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Xpansiv spins out finance data subsidiary in nod to the future

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2023-06-13 03:57
Xpansiv is spinning out its finance data subsidiary into a new company called Fiutur following the company’s decision to licence its global environmental reference system in conjunction with its digital measurement, reporting and verification technology.
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Flight turbulence increasing as planet heats up - study

BBC - Tue, 2023-06-13 02:40
Researchers found that severe turbulence had increased 55% between 1979 and 2020 on a typically busy North Atlantic route.
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Investor associations criticise Brussels for diluting climate disclosure rules

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2023-06-13 01:58
Draft European Commission rules to require companies in the EU to disclose social and environmental risks and impacts of their activities have been significantly watered down compared to the technical advisory recommendations, sustainable finance associations said on Monday.
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Circular economy could relieve pressure on biodiversity worldwide -report

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2023-06-13 01:38
The circular economy can play a role in alleviating most of the pressure currently applied by the food, construction, energy, and textile sectors on biodiversity worldwide, according to a briefing by the European Environment Agency (EEA) published on Monday.
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Decades’ old biodiversity offsetting scheme had limited-to-no impact, study finds

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2023-06-13 01:32
A scientific study evaluating the impact of one of the first established biodiversity offsetting schemes on native vegetation found it was not possible to conclusively demonstrate the policy had resulted in a net biodiversity gain due to limited data and the lack of robust impact evaluations.
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Detection dogs taught newt tricks in bid to improve conservation

The Guardian - Mon, 2023-06-12 22:31

Springer spaniel trained to recognise scent of great crested newt with 87% success rate from distance of 2 metres

From terrorists to drug traffickers, detection dogs are trained to sniff out the most elusive of offenders. Now a springer spaniel called Freya has taken up the scent of another slippery species: the great crested newt.

Sheltering in underground burrows and rocky crevices, these warty amphibians are a protected species under rules overseen by Natural England. Boris Johnson previously complained that newt-counting delays had become “a massive drag on the prosperity of this country” because building developers must search for, and move them, before construction projects can begin.

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Illegal reintroductions of rare butterflies to UK ‘a risk to other species’

The Guardian - Mon, 2023-06-12 22:19

Conservation scientists warn releases of rare or extinct species may spread diseases and harm attempts to save other butterflies

“Ridiculous” illegal reintroductions of rare or extinct butterflies to new sites in Britain risk introducing disease, damage attempts to save species and jeopardise well-planned releases, conservationists have warned.

Conservation scientists spoke out after black-veined whites, which fell extinct in Britain 100 years ago, reappeared on a nature reserve near Croydon.

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Euro Markets: Midday Update

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2023-06-12 21:53
European carbon prices were moderately weaker in Monday morning trade as early selling gave way to renewed demand – which some participants said was short-covering – while energy markets were weaker as gas prices continued to whipsaw.
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China’s Chengdu planning special vouchers to subsidise carbon management investments

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2023-06-12 20:32
One of China's largest cities is planning to roll out a special subsidy programme for businesses through the issuance of 'zero carbon vouchers' on an integrated platform to encourage more investments in carbon management.
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Be angry about the wildfire pollution – but be angry at the right people | Kate Aronoff

The Guardian - Mon, 2023-06-12 20:09

A poisonous haze made the air over New York temporarily more hazardous than any other place on Earth. Thank fossil fuel billionaires

Who’s responsible for the poisonous haze that blanketed the north-east this week, that turned the sky eerie shades of yellow and orange and made the air over New York City more hazardous – for a time – than in any other place on Earth?

The smoke is from the unprecedented wildfires that, first sparked by lightning, have been raging for weeks in Nova Scotia and Quebec; more than 450 are now burning across Canada. More than half of those are considered “out of control”. That ferocity is thanks in large part to the kinds of unusually warm and dry conditions that rising temperatures are making more common. Winds from a low pressure system then fanned the flames and sent them southward.

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Singapore adds Mongolia to roster of Article 6 carbon trading partners

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2023-06-12 17:54
Singapore and Mongolia have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on collaboration under Article 6 of the Paris Agreement, the Southeast Asian island’s tenth such carbon trading partner.
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Growth in national and sub-national net zero target setting slows, company momentum speeds up -analysis

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2023-06-12 17:18
Growth in the number of national and sub-national net zero targets has slowed, though company net zero target-setting momentum continues at speed in the absence of universal standards, according to a report published Monday.
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HotSat spacecraft to map heat loss from buildings

BBC - Mon, 2023-06-12 17:14
HotSat-1 will sense heat loss through roofs and walls to help direct insulation improvements.
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Conservation charity lines up massive project pipeline for biodiversity market

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2023-06-12 15:00
UK-based Botanical Gardens Conservation International (BGCI) is preparing a large number of projects protecting threatened tree species for the fledgling biodiversity credit market, expecting the first issuances before the end of the year.
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NZ opposition party vows to keep agriculture out of ETS

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2023-06-12 14:14
New Zealand’s opposition National party will keep agriculture out of the nation’s emissions trading scheme and delay a separate pricing mechanism for the sector by five years, if it wins the general election in October, it announced Monday.
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Tasmania wind farms do best in May, Queensland dominates solar rankings

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2023-06-12 13:51

Listen of Top 20 wind and solar farms in month of May shows the wind blows in Tasmania and the sun shines in Queensland.

The post Tasmania wind farms do best in May, Queensland dominates solar rankings appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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Zimbabwe eyes pan-African carbon trading registry as it prepares to host VCM summit

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2023-06-12 10:18
Zimbabwe is preparing to host a voluntary carbon markets forum as it targets creating a pan-African registry linked to the country’s Victoria Falls Stock Exchange (VFEX).
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Tech companies team up to launch draft peatland crediting blueprint

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2023-06-12 09:01
Two UK-based technology companies have partnered to publish a draft methodology for crediting emissions removals from restoring peatlands.
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PREVIEW: Upcoming NZ ETS auction seen unlikely to clear amid lingering uncertainty

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2023-06-12 09:01
New Zealand is unlikely to sell any of the 8.9 million NZUs that will be made available at this week’s auction, market participants told Carbon Pulse, doubting bids will meet the government’s confidential reserve price.
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Transgress to impress: why do people tag buildings – and are there any solutions?

The Conversation - Mon, 2023-06-12 06:53
Living in cities filled with tags may make us feel less safe. But tags don’t mean crime and gangs. The real reasons people tag buildings and bridges are to show off and create community. Flavia Marcello, Professor of Design History, Swinburne University of Technology Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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