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Brazilian agroforestry project loses nearly 18,000 tCO2e to drought
Conservation finance group eyes collaboration with Verra on stewardship certificates
Biodiversity net gain lacks market transparency, expert says
UK government prepares environmental plan as “nature is dying”
Japan’s MOL on track to meet 2030 emissions reduction target
Vietnam confirms 100 industrial participants in two-year carbon market pilot run
BRIEFING: Amid steel boom, Malaysia faces rising CBAM costs, climate target challenge
Scientists warn swift emission reductions needed to reverse tipping points
Sea swimming was my saviour. But the dumping of sewage changed everything | Jo Bateman
My daily dips were a game-changer for my mental health. Now I’m suing the water company that’s deprived me of them
Six years ago, I was living in the Midlands, about as far away from the sea as you can get. But during a week of walking from Poole to Lyme Regis, I fell in love with that vast blue space and its ability to restore my mind and body. I went home, handed in my notice, put my house on the market and within a few months I was living in Exmouth, Devon – a stone’s throw from the most beautiful beach, almost two miles of unbroken golden sand.
I still remember my first outdoor swimming experience, in Exmouth’s sheltered Pirate Cove – how I felt as the cold began to creep up from my toes. Endorphins coursed through me. I was buzzing, grinning, full of joy, and from that moment I was hooked. I began to swim daily.
Jo Bateman is a retired physiotherapist. She lives in Exmouth, Devon, and swims in the sea all year round
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Continue reading...Australian startup with Japanese CCS project pipeline secures govt permit
Brazil led the way, now the UK should get behind the assault on hunger and poverty | Kevin Watkins
At its recent summit, Lula gave the G20 a chance to show its commitment to real change – and Britain can take the lead
Last week the Brazilian president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, shattered the mould of G20 meetings. In using the annual summit as a launchpad for a new effort to tackle hunger and extreme poverty, he has provided the world with a chance – a last chance – to breathe new life into a moribund sustainable development goal (SDG) agenda. He has handed the G20 a cause that could halt its slide into irrelevance.
For the UK, the creation of the Global Alliance Against Hunger and Poverty represents an opportunity to restore a deeply tarnished reputation on international development.
Continue reading...Hong Kong exchange adds Gold Standard credits to voluntary carbon marketplace
Quit the quarry mentality or miss the green iron opportunity
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In the race to net zero, now is not the time to put dollars before sense
The post In the race to net zero, now is not the time to put dollars before sense appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Cornish conservation charity launches major ‘Tor to Shore’ rewilding project
Cornwall Wildlife Trust initiative aims to benefit creatures from upland marsh fritillaries to seahorses in St Austell Bay
A Cornish conservation charity has launched an ambitious rewilding project intended to benefit creatures from marsh fritillary butterflies living high on the moor to long-snouted seahorses in seagrass in a bay five miles away.
The Tor to Shore project will stretch from Helman Tor, a reserve topped with a granite boulder summit near Bodmin, to St Austell Bay via the tumbling River Par, its idea to improve a landscape at scale.
Continue reading...Nuclear plant trips due to fire, and battery storage steps in to stabilises the grid
The post Nuclear plant trips due to fire, and battery storage steps in to stabilises the grid appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Sluggish, slow and anaemic: BloombergNEF’s sad take on Australia’s green energy transition
The post Sluggish, slow and anaemic: BloombergNEF’s sad take on Australia’s green energy transition appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Australian government ‘deeply disappointed’ by Japan’s decision to expand commercial whaling target list
Japanese government confirms it will allow whalers to catch and kill up to 59 fin whales, a species conservationists consider vulnerable
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The Australian government is “deeply disappointed” by Japan’s decision to add the world’s second-largest whale species to the list of species its commercial whale hunters will target.
Tanya Plibersek, the environment minister, attacked Japan’s decision to hunt fin whales – the world’s second-longest whale and considered vulnerable.
Continue reading...ClearVue inks deal to supply solar glass to “fastest growing” global market
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