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Unseen images of code breaking computer that helped win WW2
Nature in England at risk due to government failures, says environment watchdog
Office for Environmental Protection report shows only four of 40 targets for England likely to be achieved
The government is failing on almost all of its environmental targets, risking an “irreversible spiral of decline” in nature, a damning report by the environment watchdog has found.
Dame Glenys Stacey, chair of the Office for Environmental Protection (OEP), has said in the report, published today, that if action is not taken England will fail to meet its goal of halting nature’s decline by 2030, as well as a host of other vital nature targets.
Continue reading...Peregrine lander: US Moon mission on course for fiery destruction
Peatlands nature market to mature between between 2030 and 2050, report predicts
US carbon marketplace startup partners with Brazilian NGO to generate smallholder farm offsets
Central US state senators introduce bill banning CO2 pipelines
Australian oil and gas giant invests in US university-led decarbonisation accelerator
Immediate climate threat on corporate agenda at Davos
Aussie startup reports "buzz of potential" for innovators at this year's meeting as quest to find sustainable ways of doing business gets urgent.
The post Immediate climate threat on corporate agenda at Davos appeared first on RenewEconomy.
EU needs to align ETS and policies with fossil fuel phaseout -scientific advisory board
Data Manager, Conservation International – Various Locations
Last year’s drop in industry and power emissions depresses 2024 EUA price outlook –analyst
*Legal Counsel, Verra – Remote (US)
RGGI Q1 auction volumes drop nearly 30% after Virginia’s exit
Strategy Development, Reporting and Planning, Conservation International – Various Locations
*Manager, Integrated Marketing, Verra – Remote (Worldwide, with significant overlap with US business hours)
Davos 2024: Nigerian vice president backs smallholder sustainable agriculture
Viability of certain CCUS projects hinges on higher carbon price, technology improvements -report
Why electric trucks are our best bet to cut road transport emissions
Davos 2024: Global miners vow to halt biodiversity loss, restore landscapes
Give BP’s ‘continuity candidate’ time to succeed or fail on net zero strategy | Nils Pratley
There is method in the oil conglomerate’s decision that the best candidate for CEO is the one already doing the job
After a “robust and competitive” hunt for a new chief executive, the board of BP has decided that the best appointment is the bloke who has been sitting in the boardroom for three and a half years already and doing the job on a stand-in basis since the defenestration of Bernard Looney last September.
No surprise there. BP has never appointed a boss from outside, and Murray Auchincloss, the former chief financial officer, fits the bill as a continuity candidate. He has been in the company for 25 years and is wedded to Looney’s – and chair Helge Lund’s – strategy of “orderly” transition to net zero by 2050 or sooner. He did the numbers on the approach, after all.
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