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New York summit to offer opportunity to “hold feet to the fire” on climate finance, though undermined by absentees
US launches $1bn tree-planting scheme to mitigate effects of climate crisis
Federal effort will focus on marginalized areas in all parts of country and aims to reduce extreme heat and benefit health
Hundreds of communities around the US will share more than $1bn in federal money to help them plant and maintain trees under a federal program that is intended to reduce extreme heat, benefit health and improve access to nature.
The US agriculture secretary, Tom Vilsack, will announce the $1.13bn in funding for 385 projects at an event on Thursday morning in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
Continue reading...Brazilian fintech company looks to raise $60 mln for second carbon credit fund -media
Removals market to hit $135 bln in 2040 if credits fall to $150/t, forecasts consultancy
UN body hails “quantum leap” in carbon mechanism discussions, but leaves methodologies guidance to go to the wire
New fossil fuel projects ‘very unwise economic risk’ says global energy chief
Fatih Birol, head of International Energy Agency, says countries planning expansion are ‘misjudging market trends’
Countries and companies planning to expand their fossil fuel production are taking “very unhealthy and unwise economic risks” as their investments may not be profitable, the world’s foremost energy adviser has warned.
Fatih Birol, the executive director of the International Energy Agency (IEA), predicted this week that fossil fuels would peak this decade, a historic turning point for the climate. But despite the likelihood of demand declining, and the threat of climate chaos, many countries and private sector companies are considering new capacity.
Continue reading...Over half of leading corporates on climate action headquartered in Europe, report finds
Young people to take 32 European countries to court over climate policies
Claimants to argue lack of adequate action is breach of human rights, in largest climate legal action to date
Six young people are preparing to appear at the European court of human rights to try to compel 32 nations to rapidly escalate their emissions reductions in the world’s largest climate legal action to date.
Aged from 11 to 24, the six Portuguese claimants, say they were driven to act by their experiences in the wildfires that ripped through the Leiria region in 2017, killing 66 people and destroying 20,000 hectares of forest.
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