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Australia’s ‘learning by doing’ approach to managing large mines is failing the environment

The Conversation - Tue, 2024-06-04 06:06
Conflict between coal giant Adani, the Queensland government and traditional owners over harm to groundwater ecosystems stems from a flawed interpretation of the ‘adaptive management’ approach. Matthew Currell, Professor of Environmental Engineering, School of Engineering, Griffith University Adrian Werner, Professor of Hydrogeology, Flinders University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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EU’s CBAM may hurt bloc’s manufacturers more than int’l ones -NGO

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2024-06-04 02:36
The EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) might hurt industrial manufacturers based in Europe more than those in third countries due to loopholes and its limited scope, according to a report published by a Brussels-based climate NGO.
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INTERVIEW: Crucial for compliance schemes to be tech agnostic when integrating carbon removals

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2024-06-04 02:26
A startup accelerator has stressed the need for a tech-agnostic approach when integrating carbon removals into the UK and EU compliance schemes, pointing to the early-stage nature of the market and fact that some methods are still in development.
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VCM Report: Voluntary carbon trade dries up at end of May as market waits for CCPs to brighten June

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2024-06-04 01:58
Thin liquidity continued to stalk the market last week, although a number of high-priced trades, and expectations that the Integrity Council for the Voluntary Carbon Market (ICVCM) could soon approve the first methodologies for the CCPs quality label, kept optimism upbeat.
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Developers team up to scale nature-based solutions in Latin America, eye biodiversity credits

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2024-06-04 01:31
French and Peru-based developers of nature-based solution projects have partnered to scale up reforestation, afforestation, and agroforestry initiatives in Latin America, aiming to generate both carbon and biodiversity credits.
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Von der Leyen presidency sees fossil fuels squeezed out of EU power mix -analysts

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2024-06-04 01:10
Since 2019, when the current Ursula von der Leyen-led European Commission took office, coal and gas has been rapidly pushed out of the EU power mix, with her presidency a driving force behind this trend, according to analysis released Monday.
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Demand uncertainty threatens European shipping e-fuel projects –NGO

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2024-06-04 01:05
Two-thirds of European green shipping fuel projects are at risk due to lack of certainty from investors, according to a new report.
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Australian photography auction – in pictures

The Guardian - Tue, 2024-06-04 01:00

The Museum of Australian Photography (MAPh), the proud custodian of more than 3,860 photographs, is holding a fundraising auction in Melbourne, with the proceeds of the sales shared equally with the contributing artists

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If regional communities don’t want a wind farm, why would they accept a nuclear power station? | Gabrielle Chan

The Guardian - Tue, 2024-06-04 01:00

The Coalition’s nuclear policy is leveraged on regional discontent over renewables. But many farmers don’t want nuclear in their back yard either

Here’s the thing about the Coalition’s latest nuclear policy. It tries to use one of the most contentious issues in rural areas, which is the rollout of renewables and the electricity transmission lines to carry energy around the country, to push an even more controversial energy transition.

Because nuclear power stations would also be built in the regions. And if you’re worried about renewables, hands up who wants a nuclear reactor next door?

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An orchard: a place where you tame trees, or try to – an act of hope | Helen Sullivan

The Guardian - Tue, 2024-06-04 01:00

My grandmother’s orchard stopped me in my tracks, and I only have to read the word to feel the shade of those trees

My grandmother had a small orchard in her garden in Johannesburg. It was a few plum and peach trees, and very shady. The leaves of the plum trees were purpley-green, almost black, and the ground was covered with the pits of decayed peaches, so that when I ran barefoot across the sunny garden with its dry grass, and into the orchard, I was forced to stop; it was like running over hard pebbles. And when I stood still, it was dark and smelled like rotting fruit. There were gnats hovering near the ground. I lifted my foot and looked at the hard folds on the peach pit. My shadow stopped at the orchard’s border, it could not cross.

