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Environment Agency accused of ‘scandalous neglect’ over chicken excrement entering River Wye
Charity says new evidence shows how poultry farms are draining excrement into river system
The Environment Agency faces new allegations of neglect of the River Wye after a project by a conservation group found effluent and contaminated waters at free-range egg farms flowing directly into watercourses in the catchment.
Out of 47 sites visited in England and Wales in the Wye catchment, 19 had drains running from the poultry units to a nearby watercourse. Many of the farms had drains excavated within a few metres of the sheds.
Continue reading...Tories urged to end ‘idiotic’ £1.8bn tax break for UK fishing fleet
Conservationists call for end to subsidies that make up 15% to 18% of industry’s income and threaten to ‘empty the ocean of fish’
The government needs to urgently end polluting tax breaks for the UK fishing fleet that threaten to “empty the ocean of fish”, say conservationists, after a first-of-its kind study reveals diesel subsidies to be worth up to £1.8bn a decade.
Without the tax subsidies, largely provided to the most fuel-intensive section of the fleet, many sectors would be unprofitable, according to the analysis by government environmental advisers.
Continue reading...Children living near green spaces ‘have stronger bones’
Bone strength is set in childhood so better park access could prevent fractures in older people, study finds
Children with more green space near their homes have significantly stronger bones, a study has found, potentially leading to lifelong health benefits.
The scientists found that the children living in places with 20-25% more natural areas had increased bone strength that was equivalent to half a year’s natural growth.
Continue reading...CP Daily: Friday January 12, 2024
Investors “flying blind” to financial risks of climate litigation, academics warn
Speculators add largest CCA net haul in 11 mths, Washington below CFTC threshold for third week
Washington Senate Committee fields amendment requests to proposed linkage bill with WCI carbon market
Canadian clean fuel credit supply expected to exceed compliance demand -official
Brazilian coffee cooperative achieves carbon negative harvest -study
What’s changing (and what’s not) for carbon policy in Milei’s Argentina
Blue carbon projects account for a fifth of raters’ high scores, but market struggling to scale
Shell’s huge carbon credit retirement spree includes 1 mln units linked to discredited rice methodology
Climate and Land Use Data Scientist, Conservation International – Eastern Cape, South Africa
Climate Positive Land Use Planning Partnership Manager, Conservation International – Eastern Cape, South Africa
Environment Bank ‘overwhelmed’ with potential biodiversity credit projects
INTERVIEW: Carbon removal developer targets “industry influencers” to create market traction for its credits
US researchers discover microbes that convert CO2 into rocks
Macron’s cabinet reshuffle leaves France without energy minister
‘Off the charts’: 2023 was hottest year ever recorded globally, US scientists confirm
New analysis confirms ‘unprecedented’ record reported by European Union and United Nations scientists
Last year was the hottest ever reliably recorded globally by a blistering margin, US scientists have confirmed, leaving researchers struggling to account for the severity of the heat and what it portends for the unfolding climate crisis.
Last year was the world’s hottest in records that stretch back to 1850, according to analyses released concurrently by Nasa and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) on Friday, with a record high in ocean temperatures and a new low in Antarctic sea ice extent.
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