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Expensive failure: Flagship Gorgon CCS collects less CO2 in worst year
The post Expensive failure: Flagship Gorgon CCS collects less CO2 in worst year appeared first on RenewEconomy.
“No-cost” home solar and battery start-up raises funds to target 2,000 homes a month
The post “No-cost” home solar and battery start-up raises funds to target 2,000 homes a month appeared first on RenewEconomy.
How to make the rooftop solar emergency backstop work for consumers
The post How to make the rooftop solar emergency backstop work for consumers appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Demand signals needed to drive green steel development in China, report says
INTERVIEW: US non-profit to launch Ethiopian methane carbon credit project
Energy market review must deliver a “new deal” for consumers
The post Energy market review must deliver a “new deal” for consumers appeared first on RenewEconomy.
‘They’re my babies’: what our attitudes to backyard chickens reveals about Australians
Global plastic pollution talks have stalled – but a treaty is possible if countries can agree on these three things
VCM Report: Verra carbon credit retirements breach 7 mln as market shows signs of life
Natural history GCSE on hold as qualification seen as ‘Tory initiative’, claims campaigner
New GCSE was announced under previous government in 2022 but now ‘sitting in limbo’, says Mary Colwell, one of its architects
The natural history GCSE has been shelved because it is “seen as a Conservative party initiative”, one of the architects of the proposed new qualification has said.
The conservationist and campaigner Mary Colwell told the Guardian she was “hugely frustrated” with the halt to the proposed new GCSE, which had been announced in 2022 and was supposed to be taught in schools by 2025.
Continue reading...IFC launches $450-mln green bond to fund biodiversity
Insurers must contribute to nature-positive future, UNEP FI says
BeZero launches standardised datasets for carbon project analysis
Veteran carbon analyst joins ClearBlue Markets
BRIEFING: UK wins praise for renewed climate leadership at COP29
Bee-harming pesticides found in majority of English waterways
Industry groups want CBAM registry to be as transparent as EU ETS
Anti-whaling activist to learn if he will be extradited to Japan within 14 days
Paul Watson, an early Greenpeace member, says his imprisonment in Greenland is a ‘political case’
The anti-whaling activist Paul Watson will learn within 14 days whether he will be extradited to Japan, a court has been told, as his four-month imprisonment in Greenland was extended.
At a hearing in Nuuk on Monday, the capital of the autonomous territory of Denmark, the judge Lars-Christian Sinkbæk said that Watson, who turned 74 today, would continue to be detained in a high security prison pending a decision from the Danish government. Watson’s legal team immediately submitted an appeal to Greenland’s high court.
Continue reading...Euro Markets: Midday Update
A pufferfish: ‘probably nature’s greatest artist’ | Helen Sullivan
The word ‘probably’ will haunt this fish for the rest of its days – a deflating description for a cute, toxic creature
Pufferfish are cute, and most pufferfish are toxic. Like people, they spend their weeks moving between states of puffed up and deflated. Or, really, three states: normal, puffed up and then the hangover after the puffing up. Ironically, the pufferfish toxin, called tetrodotoxin, is deadly because it stops a person’s diaphragm from moving – in other words, it stops you from being able to puff yourself up. And you could see that as a lesson for wanting to eat them in the first place.
You’re wondering what is inside a blown-up pufferfish, how they inflate. Firstly: it is not air, or else they would pop up and out of the water like a balloon in a swimming pool. Also, air is hard to come by down there. They turn themselves into absurd-looking spherical objects by sucking water – something called, grossly, “buccal pumping” – into their extremely elastic stomachs. They don’t have ribs, which helps. This gives predators a fright – but perhaps more to the point, large spheres are hard to swallow.
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