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Biodiversity Pulse Weekly: Thursday August 24, 2023
Report stresses need for policy consistency as governments set out to meet 30×30 target
India can become a global export hub of wind energy, trade association says
China’s Guangdong to extend the scope of its regional ETS by 2030
Global initiative launched to arrest nature crime
Australian carbon project developer reaches agreement with Traditional Owners
The message from Ecuador is clear: people will vote to keep oil in the ground | Jonathan Watts
People were overwhelmingly in favour of stopping oil drilling in Yasuní national park. Can this success be replicated elsewhere in the world?
Joy and hope are all too rarely associated with the environmental movement, but both have been in abundant supply since Ecuador’s people voted on Sunday to keep the country’s oil in the subsoil of the Yasuní national park. The question now is whether this is a one-off triumph, or something that can be replicated in other countries.
The referendum result obliges the state oil company to dismantle operations – 12 drilling platforms and 225 wells that produce up to 57,000 barrels a day – in block 43 of the Ishpingo-Tambococha-Tiputini (ITT) project, an area of the Amazon rainforest famed for its ecological diversity, and which is home to two tribes that live in voluntary isolation. With more than 5.4 million votes in favour of halting production and 3.7 million against, this is the most decisive democratic victory against the fossil fuel industry in Latin America and, arguably, the world.
Jonathan Watts is the Guardian’s global environment editor
Continue reading...INTERVIEW: Environmental plantings project developer raises A$3 mln for next stage of growth
Bushfires focus public attention on climate change for months, but it's different for storms and floods
Greek firefighters struggle to contain blazes – in pictures
Greek firefighters have been struggling for five days to contain deadly wildfires throughout the country, several of them bordering an acrid, smoke-filled Athens
Continue reading...Shift to renewables will be cheaper than cost of setting up gas industry, says Chalmers
The shift to renewables will not be cheap, the Intergenerational Report confirms, but it won’t cost nearly as much as it did to set up Australia’s fossil gas industry.
The post Shift to renewables will be cheaper than cost of setting up gas industry, says Chalmers appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Greens push for 2035 net zero target in NSW as Labor sweats over Eraring closure
NSW Greens call for climate act that sets a net zero target for 2035, as the Labor government ponders extending the life of the country's biggest coal fired generator.
The post Greens push for 2035 net zero target in NSW as Labor sweats over Eraring closure appeared first on RenewEconomy.
‘Rewiggle’ room: Lewes river channel project will create new wetland
Work on Cockshut chalk stream will restore its natural flow, improving biodiversity and reducing flood risk
A chalk stream in Lewes, East Sussex, has been “rewiggled” to restore its natural flow and create a public wetland.
Continue reading...Chandrayaan-3: India lunar rover Pragyaan takes a walk on the Moon
Indonesia issues carbon exchange regulations to promote cap and trade scheme, allows foreign projects
INTERVIEW: Biodiversity too big for governments to act alone, UNDP director says
Japan begins releasing Fukushima wastewater into Pacific ocean
Water containing radioactive tritium being pumped into ocean via tunnel from Tepco plant, amid protests from China, South Korea and fishing communities
Japan has begun discharging more than 1m tonnes of tainted water into the Pacific Ocean from the wrecked Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, news agency Kyodo has reported, a move that has sparked protests and import bans from China and Hong Kong, and anger in nearby fishing communities.
The plant’s operator, Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco), pumped a small quantity of water from the plant on Thursday, two days after the plan was approved by Japan’s government.
Continue reading...Reaching net zero will reap Australia A$435-bln economic dividend, Deloitte report says
World’s largest floating wind farm has opened – but it’s powering oil and gas
Equinor officially opens the largest floating wind farm in the world, with plans to bring this technology to Australia - hopefully not to power oil and gas rigs.
The post World’s largest floating wind farm has opened – but it’s powering oil and gas appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Solar Insiders Podcast: Confessions of a solar and battery nerd
We talk to early adopter and self confessed “energy nerd” Andrew Wilson about the key lessons he has learned from four years with home solar and storage.
The post Solar Insiders Podcast: Confessions of a solar and battery nerd appeared first on RenewEconomy.