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Miscarriages due to climate crisis a ‘blind spot’ in action plans – report

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-10-28 18:00

The harm to babies and mothers is one of the warnings being sent to Cop29 decision-makers by leading scientists

Miscarriages, premature babies and harm to mothers caused by the climate crisis are a “blind spot” in action plans, according to a report aimed at the decision-makers who will attend the Cop29 summit in November.

Potential collapse of the Amazon rainforest, vital Atlantic Ocean currents and essential infrastructure in cities are also among the dangers cited by an international group of 80 leading scientists from 45 countries. The report collects the latest insights from physical and social science to inform the negotiations at the UN climate summit in Azerbaijan.

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Santos sued by its own shareholder in world-first greenwashing case

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-10-28 17:43

Australasian Centre for Corporate Responsibility alleges Santos’s plan to reach net zero by 2040 is ‘little more than a series of speculations’

A world-first greenwashing case that seeks to hold oil and gas company Santos accountable for its net zero commitments began in the federal court today, brought by one of its own shareholders, the Australasian Centre for Corporate Responsibility (ACCR).

The organisation claims Santos did not have a proper basis for saying it had a clear pathway to reduce emissions by 26% to 30% by 2030 and reach net zero by 2040, which constituted misleading or deceptive conduct in breach of Australian corporate and consumer laws.

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Climate watchdog releases draft guide to prevent greenwashing

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2024-10-28 17:16
Climate watchdog RimbaWatch has released a draft guide that aims to define what practices constitute greenwashing in Southeast Asia.
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AU Market: ACCU project registration soars in Q3, regulator data shows  

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2024-10-28 16:42
A record number of Australian Carbon Credit Unit (ACCU) projects were registered in the third quarter this year, according to regulatory data.
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Singapore company launches carbon neutral LNG product

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2024-10-28 16:37
Singapore’s H2G Green Limited launched two LNG projects aiming to decarbonise the emissions-heavy commodity.
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FEATURE: The forgotten legal clause that could unlock EU carbon credits under CORSIA and ETS

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2024-10-28 16:00
An overlooked clause in the EU ETS directive could be used as a way to integrate carbon removals in the bloc’s carbon trading system and unlock credits under the United Nation's CORSIA scheme for offsetting aviation emissions, according to policy experts.
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Pollutants from gas stoves kill 40,000 Europeans each year, report finds

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-10-28 15:00

Study says harmful gases linked to heart and lung disease shave nearly two years off a person’s life

Gas stoves kill 40,000 Europeans each year by pumping pollutants into their lungs, a report has found, a death toll twice as high as that from car crashes.

The cookers spew harmful gases linked to heart and lung disease but experts warn there is little public awareness of their dangers. On average, using a gas stove shaves nearly two years off a person’s life, according to a study of households in the EU and UK.

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Spreading crushed rock over farmland can remove CO₂ from the atmosphere if we do it right

The Conversation - Mon, 2024-10-28 13:14
A technique known as “enhanced rock weathering” promises to remove billions of tonnes of carbon dioxide (CO₂) from the atmosphere. But it’s crucial to be able to measure how much CO₂ is captured. Paul Nelson, Associate Professor of Soil Science, James Cook University Wolfram Buss, Research fellow, Australian National University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Carbon emissions of richest 1% increase hunger, poverty and deaths, says Oxfam

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-10-28 10:01

Consumption of world’s wealthiest people also making it increasingly difficult to limit global heating to 1.5C

The high carbon emissions of the world’s richest 1% are worsening hunger, poverty and excess deaths, a report has found.

Owing to luxury yachts, private jets and investments in polluting industries, the consumption of the world’s wealthiest people is also making it increasingly difficult to limit global heating to 1.5C.

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Australia to develop voluntary GHG accounting standards for agriculture, fishery, forestry sectors

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2024-10-28 09:41
Australia has announced it will develop voluntary GHG accounting standards for the agriculture, fisheries, and forestry sectors, and has established a reference group to guide this work.
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Non-profit targets raising up to $500 mln for sustainable materials fund

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2024-10-28 09:04
Canopy is planning to target raising between $300-500 million with a private equity fund tackling nature loss through investment in sustainable materials technologies, and seeks first close in the first quarter of 2025, Carbon Pulse has learned.
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Dingoes are not mating with dogs – but that could soon change if the culling continues

The Conversation - Mon, 2024-10-28 05:13
New genetic research shows dingoes are not breeding with domestic dogs in the wild. But that could change if lethal control measures continue to decimate populations in Victoria. Andrew Weeks, Associate Senior Research Scientist, The University of Melbourne Collin Ahrens, Visiting Fellow - Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment, Western Sydney University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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COP16: Cali outcomes to mark watershed for UN plastic treaty, UNEP exec says

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2024-10-28 03:33
The ongoing Cali biodiversity talks could lay the groundwork for the success of the final round of the upcoming negotiations on the long-awaited UN treaty to address plastic pollution, the UN Environment Programme's (UNEP) executive director told Carbon Pulse Sunday.
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LCFS Market: Credit prices swoon amid scrutiny of retail gas price impacts

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2024-10-28 01:21
California Low Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS) credit prices abruptly sold off nearly 13% last week from year-to-date (YtD) highs reached earlier this month, after backlash on the potential impact that proposed changes to the scheme may have on retail gasoline prices, which the regulator continues to challenge.
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‘It is about people’s love of the river’: swimming group fighting for rights in the Avon

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-10-28 00:31

Conham River Park is home to a group devoted to protecting and promoting the use of the river

In a shallow valley populated by reddening ancient oak trees, the River Avon snakes along quietly – the grind of Bristol unknowingly just metres away.

Despite the falling leaves and temperature, a group of women tentatively step into the 12.5C waters of the Conham River Park in the east of the city for a midday swim – a ritual they all insist is not just a hobby but a way of life.

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Corporations using ‘ineffectual’ carbon offsets are slowing path to ‘real zero’, more than 60 climate scientists say

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-10-28 00:00

Pledge signed by scientists from nine countries reflects concerns that offsets generated from forest-related projects may not have reduced emissions

Carbon offsets used by corporations around the world to lower their reportable greenhouse gas emissions are “ineffectual” and “hindering the energy transition”, according to more than 60 leading climate change scientists.

A pledge signed by scientists from nine countries, including the UK, US and Australia, said the “only path that can prevent further escalation of climate impacts” was “real zero” and not “net zero”.

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High-flying life of Australia’s birds revealed in new detail – thanks to weather radars

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-10-28 00:00

Researchers gain deeper understanding of bird migration in study that could have ‘profound’ implications for windfarms

The yearly travel plans of birds up and down Australia’s east coast have been revealed for the first time, using the same tool that tracks the weather – a development experts say could have “profound” implications for conservation as more windfarms are built.

Scientists have used weather radars to show that bird migration across eastern Australia occurs in structured patterns. While many Australian bird species are known to be seasonally migratory, scientists previously did not know to what extent a distinct system existed.

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