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Developer hands biodiversity crediting scheme to independent administrator
UK ‘risks repeat of surging energy bills’ amid continued reliance on gas
Energy crisis panel warns country is ‘dangerously unprepared’ and must shift away from gas quickly
Britain is at risk of experiencing a repeat of the sharp increase in energy costs which has fuelled the continuing cost of living crisis because it relies too heavily on gas, according to an expert panel of industry leaders.
The Energy Crisis Commission has warned that the UK is still “dangerously underprepared” for another crisis because it continues to rely on gas for its power plants and home heating.
Continue reading...LATAM Roundup: A big week for the Paris Agreement’s Article 6
New evidence says gas exports damage the climate even more than coal. It’s time Australia took serious action | Adam Morton
A US study estimates the total climate pollution from LNG was 33% greater than that from coal over a 20-year period. This should have major ramifications for emissions policy
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The claim that Australian gas exports are “clean” and needed to drive the transition to net zero greenhouse gas emissions has become an article of faith for significant parts of the country’s industry, media and political classes – often repeated, only occasionally challenged.
It has buttressed a massive expansion of the liquified natural gas (LNG) industry in the north of the continent over the past decade, with major new developments in Queensland, Western Australia and the Northern Territory.
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Continue reading...US fund manager raises $80 mln for new forest conservation vehicle
Only one-third of Europe’s surface water qualifies as good or better, study finds
Data compiled by EEA shows quality of water bodies falls far short of target first set for 2015 and since extended to 2027
Only about one-third of Europe’s surface water is in good health or better, a report has found, despite an EU target first set for 2015 to bring all bodies of water up to good quality.
About 37% of Europe’s surface waters qualified as having at least a good ecological status and 29% a good chemical status in 2021, according to data from 19 member countries compiled by the European Environment Agency (EEA). The original deadline for the EU target has been extended to 2027 but data suggests this is on track to be missed by a wide margin.
Continue reading...Broken: Study reveals sharp decline in global land carbon sink in 2023
EU wants more countries to contribute to global climate finance goal
US EPA challenges that power plant rules can allow coal, gas plants to continue with CCS
ANALYSIS: In ‘new school’ LATAM carbon markets, regulators push growth as ‘old school’ cracks down
Giving First Nations names to our bird species is a lot more complex – and contentious – than you might think
Integrating carbon removal credits into EU ETS makes moral and business sense, says BP
Poland’s new ‘ambitious’ climate plan foresees sharp drop in coal use by 2040
Spacecraft blasts off to hunt alien life on a distant moon
CFEL2024: Integrity concerns still keeping voluntary carbon credit buyers at bay
VCM Report: Huge REDD trade lifts spirits, prices tick higher ahead of COP29
Non-profit considering global portfolio of biodiversity credit pilots
Under-prepared shipping companies may face hefty fines under FuelEU -consultancy
‘Wavy’ jet stream to bring warm weather to north-west Europe
Warm air from south to bring above-average temperatures – but heavy rain expected to follow
North-west Europe is forecast to experience a burst of autumn warmth this week, thanks to warm air from southern Europe spreading northwards. This brief episode of warmer-than-average conditions will be driven by an amplified, or “wavy”, jet stream, which will allow warm air to push farther north.
Daytime temperatures across much of France are forecast to reach the mid-20s on Tuesday and Wednesday, with some areas in the south-west potentially exceeding this. Meanwhile, the Benelux area and south-east England are expected to reach the low-20s by midweek.
Continue reading...A red-lipped batfish: is there anything creepier? | Helen Sullivan
We’ve all been there. We’ve all felt like a badly made-up, odd-limbed, irritable floor-dwelling mess
As you contemplate the wonders of evolution, and how a creature can be born with something weird and new, and that thing can either help it get ahead or not hurt its chances, and it can then reproduce and make another one like it, spare a thought for the red-lipped batfish.
A real animal, it has the kind of mouth that, as a kid, you may have made from Babybel cheese wax, to go with your red wax fake nails. It has a beard of white whiskers. It has fins that bend backwards, like a person’s arms at yoga when they are about to do upward dog. Before your eyes, it sprouts a new limb from its nostril. Its nose – technically a snout – is long, at the top of its head, and hook-shaped. It cannot swim, only crawl. Its crawl is more like a waddle.
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