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Huge NT solar farm backed by Mike Cannon-Brookes gets environmental approval
Go-ahead given for first stage of $30bn SunCable project, which minister says will be ‘transformational’ for Northern Territory
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The Australian government has given the green light to the first stages of what it describes as the country’s “biggest renewable energy project ever” – an ambitious proposal to send energy from a solar farm in the Northern Territory outback to Singapore via subsea cables.
The environment minister, Tanya Plibersek, said the approval under conservation law of SunCable’s $30bn-plus Australia-Asia Power Link was a “massive step towards making Australia a renewable energy superpower” and that the project would be “economically and socially transformational” for the NT.
Continue reading...Placing agriculture into NZ ETS would have “torpedoed the economy”, minister says
Poor compliance and broad exemptions mean land clearing continues apace in northern Australia – despite our laws and pledges
Researchers urge US industrial carbon utilisation to reach net zero goals
RGGI compliance entities expand allowance holdings in Q2, secondary market activity jumps -report
Sweden, Zambia sign Article 6 MoU
Brazilian carbon credit alliance defends REDD+ following Amazonas controversy
Compliance frameworks using offsets and CDR may steer VCM evolution, but quality concerns persist
US carves out nearly $300 mln from IRA for SAF
Badger cull may have increased bovine TB risk in neighbouring herds – study
England’s controversial eradication scheme may have caused higher rates of disease in surrounding areas, research shows
England’s controversial badger cull may have increased the risk of bovine tuberculosis (bTB) among herds in neighbouring areas, according to new research.
Researchers at the University of Oxford found that although badger culling reduced incidences of tuberculosis in the areas where it took place, in neighbouring areas the risk of the disease in cattle increased by almost a third.
Continue reading...Danish renewable giant scraps development of eMethanol project
The post Danish renewable giant scraps development of eMethanol project appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Updated NDCs could see Australia’s big emitters reach net zero early, says consultancy
Sun Cable: Plibersek approves first stage of world’s biggest solar and battery project
The post Sun Cable: Plibersek approves first stage of world’s biggest solar and battery project appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Yes, it’s difficult for governments to pick green industry winners – but it’s essential Australia tries
NZ’s electricity market is a mess. Rolling out rooftop solar would change the game
‘We basically live in the jungle’: how one couple cooled their home naturally
John Boland and Chris Bryant use their garden to shade their house from Australia’s hot summers – and it helps feed them as well
As soon as John Boland moved into his house in inner-city Adelaide he got rid of the concrete and sheds and planted fruit trees. In the thirty years since, those trees have provided him with a third of his food and cooled his home so well that he doesn’t need air conditioning.
Deciduous trees on the western side of the house bathe the house in shade in the hot South Australian summer while letting in afternoon sun during winter. They also block hot breezes in summer and cold winds in winter.
Continue reading...It’s time to shift flexible hot water heating from overnight coal to smart wind and solar
The post It’s time to shift flexible hot water heating from overnight coal to smart wind and solar appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Voluntary carbon removal standard body offers project developers digital MRV tool
Australia could save thousands of bats a year with simple tweak to wind turbines, study says
Raising the wind speed at which turbines start spinning could prevent tens of thousands of bat deaths each year, researchers find
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Australian windfarm operators are being urged to embrace a simple measure used overseas that scientists say could dramatically reduce the number of bats killed by turbines.
Curtailment – lifting the wind speed at which turbines start spinning – is used in some European countries and parts of the US and Canada, but rarely in Australia. A global study published in the journal BioScience found it was an effective way to limit bat deaths.
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