Feed aggregator

Two sites published on English biodiversity gain register without boundary details

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2024-03-22 22:53
The first two areas on the register for off-site biodiversity net gain (BNG) projects in England have faced criticism for their lack of boundary details.   
Categories: Around The Web

Euro Markets: Midday Update

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2024-03-22 22:30
European carbon prices were heading for their first gain in four days on Friday morning, with some observers saying the market was reverting to a familiar recent pattern of rising on Friday ahead of renewed weakness on the following Monday, while natural gas turned bullish amid forecasts for lower temperatures from this weekend.
Categories: Around The Web

There are more than 1,000 varieties of banana, and we eat one of them. Here’s why that’s absurd | Dan Saladino

The Guardian - Fri, 2024-03-22 22:00

The lack of diversity could mean the fruit’s extinction. It offers a stark warning of what could happen to other key foods

The meeting of the World Banana Forum last week in Rome didn’t make many headlines. But what was under discussion there has serious implications for everyone. The ubiquitous yellow fruit is the proverbial canary in the mine of our modern food system, showing just how fragile it is. And the current plight of the banana should serve as an invitation to us all to become champions of food diversity.

When you peel a banana, you’re on the receiving end of a near-miraculous $10bn supply chain. One that sends seemingly endless quantities of a tropical fruit halfway across the world to be among the cheapest, most readily available products in supermarket aisles (on average, around 12p a banana). But, incredibly, there’s no inbuilt backup plan or safety net if the one variety that most of the global trade depends on starts to fail.

Dan Saladino is a food journalist, broadcaster and author of Eating to Extinction: The World’s Rarest Foods and Why We Need to Save Them

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

England won’t adopt EU river pollution rules for pharma and cosmetics firms

The Guardian - Fri, 2024-03-22 21:55

Campaigners say government is failing to match major step forward as bloc prepares to introduce ‘polluter pays’ principle

New EU rules which introduce “polluter pays” principles to get pharmaceutical and cosmetic companies to pay for the pollution they cause in rivers will not be adopted by the government in England, as campaigners say the country is falling behind.

Lawmakers in Europe have signed off on an update to the urban waste water treatment (UWWT) directive, which is to further tighten restrictions on pollution. More nutrients from agricultural waste and sewage will have to be removed from waterways under the new rules. It also for the first time applies standards to micropollutants such as chemicals from pharmaceutical waste.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Stakeholders call on GHG Protocol standards to make comparing corporate emissions accounting easier

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2024-03-22 21:30
The GHG Protocol has published a summary of stakeholder responses on its corporate emissions accounting standards, which includes details on market-based approaches and the use of voluntary carbon credits.
Categories: Around The Web

CN Markets: CEA price holds above 80 yuan, liquidity plummets

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2024-03-22 21:22
China saw liquidity in its compliance carbon market fall sharply over the past week, while permit prices held above the 80 yuan ($11.07) benchmark amid growing optimism about the sectoral expansion of the market.
Categories: Around The Web

Weather tracker: Tornadoes hit central US, killing three

The Guardian - Fri, 2024-03-22 21:05

Elsewhere, record-breaking snowfall in Japan and unseasonally high temperatures in South Sudan

Last week, central parts of the US experienced a severe outbreak of tornadoes with more than two dozen forming across the states of Ohio and Indiana, resulting in at least three deaths and multiple injuries.

A number of intense supercell thunderstorms travelled eastwards across central Indiana late in the afternoon and evening of 14 March, from which tornadoes formed. Many of these were weak with estimated maximum wind speeds of 65-85mph – the requirement to be categorised as an EF-0 tornado.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Australia must lead the world on nature restoration through ambitious interpretation of international law

The Conversation - Fri, 2024-03-22 20:49
Australia committed to restore 30% of degraded ecosystems by 2030 when we signed the global biodiversity framework. But what does that really mean? It’s open to interpretation. So let’s be ambitious. Justine Bell-James, Associate Professor, TC Beirne School of Law, The University of Queensland Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

Thai govt seeks consultation on second climate change bill, with market provisions

