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Twenty years on, how is Australia’s first batch of wind farms performing?
As Challicum Hills turns 20, we look at the long-term technical and commercial performance of the NEM’s first batch of utility-scale wind farms.
The post Twenty years on, how is Australia’s first batch of wind farms performing? appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Forrest backtracks on “filthy” fossils, supports development of gas terminal
Having once pledged not to “mangle the process” by using anything but renewables to fuel his energy plans, Andrew Forrest says some imported gas is necessary.
The post Forrest backtracks on “filthy” fossils, supports development of gas terminal appeared first on RenewEconomy.
*Senior Program Officer, Carbon Market Infrastructure, Verra – Remote (Worldwide)
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The Guardian view on Rishi Sunak: he’s not serious about meeting green targets | Editorial
The prime minister believes that the climate emergency can be left to the individual conscience. He’s wrong
This year has been the hottest in our recorded history and, most likely, over the last 100,000 years. “Heat domes” across the northern hemisphere saw temperatures soar. There were heatwaves during winter in the Andes. Extreme weather saw unprecedented flooding in Asia. The wildfires that swept Canada this summer were the largest in modern history – and produced more carbon emissions than all of the country’s other human-related activities combined. After a Mexico-sized chunk of Antarctica failed to refreeze, the UN secretary general, António Guterres, proclaimed that “the era of global boiling has arrived”.
There can be little comfort taken from the fact that the average global surface temperature in 2023 was 1.48C hotter than that of the preindustrial period, a fraction below the UN’s 1.5C target. Scientists suggest that above this – but below the 2C threshold – the world is more likely to pass key irreversible tipping points: the die-off of low-latitude coral reefs; widespread abrupt permafrost thaw leading to greenhouse gas release; and the collapse of the Greenland and West Antarctic ice sheets. One entrepreneur with an eye for the apocalyptic is already shipping glacier ice to cocktail bars in the UAE. But exploiting the current situation is the problem.
Continue reading...EU lawmakers rubber-stamp new emissions laws ahead of elections
Russia could weaponise fertilisers so EU should safeguard its own production -CEO
Consulting giant forges deal with US carbon removals developer that includes DAC credit purchase
Popular biochar-based carbon removal trails behind DAC in end-of-year investment numbers
Biodiversity Pulse: Thursday January 11, 2024
Nature tech cohort launches with biodiversity credit developers
Russia’s Sibur says it has built nation’s largest carbon credit portfolio
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INTERVIEW: Shift to net-zero emission concrete gains pace with CO2 storage solution
Have Australian drivers finally charged into electric vehicles?
EV sales are booming and longtime favourite makes and models are being ignored in favour of Tesla and BYD
Newcomer brands and luxury marques are dominating booming electric car sales as mainstream players struggle to match the pace of a fast-evolving EV market.
The top three selling electric vehicles in Australia in 2023 were from Tesla and BYD, between them accounting for two-thirds of the 87,217 electric cars sold, according to figures released by the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries.
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