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Australian cattle farmers cautious on asparagopsis over animal and human health concerns

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2023-07-20 11:35
Cattle farmers have expressed their concerns over using asparagopsis feed additive as a way to cut methane emissions from their livestock, urging the emerging industry to take the necessary time to thoroughly scrutinise the process.
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Tensions rise on reports Liberian govt to award UAE’s Blue Carbon credit rights to 1 mln hectares of key forest land

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2023-07-20 11:09
Tensions are said to be escalating over reports that the Liberian government is in talks with UAE-based Blue Carbon to grant it access to a million hectares of crucial forest land to develop for carbon credit generation.
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FEATURE: Biodiversity crediting to imminently face up to the challenges of bundling and stacking with carbon

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2023-07-20 11:00
Biodiversity crediting will soon have to face up to the challenge of when to bundle or stack mitigation outcomes alongside carbon, experts have told Carbon Pulse, with the sometimes controversial practice expected to come to the fore of the conversation as the nascent nature market looks to scale.
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Kuno cheetah deaths: Could radio collars be killing the big cats in India?

BBC - Thu, 2023-07-20 10:55
Deaths of some of the cheetahs brought to India last year amid much fanfare have been making headlines.
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Key aspects of closely-watched integrated farm method yet to be resolved, Australian govt official says

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2023-07-20 10:33
The Australian government expects a draft of the hotly anticipated Integrated Farming and Land Management (IFLM) methodology to be released later in the year, but crucial details have yet to be resolved.
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Brazil needs $80 bln per year to reach net zero by 2050 -report

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2023-07-20 10:22
A report from an international consultancy group says Brazil will need to invest $80 billion per year to control its emissions, largely driven by illegal deforestation, and that carbon markets have an important role to play.
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US CFTC voluntary carbon market convening hears criticism of standards

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2023-07-20 10:12
US federal government regulators heard pointed criticism of voluntary carbon standards, as agency officials defended their record and suggested greater participatory roles at the Commodity Futures Trading Commission's (CFTC) second voluntary carbon markets convening on Wednesday.
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EU co-legislators fail to strike a deal on F-gases regulation

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2023-07-20 09:52
The European Parliament, Council, and Commission late Wednesday failed to reach an agreement on the regulation of Fluorinated Greenhouse Gases (F-Gases), in what was expected to be the final climate-related trilogue negotiation before the summer break.
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Data startup partners with voluntary carbon standard to launch biodiversity certificates by year-end

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2023-07-20 09:01
The Plan Vivo Foundation and biodiversity data startup Pivotal have announced a new partnership as they aim to deliver their first biodiversity certificates by the end of 2023, the companies announced Thursday.
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Flying in Europe up to 30 times cheaper than train, says Greenpeace

The Guardian - Thu, 2023-07-20 09:01

Campaigners say cheap flights, made possible by tax breaks for airlines, are encouraging people to heat the planet

Europe’s cheap flights and pricey train tickets promote dirty forms of transport, campaigners say, with “outrageous” tax breaks encouraging people to heat the planet as they head on holiday.

Train tickets are double the price of flights for the same routes, on average, according to an analysis from Greenpeace published on Thursday. The campaigners compared tickets on 112 routes on nine different days. To get from London to Barcelona, they found, the cost of taking the train is up to 30 times the cost of jumping on a plane.

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AI-powered clean power startup raises almost $6 mln in seed funding, inks deal with prominent removals firm

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2023-07-20 07:43
A San Francisco-based startup that uses generative AI to help companies transition to clean power has secured nearly $6 mln in seed funding and has signed an agreement with a prominent carbon removals firm.
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The Northern Territory does not have a crocodile problem – and 'salties' do not need culling

The Conversation - Thu, 2023-07-20 06:00
A non-fatal crocodile attack on a tourist last week made headlines. But talk of culling is an over-reaction to a fairly isolated incident. Brandon Michael Sideleau, PhD student studying human-saltwater crocodile conflict, Charles Darwin University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Tanzania faces protests over ‘unprecedented’ fees for voluntary carbon projects

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2023-07-20 03:02
A row has erupted in Tanzania after the Ministry of Environment imposed a raft of hefty new fees on voluntary carbon projects that developers warn will derail current activity and discourage future investment in the African country’s nascent market.
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What is supercharging the global heat? – video explainer

The Guardian - Thu, 2023-07-20 02:48

The planet is being hit with a double whammy of global heating in 2023: on top of the rise in global temperature caused by greenhouse gas emissions is an emerging El Niño. This sporadic event is the biggest natural influence on year-to-year weather and adds a further spurt of warmth to an already overheating world. The Guardian's environment editor, Damian Carrington, explains what El Niño is and how it affects extreme weather

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New platform combines dynamic baselines with digital MRV to keep watch on forestry

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2023-07-20 02:46
A new platform plans to provide an up-to-date, detailed, and verified snapshot of the health of a forest by integrating multiple technologies at the same time.
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EU lawmakers back electricity market reform to protect citizens

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2023-07-20 02:42
Members of the European Parliament's cross-party industry committee (ITRE) on Wednesday backed the European Commission's proposal to tackle high energy prices and energy supply issues.
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Zimbabwe’s Kariba REDD+ project reportedly suspends operations amid carbon market regulatory uncertainty

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2023-07-20 02:37
The Kariba REDD+ project, ranked as the world's second-largest in the voluntary carbon market, has reportedly suspended operations due to uncertainty following a Zimbabwean government directive that developers must relinquish more than half their revenue.
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EU parliamentarians signal dismay at scrapping of EU-wide Sovereignty Fund for net zero industry

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2023-07-20 02:20
The EU’s newly-proposed STEP funding platform for clean and digital technology will not meet the needs of the bloc’s industry amid increased competition from the US and China, lawmakers from across the political spectrum told a European Parliament hearing on Wednesday. 
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The Australian climate protesters cast as extremists

BBC - Thu, 2023-07-20 01:46
Counter terror police have raided the homes of a swathe of Australian environmental activists.
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Orcas are attacking boats. But to say they’re ‘fighting back’ is all too human | Elle Hunt

The Guardian - Thu, 2023-07-20 01:12

These incidents are spreading – and along with them, bogus narratives casting the killer whales as marine avengers

In the opening sequence of the BBC’s original Blue Planet series of 2001, TV’s first real look at life within the world’s oceans, a pod of orca are shown hunting a grey whale and her calf. Over and over, the killer whales jump on the calf, pushing it under the waves, determined to drown it. Once it is finally dead, after a six-hour battle, they eat only its lower jaw and tongue.

I vividly remember watching this as a 10-year-old in 2001 and thinking: I wouldn’t like to take on a killer whale. Lately, however, their attention seems to have turned uncomfortably close to home. In the past few years, a pod of orcas has been ramming boats in the waters off south-west Europe at seemingly increasing rates. From 52 such “interactions” recorded in 2020, there were 197 in 2021, 207 last year and a steady number so far this summer. In three cases, the orcas have damaged boats so badly that they have sunk.

Elle Hunt is a freelance journalist

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