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If Turnbull is serious about energy prices, he’d bring Snowy Hydro to heal
Taste of the future: Australia’s southern states at 50% renewables
Nestlé products removed from Melbourne zoos over palm oil
Zoos Victoria made the decision after Nestlé lost its sustainable certification
Products from the food and drink giant Nestlé will no longer be stocked at the stores and food carts at Melbourne and Werribee zoos.
Zoos Victoria made the decision after the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) suspended Nestlé’s membership when the company failed to submit a 2016 progress report, and its 2017 report lacked a timetable for producing or buying certified sustainable palm oil.
Continue reading...Fossil of 'first giant' dinosaur discovered in Argentina
Elephant poaching: 'Sick' EU ivory sales 'cover up illegal trade'
Salisbury poisoning: What is Novichok?
CP Daily: Monday July 9, 2018
Ontario carbon allowances amount to 1% of total holdings in California, Quebec registry accounts
Krill companies stop Antarctic fishing
Governance Programme Director, IDDRI – Paris
Intern, Landscape Standard, Verra – Washington DC
Krill fishing firms back Antarctic ocean sanctuary
Creation of the world’s largest marine reserve comes a step closer as major companies add support
The creation of the world’s biggest ocean sanctuary, protecting a huge tract of remote seas around Antarctica, has come a step closer after major fishing companies came out in favour of the plan.
A global campaign – spearheaded by Greenpeace and backed by 1.7 million people – had put massive pressure on the krill fishing industry and retailers amid fears it was endangering one of the world’s last great wildernesses, undermining the global fight against climate change.
Continue reading...Illegal land clearing in NSW may be accelerating, complaints data suggests
Exclusive: Data obtained by the Guardian suggests land clearing may be accelerating under Biodiversity Conservation Act
Complaints about suspected illegal land clearing to a government hotline have increased sharply under the New South Wales government’s new Biodiversity Conservation Act, suggesting the rate of land clearing may be accelerating.
Data obtained by the Guardian under freedom of information laws after an eight month battle with the Department of Environment shows that reports of suspected illegal land clearing have increased by nearly 30% in the months since August last year when the new laws came into force.
EU Market: EUAs streak to new 1-mth high above €16 as power prices keep rising
China CORSIA withdrawal reports inaccurate, official tells media
INTERVIEW: More conversation necessary between Ontario government, people over fate of cap-and-trade, climate policy
Banks court buyers for 49% stake in UK nuclear power stations
EDF Energy thought to have piggybacked on plans by Centrica to sell off some of nuclear power stake
Three international banks have begun courting buyers for a 49% stake in Britain’s eight nuclear power stations, starting the process of a major shakeup of the sector’s ownership.
UK-listed Centrica said in February it was looking to sell its 20% stake in the nuclear plants, which UBS and Goldman Sachs are understood to be handling.
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