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Electrification: ACT seeks to cut hefty cost of quitting gas network

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2023-08-08 12:53

ACT says final step to going all-electric is to abolish existing network connections. But currently that costs up to $800 for a home and $1,500 for a business.

The post Electrification: ACT seeks to cut hefty cost of quitting gas network appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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Spanish enegy giant flags 330MW wind farm plans for Victoria region with a history

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2023-08-08 12:50

waubra wind farm accionaAcciona unveils plans to install 58 turbines outside the towns of Evansford and Waubra – home to one of Acciona's earliest wind projects in Australia.

The post Spanish enegy giant flags 330MW wind farm plans for Victoria region with a history appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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Carbon credits - land grab or the Amazon’s future?

BBC - Tue, 2023-08-08 12:19
The eight countries who share the rainforest are meeting in Brazil for a "milestone" summit.
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NZ govt teams up with BlackRock to launch NZ$2 bln Net Zero Fund

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2023-08-08 10:49
The New Zealand government is partnering with BlackRock to launch a new NZ$2 billion ($1.2 bln) fund designed to help the country achieve 100% renewable electricity by 2030, it announced Tuesday.
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CP Daily: Monday August 7, 2023

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2023-08-08 08:13
A daily summary of our news plus bite-sized updates from around the world.
Categories: Around The Web

New platform launches to bring “radical transparency” to voluntary carbon market

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2023-08-08 07:29
A new firm announced a voluntary carbon market listing platform on Monday to accelerate credit supply development by rectifying what it says is the current “information asymmetry” that is stifling growth and trust in the sector.
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RGGI Market: RGAs recede to 2.5-week low as California carbon rally subsides

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2023-08-08 07:26
RGGI Allowance prices fell back from eight-month highs this week in what market participants attributed to a continued sympathy trade with California Carbon Allowances, as well as a lack of fundamental demand specific to the power sector cap-and-trade system.
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Brazil development bank cancels voluntary carbon purchase plans from credit tenders

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2023-08-08 07:17
Brazil’s development bank BNDES on Friday announced that it has scrapped its plan to purchase tens of millions of dollars in voluntary carbon credits from two tender processes last year as the institution restructures its support for the market.
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How air travellers can cut their door-to-door emissions right now – by as much as 13% on the Sydney-Melbourne route

The Conversation - Tue, 2023-08-08 06:02
Air travel emissions are proving difficult and costly to cut, but travellers can make a surprisingly big difference simply by changing how they travel to and from the airport. Rico Merkert, Professor in Transport and Supply Chain Management and Deputy Director, Institute of Transport and Logistics Studies (ITLS), University of Sydney Business School, University of Sydney David Li, PhD Candidate, Institute of Transport and Logistics Studies, University of Sydney Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Controversial ‘forever chemicals’ could be phased out in Australia under new restrictions. Here’s what you need to know

The Conversation - Tue, 2023-08-08 06:02
New restrictions on PFAS and other potentially hazardous chemicals in Australia present an opportunity for industry to develop alternatives for new, safe and clean products. Sarah Wilson, PhD Candidate in Nanotechnology & Innovation Governance, University of Technology Sydney Rachael Wakefield-Rann, Senior Research Consultant, Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology Sydney Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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More than half of Earth’s species live in the soil, study finds

The Guardian - Tue, 2023-08-08 05:00

Soil estimated to be home to 90% of world’s fungi, 85% of plants and more than 50% of bacteria, making it the world’s most species-rich habitat

More than half of all species live in the soil, according to a study that has found it is the single most species-rich habitat on Earth.

Soil was known to hold a wealth of life, but this new figure doubles what scientists estimated in 2006, when they suggested 25% of life was soil-based.

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INTERVIEW: Kenya should focus on tax-dodging, not special taxes and fees in revised climate law, says clean fuels distributor

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2023-08-08 04:35
Kenya should close loopholes that allow untaxed carbon revenue to be shifted outside of the country in its upcoming legislation while steering clear of imposing special taxes and fees on the domestic market, a climate-tech chief executive told Carbon Pulse on Monday.
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VCM Report: Prices drift amid thin trade and uncertainty about CCP label

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2023-08-08 04:03
Carbon credit prices were little changed over the past week amid continuing uncertainty about the impact of the Core Carbon Principles (CCP) framework from the Integrity Council for the Voluntary Carbon Market (ICVCM), although there was a slight bounce in Xpansiv CBL’s nature-based standardised contract.
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UAE partners with technology providers to deliver blockchain system for carbon credits

