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COP29: Four carbon negative nations launch G-ZERO forum at the climate summit in Baku
The Guardian view on Cop29: 1.5C has been passed – so speed up the green transition | Editorial
Sir Keir Starmer’s pledge on emissions is an encouraging step at a frightening moment
Predictions that this will be the first calendar year in which the 1.5C warming limit enshrined in the Paris agreement is surpassed provide a stark backdrop to the UN’s 29th climate conference. This year – 2024 – has already seen the hottest-ever day and month, and is expected by experts to be the hottest year too. Addressing delegates on Tuesday, the UN chief, António Guterres, referred to a “masterclass in climate destruction”. The escalating pattern of destructive weather events, most recently in Valencia, is a warning of what lies ahead.
When the 1.5C figure was included in the 2015 deal, it was known to be a stretch. The treaty says countries must hold the average temperature “well below 2C above pre-industrial levels” and aim for 1.5C. Busting this target in 2024 will not mean it has been definitively missed; the measurement of global temperatures relies on averages recorded over 20 or more years. But the crossing of this threshold is a menacing moment. Around the world, people as well as governments and climate specialists should take notice – and act.
Continue reading...COP29: Major fossil fuel-producing countries commit funding, announce penalties to crack down on methane emissions
COP29: Approval of Article 6 standards paves way for methodologies from mid-2025
NZ’s food manufacturers are embracing the idea of a circular economy but are slow to implement it
Cancel drilling of Rosebank oilfield, activists urge Scottish court
Greenpeace and Uplift say Rosebank and Jackdaw licences were granted unlawfully by former Tory government
Climate campaigners have urged a Scottish court to cancel the licence to drill the UK’s largest untapped oilfield, arguing it will cause “sizeable” and unjustified damage to the planet.
Greenpeace and Uplift accuse the former Conservative government of having unlawfully given the Norwegian oil giant Equinor a licence to exploit the Rosebank oilfield, which sits 80 miles (130km) north-west of Shetland and holds nearly 500m barrels of oil and gas.
Continue reading...Starmer confirms that the UK has committed to an 81% cut to emissions by 2035 – video
Keir Starmer has confirmed that the UK has committed to an 81% cut to emissions by 2035. The prime minister also said the British government was due to launch the CIF Capital Markets Mechanism, a climate finance scheme, on the London Stock Exchange to help developing countries
Continue reading...Flaring emissions more than double for top 10 oil majors when including non-operated assets -report
COP29: Negotiators hail Article 6.4 deal, but campaigners say it’s a false solution
CIX to add one REDD project and remove another from its NBS index
INTERVIEW: Amazon bioeconomy investment facility takes aim at illegal activity
US oil and gas firms to face federal fee for methane emissions in new EPA rule
Environmental Protection Agency rule seeks to curb ‘super pollutant’ more potent than carbon dioxide in short term
Oil and natural gas companies for the first time will have to pay a federal fee if they emit dangerous methane above certain levels under a rule being made final by the Biden administration.
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) rule follows through on a directive from Congress included in the 2022 climate law. The new fee is intended to encourage industry to adopt best practices that reduce emissions of methane – the primary component of natural gas – and thereby avoid paying the fee.
Continue reading...Wild bird numbers continue ‘alarming’ decline in UK, Defra figures show
All bird species have declined in number, after suffering habitat loss, pesticide use, climate breakdown and bird flu
Wild bird numbers in the UK are continuing to fall despite government promises to halt nature decline by 2030.
Data released by the government on Tuesday shows that over the past five years, all bird species have faced population decline after suffering from habitat loss, pesticide use, climate breakdown and bird flu. Overall, bird species have declined in number UK-wide by 2% and in England by 7% in the five years since 2018.
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