Feed aggregator
We found 3 types of food wasters, which one are you?
Scarce clean hydrogen put public funds at risk in Spain ahead of upcoming EU auction
CARBON FORWARD 2023: EUA price outlook sees short-term supply increase meeting “sticky” industrial emissions
Carbon credit insurance company to pay claims with replacement offsets
Development banks’ climate finance reached record almost $100 billion in 2022 -report
ICE sees first trades in CORSIA first phase carbon credit futures
CARBON FORWARD 2023: Implement CBAM first before expanding its scope, urges industry representative
INTERVIEW: First Brazil-based carbon credit certifier seeks to fill market gap by adapting to national context
CARBON FORWARD 2023: Shipping companies may seek to avoid EU ETS via sea transfer -industry
South African exchange teams up with Xpansiv under new environmental markets venture
New funding round for clean cooking companies to open in November
Biodiversity Pulse: Thursday October 12, 2023
World Economic Forum to launch buyers club for biodiversity credits
Australian solar pioneers presented with world’s top engineering prize
Australian and Chinese researchers whose worked delivered the stunning cost reductions in solar PV presented with world's top engineering prize.
The post Australian solar pioneers presented with world’s top engineering prize appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Climate expert ‘sacked’ after refusing flight to Germany over carbon emissions
Gianluca Grimalda says he was fired when he refused to return at short notice from Solomon Islands research trip by plane
A climate researcher who refused to comply with his employer’s demand to fly at short notice back to Germany from the Solomon Islands says he has been fired from his job.
Gianluca Grimalda is still waiting in Bougainville for a cargo ship, set to depart on Saturday, to begin his return journey to Europe, after six months investigating the impacts of climate breakdown and globalisation on the island’s inhabitants.
Continue reading...Almost two-thirds of EU firms face losses due to climate change, says report
Refusing to fly has lost me my job as a climate researcher. It’s a price worth paying | Gianluca Grimalda
My company in Germany has demanded my swift return from climate-change fieldwork near Papua New Guinea. I can’t do it
Two weeks ago, my employer presented me with a stark ultimatum: return to my offices in Kiel, Germany, within five days, or lose my job. I am a climate researcher and since March 2023, I have been completing vital fieldwork into the social impact of climate change almost 24,000km away by overland routes, on the island of Bougainville off the coast of Papua New Guinea.
My fieldwork had been mired in unforeseeable problems, from natural disasters to security threats, and my employer was, unsurprisingly, unhappy that my return had been delayed by many weeks. The urgency of their request to return meant I would have to jump on a plane if I was to meet the deadline; but for me, this was not an option. I have been practising conscientious objection to flying for more than 10 years. My employer has supported me on a “slow trip” in the past. I do not boycott flying altogether, but I will only catch a plane when no other alternative exists.
Gianluca Grimalda, formerly senior researcher at the Kiel Institute for the World Economy, is a social scientist interested in social cohesion and adaptation to climate change
Continue reading...Euro Markets: Midday Update
Nuclear dependent France extends life of coal generators to avoid winter blackouts
France has extended the life of two coal fired generators to help meet expected power shortages this winter as it struggles with reliability in its ageing nuclear fleet.
The post Nuclear dependent France extends life of coal generators to avoid winter blackouts appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Sunak’s U-turns make net zero harder and keep bills high, watchdog warns
Climate Change Committee also says rowing back on climate policies has harmed investment into UK
Rishi Sunak’s reversals on key climate policies have damaged the UK’s ability to meet its carbon-cutting goals and will keep energy bills high for millions of households, with the effect of “making net zero considerably harder to achieve”, the UK’s climate watchdog has warned.
Rowing back on policies to phase out gas boilers and petrol and diesel vehicles, and the general sense that the government is “weakening its commitments” to shifting to a green economy, have also harmed the prospects of inward investment into the UK, and sent adverse signals to consumers, businesses and other governments.
Continue reading...