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South Dakota Supreme Court rejects reviewing denial of eminent domain for CO2 pipeline
Wind turbine nacelle gets second life as tiny house
The post Wind turbine nacelle gets second life as tiny house appeared first on RenewEconomy.
COP16: Fewer than one in 10 companies assess biodiversity dependencies, despite growing interest in nature reporting
COP16: Colombian standard partners with local developer to scale biodiversity markets
Cultural burning isn’t just important to Indigenous culture – it’s essential to Australia’s disaster management
Include gardens in new rules for UK housebuilders, green groups urge
RHS says ensuring access to green space as part of housebuilding push could make Britons healthier
Requirements for gardens and the planting of trees must be included in Labour’s planned new rules for housebuilders, green groups have said.
The government is drawing up its future homes standard for new developments and it is not yet clear what requirements there will be for green space.
Continue reading...COP16: Carbon registry launches biodiversity credit programme, kickstarts pilot phase
‘Big Three’ dominate fossil fuel emissions in the Commonwealth -report
COP16: Trio releases high-level principles for biodiversity credit market
Project to build German EV microchip factory put on hold
US firm Wolfspeed and German car parts supplier ZF postpone plans over doubts over viability
A project to build a €3bn factory making microchips for electric vehicles once hailed as part of a “return of the industrial revolution” in Germany has been put on hold, as the crisis in the country’s hi-tech manufacturing industry deepened.
US company Wolfspeed and German car parts supplier ZF have postponed plans to build an EV chip factory, adding to problems caused by a delay to two large-scale factories by US chip giant Intel and potential factory closures being considered by German carmaker Volkswagen.
Continue reading...Investors increasingly speculating on Article 6 credits, says ratings agency
Non-profit buys $3 mln carbon removals in largest quarterly purchase to date
Draft COP29 negotiating text sets out three options for global climate finance
AI materials company secures funding to boost R&D in carbon removals, SAF, solar cells
Bill Maher puts the fate of the Great Barrier Reef in the spotlight – but do the claims stack up? | Temperature Check
Danish political scientist Bjorn Lomborg told the US cable host its biggest threat was not the climate crisis, but do his claims stack up?
- Great Barrier Reef’s worst bleaching leaves giant coral graveyard: ‘It looks as if it has been carpet bombed’
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Instead of an existential crisis for species worldwide, or threatening to submerge entire Pacific nations and coastal cities where hundreds of millions of people live, or a phenomenon driving unprecedented heatwaves and wildfires, the climate crisis was characterised somewhat differently on major US cable show Real Time with Bill Maher.
Climate change was “a problem”, Danish political scientist Bjorn Lomborg told comedian Maher, but would only shave a few percentage points off global GDP by the end of the century and in any case, he claimed, by then people would be much richer anyway.
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Continue reading...‘What the hell is happening’: calls for answers after 10% of Tasmanian salmon die in Macquarie Harbour fish farms
Greens MP says number of mortalities is ‘enormous’ and ‘most likely the result of overstocking’
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Environmentalists are calling on the Tasmanian salmon industry to explain why more than 1,000 tonnes of salmon died in fish farms in Macquarie Harbour over seven months last spring and summer.
A government document published after a request by the Neighbours of Fish Farming, a group that campaigns against commercial salmon operations, suggest 1,150 tonnes of fish died in farms in the vast harbour on the state’s west coast between September and March.
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Continue reading...Mining a key driver of tree cover loss in tropical primary rainforests, Indigenous land -report
COP16: Less than $1 mln of biodiversity credits purchased, BloombergNEF says
‘We don’t know where the tipping point is’: climate expert on potential collapse of Atlantic circulation
Oceanographer Stefan Rahmstorf explains why Amoc breakdown could be catastrophic for both humans and marine life
The dangers of a collapse of the main Atlantic Ocean circulation, known as Amoc, have been “greatly underestimated” and would have devastating and irreversible impacts, according to an open letter released at the weekend by 44 experts from 15 countries. One of the signatories, Stefan Rahmstorf, an oceanographer and climatologist who heads the Earth system analysis department at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany, explains here why he has recently upgraded his risk assessment of an Amoc breakdown as a result of global heating – and what that means for Britain, Europe and the wider world.
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