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Ontario confirms entities held California offsets when cap-and-trade accounts were frozen
One-third of Australian drivers looking to buy EV: Nissan
Study of consumers who intend to purchase a new car in next three years found two out of three considering going electric.
The post One-third of Australian drivers looking to buy EV: Nissan appeared first on RenewEconomy.
EU Market: EUA slide 5% to below €21 on technical selling, weaker energy
Australia moves to El Niño alert and the drought is likely to continue
California gubernatorial candidate signals more attention on limiting fossil fuels
Whale calf rescued from shark net near Australian coast
US Supreme Court denies hearing to reinstate HFC ban
Environmental warnings should stop drivers taking the road to ruin | Letters
Following the UN’s report concluding carbon emissions need to be reduced massively and rapidly to prevent an average increase in global temperatures of more than 1.5C (Global warming must not exceed 1.5C, landmark UN report warns, 8 October), one quick and simple way in which the UK could make a start is by cutting the top speed vehicles can travel on motorways from 70 to 60mph. All cars operate most efficiently at a speed between 50 and 60mph. At the stroke of a pen we could ensure all vehicles on motorways are running far closer to their most efficient levels. It won’t save the world on its own, but it’s a cost-free and easy step to take that gets us moving in the right direction.
Matt Wheeler
Bushey, Hertforshire
• It is increasingly evident how difficult it will be to stop global warming; the need is pressing, obvious and requires strong leadership from governments. But, incredibly, our government is planning to build a major road (the so-called expressway) between Oxford and Cambridge. Painful as it might appear, the time has come when we have to stop building new major roads altogether, anywhere. We have to slash use of roads and fossil fuels, not encourage them.
Continue reading...The time is now for a new global climate pact | Letter
On 10 April 2018, the United Nations general assembly adopted a resolution that paved the way for negotiations on a global pact for the environment. This international treaty would combine the guiding legal principles for environmental action into one single and far-reaching text. In 2015, the adoption of the sustainable development goals and the Paris climate agreement represented major progress. However, environmental damage persists and is more serious than ever before. The years 2017 and 2018 have seen record-breaking temperatures. Biodiversity continues to decline at a rapid pace.
With the global pact for the environment, the international community would be equipped for the first time with a treaty of a general nature that covers all environmental areas. It would be the cornerstone of international environmental law, therefore overseeing the different existing sectoral agreements (climate, biodiversity, waste, pollution, etc), filling the gaps and facilitating their implementation.
Continue reading...EU won’t seek to raise bloc’s 2030 climate target this year -Council
RGGI to auction 13.4 mln allowances on Dec. 5
Seafloor mapping XPRIZE final will be in the Mediterranean, off Greek coast
Australia defies climate warning to back coal
UPDATE – Denmark to cancel 8 mln EUAs next decade to help meet non-ETS goals
UK fracking rules on earthquakes could be relaxed, says minister
Exclusive: Claire Perry says level at which operations must be halted could be raised
Rules designed to halt fracking operations if they trigger minor earthquakes could be relaxed as the shale industry begins to expand, the UK energy minister, Claire Perry, has said.
A series of small tremors seven years ago prompted tough regulations that mean even very low levels of seismic activity now require companies to suspend fracking.
Continue reading...Robotic bees could pollinate plants in case of insect apocalypse
Dutch scientists say they can create millions of bee-like drones to take over if the insects die out
Intensive modern farming methods and the unravelling consequences of global climate change are said to have put the future of the common bee under threat like never before.
But in Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands a group of scientists working on long-term solutions to some of the world’s thorniest problems have developed a solution that could have come straight from a sci-fi novel: robotic bees.
Continue reading...Dutch appeals court upholds landmark climate change ruling
Netherlands ordered to increase emissions cuts in historic ruling that puts ‘all world governments on notice’
A court in The Hague has upheld a historic legal order on the Dutch government to accelerate carbon emissions cuts, a day after the world’s climate scientists warned that time was running out to avoid dangerous warming.
Appeal court judges ruled that the severity and scope of the climate crisis demanded greenhouse gas reductions of at least 25% by 2020 – measured against 1990 levels – higher than the 17% drop planned by Mark Rutte’s liberal administration.
Continue reading...Amazon at risk from Bolsonaro's grim attack on the environment | Fabiano Maisonnave
Threats to the rainforest and its people and an end to the Paris agreement are among the promises of Brazil’s presidential hopeful, reports Climate Home
No more Paris agreement. No more ministry of environment. A paved highway cutting through the Amazon.
Not only that. Indigenous territories opened to mining. Relaxed environmental law enforcement and licensing. International NGOs, such as Greenpeace and WWF, banned from the country. A strong alliance with the beef lobby.
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