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CP Daily: Wednesday November 14, 2018
Crab fishermen sue 30 oil firms, saying climate change has battered industry
Fossil fuel companies including Chevron and ExxonMobil ‘knowingly caused harm’ by contributing to warming, group says
For the fourth-generation crab fisherman John Beardon, the warming of Pacific waters off the coast of California has meant toxic crabs, shortened fishing seasons and a near decimation of his livelihood as a crab boat captain. Now he would like to see the industry he says is responsible pay for the damage.
On Wednesday, associations representing California crab fishermen like Beardon filed suit against 30 fossil fuel companies seeking to make the companies pay for the harm global warming has caused to California’s fisheries. The suit demands that petroleum interests finance the changes that will be needed to sustain the crab fishing industry in the future.
Continue reading...Energy Estate, MirusWind propose 4GW wind and solar project in NSW
Energy Estate and MirusWind propose 4GW wind and solar project with storage in NSW - the largest single renewable energy project in Australia's main grid.
The post Energy Estate, MirusWind propose 4GW wind and solar project in NSW appeared first on RenewEconomy.
UK ministers back Brexit deal that commits to post-2020 carbon pricing, ETS linking
California issued nearly 51k offsets before compliance deadline, data shows
EU Market: EUAs skid back below €20 despite strong auction
Analysts cut WCI price forecast as fuel sales slow
Greenland ice sheet hides huge 'impact crater'
EU carbon prices will show resilience against eventual speculator sell-off, say analysts
'Keep it in the ground': what we can learn from anti-fossil fuel campaigns
Exoplanet discovered around neighbouring star
Climate change is making hurricanes even more destructive, research finds
Hurricane rainfall could increase by a third and wind speeds boosted by up to 25 knots if global warming continues
Climate change worsened the most destructive hurricanes of recent years, including Katrina, Irma and Maria, by intensifying rainfall by as much as 10%, new research has found.
Related: 'It's hyped up': climate change skeptics in the path of Hurricane Florence
Continue reading...RGGI volume, prices increase while transfers decline in Q3 -report
Nova Scotia details allowance caps, auction details in ETS regulation
Brussels cautions over suggestions of EU carbon market manipulation
The climate protesters ready to go to prison for the planet – video
With only 12 years to limit climate change catastrophe, according to a UN report, a group of activists called Extinction Rebellion have launched a campaign of civil disobedience across London in an attempt to provoke action
- Today in Focus podcast: George Monbiot says climate crisis requires civil disobedience
John Large obituary
John Large’s working life was split into two halves, the first spent designing civil and military nuclear reactors and the second trying to make sure the industry was kept safe from accidents, nuclear waste and security threats. In this later role as a consulting engineer John was a dangerous opponent for the secretive nuclear establishment because his inside knowledge gave him the ability to ask difficult questions and expose weaknesses. He was never afraid to speak truth to power, although it took courage to take on such a powerful industry.
Despite his chosen role as an outsider, John’s abilities meant he had an astonishing list of clients ranging from the Russian Federation, the British government, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and Greenpeace International. He was invited by the IAEA to China, North Korea and Iran, and by others to the US and Japan, to give advice on their nuclear programmes and the risks they posed.
Continue reading...Louisiana landowners sue Bayou Bridge pipeline for trespassing and damage
Latest legal skirmish in a long battle between activists and the company building the pipeline, which is also behind Keystone XL
Landowners in Louisiana’s Atchafalaya Basin have filed suit against the company building the controversial Bayou Bridge pipeline for trespassing and property damage, claiming that it did not obtain legal authority before running stretches of the nearly completed pipeline through their property.
It’s the latest legal skirmish in a long battle between Louisiana activists and Energy Transfer Partners (ETP), which is also behind the the more well-known Keystone XL pipeline, and one that advocates hope might shutter the nearly completed 160-mile stretch of pipe before it goes live.
Continue reading...