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Communications Manager, Carbon Markets and Technical Solutions, Agreena – London/Copenhagen

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2023-11-21 02:54
Join our growing Corporate Communications team as we expand into new markets and launch innovative products. We're hiring a Communications Manager to support the Head of Corporate Communications, with a focus on our carbon market and technical solution activities. The position involves coordinating global and local communications, and playing a pivotal role in shaping and executing our communication strategy.
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First auction for 2023 Swiss carbon permits sells out

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2023-11-21 02:36
Buyers scooped up all the carbon permits on offer in the first of two Swiss ETS auctions for 2023-vintage units.
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EU’s Von der Leyen confirms second green hydrogen auction on eve of the first

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2023-11-21 02:15
The second round of EU auctions to support home-grown green hydrogen capacity buildout will take place in spring 2024, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced on Monday.
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Restaurants, pets and holidays: how UK’s well-off have outsize carbon footprints

The Guardian - Tue, 2023-11-21 02:03

Data shows baby boomers have highest emissions and London has lower footprint than rest of UK

The great carbon divide: charting a climate chasm

Restaurants, pets and foreign holidays are among the reasons why the UK’s most well-off people rack up carbon footprints far greater than those on low incomes, according to data shared with the Guardian.

The biggest carbon divide is in aviation, with the richest 10% in the UK – the 6.7 million people paid more than £59,000 a year – causing more than six times more climate-heating emissions from flights than the poorest 10%. Spending on electrical items, homeware and furniture also contributes to the outsize impact of the wealthy, who splash out four times more on these goods.

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Revealed: the huge climate impact of the middle classes

The Guardian - Tue, 2023-11-21 02:03

Carbon emissions of richest 10% is up to 40 times bigger than poorest, and ignoring divide may make ending climate crisis impossible, experts say

The richest 10% of people in many countries cause up to 40 times more climate-heating carbon emissions than the poorest 10% of their fellow citizens, according to data obtained by the Guardian.

Failing to account for this huge divide when making policies to cut emissions can cause a backlash over the affordability of climate action, experts say.

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Italian startup raises €1.75 mln in pre-seed funding towards DAC tech

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2023-11-21 00:53
An Italian climate tech startup has raised €1.75 million in pre-seed funding to help develop its direct air capture (DAC) technology.
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Senior Carbon Markets Analyst, Energy Aspects – New York (Hybrid)

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2023-11-21 00:35
Energy Aspects has a new and exciting opportunity for a Senior Carbon Markets Analyst to join our growing research team, based in New York. This is a fantastic opportunity for an experienced Markets Analyst, with knowledge and understanding of North American carbon markets, to join an award-winning and rapidly growing energy research consultancy and assist with the ongoing development and delivery of our carbon market product offerings.
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Top 1% richest emit equivalent to poorest two-thirds of global population -NGO

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2023-11-21 00:04
The super-rich are responsible for 16% of global CO2 emissions, about the same as the emissions from the poorest 66% of humanity in 2019, according to a report by an NGO, that recommended a 60% income tax on the top 1% to lower their emissions and raise funds for the energy transition.
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'Frustrating as hell': Graeme Pearman’s climate research should have warned the world - video

The Guardian - Tue, 2023-11-21 00:00

In the 1970s, Graeme Pearman measured rising carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere, briefing three prime ministers on what that meant for the planet. After decades leading Australia’s climate research, Pearman, now 82, speaks of the frustration that the science didn't lead to meaningful change.

This video is part of Weight of the World: a climate scientist's burden. The series features three pioneering Australian climate change scientists - Graeme Pearman, Lesley Hughes and Ove Hoegh-Guldberg. Pearman was measuring CO2 in the atmosphere as long ago as 1971. Hughes is one of the first ecologists to warn that rising temperatures would push many species towards extinction. Hoegh-Guldberg’s research revealed the risk that global heating would have on the ocean’s richest ecosystems - coral reefs.

The series tells the story of how the three scientists made their discoveries, how they came under attack for their science and the personal toll it has taken on them. And importantly, how they stay hopeful.

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World facing ‘hellish’ 3C of climate heating, UN warns before Cop28

The Guardian - Tue, 2023-11-21 00:00

‘We must start setting records on cutting emissions,’ UN boss says after temperature records obliterated in 2023

The world is on track for a “hellish” 3C of global heating, the UN has warned before the crucial Cop28 climate summit that begins next week in the United Arab Emirates.

