Feed aggregator

Carnival cruise line emitted more CO2 in 2023 than Scotland’s biggest city – report

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-11-25 15:00

World’s largest cruise line named Europe’s most climate-polluting, despite investing millions in cleaner technologies

The world’s largest cruise line company is responsible for producing more carbon dioxide in Europe than the city of Glasgow, a report has found.

Analysis by the Transport and Environment (T&E) campaign group, provided to the Guardian, found Carnival to be the most climate-polluting cruise company sailing in Europe in 2023.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

As Cop29 wraps up and the climate crisis gathers pace, Australia’s dash for gas is confounding | Bill Hare

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-11-25 10:27

Nearly all observers believe Chris Bowen is strongly committed to action. Most agree that can’t be said for his party

Cop29 in Baku has concluded but its outcome is disappointing – in many dimensions. Its decisions on finance – agreeing that the developed world would provide US$300bn a year by 2035 – come nowhere close to what’s needed. Ultimately, it may even be poisonous because of its lack of ambition and muddled scope – it does not even cover loss and damage.

Baku saw little sense of urgency or increased climate action, despite the universal message from scientific studies, including the Climate Action Tracker. Our global update this year found that in the last three years there’s been virtually no improvement in either action on the ground, nor ambition to take action in the future. And this is despite a series of seemingly never-ending, global warming-linked deadly catastrophes unfolding around the world.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

COP29: Reactions to the new Baku Finance Goal, Article 6 deal

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2024-11-25 09:30
Here are selected party, stakeholder, and expert reactions to the New Collective Quantified Goal on climate finance (NCQG), dubbed the Baku Finance Goal, as well as the agreement on Article 6 reached at the COP29 climate summit, which wrapped up early Sunday.
Categories: Around The Web

‘Divorce’ in songbirds: extreme weather pushes couples past breaking point

The Conversation - Mon, 2024-11-25 05:10
New research examines the link between extreme weather and divorce in a small monogamous tropical songbird, the Seychelles warbler. Concerningly, extreme rain and dry spells increased divorce rates. Frigg Janne Daan Speelman, PhD Candidate in behavioural ecology, Macquarie University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

Green hydrogen could decarbonise entire industries in NZ – but there’s a long way to go

The Conversation - Mon, 2024-11-25 05:10
If New Zealand decided to use green hydrogen to decarbonise industries such as fertiliser and methanol production, it would need to triple the installed capacity of renewable power plants. Jannik Haas, Senior Lecturer of Sustainable Systems, University of Canterbury Aaron Marshall, Professor of Chemical Engineering, University of Canterbury Andy Nicol, Professor in Geosciences, University of Canterbury David Dempsey, Associate Professor in Natural Resources Engineering, University of Canterbury Ian Wright, Professor in Marine Geology, University of Canterbury Matthew J Watson, Professor in Chemical Engineering, University of Canterbury Rebecca Peer, Senior Lecturer in Natural Resources Engineering, University of Canterbury Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

The Guardian view on Cop29: poor-world discontent over a failure of rich countries to deliver | Editorial

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-11-25 03:42

A rushed final text in Baku strains trust between nations, as inadequate climate finance commitments leave vulnerable countries calling for justice

The hasty imposition of a deal at the UN climate conference, Cop29, in Azerbaijan, over the objections of poorer nations has fractured global trust and undermined recent progress. This was supposed to be the “finance Cop” when two dozen industrialised countries – including the US, Europe and Canada – promised to pay developing nations for the damage caused by their rise. Instead, developing nations – led by a group including India, Nigeria and Bolivia – say this weekend’s agreement for $300bn a year in 2035 is too little, too late. Worse, rich-world governments will be able to escape their obligations by being able to rely on cash from private companies and international lenders.

Independent experts say the developing world, excluding China, would need $1.3tn a year by 2035 to fund its green transition and keep temperature rises in line with the Paris agreement. The climate finance target, pushed through by the Azerbaijani chair, is described by poor nations as a death sentence for those already drowning under rising seas and facing devastating costs.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Cop29 climate finance deal criticised as ‘travesty of justice’ and ‘stage-managed’

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-11-25 01:13

Some countries say deal should not have been done and is ‘abysmally poor’ compared with what is needed

The climate finance deal agreed at Cop29 is a “travesty of justice” that should not have been adopted, some countries’ negotiators have said.

The climate conference came to a dramatic close early on Sunday morning when negotiators struck an agreement to triple the flow of climate finance to poorer countries.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Huge deal struck but is it enough? 5 takeaways from a dramatic COP29

BBC - Mon, 2024-11-25 00:13
Fraught debate revealed the divide between rich and poor as the UN conference sealed a climate finance deal.
Categories: Around The Web

Huge deal struck but is it enough? 5 takeaways from a dramatic COP29

BBC - Mon, 2024-11-25 00:13
Fraught debate revealed the divide between rich and poor as the UN conference sealed a climate finance deal.
Categories: Around The Web

Deal or no deal: can Labor avoid an ‘end-of-year dumpster fire’ and pass its legislative agenda? | The Agenda

The Guardian - Mon, 2024-11-25 00:00

If Peter Dutton senses an opportunity in blocking bills in the lead-up to an election, he might just take it

The final parliamentary sitting week of the year is here!

That odour you’re smelling is drip filter coffee to fuel late-night Senate votes and the faint whiff of desperation to pass as much of the government’s legislative agenda as possible.

Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news email

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Developing countries condemn 'insufficient' Cop29 deal – video

The Guardian - Sun, 2024-11-24 23:36

Rich and poor countries concluded a trillion-dollar deal on the climate crisis in the early hours of Sunday morning, after marathon talks and days of bitter recriminations ended in what campaigners said was a 'betrayal'.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Cop29 showed climate progress can survive a Trump presidency – despite a disappointing deal | Geoffrey Lean

The Guardian - Sun, 2024-11-24 23:31

Away from the brutal main negotiations, there were important strides forward. The science can – and must – rise above politics

The resolutions reached at Cop29 on tackling the climate crisis, in the early hours of Sunday morning, are gravely disappointing but much better than nothing. And “nothing” was almost the result of this climate conference in Baku.

The deal falls a long way short of hopes at the start of the climate summit, and even further behind what the world urgently needs. But coming after negotiations that frequently teetered on the very edge of collapse, the result does keep climate talks alive despite Donald Trump’s second coming, and has laid the first ever international foundation, however weak, on which the world could finally construct a system of financing poor countries’ transition away from fossil fuels.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Cop29’s new carbon market rules offer hope after scandal and deadlock

The Guardian - Sun, 2024-11-24 20:03

Countries agree on how to create, trade and register credits to meet climate commitments

It was once among the most promising ways to funnel climate finance to vulnerable communities and nature conservation. The trading of carbon credits, each equal to a tonne of CO2 that has been reduced or removed from the atmosphere, was meant to target quick, cost-effective wins on climate and biodiversity. In 2022, demand soared as companies made environmental commitments using offsets, with the market surpassing $2bn (£1.6bn) while experiencing exponential growth. But the excitement did not last.

Two years later, many carbon markets organisations are clinging on for survival, with several firms losing millions of dollars a year and cutting jobs. Scandals about environmentally worthless credits, an FBI charge against a leading project developer for a $100m fraud, and a lack of clarity about where money from offsets went has caused their market value to plunge by more than half. Predictions that standing rainforests and other carbon-rich ecosystems would become multibillion-dollar assets have not yet come to pass.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Pages

Subscribe to Sustainable Engineering Society aggregator