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Is Australia’s brown coal hydrogen export project destined to fail?
The post Is Australia’s brown coal hydrogen export project destined to fail? appeared first on RenewEconomy.
WCI Markets: CCAs trade higher after rare auction delay, Washington uncertainty prolongs
Nuclear subs are coming to Australia. Now the Coalition wants reactors, too. We’re not ready for it
Alberta TIER programme tightens emissions benchmarks for second time this year
Giant Queensland zinc mine plans behind the meter wind farm to slash crippling gas power costs
The post Giant Queensland zinc mine plans behind the meter wind farm to slash crippling gas power costs appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Governance gaps, market uncertainty to hinder BNG effectiveness, report says
Voluntary carbon credit management firm, Brazilian investor partner to scale offset project
Denser housing can be greener too – here’s how NZ can build better for biodiversity
Clean energy slump – why Australia’s renewables revolution is behind schedule, and how to fix it
LCFS Market: Credit prices plunge lower as renewable feedstock tariff hopes sink, stakeholders renew calls for programme stringency
Swallow, swift and house martin populations have nearly halved, finds UK bird survey
Reduction in insect numbers contributes to drop, and there are declines across more than a third of bird species surveyed
Swallows, swifts and house martins were once a common sight over UK towns and cities, dextrously catching insects on the wing. But these spring and summer visitors are becoming increasingly rare, according to the definitive survey of the country’s birds.
Populations of these insect-eating birds have dropped by 40% or more in the past decade, according to the latest Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) report.
Continue reading...India mulls adding cookstoves to list of eligible Article 6.2 activities
FEATURE: Denmark’s move to set up carbon removals fund creates emissions accounting headache for Brussels
Slow burn development of low-carbon tech leaves oil demand ramping higher until 2030, finds report
EU countries cut gas under REPowerEU, but risk missing new target -analysts
Solar-powered humanitarian project in Uganda to yield carbon credits
Activists sue Russia over ‘weak’ climate policy
Russian constitutional court is considering claim, which activists hope will raise awareness about emissions
A group of activists are fighting for the right to scrutinise Russia’s climate policies, and in particular its enormous methane emissions, in court.
Russia’s constitutional court is considering a claim brought by 18 individuals and the NGO Ecodefense that insufficient action by the Russian state to cut national greenhouse gas emissions is violating their rights to life, health and a healthy environment.
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