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Washington’s cap-and-invest participation continues to increase despite programme repeal risks
US can reach 65% emissions reduction by 2035 with strong subnational support -study
Amid Australia’s chaotic climate politics, the rooftop solar boom is an unlikely triumph | Adam Morton
It’s difficult to overstate how rapidly Australians have embraced solar power – there’s now more rooftop solar than coal-fired power. The key question is what policymakers can learn from its success
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Australia was a different place in 2011. Julia Gillard’s Labor government, the Greens and a couple of country independents were rewriting the country’s climate policies, including introducing a world-leading carbon pricing system and creating three agencies to back it up.
Those organisations – the Clean Energy Finance Corporation, the Australian Renewable Energy Agency and the Climate Change Authority – have survived and help shape the investment and policy landscape. The carbon pricing system – falsely described as a tax – famously didn’t.
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Continue reading...Natural gas necessary bridge fuel in US grid decarbonisation, CCS not yet commercially viable -report
Firefly species may blink out as US seeks to list it as endangered for first time
Bethany Beach firefly, found in Delaware, Maryland and Virginia, faces dangers to habitat because of climate change
The US government is seeking to consider a firefly species as endangered for the first time, according to a proposal from the US Fish and Wildlife Service.
The Bethany Beach firefly, found in coastal Delaware, Maryland and Virginia, is facing increasing dangers to its natural habitat because of climate change-related events. They include sea level rise, which is predicted to affect all sites within the known distribution by the end of the century, and the lowering of groundwater aquifers.
Continue reading...Environmental group sues Vermont for alleged failure to comply with state climate law
Animals in the machine: why the law needs to protect animals from AI
Morgan Stanley IM closes climate equity fund at $750 mln
Joyful welcome by stranded astronauts for SpaceX capsule crew
VCM Report: Market hopeful for COP29 boost despite weak liquidity
Saudi firm to launch voluntary carbon exchange at COP29 -media
DATA DIVE: Britain’s coal achievement comes against backdrop of ever-increasing global consumption
Majority of buyers prefer carbon removals to avoidance, reductions -survey
Kenyan cookstove manufacturer secures $9 mln investment through carbon credit partnership
EU agriculture policy failing on climate, auditors say
A butterfly: ‘elbowing each other with the joints on their legs, pushing and shoving to get at the liquid’
We learn about butterflies when we are small because it is foreshadowing: you too will change. But they are an imperfect metaphor for what it feels like to live
The very funny naturalist and writer Redmond O’Hanlon was on a sandbank on the edge of a river in Borneo when hundreds of butterflies started to fly towards him and his travel companion and landed on their boots, trousers, and shirts, and “sucked the sweat from our arms.”
He watched them for a while – “there were Whites, Yellows and Blues, Swallow-tails, black, banded, or spotted with blue-greens” – and then stood up and brushed them off gently.
Continue reading...Australia’s ‘immoral’ coalmine decision akin to drowning its Pacific neighbours, Tuvalu’s climate minister declares
Labor government has undermined case to co-host 2026 UN climate summit with island nations, Dr Maina Talia declares
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Tuvalu’s climate minister says Australia’s decision to approve three coalmine expansions calls into question its claim to be a “member of the Pacific family”, and undermines the Australian case to co-host the 2026 UN climate summit with island nations.
Dr Maina Talia said last week’s mine approvals that analysts say could generate more than 1.3bn tonnes of carbon dioxide across their lifetime once the coal is shipped and burned overseas was “a direct threat to our collective future”.
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