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FEATURE: Oil majors tout CCS as only option to decarbonise UK’s hard-to-abate industries

Carbon Pulse - 3 hours 27 min ago
A clear UK plan to spearhead development of carbon capture and storage (CCS) projects is urgently needed to decarbonise hard-to-abate industries and to achieve the 2030 clean power goal, according to the oil majors behind CCS clusters in England.
Categories: Around The Web

Ukraine approves roadmap for national ETS

Carbon Pulse - 3 hours 28 min ago
Ukraine has approved a roadmap for setting up a national emissions trading system (ETS) – although it would not become fully operational until the country's war-torn economy has recovered, the environment minister has announced.
Categories: Around The Web

Study flags gaps in research on chemical pollution impacts on biodiversity

Carbon Pulse - 3 hours 37 min ago
There is a misalignment between studies of chemical impacts on nature and biodiversity measurements, according to a study led by the EU Commission's Joint Research Centre (JRC).
Categories: Around The Web

Scottish nature law proposals trigger biodiversity credit concerns

Carbon Pulse - 3 hours 43 min ago
The Scottish government’s proposals to give politicians the power to modify key environmental legislation have triggered biodiversity credit concerns from a market actor.
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A frog: their eyes can detect a single photon of light | Helen Sullivan

The Guardian - 4 hours 11 min ago

Their metamorphosis seems more like a human’s than a butterfly’s – so much is visible, and awkward, whereas the butterfly forms in secret

Some species of frog have eyes so sensitive to light that they can detect a single photon. To confirm this, scientists dissected a frog’s eye and removed the lens. If you dissected eyes in biology class, you may remember that a lens is extraordinarily simple, and unlike other organs. It is a hard, clearish, object that comes out clean: no blood supply, no blood. It looks like a glass bead, and functions – inanimate – much like glass, and not like most things we find in our body (except maybe teeth, which function like knives). Look through the lens at the classroom around you, you will see it clearly, but upside down.

A frog in space, moving further and further from the sun, would eventually start to see not a shrinking star, but tiny flashes of light: individual photons. This is because as the photons travel further from their source, they are spread over greater areas: they will hit a frog’s eye less and less often.

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BRIEFING: EU’s clean industry push lacks ‘game-changer’ on energy, critics say

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-02-24 23:09
The European Commission’s upcoming Clean Industrial Deal initiative, due on Wednesday, lacks “game-changing” measures to reduce energy prices, such as a reform of the marginal pricing system for electricity, say EU steelmakers and trade unions.
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Euro Markets: Midday Update

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-02-24 23:02
European carbon prices gave up Friday's gains as an early boost from Germany's general election result was quickly wiped out, while natural gas continued its 10-day decline that has seen regional prices for the fuel drop by 23%.
Categories: Around The Web

Antioxidants in fruits and flowers seem to counteract harmful effects of microplastics, study shows

The Guardian - Mon, 2025-02-24 22:00

Anthocyanins in nuts, fruits and vegetables seem to lesson harmful effects of microplastics on reproductive systems

Antioxidants that give fruits and flowers their vibrant colors seem to counteract some of the most dangerous reproductive system effects of exposure to microplastics, such as decreased fertility, and could ultimately be used in developing treatments, new peer-reviewed research shows.

The paper focused on microplastics’ reproductive toxicity and plant compounds called anthocyanins, which are widely found in nuts, fruits and vegetables. The new review of scientific literature on anthocyanins found that the compounds are probably protective against a range of plastic-induced impacts on hormones, reductions in testosterone and estrogen, decreased sperm counts, lower sperm quality, erectile dysfunction and ovarian damage.

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Brazilian commission sets out path forward for national biodiversity plan

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-02-24 20:41
Brazil's National Biodiversity Commission (Conabio) has issued recommendations on the targets that should underpin the country's National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan (NBSAP), including halting deforestation, reducing harmful subsidies, and increasing public funding.
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Australian agency says Coalition’s nuclear plan would lead to 2 bln tonnes of CO2 emitted

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-02-24 19:42
The Australian conservative Coalition's flagship energy policy to hold back the renewable energy roll-out and keep coal power online longer while a fleet of nuclear power stations are built would add an additional 2 billion tonnes of cumulative CO2 emissions, according the the country's Climate Change Authority (CCA).
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LEAK: Brussels set to postpone CBAM fees and trim reporting rules

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-02-24 18:43
The European Commission plans to defer the financial obligations for companies under the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) to 2027, from 2026, and raise the threshold of emissions embedded in goods that are subject to the fee, according to a leaked draft amendment seen by Carbon Pulse on Saturday.
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Singapore, Bhutan to sign Article 6 implementation agreement this week

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-02-24 17:53
Bhutan will sign an Article 6.2 implementation agreement with Singapore on Feb. 28, becoming the third nation to formalise the agreement with the city state, Carbon Pulse has learned.
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Britain’s net zero economy is booming, CBI says

The Guardian - Mon, 2025-02-24 16:00

Green sector growing at triple the rate of the UK economy, providing high-wage jobs and increasing energy security

The net zero sector is growing three times faster than the overall UK economy, analysis has found, providing high-wage jobs across the country while cutting climate-heating emissions and increasing energy security.

The net zero economy grew by 10% in 2024 and generated £83bn in gross value added (GVA), a measure of how much value companies add through the goods and services they produce.

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UNEP to support Pakistan Article 6 pilot project

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-02-24 15:35
The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) will provide technical assistance to Pakistan for a methane offsetting project in Punjab province that will help the country earn carbon credits under Article 6.
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More than half of countries are ignoring biodiversity pledges – analysis

The Guardian - Mon, 2025-02-24 15:00

Many of the nations gathering in Rome for Cop16 have offered no plans to honour their agreement to protect 30% of land and sea for nature

More than half the world’s countries have no plans to protect 30% of land and sea for nature, despite committing to a global agreement to do so less than three years ago, new analysis shows.

In late 2022, nearly every country signed a once-in-a-decade UN deal to halt the destruction of Earth’s ecosystems. It included a headline target to protect nearly a third of the planet for biodiversity by the end of the decade – a goal known as “30 by 30”.

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