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ANALYSIS: New review for zero-rated BC forest carbon project after key data surfaces
8 TAKEAWAYS: Rocky road ahead for the EU’s 2040 targets and carbon management plan
US court bans three weedkillers and finds EPA broke law in approval process
Ruling, specific to three dicamba-based weedkillers, is major blow to Bayer, BASF and Syngenta
Dealing a blow to three of the world’s biggest agrochemical companies, a US court this week banned three weedkillers widely used in American agriculture, finding that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) broke the law in allowing them to be on the market.
The ruling is specific to three dicamba-based weedkillers manufactured by Bayer, BASF and Syngenta, which have been blamed for millions of acres of crop damage and harm to endangered species and natural areas across the midwest and south.
Continue reading...Climate-focused guarantee company aims to unlock billions in green finance
Norwegian sovereign fund identifies ‘very high’ nature risks in first TNFD disclosure step
Biodiversity credits will “counterbalance” negative corporate impacts, expert says
Verra launches consultation on refrigerant methodology as part of carbon crediting reform efforts
Non-EU shipping companies struggle to navigate ETS rules in tight timeframe
Energy transition fund for developing countries receives EIB backing
Tumbling biochar prices tap into growing demand in nascent carbon removals market
CN Markets: CEA price goes up, volumes down as market prepares for week-long Lunar New Year break
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Danish agtech startup buys UK-based farm management software company to boost soil carbon efforts
Community engagement has no cookie-cutter approach: It’s time to start listening
The post Community engagement has no cookie-cutter approach: It’s time to start listening appeared first on RenewEconomy.
How solar panels could act as a bushfire early warning system
The post How solar panels could act as a bushfire early warning system appeared first on RenewEconomy.
This is the year of the climate election. Journalists should cover it that way | Mark Hertsgaard and Kyle Pope
The press is covering the 2024 campaign as if climate isn’t on the ballot, but 56% of US voters are ‘concerned’ or ‘alarmed’ about the crisis
Fact one: more voters face national elections in 2024 than ever before in recorded history – about 4 billion people, nearly half the human population.
Fact two: last year was the hottest in recorded history – and scientists warn that oil, gas and coal burning must be rapidly phased out if we are to preserve a livable planet.
Mark Hertsgaard is executive director and co-founder of Covering Climate Now, a global journalism collaboration committed to more and better coverage of the climate story, and the Nation magazine’s environment correspondent
Kyle Pope is executive director of strategic initiatives and co-founder of Covering Climate Now, and a former editor and publisher of the Columbia Journalism Review
This article is published here as part of the global journalism collaboration Covering Climate Now
Continue reading...Joe Biden just did the rarest thing in US politics: he stood up to the oil industry | Bill McKibben
The Biden administration suspended new permits for natural gas terminals. Can we see more of this kind of backbone?
Ten days ago Joe Biden did something remarkable, and almost without precedent – he actually said no to big oil.
His administration halted the granting of new permits for building liquefied natural gas (LNG) export terminals, something Washington had been handing out like M&Ms on Halloween for nearly a decade. It’s a provisional “no” – Department of Energy experts will spend the coming months figuring out a new formula for granting the licenses that takes the latest science and economics into account – but you can tell what a big deal it is because of the howls of rage coming from the petroleum industry and its gaggle of politicians.
Bill McKibben is the founder of Third Act, which organizes Americans over 60 for progressive action and which worked this fall to persuade the administration to stop granting the LNG permits
Continue reading...Environment Agency failed to protect River Wye from chicken waste, court to hear
Campaigners argue in legal challenge that loophole has allowed poultry farmers to pollute river
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The Environment Agency and the UK government failed to protect the River Wye from catastrophic decline by allowing pollution from industrial chicken farming to saturate the land and devastate the protected river, a legal challenge is to argue.
Continue reading...Flights of fancy: starling murmurations – in pictures
The Danish photographer Soren Solkær first saw starling murmurations as a child near Wadden Sea in the south of the country. After photographing the phenomenon for three years in the marshlands of Denmark, Solkær’s new work, Starling, published by Edition Circle, expands his scope to trace the birds along their migration routes to the Netherlands and Italy
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