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2024-03-22 20:34
The government of Thailand has put out the second draft of its climate change bill for consultation until mid-April even as it will be considered for cabinet approval not before June 2024, with provisions for several market-based mechanisms to drive emissions cuts.
Categories: Around The Web

Japan updates carbon offset guidelines to align with international standards, selects latest JCM projects

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2024-03-22 19:49
Japan has updated its guidelines to provide more clarity on the quality of offsets, as the country seeks to align its domestic framework with international efforts to improve the integrity of the voluntary carbon market.
Categories: Around The Web

'Paddington' bears spotted in Bolivian forest raise hopes for species' survival – video

The Guardian - Fri, 2024-03-22 19:27

A Bolivian conservation programme has identified at least 60 'Paddington' bears in areas where they had not been spotted before. The animal is the inspiration behind the beloved fictional character Paddington, who travels to London, is adopted by a family and eats lashings of marmalade. In 2017, Chester zoo’s Andean carnivore conservation programme installed trap cameras in Tarija forest areas, and in 2023 it spotted members of the thriving bear community playing and walking among the trees. According to Ximena Velez-Liendo, the programme's coordinator, the Andean bear is vulnerable to extinction. The expert said if threats to the species, such as the loss of habitat, retaliatory hunting and the effects of the climate crisis were not addressed by 2030, the region could lose almost 30% of the population

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

ETS2 prices seen hitting €200 mark by 2030 –analysts

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2024-03-22 19:14
Prices in the EU’s ETS for transport and heating fuels (ETS2) are expected to surpass those of the existing carbon market as early as 2029, and exceed €200/tonne of CO2 by 2030, according to projections unveiled on this week.
Categories: Around The Web

South Korea moves to let securities firm launch OTC brokerage services in ETS

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2024-03-22 19:13
One of the largest Korean securities firms has been designated as an official broker for the country's national emissions market, as the government seeks to open up the market to more participants.
Categories: Around The Web

Week in wildlife – in pictures: a majestic crane, a clumsy owlet and sleepy seals

The Guardian - Fri, 2024-03-22 18:00

The best of this week’s wildlife photographs from around the world

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Carbon market linkage may come at a price for Washington, analyst says

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2024-03-22 17:54
Washington’s linkage with the broader WCI market could hinder the state’s climate goals if it does not recalibrate its existing programme mechanisms, an analyst told conference participants Wednesday.
Categories: Around The Web

ARB eyes LCFS proposal changes, will discuss stringency, crop-based biofuels at next workshop

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2024-03-22 17:47
Staff of California regulator ARB detailed next steps regarding its proposed Low Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS) amendments and addressed programme scrutiny from industry and environmental groups.
Categories: Around The Web

Radical pay-what-you-can restaurant faces eviction from mill it refurbished

The Guardian - Fri, 2024-03-22 17:00

The Long Table says it took thousands of hours of work to turn derelict site into a community space, but landlord has now sold it

A Gloucestershire restaurant with a radical business model, in that it feeds all comers regardless of their ability to pay, is losing its premises after the owner sold the property.

The community around The Long Table, featured in the Guardian earlier this month, has been left reeling after it was ordered to move out of the mill it occupies in Stroud – even as it sought to engage with the landlord to buy the building.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Australia’s new environmental plantings method will only require ‘minor changes’, govt says

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2024-03-22 16:51
The Australian government will only need to make 'minor changes' to the replacement environmental plantings method, and continues its work on the proposed integrated farm land management (IFLM) method, it confirmed Friday.
Categories: Around The Web

California fuel sales fall again in December, diesel declines as emissions fall on year

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2024-03-22 16:34
California gasoline sales and emissions trailed 2022 levels for the fourth month in a row in December, while diesel reversed course and also declined and total transportation emissions fell overall on the year, state data published Thursday showed.
Categories: Around The Web

Solar eclipse spectacle set to grip North America again

BBC - Fri, 2024-03-22 16:09
How lucky is that? The US will witness its second total solar eclipse in seven years on 8 April.
Categories: Around The Web

Pages

Subscribe to Sustainable Engineering Society aggregator