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UK’s first glyphosate-resistant weed found on Kent farm

The Guardian - 21 hours 28 min ago

Scientist says case is warning for farmers to reduce reliance on controversial and common herbicide

Scientists have identified a glyphosate-resistant weed on a farm in the UK for the first time, raising concerns about the controversial herbicide.

Scientists at the agricultural consultancy ADAS, said that, after reports from agronomists and screening of seed samples from a farm in Kent, they had confirmed glyphosate resistance in Italian ryegrass, an annual grass weed that particularly affects wheat fields in the UK. This is the first time glyphosate resistance in weeds has been detected in the UK.

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Coordinated effort needed to stop whales getting tangled in ropes and nets, scientists say – video

The Guardian - 22 hours 5 min ago

At least 45 whales were entangled by fishing ropes and line on the east coast in 2024. 'There’s a lot of times when we’ll get out to an entanglement where we just think, this animal should just probably be put to sleep,' says Sea World’s head of marine sciences, Wayne Phillips.

The constant drag of rope and floats slowly causes a whale to succumb to exhaustion. 'It’s probably the worst way of dying for any marine … animal,' marine scientist Olaf Meynecke, says. 'It takes weeks to several months until they actually die'

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Giant pink slug makes a comeback on extinct volcano in NSW national park

The Guardian - 22 hours 5 min ago

Exclusive: The kaputar slug, which can grow longer than a human hand, was almost wiped out in the black summer bushfires of 2019-20

A giant, fluorescent pink slug’s comeback on Mount Kaputar has been mapped by eager citizen scientists.

The kaputar slug grows up to 20cm long – outstripping the average human hand – and 6cm wide. The only place it exists in the entire world is on an extinct volcano in NSW’s Mount Kaputar national park.

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‘The worst way of dying’: scientists urge coordinated effort to stop whales getting tangled

The Guardian - 22 hours 5 min ago

Experts recorded 45 entanglements off Australia’s east coast in 2024 – but believe that’s ‘the tip of the iceberg’

At least 45 whales were entangled by fishing ropes and line on the east coast in 2024, and experts are calling for better management of fishing gear in Australia to prevent marine suffering.

Dr Olaf Meynecke, a marine scientist at Griffith University, said the issue of preventing whale entanglements was “largely ignored in Australia”.

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INTERVIEW: European carbon capture developer plans to help emitters monetise biogenic CO2

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-01-10 23:41
The possible inclusion of waste incinerators in the EU ETS will incentivise them to capture CO2 to both reduce their compliance payments and to generate carbon removals from the biogenic portion, according to a Norwegian project developer.
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Europe’s wind energy expansion faces gridlock as ETS2 looms

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-01-10 23:20
Europe is falling short on its annual goal of building 30 gigawatts (GW) of new wind farms, undermining the EU's energy transition and making the expansion of the bloc's carbon pricing scheme to building and transport fuels more challenging, new industry data shows.
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Early ‘forever chemicals’ exposure could impact economic success in adulthood – study

The Guardian - Fri, 2025-01-10 23:00

Those who lived in regions with firefighting training areas earned about 1.7% less later in life, research shows

Early life exposure to toxic PFAS “forever chemicals” could impact economic success in adulthood, new first-of-its-kind research suggests.

The Iowa State University and US Census Bureau working paper compared the earnings, college graduation rates, and birth weights of two groups of children – those raised around military installations that had firefighting training areas, and those who lived near bases with no fire training site.

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Euro Markets: Midday Update

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-01-10 22:28
European carbon prices stabilised on Friday morning as buyers stepped in to accumulate length after early weakness, leaving the market little-changed by midday, while prompt natural gas headed for its fifth decline in the first seven sessions of the year even as storage levels dropped below 70%.
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UK charity unveils 10-year plan to restore nature across 250,000 ha

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-01-10 21:37
A UK charity has announced plans to create 250,000 hectares of nature-rich landscapes in the country over the next 10 years in a bid to support national efforts to meet biodiversity goals.
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CN Markets: CEA price continues to fall, CCER credit issuance slower than expected

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-01-10 21:24
Prices in China's national emissions market continued to fall over the past week with decreasing trading volumes, while observers remained cautious about the supply outlook of the long-stalled offset market, given the slower-than-expected project registration progress.
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Australian cement decarbonisation company wins $3 mln in US grants

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-01-10 20:38
A company already backed by the Australian government for its cement decarbonisation solution announced that two of its projects have now been selected for US Department of Energy (DOE) funding.
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Japanese player partners with coal miner for SAF project

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-01-10 19:34
A Japanese conglomerate is partnering with a coal miner and an agricultural startup in a further step toward sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) in Australia this week, with a view to earning carbon credits.
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Current inventories may underestimate methane emissions from Chinese coal mines, research says

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-01-10 18:40
Existing emission inventories may underestimate methane emissions from China's coal mines, partly because of their reliance on aggregated statistical data, according to a recent report using satellite-based monitoring methods.
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Week in wildlife in pictures: an entangled elk, a grieving whale and a tortoise on the run

The Guardian - Fri, 2025-01-10 18:00

The best of this week’s wildlife photographs from around the world

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2024 first year to pass 1.5C global warming limit

BBC - Fri, 2025-01-10 14:13
Last year was the world's warmest on record, bringing temperatures above a politically symbolic milestone.
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WCI Markets: Rocky start to the year for CCAs

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-01-10 13:13
Traders scrambled for reasons to explain the start of year weakness in California Carbon Allowances (CCA) as macro risk-off sentiment spread across broader markets.
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As Los Angeles combusts, 2024 is declared Earth’s hottest on record

The Conversation - Fri, 2025-01-10 13:08
This record-breaking heat is primarily driven by humanity’s burning of fossil fuels. The warming won’t stop until we reach net-zero emissions. Andrew King, Associate Professor in Climate Science, ARC Centre of Excellence for 21st Century Weather, The University of Melbourne David Karoly, Professor emeritus, The University of Melbourne Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Hottest year on record sent planet past 1.5C of heating for first time in 2024

The Guardian - Fri, 2025-01-10 13:00

Highest recorded temperatures supercharged extreme weather – with worse to come, EU data shows

Climate breakdown drove the annual global temperature above the internationally agreed 1.5C target for the first time last year, supercharging extreme weather and causing “misery to millions of people”.

The average temperature in 2024 was 1.6C above preindustrial levels, data from the EU’s Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) shows. That is a jump of 0.1C from 2023, which was also a record hot year and represents levels of heat never experienced by modern humans.

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2024 declared warmest year on record, first time global temperatures exceed 1.5C

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-01-10 13:00
Last year was confirmed by multiple scientific agencies on Friday as the warmest year on record and the first calendar year that average global temperatures have exceeded 1.5C above pre-industrial levels.
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Participants left in the dark over fate of Australian voluntary offsetting scheme

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-01-10 12:58
The Australian government has yet to decide on reforms for its troubled voluntary corporate offsetting programme, even as speculation swirls that it may be scrapped altogether.
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