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Falkland Islands dispute is causing fishing ‘free-for-all’ in nearby Blue Hole

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-02-19 17:00

Warning that soaring number of vessels threaten fish stocks and environment as geopolitics prevents agreement to regulate area

The scale of unregulated fishing in a disputed region close to the Falkland Islands has reached an “overwhelming” level that is threatening fish populations and the rich biodiversity of the area, politicians and environmentalists have claimed.

The “Blue Hole”, a stretch of the south Atlantic Ocean lying approximately 200 miles off the coast of Argentina and north of the Falkland Islands, is one of the only areas of sea that is not covered by a regional fishing agreement.

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Categories: Around The Web

Australia Market Roundup: Australia losing momentum in hydrogen development, ACCU issuance slumps

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2024-02-19 15:58
The head of an Australian energy gentailer is unsure whether a newly-opened gas-fired power station will be able to meet its target to partially run off green hydrogen by 2025 due to a lack of supply.
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Big oil pockets hundreds of billions from energy sales since Ukraine invasion

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2024-02-19 15:00
The profits of the big five Western oil majors have reached nearly $300 billion since Russia invaded Ukraine two years ago, according to analysis from an NGO.
Categories: Around The Web

Japan, Ukraine to trade Paris-aligned carbon credits under JCM

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2024-02-19 14:33
Ukraine has become the 29th country to sign up to Japan’s Joint Crediting Mechanism (JCM), in the hope of generating carbon credits aligned with the Paris Agreement.
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Scientists shocked to discover new species of green anaconda, the world’s biggest snake

The Conversation - Mon, 2024-02-19 13:46
Green anacondas are the world’s heaviest snakes, and among the longest. it’s remarkable this hidden species has slipped under the radar until now. Bryan G. Fry, Professor of Toxicology, School of the Environment, The University of Queensland Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Right to roam countryside 'closed off' to walkers

BBC - Mon, 2024-02-19 13:33
Right to roam campaigners say hundreds of "open country" locations are inaccessible to the public.
Categories: Around The Web

PREVIEW: Upcoming Supreme Court case could stifle US federal environmental efforts, experts say

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2024-02-19 11:00
An unprecedented US Supreme Court hearing on Feb. 21 could open the door for challengers of federal environmental policies to effectively halt the implementation of regulations while those policies are being litigated, legal experts warn.
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Weak EU demand for electric vehicles due to high prices, not the other way around, says campaign group

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2024-02-19 09:01
European carmakers are failing to deliver affordable models for electric vehicles, data show, contrary to popular belief that low consumer demand is behind a "backpedalling" on production plans.
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‘Green’ or ‘blue’ hydrogen – what difference does it make? Not much for most Australians

The Conversation - Mon, 2024-02-19 05:51
There are two approaches to producing low-emission hydrogen, and public acceptance (or rejection) of each method will be important for hydrogen and its place in the energy transition. Mitchell Scovell, Research Scientist, CSIRO Andrea Walton, Social Scientist, CSIRO Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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The Guardian view on festivals and the future: bound together by the power of a shared vision | Editorial

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-02-19 04:25

We need international gatherings if we are to find a common language to resist environmental destruction

In the autumn of 1945, the Scotsman newspaper reported excitedly on an ambitious project to establish Edinburgh as a world centre for music and drama. It would host the first great postwar international art assembly in Europe, with a mission to celebrate the “flowering of the human spirit”. Two years later, the Edinburgh international festival was born.

Seven decades on, that flowering might sometimes appear overabundant. Scotland alone has 18 book festivals this year, while the Association of Festival Organisers, which is currently updating a survey from 2022, estimates that, despite a ripple of post-Covid closures, there will as many as 900 music jamborees across the UK. Faced with the double whammy of shrinking incomes and vanishing subsidies, prices have risen and audiences have aged, while organisers face an annual scramble to fill gaping holes in their budgets that yawn wider the more brave and imaginative they are. Meanwhile, the search for alternative sources of funding, either from business or from overseas, has been repeatedly complicated by ethical issues.

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UN wildlife summit expands species protection list, agrees strategic plan

Carbon Pulse - Sun, 2024-02-18 10:46
Fourteen new migratory species will be protected under the Convention on Migratory Species (CMS) as delegates at the UN summit in Samarkand, Uzbekistan committed to raising transboundary efforts on wildlife conservation.
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