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Participants left in the dark over fate of Australian voluntary offsetting scheme
Business group challenges EPA approval of California’s stricter emission standards
We tracked the Tasmanian boobook as it flew a remarkable 250 kilometres non-stop across Bass Strait
Why community volunteers will be essential for how NZ handles the arrival of bird flu
Oil and gas emissions cap unconstitutional, Alberta asserts in public consultations
Fires like those in LA could hit Sydney or Melbourne. How prepared are we? | David Bowman for the Conversation
It’s possible for massive fires to burn in Australian cities. Planning needs to reflect this
As the Los Angeles wildfires rage, we are watching a disaster unfold in real time.
We knew this would happen eventually. We have moved from possible futures to these things now happening. The deferment has ended.
Continue reading...New Mexico’s clean transportation fuel programme expected to begin in Q4
World’s richest use up their fair share of 2025 carbon budget in 10 days
Emissions caused by wealthiest 1% so far this year would take someone from poorest 50% three years to create
The world’s richest 1% have already used up their fair share of the global carbon budget for 2025, just 10 days into the year.
In less than a week and a half, the consumption habits of an individual from this monied elite had already caused, on average, 2.1 tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions, according to analysis by Oxfam GB. It would take someone from the poorest 50% of humanity three years to create the same amount of pollution.
Continue reading...Richest 1% have already burnt their entire annual carbon budget for 2025, Oxfam says
Oregon EQC approves changes to its clean fuels programme
US Forest Service ends rulemaking on old-growth forest preservation
Germany can meet its climate goals, without higher carbon prices -study
DATA DIVE: Major companies retired 15-year-old carbon credits last year, but old vintages growing less popular
WCI credit glut peaks to new record at the end of 2024 despite full fourth compliance period retirements
Verra receives first compensation from discredited Chinese rice carbon projects, but bulk still outstanding
The chronicle of a fire foretold | Rebecca Solnit
The current fires in Los Angeles are reminders of the costs of forgetting
The fires raging in and around Malibu are huge, and they’re terrible, and they’re also the latest in a series of catastrophic fires in Los Angeles county and the region, the latest consequence of heat and drought and wind that have long created the region’s volatile fire weather.
The climate crisis has made it hotter and dryer and made wildfire worse here and across the west and around the world, but this region’s ecology has always been wedded to fire. Homes built in and around natural landscapes – canyons, chaparral coastal hills, forests, mountainsides – with a history of wildfire that are pretty much guaranteed to burn again sooner or later create the personal tragedies and losses and the pressure for fire crews to try to contain the blazes. But suppressing the blazes lets the fuel load build up, meaning that fire will be worse when it comes.
Rebecca Solnit is a Guardian US columnist. She is the author of Orwell’s Roses and co-editor with Thelma Young Lutunatabua of the climate anthology Not Too Late: Changing the Climate Story from Despair to Possibility
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