germany to cover for gas, but 2030 coal phase-out remains appeared first on RenewEconomy.
The Voice could advise on how to address natural disasters like bushfires
Australian bird of the year 2023 result – follow live updates as the #birdoftheyear winner is announced
The moment has arrived – and the swift parrot has taken the crown for 2023 after the votes for the final 10 candidates
The critically endangered swift parrot is the 2023 Australian bird of the year.
Voters in the Guardian/BirdLife Australia biennial poll have used this year’s competition to send a message that they want to see the habitat of the world’s fastest parrot protected.
Continue reading...