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Air cargo group launches voluntary carbon offsetting platform
RepRisk to expand biodiversity risk tool to include power sector
UNEP warns surging natural resource forecast could derail biodiversity targets
UK ETS supply adjustment mechanism could be in place from 2026 -official
Czech utility planning to close two lignite units in early 2025 -media
Voluntary carbon project developer launches large-scale electric cooking activity in Africa
February voluntary carbon credit retirements keep market on track to reach 233 mln this year
Danish firm’s ‘climate-controlled pork’ claim misleading, court rules
Campaigners say decision against Danish Crown, Europe’s largest pork producer, sends resounding message
Europe’s largest pork producer misled customers with its “climate-controlled pork” campaign, Denmark’s high court has ruled in the country’s first climate lawsuit.
Campaigners argued that Danish Crown greenwashed its meat with round, pink stickers on its packaging that said pigs were “climate-controlled”, along with a marketing campaign that claimed its pork was “more climate-friendly than you think”.
Continue reading...Act to save Dartmoor rainforest from sheep, urge campaigners
Authorities asked to step in to protect Black-a-Tor Copse, an ancient temperate rainforest in Devon at risk from overgrazing
There are acorns galore and tiny oaks sprouting from tussocky grass beside the gnarled ancient trees of Black-a-Tor Copse on the northern slopes of Dartmoor national park.
But each tiny sapling grows no higher than a sheep’s chin and there it stays, its new shoots and tender leaves repeatedly shorn each spring by the livestock roaming through this national nature reserve.
Continue reading...Enhanced weathering shows CO2 removal, crop yield boost in US farmland study
Deep sea mining has ‘poor’ market prospects, report warns
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Global steelmaker developing voluntary carbon offset strategy
PREVIEW: Transport carbon accounting rules set for key EU vote
Global energy-related CO2 emissions up, but lower than expected -IEA
Texas farmers claim company sold them PFAS-contaminated sludge that killed livestock
Two ranches also allege biosolids with ‘forever chemicals’ ruined crops, polluted drinking water and left their properties worthless
A Texas county has launched a first-of-its-kind criminal investigation into waste management giant Synagro over PFAS-contaminated sewage sludge it is selling to Texas farmers as a cheap alternative to fertilizer.
Two small Texas ranches at the center of that case have also filed a federal lawsuit against Synagro, alleging the company knew its sludge was contaminated but still sold it. Sludge spread on a nearby field sickened the farmers, killed livestock, polluted drinking water, contaminated beef later sold to the public and left their properties worthless, the complaint alleges.
Continue reading...Verra consults on voluntary carbon capture and storage crediting methodology
International Big Cat Alliance set for launch after India cabinet approval
CN Markets: CEAs climb to four-month high amid healthier liquidity, loftier expectations
The week in wildlife – in pictures: hugging bear cubs, quarrelling birds and London goslings
The best of this week’s wildlife photographs from around the world
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