An orchard is a place where you tame trees, or try to. To plant one is an act of hope, the belief that home will mean abundance, that it is good to put down roots. “These trees came to stay,” is how Richard Wilbur opens his poem Young Orchard.

the shadows of long pines down trackless slopes,
the shadows of glass-faced towers down evening streets,
the shadow of a frail plant on a city sill—

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battalions of starlings waging peaceful cries,
bearing the net higher, covering this world
like the vines of an orchard, or a mother drawing
the trembling gauze over the trembling eyes
of a child fluttering to sleep;

it was the light

Do you have an animal, insect or other subject you feel is worthy of appearing in this very serious column? Email helen.sullivan@theguardian.com

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Asian hornets overwintered in UK for first time, DNA testing shows

The Guardian - Tue, 2024-06-04 00:57

Discovery of three queen hornets in East Sussex means it is likely the bee-killing insect will be here for good

DNA testing has confirmed that Asian hornets overwintered in the UK for the first time this year, meaning it is very likely the bee-killing insect will be here for good.

Asian hornets (Vespa velutina) dismember and eat bees, and have thrived in France, where they have caused concern because of the number of insects killed. They sit outside honeybee hives and capture bees as they enter and exit, and chop up the smaller insects and feed their thoraxes to their young.

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Voluntary carbon registry launches first ocean alkalinity protocol

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2024-06-04 00:48
A voluntary carbon registry has published what it describes as the world's first ocean alkalinity protocol, with buyers already signed up to purchase the first batch of credits.
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‘We will work our ass off’ to close Article 6 deal, EU Commission says

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2024-06-04 00:03
The European Commission is stepping up efforts to close a deal on international carbon credits, but a successful outcome needs to be based on a clear understanding that emissions reductions or removals – rather than climate finance – are the top priority, a senior EU official has said.
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Over 40% of securities held by French financials highly dependent on ecosystems, study finds

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2024-06-03 23:28
French financial institutions are highly exposed to risks associated with biodiversity loss, with over 40% of securities in their portfolios issued by companies heavily dependent on at least one ecosystem service, a paper has found.
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Euro Markets: Midday Update

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2024-06-03 21:27
European carbon prices jumped steeply on Monday morning and approached a five-month high after natural gas markets were roiled by an unscheduled outage in the North Sea, while UK Allowances also climbed to their most in nearly eight months.
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Sure, the Taylor Swift millipede is the least of our problems – but what we call wildlife matters | Emma Beddington

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-06-03 20:00

The SpongeBob SquarePants fungus and Shakira wasp might sound funny, but there is a rising acceptance that eponyms in the natural world are a legacy of empire and oppression

Unsurprisingly, numerous species of animal (including a flightless weevil and a parasitic flatworm) are named after David Attenborough – but were you aware of the existence of a Shakira wasp (aleoides Shakira) and the Taylor Swift millipede (nannaria swiftae)?

It’s not just fauna. Spring on middle-aged-lady Instagram is a riot of people posting pics of their Gertrude Jekyll (a formidable horticulturist) roses and there are hundreds of others named for everyone from Judi Dench to Jimmy Greaves. We name the natural world for people we admire and want to honour, and always have; even asteroids, which makes me wonder if anything out there has named us. (The dismissive alien equivalent of “flightless weevils” perhaps?)

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Paris airports group looking for voluntary carbon credits to offset emissions

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2024-06-03 19:40
The operating entity of three Paris airports closes a tender Monday for the provision of voluntary carbon credits from France-based projects to offset some of the group's annual emissions.
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India’s biggest packaged water company proposes framework to establish water credits for the beverage industry

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2024-06-03 15:54
India’s biggest bottled water company has proposed developing a framework for establishing water credits to make the beverage industry accountable for its water use. 
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LSEG, Japanese financial sign VCM collaboration agreement

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2024-06-03 15:05
A Japanese financial institution has signed an agreement with the London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) to collaborate on growing carbon markets, they announced in a joint statement Monday.
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