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CARBON FORWARD 2023: Pakistan developing Article 6 framework for international carbon trade, planning domestic carbon market
Number of nesting seabirds on Island of Lundy at nine-decade high
Tiny island in Bristol Channel has 25,000 Manx shearwaters – 95% of England’s breeding population – and 1,335 puffins
There are more seabirds nesting on the island of Lundy than at any time since the 1930s, conservationists have revealed.
The tiny island in the Bristol Channel, a globally famed location for Britain’s seabirds, is now home to 25,000 Manx shearwaters – 95% of England’s breeding population – as well as 1,335 puffins and more than 150 pairs of storm petrels, a species that only arrived on the island in 2014.
Continue reading...CARBON FORWARD 2023: Corporates in polluting sectors set to reap profits from carbon pricing -analyst
Exxon reinforces support for fossil fuels with deal to buy shale giant for $60bn
Deal to buy Pioneer Natural Resources shows Exxon’s confidence that fossil fuel output will not be hampered in years to come
Oil giant ExxonMobil agreed to buy the shale group Pioneer Natural Resources for $59.5bn in a deal that places a vast bet on a future for fossil fuel production in the United States.
America’s largest oil and gas deal in more than two decades will increase Exxon’s dominance in the Permian Basin shale field, at the heart of the country’s transformation into the world’s biggest oil producer.
Continue reading...Voluntary UK woodland and peatland carbon credits revealed as among highest priced in market
Guess who’s coming for dinner? The world’s second most venomous snake | Annabelle Hickson
Channelling Villanelle, Annabelle Hickson’s onion chopping skills did not prepare her for the entry of the deadly brown snake that slithered into her farmhouse kitchen in rural NSW
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They say you can’t kill a brown snake because it’s a native animal. And that you definitely shouldn’t kill one with a shovel. And that guinea fowls are meant to scare snakes away. And that blue tongue lizards eat snake eggs.
But what are you to do when you’re in the kitchen chopping onions for dinner and the second most venomous snake in the world slithers in?
Continue reading...Felled Sycamore Gap tree to be moved to secret location
The much-loved tree must be removed to protect Hadrian’s Wall, but its ultimate fate remains uncertain
The Sycamore Gap tree is being removed from its spot on Hadrian’s Wall after it was cut down by vandals two weeks ago.
On Thursday a crane will lift the 50-foot sycamore off the wall in Northumberland and it will be put into storage at a National Trust property – the location of which is not being disclosed for security reasons.
Continue reading...CARBON FORWARD 2023: UN Article 6 body “confident but apprehensive” on methodology progress at COP28
Climate change could make beer taste worse
Malaysia’s parliament passes CO2-cutting energy efficiency legislation
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Never mind the French connection. Bedbugs are already at home in Britain, and we must live with them | James Logan
These hardy insects are incredibly good hitchhikers. We can slow their march, but we’ll never entirely eradicate them
The reported outbreak of bedbugs in Paris is hardly surprising. Reports of sightings on the London Underground – so far unsubstantiated, but quickly addressed by Sadiq Khan – are not surprising either. Bedbugs are everywhere. Bedbugs can be found in any city around the world, in any location, from youth hostels to five-star hotels. There are not yet clear numbers on the purported “explosion” of bedbugs in Paris, but in the UK, pest control company Rentokil reported a 65% increase in bedbug infestations in the UK from 2022 to 2023.
As we return to pre-pandemic levels of travel, bedbugs are on the move, and this is likely to cause more sightings. They tend to travel in people’s suitcases and end up in our bedrooms – they are incredibly good hitchhikers. The rise in popularity of secondhand furniture is another way for bedbugs to enter our homes.
James Logan is professor of medical entomology at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
Continue reading...Stakeholders dissatisfied with EU taxonomy biodiversity criteria, ex-EU advisor says
Rare 'skin eating beetle' found on Flat Holm Island
Waiting list for allotments in England almost doubles in 12 years
There are at least 157,820 outstanding applications to local authorities, and waits of up to 15 years
There are few things so quintessentially English as the allotment, but the number of people waiting for a space of their own has almost doubled in the last 12 years.
The most recent figures, obtained by Greenpeace through freedom of information requests, show there are now at least 157,820 applications sitting on English local authorities’ allotment waiting lists, up 81% from 12 years ago when researchers found the figure was 86,787.
Continue reading...Tokyo Stock Exchange begins carbon trading, sees miniscule volumes on opening day
Cutting methane emissions offers vast climate win at low cost -IEA
Nature remains niche in sustainable finance market but room for growth, report finds
Veolia to capture 10 mln tonnes of CO2 from Hong Kong waste project
Politicians, not public, drive U-turns on green agenda, says UN biodiversity chief
People are ahead of governments, says David Cooper, who blames backtracking on parties seeking ‘wedge issues’ for electoral gain
Government backtracking on environmental promises is being driven by politicians and vested interests, not the public, the acting UN biodiversity chief has said, as he called for greater support for those experiencing short-term costs from green policies.
David Cooper, acting executive secretary for the UN convention on biological diversity (CBD), told the Guardian he believed the public mood was not moving against greater environmental protections, and that vested interests opposed to action on the climate crisis and nature loss were trying to frustrate progress.
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