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US federal court denies petition from green groups against California Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant’s license renewal exemption
Clean Energy Regulator’s oversight of ACCU Scheme “largely effective”, audit finds
Mexican community stakeholders in voluntary carbon market accuse regulators of overreach
LCFS net credit surplus rises to new records in Q4
Scientists work to make healthier white bread
Major carbon removals buyer calls for reconciliation between corporate claims and national goals
US releases handbook to guide emerging economies in CCUS development, implementation
High taxpayer cost, minimal industrial participation plague Canada’s C$8 bln decarbonisation fund -report
Net losses skyrocket for Canadian carbon consultancy from expanded offset investments
Wondering what Australia might look like in a hotter world? Take a glimpse into the distant past
Partnership to provide best practices guidance, advance voluntary carbon market in Yucatan
African Union to develop ‘Gold Standard’ for carbon offsets
Durable carbon removal sales decline for third consecutive quarter
BRIEFING: UK regional airports take first steps to develop hydrogen infrastructure
EU’s over-subscribed hydrogen bank auction awards €720 mln to seven projects
EU to take action against 20 airlines on greenwashing concerns
Plastic-eating bacteria help waste self-destruct
G7 confirms commitment to end coal power by 2035, amid steps to help shift away from fossil fuels
Great Barrier Reef’s worst bleaching leaves giant coral graveyard: ‘It looks as if it has been carpet bombed’
Scientists stunned by scale of destruction after summer of storm surges, cyclones and floods
Beneath the turquoise waters off Heron Island lies a huge, brain-shaped Porites coral that, in health, would be a rude shade of purplish-brown. Today that coral outcrop, or bommie, shines snow white.
Prof Terry Hughes, a coral bleaching expert at James Cook University, estimates this living boulder is at least 300 years old.
Continue reading...Man who allegedly kicked bison in Yellowstone park arrested for incident
Clarence Yoder was reportedly injured by animal in return, before police arrested him for disorderly conduct and other charges
A man who allegedly harassed bison at Yellowstone national park by kicking one of the animals was injured in return and arrested in the first such encounter at the famed site this year.
Officials said on Monday that police received a report about a man kicking a bison in the leg and being injured by one of the animals about seven miles from the park’s entrance, near Seven Mile Bridge, on 21 April.
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