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2023-08-08 03:06
An inaugural national system for carbon credits using blockchain technology is being launched in the UAE through a partnership between the Ministry of Climate Change and Environment (MoCCAE) and two technology providers. 
Categories: Around The Web

EU countries are set to outstrip their targets on solar energy, says business group

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2023-08-08 02:40
EU nations are likely to overachieve on the bloc's overall targets for installing solar power over this decade, according to a business group's assessment of the government plans submitted to date.
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Extinction alert issued over critically endangered vaquita

The Guardian - Tue, 2023-08-08 02:09

World’s tiniest marine mammal – found only in the Gulf of California in Mexico – has only 10 individuals left, study finds

The International Whaling Commission has issued the first “extinction alert” in its 70-year history, to warn of the danger facing the vaquita, the world’s tiniest and most critically endangered marine mammal.

A recent study shows that the small porpoise, found only in the Gulf of California in Mexico, has only 10 individuals left. It has been driven to the edge of extinction due to entanglement in fishing nets known as “gillnets”, which are now illegal in the area.

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Activists drill holes in tyres of more than 60 SUVs at Exeter car dealership

The Guardian - Tue, 2023-08-08 01:43

Tyre Extinguishers claim responsibility for attack to highlight ‘presence of grossly inappropriate private vehicles’ on roads

Anti-SUV activists used a power drill to sabotage the tyres of more than 60 4x4 vehicles at a car dealership, in an attack they described as a reprisal for the deaths of two girls in a crash at a primary school last month.

In the early hours of Monday morning, activists crept on to the forecourt of the Vertu Jaguar showroom in Exeter. They told the Guardian they went from vehicle to vehicle drilling holes in the sidewalls of all four tyres on each, so they must be replaced.

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Unseasonably wet weather threatens UK harvest, say farmers

The Guardian - Tue, 2023-08-08 01:41

Soggy July has affected wheat, barley and hay crops as waterlogged soil makes some harder to harvest

The unseasonably wet weather is causing problems for this year’s harvest, experts have said, with wheat, barley and hay crops affected.

Many farmers have been signed up to a nature-friendly scheme called Mid Tier, which does not allow hay to be cut until July to help wildlife.

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A giant oarfish: the mirrored harbinger of earthquakes | Helen Sullivan

The Guardian - Tue, 2023-08-08 01:00

Oarfish swim vertically, moving up and down and side to side like a cursor. It would be easier to believe that they do not exist

A giant oarfish, also known as the “king of herrings”, is an eight-metre long ribbon of silver, tapered at its tail and on its head wearing a permanently stunned face – as though moments ago it was a normal herring and then the world’s largest chef slapped it down on a bench top and rolled over it with a rolling pin.

“These are unpredictable fish,” research biologist Milton Love told the New York Times 10 years ago. But in Japan, oarfish are considered highly predictable: they predict the future. See an oarfish, the story goes, and an earthquake will follow. In the months before Japan’s 2011 earthquake, one of the most powerful ever recorded, 20 oarfish were found on beaches. They’re known as “messengers from the sea god’s palace”, or jinja hime, “shrine princesses”.

The sea god’s palace, Ryūgū-jō, has four sides, each of which faces one of the four seasons. The expression on the oarfish’s face, with one wide eye on each side, makes sense viewed like this, too – one side is seeing the past, and the other the future. Things don’t look good: looking east it sees plum and cherry blossoms, looking west it sees a maple tree making “fire in the branches”.

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The weather is terrible and the forecasts worse – why do we bother with holidays in August? | Simon Jenkins

The Guardian - Tue, 2023-08-08 00:54

The British summer is still based on pre-industrial events. It’s time a government had the guts to shake up the holiday year

If you had booked an August holiday in Britain 10 days ago, then heard the weather forecast, you probably would have taken the first train to Gatwick. The forecast for the following week was awful – for storms, clouds, rain and “unseasonably cold” weather. In other words, another typical August.

In the event the forecast was wildly inaccurate. Where I was on the Welsh coast, just one day passed without sun for all or part of the day. It did rain heavily for part of one day and there was the odd shower. It certainly was not hot. But a week on the beach was feasible, the sea blue and the sunsets glorious. That we saw relatively few visitors was entirely the result of the forecast, according to local businesses. One publican told me he can predict his takings each day not by the weather but by the 8am forecast. Yet it is so often wrong. The weather forecast is England’s economic sanction against Wales.

Simon Jenkins is a Guardian columnist

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