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California regulator recommends strategies to avoid price spikes as clean fuel policies shrink gasoline supply and demand
Bill Gates-founded climate investment firm pulls in $839 mln for new fund
Royal Mint starts turning e-waste into gold
China will use wind farm cameras to spy on people, cows and crops, say opponents in new conspiracy theory
The post China will use wind farm cameras to spy on people, cows and crops, say opponents in new conspiracy theory appeared first on RenewEconomy.
High coral cover amid intense heatwaves and bleaching? Here’s how both can be true on the Great Barrier Reef
ICVCM ruling deals major blow to LATAM voluntary carbon credits
Colorado firm successfully demonstrates 1,000 hours of cryogenic CCS
New independent body aims to set tough standards for carbon removal
Pig-nosed turtle among over a dozen new species added to Australia’s list of endangered species
The number of species recognised as threatened with extinction in Australia now stands at 2,224
Another 13 animals and plants have been added to Australia’s list of threatened species, sparking renewed calls for the federal government to quickly overhaul the country’s nature laws.
The species newly listed as at risk include the pig-nosed turtle (listed as vulnerable), the Dalhousie catfish (critically endangered), Pugh’s sphagnum frog (endangered) and the Coffs Harbour Fontainea, a rainforest tree (critically endangered). Other species are freshwater fish, lizards, flowering shrubs, a daisy and an orchid species.
Continue reading...Technical UN body updates guidelines for post-2026 CORSIA carbon credit eligibility
Biodiversity net gain opacity threatens nature gains, say experts
REDD+ carbon projects bring moderate yet significant impact, study finds
Almost 500 chemicals found in England’s rivers and groundwater
More than half classed as very toxic, toxic or harmful to aquatic life, with 20 categorised as ‘substances of very high concern’
Almost 500 different chemicals, some of which are banned, have been found in various mixtures across all 171 river and groundwater catchments tested in England in 2024, according to data from the Environment Agency, analysed by the Guardian and Watershed Investigations.
More than half of them are classified as very toxic, toxic or harmful to aquatic life, according to the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA), and a banned, carcinogenic “forever chemical” was among 20 “substances of very high concern” found.
Continue reading...Carbon offset provider launches new high permanence CDR programme
EU-UK ETS link-up would lower costs and frictions, especially for the UK -study
Replacing Norwegian oil and gas with int’l imports would create hundreds of millions of EU emissions
Sewage discharge fines are a damning indictment of the water regulators
The penalties reflect the failings of the Environment Agency and Ofwat as much as the water companies
Behind the record fines announced by Ofwat for the routine dumping of sewage into rivers and seas by three water companies, there is a voiceless victim, one that does not sit in boardrooms, or get a chance to count dividends. It is our rivers and coastal waters, subjected to years of continuous pollution under the noses of the regulators, which are suffering.
In all likelihood the £168m penalties for the already struggling Thames Water, Yorkshire Water and Northumbrian Water will be followed by fines for the remaining eight water and sewerage companies, all of whom Ofwat is investigating over failure to treat sewage according to the law.
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