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Working group to consider carbon credit eligibility in Japan’s GX League trading scheme
Plibersek approves new 600MW solar farm in central Queensland
Plibersek approves 600MW solar farm in central Queensland, and uses media release to criticise the Greens for rejecting the CPRS in 2009.
The post Plibersek approves new 600MW solar farm in central Queensland appeared first on RenewEconomy.
New Zealand govt defends new ETS service fees, annual forestry charge
Rooftop solar smashes more records, sending coal output and grid demand to new lows
Rooftop solar smashed more records over the "grand final" long weekend, sending coal output and network demand to new lows as the grid continues to be reshaped.
The post Rooftop solar smashes more records, sending coal output and grid demand to new lows appeared first on RenewEconomy.
The road is long and time is short, but Australia’s pace towards net zero is quickening
For all of the doom-saying, Australia is putting the building blocks in place to get to net zero faster.
The post The road is long and time is short, but Australia’s pace towards net zero is quickening appeared first on RenewEconomy.
ICVCM expert views voluntary carbon market oversight not purview of CFTC
Vietnamese firm launches carbon credit trading platform
'The boss of Country', not wild dogs to kill: living with dingoes can unite communities
Scientists sound alarm over recent soil ACCU issuances
A weebill speaks: vote for us as your bird of the year – video
Everyone knows Australia's largest bird, the emu, but how many are familiar with our smallest? At only 8cm to 9cm long, the weebill generally goes unnoticed due to its small stature and earthy colours, even though it is found across much of the country. It’s most often found gleaning insects from eucalyptus leaves, which at times are bigger than the bird itself
Continue reading...Emperor penguins face a bleak future – but some colonies will do better than others in diverse sea-ice conditions
The road is long and time is short, but Australia's pace towards net zero is quickening
Too hard basket: why climate change is defeating our political system
Replacing gas heating with reverse-cycle aircon leaves some people feeling cold. Why? And what's the solution?
Sapling planted at Sycamore Gap removed by National Trust
Kieran Chapman, 27, says removal of young sycamore he planted at site of historic felled tree is ‘devastating’
A man who planted a sapling at the site where the Sycamore Gap tree previously stood at Hadrian’s Wall in Northumberland has said it is “devastating” that it has been removed.
The National Trust dug up the young sycamore planted by 27-year-old Kieran Chapman metres away from the stump of the historic tree, which was illegally felled overnight on Wednesday.
Continue reading...‘Watching extinction in real time’: conservationists losing hope for Australia’s swift parrot if logging continues
Experts predict there will be fewer than 100 individuals of the species by 2031 as the rate of decline in population grows faster
- Vote in the 2023 Australian bird of the year poll
- Keep up with all the Guardian/BirdLife Australia bird of the year coverage here
“They’re really cute. They are very chatty. When they’re around you know they’re around,” says conservation scientist Giselle Owens. “They make this little flying call – it goes ‘pip, pip, pip, pip’.”
So fascinated was Owens by the critically endangered swift parrot, she is writing a PhD on the bird, which is one of just two migratory parrot species in the world, and the farthest flying.
Continue reading...Campaigners urge Prince William to rewild Dartmoor farmland
William became largest private landholder in the national park when he inherited Duchy of Cornwall
Campaigners are urging Prince William to invest in significant rewilding across swathes of Dartmoor’s predominantly farmed land.
The land became William’s after he inherited the Duchy of Cornwall, an extensive landholding including the largest privately owned area of Dartmoor national park, from his father, King Charles, when he succeeded to the throne.
Continue reading...Autumn heat continues in Europe after record-breaking September
Countries including France, Germany and Poland all had their hottest Septembers on record
Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Poland and Switzerland have all experienced their hottest Septembers on record, with unseasonably high temperatures set to continue into October, in a year likely to be the warmest in human history.
As 31C (88F) was forecast in south-west France on Sunday and 28C in Paris, the French weather authority, Météo-France, said September’s average temperature was 21.5C, between 3.5C and 3.6C above the norm for the 1991-2020 reference period.
Continue reading...Tory swing voters switch to Labour after Sunak’s green retreat, poll finds
Survey shows nearly 90% of 2019 Conservative voters say green industry is vital to UK’s economic growth
Almost nine in 10 voters who intend to switch their support from Conservative to Labour candidates in the next general election believe that “green growth” is important for the future of Britain’s economy, according to a poll.
Carried out by pollsters Opinium, the survey found that 82% of all respondents backed the growth of Britain’s green industry to boost the economy, in the same week that the prime minister announced a series of U-turns on the government’s green commitments in a bid to create a dividing line with Labour ahead of the election.
Continue reading...Germany covers 52 pct of electricity consumption with renewables so far this year
Renewables covered more than half of Germany’s electricity consumption so far this year, and has averaged 50 pct or more for each of the last seven months.
The post Germany covers 52 pct of electricity consumption with renewables so far this year appeared first on RenewEconomy.