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The cost of living crisis can only be beaten by tackling the climate crisis | Ed Miliband
Investing in green jobs and energy is the best long-term way to tackle soaring bills
- Ed Miliband is the climate change and net zero shadow minister
This summer has been defined by two crises: the continuing, painful cost of living crisis afflicting millions in our country and the climate crisis, which is playing out in horrifying ways across the world. The Conservative party is saying we can’t tackle both these crises together – and is, in fact, tackling neither. The Conservatives are wrong. Tackling both these crises goes hand in hand. That’s what Labour’s green prosperity plan will do – cutting energy bills, creating good jobs, delivering energy security and providing climate leadership for our country.
To listen to the Conservatives, you might think the status quo is serving us well. It isn’t. Putin’s strangulation of international fossil fuel markets has sent energy bills soaring, plunged countries like ours into the deepest cost of living crisis in memory and stoked inflation to further pile the pain on to families and businesses. The UK has been the worst affected country in western Europe. We have been so exposed because 13 years of failed Conservative energy policy has left us so dependent on fossil fuel markets.
Ed Miliband is shadow secretary of state for climate change and net zero
Continue reading...International talks end without go-ahead for deep-sea mining
Eleventh-hour agreement reached at ISA meeting in Jamaica to discuss moratorium at next year’s talks
An international meeting in Jamaica to negotiate rules over deep-sea mining has ended with no green light to start industrial-scale mining and with an eleventh-hour agreement to hold formal discussions next year on the protection of the marine environment.
The agreement ended intense week-long negotiations at the International Seabed Authority (ISA), an intergovernmental body based in Kingston that regulates sea-bed extraction, over a proposal spearheaded by Chile, France and Costa Rica and backed by a dozen countries to discuss a precautionary pause on deep-sea mining in order to ensure the protection of the marine environment.
Continue reading...Nature groups prepared to ‘mobilise’ 20m members over UK climate policy
Organisations including RSPB, National Trust and RSPCA urge prime minister to honour green promises
Environmental groups claiming to represent 20 million people will mobilise their members should ministers water down climate commitments, they have warned.
Groups including the RSPB, National Trust and the RSPCA have written to the prime minister, Rishi Sunak, who has signalled his willingness to back away from green policies should the Conservatives stand to benefit from it electorally.
Continue reading...ISA negotiations end with no decision on deep sea mining
Air conditioning: the benefits, problems and alternatives
Amid record-breaking heat, increased access to air conditioning could save lives – but AC units are damaging the environment. Are there other options?
Much of the Earth sweltered under record-topping temperatures this month. Phoenix, Arizona, broke its record for most 110F (43.3C) days. California’s Death Valley had its highest temperature ever. An airport in coastal Iran saw a heat index of 152F, while Beijing saw a record stretch of 95F days.
Oppressive heatwaves have become more frequent and more severe as a result of the climate crisis – a trend that’s expected to continue, and could worsen in proportion to how quickly we can transition from fossil fuels.
Continue reading...Japanese firms strike carbon credit marketing deals with Kenyan developer
‘I realise how serious it is’: voters in England support action on climate crisis
Focus group for the Guardian made up of Chipping Barnet and Don Valley residents backs net zero policies
For all the fanfare about UK political parties facing pressure to re-examine their climate policies given the cost of living crisis, voters in two areas near clean air zones support measures to ensure net zero targets are met.
Wrangling in the aftermath of last Thursday’s byelection, when Labour narrowly lost out on winning Uxbridge and South Ruislip, has pushed briefings by some MPs into overdrive about what policies should be reconsidered.
Continue reading...‘This is another beast’: UN chief heat officer on living amid fires, how to cool cities and fears for her daughter
Eleni Myrivili, whose job is to help cities prepare for extreme heat, says many people do not understand how deadly it can be
It is “shocking” how little people know about the danger of hot weather, the United Nations global chief heat officer has said, as high temperatures bake cities across the northern hemisphere and politicians backslide on climate promises.
A study this month found that extreme heat in Europe last summer killed 61,000 people, most of whom were women and older people. As well as killing people through heatstroke, hot weather can push the bodies of people with heart and lung disease into deadly overdrive.
Continue reading...The end of Oppenheimer’s nuclear energy dream: Modular reactors supported by ideology alone
"Tech-bro libertarians:" Former nuclear regulatory chief questions hype around new nuclear power technologies that largely don’t exist and will likely be very costly.
The post The end of Oppenheimer’s nuclear energy dream: Modular reactors supported by ideology alone appeared first on RenewEconomy.
CP Daily: Friday July 28, 2023
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Carbon Procurement Manager, Klik – Zurich
Project Structuring Senior Associate, APAC, Ecosecurities – Manila, Phillipines or Indonesia – hybrid
G20 environment ministers summit ends without climate agreement
Ulez key to tackling ‘unacceptably high’ child illness and death, doctors say
Leading scientists and medics back London and other clean air schemes and urge politicians to keep their nerve
Leading doctors and scientists have warned politicians against watering down plans to expand city-wide schemes aimed at reducing traffic pollution levels linked to thousands of deaths each year.
They urged politicians not to lose their nerve over plans to improve poor air quality, such as the expansion of the ultra low emission zone (Ulez) in London, which they said were central to tackling “unacceptably high” levels of illness and child deaths, and called for more ambitious policies to reduce toxic air.
Continue reading...Khan says climate crisis more important than party politics after Ulez victory
London mayor to expand charging zone for drivers after high court win and rejects pressure from Labour leadership to think again
Sadiq Khan has vowed to press ahead with the expansion of London’s low emissions zone saying tackling the climate emergency and air pollution are “bigger than party politics”, despite the Labour leadership urging a rethink of the policy.
After the high court dismissed a legal challenge brought by five Conservative councils, the Labour mayor said he understood concerns of some Londoners but it was right to charge the most polluting vehicles £12.50 a day to drive in the capital’s outer boroughs from the end of August.
Continue reading...First nature-based blended finance fund to launch in UK draws huge institutional interest
Ditch green policies, win votes? Tories and Labour wrestle with net zero
Arguments between and within parties have been inflamed by the apparent ‘Ulez effect’ in the Uxbridge byelection
Since the Conservatives narrowly won a shock byelection victory by campaigning against a key low-emissions zone known as Ulez in London, there have been seven days of turmoil for climate policy in the UK.
Support for a net zero UK by 2050 is expressed among all ages and types of political voter, according to the pollsters. But nevertheless, Rishi Sunak’s government scented in Uxbridge a possible “wedge” issue that could put Tories on the side of swing voters and pit them against Labour.
Continue reading...Digested week: Forget the climate crisis – re-election is Sunak’s only burning issue | John Crace
Plus, my plan to live for ever by standing on one leg, and Nigel Farage lives his best life despite debanking ‘shame’
You would have thought the sight of wildfires in many parts of southern Europe would have given Rishi Sunak pause for thought. Instead it has inspired his pyromaniac tendencies. After the byelection in Uxbridge last week, which Labour lost principally because of Sadiq Khan’s ultra-low emission zone policy, Sunak has declared a binfire of the Tories’ green agenda. He had never really believed in it – despite most of the country supporting climate crisis measures – and had now declared it to be just a woke indulgence. Another arm of the culture wars.
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