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ANALYSIS: Voluntary action on airline non-CO2 impact takes shape as EU obligations loom
Democrats win slim majorities in Virginia’s general elections
Five free map datasets launched on agricultural impacts
VCMI announces early adopters of its code for carbon credit buyers
Human-caused heating behind extreme droughts in Syria, Iraq and Iran, study finds
Millions of people’s lives wrecked by droughts that used to happen once every 250 years but now expected once a decade
Extreme droughts that have wrecked the lives of millions of people in Syria, Iraq and Iran since 2020 would not have happened without human-caused global heating, a study has found.
The climate crisis means such long-lasting and severe droughts are no longer rare, the analysis showed. In the Tigris-Euphrates basin, which covers large parts of Syria and Iraq, droughts of this severity happened about once every 250 years before global heating – now they are expected once a decade.
Continue reading...UK asset manager Fidelity to expand sustainable oceans and water investments
Environmental consultancy develops crediting methodology for carbon removals using marine microalgae
Euro Markets: Midday Update
UK forests face 'catastrophic ecosystem collapse'
Woodland birds in quickening decline in UK, with risk of extinctions, say experts
Campaigners call for urgent action after data shows almost all bird types reducing in abundance
Woodland birds are facing an accelerating decline in the UK, with species at risk of extinction if the government does not act, experts have said.
Data released by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) has revealed that almost all bird types are reducing in abundance, despite years of warnings from nature bodies that action needs to be taken to protect habitats and save species.
Continue reading...US Farm Bill should front up funds for agroforestry, coalition says
British energy firm teams up with climate tech company to boost carbon credits offering
‘Inestimable importance’: 500-year-old cache of pressed flowers reveals new secrets
Thousands of specimens from the 1500s show huge changes to Bologna’s flora due to climate crisis and migration, say researchers
A collection of pressed flowers taken from the hillsides of Bologna 500 years ago is unlocking knowledge about how the climate crisis and human migration is changing landscapes in northern Italy.
Picked between 1551 and 1586 by the Renaissance naturalist Ulisse Aldrovandi, the 5,000 delicately cut and dried plants form one of the richest collections of its time.
Continue reading...SK Market: Drab demand sees Korean monthly auction fail to sell out again
Litter blighting UK footpaths with Lucozade bottles most often found, says study
Trash Free Trails’ report finds average of 41 pieces of litter a kilometre as calls grow for deposit returns scheme
Litter is blighting the UK’s footpaths, with an average 41 pieces found a kilometre, according to a major study. Particularly frequently found brands included Lucozade, Coca-Cola, Red Bull, Monster and Walkers.
The State of Our Trails report, conducted by Trash Free Trails, is the first UK study that aims to establish a scientific understanding of the environmental consequences of the tonnes of litter in our landscapes. It drew together more than 1,600 submissions by 4,500 volunteers and with the data the authors have estimated as many as 9.1m individual pieces of litter could be found across the UK’s 220,000km of public rights of way. The surveys took place between July 2020 and August 2023.
Continue reading...Extinction Rebellion's future is far less radical than its past | Rupert Read
The time for alarmist messages is over, and the organisation could help unite people in positive action
- Rupert Read is co-director of the Climate Majority Project
Gail Bradbrook, co-founder of Extinction Rebellion, has been found guilty of criminal damage, after she broke a window at the Department for Transport in an ecologically motivated protest against HS2 in 2019.
The timing of Bradbrook’s verdict is almost exquisitely ironic. Five years ago last week, Extinction Rebellion was launched in Parliament Square. Back then, a principal term of criticism lobbied at XR was that it was “alarmist”. Five years on, it’s plainly visible that it was not.
Rupert Read is the author of Extinction Rebellion: Insights from the Inside and Co-Director of the Climate Majority Project
Continue reading...Quinbrook eyes 16-hour batteries for Sun Cable in massive storage deal with China’s CATL
Quinbrook signs 10 GWh supply deal with China battery giant CATL, including for the use of 16-hour batteries at the world's biggest solar and storage project Sun Cable.
The post Quinbrook eyes 16-hour batteries for Sun Cable in massive storage deal with China’s CATL appeared first on RenewEconomy.
AU Market: ACCU delivery failure a key market risk, analysis says
UK forests face catastrophic ecosystem collapse within 50 years, study says
‘Alarming’ new research warns of risk to British woodlands from disease, extreme weather and wildfires, unless ‘call to action’ is heeded now
UK forests are heading for “catastrophic ecosystem collapse” within the next 50 years due to multiple threats including disease, extreme weather and wildfires, researchers have warned, with trees dying on a large scale.
The study, published in the journal Forestry, was put together by a panel of 42 researchers, with 1,200 experts consulted. Lead author, Dr Eleanor Tew, head of forest planning at Forestry England and visiting researcher at the University of Cambridge, described the finding as “sobering and alarming”.
Continue reading...Chubby frog, broad-toothed rat and impish marsupial among growing list of species under threat
More native plants and species at risk of extinction as Australia enters worst bushfire season since 2019’s black summer
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More than 20 plants and animals have been added to the government’s threatened species list as politicians look ahead to another challenging bushfire season.
A chubby frog, eight kinds of crayfish and a river fish with no scientific description have been added to the growing list of threatened native wildlife.
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