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Footballers at ‘very high risk of extreme heat stress’ during World Cup 2026
Scientists warn Fifa’s current ‘wet bulb’ temperature policy underestimates strain athletes undergo during matches
Footballers face a “very high risk of experiencing extreme heat stress” at 10 of the 16 stadiums that will host the next World Cup, researchers have warned, as they urge sports authorities to rethink the timing of sports events.
Hot weather and heavy exercise could force footballers to endure scorching temperatures that feel higher than 49.5C (121.1F) when they play in three North American countries in summer 2026, according to the study. It found they are most at risk of “unacceptable thermal stress” in the stadiums in Arlington and Houston, in the US, and in Monterrey, in Mexico.
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Peru publishes decree aligning national climate strategy with net zero, promotes forest land titling, REDD+
ICVCM to delay cookstoves carbon credit decision until 2025 amid “complex” discussions
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North American pension fund returns could halve by 2040 under high-warming scenario -report
Euro Markets: Midday Update
EU approves Sweden request to extend ETS2 to new sectors
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Seven EU countries call for slow-down on new auto decarbonisation policies
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Swiss insurer backs two carbon removal startups in net zero effort
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South Korea urged to increase auctioned share of CO2 permits in ETS
Australian law firm ordered to pay A$9 mln in court costs after losing pipeline case
Countries to resume COP16 discussions in Rome early next year
Safeguard facilities should publish 5-year compliance strategies, Climate Change Authority says
Australia is making mixed progress on emissions, and rapid cuts are needed, says CCA
The post Australia is making mixed progress on emissions, and rapid cuts are needed, says CCA appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Labor’s sad capitulation on the environment has shaken even true believers like me | Felicity Wade
As Australia’s natural environment declines, Labor appears to cave to vested interests, writes Felicity Wade
On Thursday we were hoping to be celebrating the Australian parliament passing legislation to create a federal Environmental Protection Agency, an expert watchdog to oversee our country’s natural bounty. This was going to be a major moment for which my organisation, the Labor Environment Action Network (LEAN) and many others had worked for years. Promised on the eve of the 2022 election, it was the centre-piece of the Labor’s commitment to the environment. But late on Tuesday afternoon the legislation was moth-balled.
It is a sad and sorry tale.
Felicity Wade is national co-convener of the Labor Environment Action Network
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