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New study finds high-potential solar sites in US overlap with critical habitats
CN Markets: CEA price continues to drop as bearish sentiment spreads
EU ETS support for sustainable aviation fuels should be extended, industry and NGO say
Nigeria pushes oil companies to advance carbon projects with new regulatory framework
South Korea may see marked increase in producer prices due to carbon tax -report
Week in wildlife in pictures: a rare warbler, a young chimp and sheltering joeys
The best of this week’s wildlife photographs from around the world
Continue reading...Weatherwatch: The need to wake up to sea level rise in the UK
Policymakers and insurers act as if Britain’s coastlines are fixed, but the waters are advancing faster than before
The increasing speed of sea level rise hardly seems to register with policymakers in Britain – even though with the UK weather getting more violent, destructive storm surges are increasingly likely. The future looks bleak for properties on fast-eroding cliffs and large areas of rich agricultural land on the east coast, already at or even below sea level.
The evidence that things are rapidly getting worse is clear. Sea levels have risen 24cm (9in) (7ft 3in) since 1880 but the rise has accelerated from an average of 1.4mm a year in the 20th century to 3.6mm annually by 2015. Previous conservative estimates of sea level rise of 60cm by the end of this century now look very optimistic and on current emission levels will be 2.2 metres by 2100 and 3.9 metres 50 years after that.
Continue reading...NZ Market: NZU price reaches one-month high in first session of the year
Researchers seek to expand ‘citizen scientist’ testing of UK river quality
Volunteers’ data should be included in official monitoring reports to tackle pollution crisis, says Earthwatch
Citizen science testing of river water quality will expand this year in an attempt to make the data part of official monitoring of waterways, the head of an independent environmental research group has said.
The use of ordinary people across the country to test river water quality for pollutants including phosphates, nitrates and other chemicals has captured the imagination of thousands of volunteers. In 2024 more than 7,000 people took part in river testing “blitzes” run over two weekends by the NGO Earthwatch Europe. The research, using standardised testing equipment provided by the NGO and Imperial College London, gathered data from almost 4,000 freshwater sites across the UK.
Continue reading...New Year begins with more solar records, as PV takes bigger bite out of coal’s holiday lunch
The post New Year begins with more solar records, as PV takes bigger bite out of coal’s holiday lunch appeared first on RenewEconomy.