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Carbon crediting, regulatory support can boost LATAM aviation decarbonisation amid SAF shortage -report
Snowy Hydro-worth of solar and wind wasted in 2024, as curtailment continues to bite
The post Snowy Hydro-worth of solar and wind wasted in 2024, as curtailment continues to bite appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Hydro Tasmania strikes deal to continue powering one of world’s greenest smelters
The post Hydro Tasmania strikes deal to continue powering one of world’s greenest smelters appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Tilt boosts its renewables fleet to 1.8GW with acquisition of NSW wind farm
The post Tilt boosts its renewables fleet to 1.8GW with acquisition of NSW wind farm appeared first on RenewEconomy.
EU ban on fossil fuels feasible, says green group
Enhanced rock weathering falls short on CO2 storage -study initial results
Spending on flood defences set to rise to record levels
Minister promises to spend £250m to top up England’s flood defences
Labour pledges to protect 66,500 more properties, criticising previous Tory efforts
Ministers are topping up flood defence investment in England to a “record” £2.65bn, after accusing the previous government of “putting lives at risk” by under-spending.
An extra £250m is being pledged on top of the £2.4bn previously announced, to shore up defences and protect an extra 66,500 properties from flooding over a two-year period, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) said.
Continue reading...Kenya draft carbon regulation to impose trading cap, could withhold ITMOs
Deaths of 30,000 fish off WA coast made more likely by climate change, research finds
Analysis drawing on satellite data and 13 climate models concludes that climate change makes marine heatwaves 20 times more likely
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Marine heatwaves linked to the deaths of 30,000 fish off the Western Australia coast were up to 100 times more likely to occur because of climate change, new research has found.
Waters off WA have been affected by prolonged marine heatwaves since September last year.
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Continue reading...NOAA, researchers seek feedback on ocean-based CDR data protocols
Electric vehicle batteries can last almost 40% longer in the real world than in lab tests
VCM MONTHLY DATA: Millions of Shell retirements fail to stop January slump
Thai bourse partners with global exchange to develop carbon market infrastructure
Philippines lawmakers approve carbon trading bill
LNG ships drive methane higher, as CO2 emissions also rise -EU agencies
US transportation agency drops defense of Biden-era highway emissions rule
Climate change target of 2C is ‘dead’, says renowned climate scientist
Prof James Hansen says pace of global heating has been significantly underestimated though other scientists disagree
The pace of global heating has been significantly underestimated, according to renowned climate scientist Prof James Hansen, who said the international 2C target is “dead”.
A new analysis by Hansen and colleagues concludes that both the impact of recent cuts in sun-blocking shipping pollution, which has raised temperatures, and the sensitivity of the climate to increasing fossil fuels emissions are greater than thought.
Continue reading...Ed Miliband emerges from his bunker to bask in Labour backbench love | John Crace
Deprived of Rachel Reeves’s affections, the energy secretary revelled in playing climate crisis hero to her villain
He lives!
They seek him here! They seek him there! For the last ten days or so, Ed Miliband has been the Invisible Man. A large number of the cabinet were in Oxfordshire for Rachel Reeves’s growth speech last Wednesday. Ed was not. Those who didn’t make the trip were in the Commons later on for prime minister’s questions as Keir Starmer reinforced the growth message. Ed was not. Some ministers lent their support as Darren Jones gave a statement on growth. Ed did not.
Continue reading...Temperatures at north pole 20C above average and beyond ice melting point
Scientists say unusually mild temperatures linked to low-pressure system over Iceland directing strong flow of warm air towards north pole
Temperatures at the north pole soared more than 20C above average on Sunday, crossing the threshold for ice to melt.
Temperatures north of Svalbard in Norway had already risen to 18C hotter than the 1991–2020 average on Saturday, according to models from weather agencies in Europe and the US, with actual temperatures close to water’s melting point of 0C. By Sunday, the temperature anomaly had risen to more than 20C.
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