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PREVIEW: COP16 ‘temperature check’ for world’s pledges on nature
‘Huge environmental win’: Australia to protect 52% of its oceans, more than any other country, Plibersek says
Sub-Antarctic marine park expansion welcomed but scientists say some areas important to penguins and seals missed out on sanctuary-level protection
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The environment minister, Tanya Plibersek, has declared Australia will soon protect more ocean than any other country after the government finalises a more than 300,000 square kilometre expansion of a sub-Antarctic marine park.
Speaking ahead of what was billed as a global nature positive summit starting in Sydney on Tuesday, Plibersek confirmed the Heard and McDonald Island Marine Park about 4,000 km south-west of Perth would quadruple in size.
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BRIEFING: All the new climate initiatives to expect from the European Commission’s next five-year term
Salmon numbers in England and Wales last year were lowest on record
Total declared salmon catch estimated at 5,399 fish, down from 6,952 in 2022 – and 20,000 in years up to 2017
Salmon numbers in England and Wales last year were the lowest on record, figures show, as pollution and climate breakdown are killing off the endangered fish.
A report from the Environment Agency and Cefas shows Atlantic salmon stocks in England and Wales have dropped to their lowest level since records began in 1997.
Continue reading...BNG metric fails to capture invertebrate biodiversity, study says
Indian state partners with country’s biggest development bank to implement carbon credit framework
BP drops goal to cut oil and gas output, targets new fossil investments -media
Euro Markets: Midday Update
LATAM Roundup: Global industry bets on Brazilian green hydrogen
Taiwan govt committee finalises carbon levy rates, starting at $9/t
Australia is hosting a world-first “nature positive” summit. What is it, and why does it matter?
The post Australia is hosting a world-first “nature positive” summit. What is it, and why does it matter? appeared first on RenewEconomy.
INTERVIEW: African pilots plan to generate biodiversity credits across 300,000 ha
Nobel Prize goes to microRNA researchers
Solar recycling machine powers up as key export market closes to used Australian panels
The post Solar recycling machine powers up as key export market closes to used Australian panels appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Article 6 body adopts sustainable development tool
INTERVIEW: ‘A tonne is not a tonne’ – Changing the approach to voluntary carbon crediting could unlock much-needed scale
FEATURE: ‘Panic’ as EU’s new green product reporting rules come into effect
Climate warning as world’s rivers dry up at fastest rate for 30 years
World Meteorological Organization says water is ‘canary in the coalmine of climate change’ and calls for urgent action
Rivers dried up at the highest rate in three decades in 2023, putting global water supply at risk, data has shown.
Over the past five years, there have been lower-than-average river levels across the globe and reservoirs have also been low, according to the World Meteorological Organization’s (WMO) State of Global Water Resources report.
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