Feed aggregator
‘Unacceptable’: how raw sewage has affected rivers in England and Wales – in maps
Hundreds of thousands of raw sewage discharges were recorded last year. These maps show where these were and what the impact is
More than 384,000 discharges of raw sewage were reported by water companies across England and Wales in 2022, official figures show, in what the Rivers Trust has described as “extremely bad news for environmental and human health”.
However, the true scale may be even greater, as a new legal challenge has claimed. Meanwhile, another set of water firms are under investigation by the regulator Ofwat and the Environment Agency for alleged illegal dumping of sewage from treatment works, and an independent watchdog is now saying that the government and even the regulators themselves may have broken the law by letting firms discharge raw sewage more often than law allows.
Continue reading...Tech giant makes substantial credit purchase from world’s largest air capture facility, backs modular DAC developer
Tantalising sign of possible life on faraway world
Euro Markets: Midday Update
German carbon firms announce partnership to facilitate sale of removals credits
Australia’s Woodside secures CCS ties with trio of Japanese firms
US behind more than a third of global oil and gas expansion plans, report finds
Study highlights conflict between Washington’s claims of climate leadership and its fossil fuel growth plans
The US accounts for more than a third of the expansion of global oil and gas production planned by mid-century, despite its claims of climate leadership, research has found.
Canada and Russia have the next biggest expansion plans, calculated based on how much carbon dioxide is likely to be produced from new developments, followed by Iran, China and Brazil. The United Arab Emirates, which is to host the annual UN climate summit this year, Cop28 in Dubai in November, is seventh on the list.
Continue reading...Wood products worst in manufacturing for biodiversity, CDC Biodiversite says
Ministers ignored Natural England’s advice on plans to rip up pollution laws
Correspondence shows nature watchdog had recommended that housebuilders pay for pollution
The government ignored its nature watchdog’s advice in weakening rules on pollution from housebuilders in England, the Guardian can reveal.
Michael Gove, the housing secretary, and Thérèse Coffey, the environment secretary, recently announced they would be ending what they termed “defective” EU laws, which require developers to offset any extra nutrient pollution they cause in sensitive areas, under the habitats directive. These areas include the Lake District and Norfolk Broads.
Continue reading...European Parliament backs higher 2030 renewable energy target
Investors lack understanding and conviction in achieving a ‘just transition’, finds survey
Chinese firms to add Bangladesh clean stove project to carbon portfolio
Government may have broken law over sewage - watchdog
Ministers may have broken law over sewage dumping in England, says watchdog
Government may be letting firms discharge raw sewage more often than law allows, says Office for Environmental Protection
The government and regulators may have broken the law by failing to stem raw sewage dumping into rivers by water companies in England, the new independent environmental watchdog has said.
The Office for Environmental Protection (OEP), which was set up after Brexit to replace the enforcement powers of the European Commission, said an investigation suggested the government, the Environment Agency (EA) and Ofwat may be failing to comply with environmental law and allowing raw sewage to be discharged by water companies more frequently than the law allows.
Continue reading...South Korea proposes to soften ETS allowance carryover rules in bid to drive demand
Malaysia oil giant aims for up to 8GW of renewables and batteries in Australia by 2030
Gentari, the renewables arm of Malaysian oil giant Petrobas, unveils huge renewable and storage plans for Australia after buying and rebranding Wirsol Energy.
The post Malaysia oil giant aims for up to 8GW of renewables and batteries in Australia by 2030 appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Faster disaster: climate change fuels 'flash droughts', intense downpours and storms
“Looming catastrophe:” EU solar makers issue SOS as cheap China modules flood market
European solar industry calls for urgent action amid warnings that unsustainably low-cost PV from China is pricing the local market out of business.
The post “Looming catastrophe:” EU solar makers issue SOS as cheap China modules flood market appeared first on RenewEconomy.
“Seismic shift:” Energy crisis helped wind and solar stretch cost advantage over fossil fuels
Solar and wind costs have fallen by up to 90 pct in last 12 years, and even in 2022 huge growth in China meant that global average costs remained stable.
The post “Seismic shift:” Energy crisis helped wind and solar stretch cost advantage over fossil fuels appeared first on RenewEconomy.
World Bank spent billions of dollars backing fossil fuels in 2022, study finds
Campaigners estimate about $3.7bn in trade finance was supplied to oil and gas projects despite bank’s green pledges
The World Bank poured billions of dollars into fossil fuels around the world last year despite repeated promises to refocus on shifting to a low-carbon economy, research has suggested.
The money went through a special form of funding known as trade finance, which is used to facilitate global transactions.
Continue reading...