The report found that today’s carbon-cutting policies are so inadequate that 3C of heating would be reached this century.

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Countries must increase ambition or face global warming of up to 2.9C, says UN report

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2023-11-21 00:00
Nations must go further than their current Paris Agreement pledges in order to be on track to meet targets to curb global warming or face a temperature rise of up to 2.9C this century, according to a UN report Monday that has prompted UN chief Antonio Guterres to urge leaders to "drastically up their game".
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UK net zero cluster to build and test new direct air capture pilot

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2023-11-20 23:17
A new direct air capture demonstration unit will be installed at the UK's first and largest net zero industrial cluster in northeast England, resulting from a partnership between a local university and a climate tech company.
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We smashed the windows of a major bank. A jury acquitted us. This is why | Gully Bujak

The Guardian - Mon, 2023-11-20 22:44

I think people everywhere, even on juries, have had enough of our leaders’ failure to tackle the climate crisis

In 2021, I was arrested with eight other women for breaking the windows at HSBC’s headquarters in London. On Thursday, after just two hours of deliberation, a jury of our peers found all nine of us not guilty of nearly half a million pounds in criminal damage.

Although the three-week trial was the most gruelling experience of my life, I trusted the jury to acquit us for two reasons. First, I believe the human spirit is basically good and cooperative, and when given the chance we will make decisions that are compassionate and fair.

Gully Bujak worked with Extinction Rebellion for several years and is now a community organiser in Hull

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

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Euro Markets: Midday Update

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2023-11-20 22:15
European carbon prices rose on Monday morning as the energy complex advanced amid lower temperatures and continued geopolitical uncertainty, though sources said speculative traders were working to limit increases as short-biased positions continue to dominate sentiment.
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Japan approves 26 new projects under domestic offset scheme

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2023-11-20 20:07
Japan has given the green light to the registration of 26 projects under the J-Credit scheme, which could generate roughly 3.1 million carbon credits over their lifetimes, as the country is seeking to expand the supply of domestically issued offsets.
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Japan, Malaysia set 2028 start date for large-scale CCS venture

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2023-11-20 19:14
A consortium of Japanese companies has signed with Malaysian oil and gas giant Petronas to commercialise a carbon capture and storage project by 2028.
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Chinese energy regulator to support inclusion of biodiesel in national carbon offset programme

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2023-11-20 19:02
China will promote the inclusion of biodiesel projects in the national carbon offset scheme, as part of a broader plan to popularise the applications of green fuels in the country.
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Billionaires are out of touch and much too powerful. The planet is in trouble | Rebecca Solnit

The Guardian - Mon, 2023-11-20 18:00

The 1% aren’t just the biggest climate wreckers, they also greatly influence how the world responds to the crisis

When you talk about the climate crisis, sooner or later someone is going to say that population is the issue and fret about the sheer number of humans now living on Earth. But population per se is not the problem, because the farmer in Bangladesh or the street vendor in Brazil doesn’t have nearly the impact of the venture capitalist in California or the petroleum oligarchs of Russia and the Middle East. The richest 1% of humanity is responsible for more carbon emissions than the poorest 66%. The rich are bad for the Earth, and the richer they are the bigger their adverse impact (including the impact of money invested in banks, and stocks financing fossil fuels and other forms of climate destruction).

In other words, we are not all the same size. Billionaires loom large over our politics and environment in ways that are hard to understand without taking on the shocking scale of their wealth. That impact, both through their climate emissions and their manipulations of politics and public life means they are not at all like the rest of humanity. They are behemoths, and they mostly use their outsize power in ugly ways – both in how much they consume and how much they influence the world’s climate response.

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PNG industry group calls for govt to establish Customary Land Department

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2023-11-20 17:32
An industry lobby group has urged the government of Papua New Guinea to establish a Customary Land Department in the country, saying it could both protect the rights and interests of indigenous communities and foster sustainable development.  
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Fossil fuels dominant but falling in China Belt & Road Initiative overseas power projects -report

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2023-11-20 17:05
More than half the installed power capacity from the China-initiated Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is coal and gas, though their share has declined over the past two years, a report by energy consultancy Wood Mackenzie has found.
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