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2024 on track to be world's warmest year on record
Trump victory 'major setback' to climate action
This year ‘virtually certain’ to be hottest on record, finds EU space programme
Copernicus Climate Change Service says 2024 marks ‘a new milestone’ and should raise ambitions at Cop29 summit
It is “virtually certain” that 2024 will be the hottest year on record, the European Union’s space programme has found.
The prognosis comes the week before diplomats meet at the Cop29 climate summit and a day after a majority of voters in the US, the biggest historical polluter of planet-heating gas, chose to make Donald Trump president.
Continue reading...Macquarie partner unveils another two wind projects totalling more than 1.1 GW in WA wheatbelt
The post Macquarie partner unveils another two wind projects totalling more than 1.1 GW in WA wheatbelt appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Danish giant launches Australian renewables play with 6 GW of wind, solar and battery plans
The post Danish giant launches Australian renewables play with 6 GW of wind, solar and battery plans appeared first on RenewEconomy.
A Donald Trump presidency is bad for climate action, but Australia should get on with the job
Brazil’s Para to launch $44 mln forest restoration concession -official
First of Australia’s tallest turbines go up at wind farm co-owned by Queensland coal giant
The post First of Australia’s tallest turbines go up at wind farm co-owned by Queensland coal giant appeared first on RenewEconomy.
California climate disclosure laws survive legal challenge from US business lobby
NSW biggest winner, wind gets priority over solar as Bowen lands renewable tender deals
The post NSW biggest winner, wind gets priority over solar as Bowen lands renewable tender deals appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Non-profit launches nature impact assessment tool for financial institutions
US-based carbon registry posts update to its methodology combatting ozone-depleting gases
Donald Trump can’t stop global climate action. If we stick together, it’s the US that will lose out | Bill Hare
How damaging this presidency is to the planet depends very much on how other countries react. There’s no time to waste
Donald Trump’s re-election to the White House is a major setback for climate action but ultimately it’s the US that could end up losing out, as the rest of the world will move forward without it.
The US is the world’s biggest economy and its second biggest emitter. Positive US engagement on climate has been crucial to landmark leaps forward, like getting the Paris agreement over the line, and just last year committing to transitioning away from fossil fuels.
The US missing in action in the latter half of this critical decade for climate action is nobody’s idea of a good outcome.
Continue reading...Colombian afforestation projects often use non-native species, unsuited ecosystems -study
Solar pushes renewables to record share of grid, coal hits new low despite highest spring demand
The post Solar pushes renewables to record share of grid, coal hits new low despite highest spring demand appeared first on RenewEconomy.
William announces Earthshot winners in Cape Town
Von der Leyen’s Cop29 absence sends ‘fatal signal’, say watchers
MEPs express concern for EU climate leadership as commission head confirms she will miss Baku summit
Ursula von der Leyen’s decision to miss the Cop29 climate summit is “a fatal signal” and raises questions about Europe’s commitment to the climate crisis, observers have said.
The European Commission confirmed on Tuesday that its president would not attend the UN climate talks in Baku, which start on Monday. “The commission is in a transition phase and the president will therefore focus on her institutional duties,” a spokesperson said.
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