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Renewable energy holds carbon credit potential for Pakistan -think tank

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-02-17 18:27
Pakistan could earn up to $43 million annually from carbon credits through renewable energy projects, according to a think tank, even as this source of units appears to be running out of steam.
Categories: Around The Web

AU Market: Fourth pilot exit results highlight longer-term supply fears

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-02-17 17:54
The results of the fourth pilot exit window released Friday sent Australian Carbon Credit Units (ACCUs) prices higher, with participants noting it underlines longer-term supply concerns in the market stemming from underperforming carbon abatement contracts (CACs).
Categories: Around The Web

LATAM Roundup: REDD+ issuers push for inclusion in compliance schemes

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-02-17 17:01
Regional governments, firms, and non-profits involved in REDD+ forest projects all advocated a role for these credits within compliance carbon pricing or payments for ecosystem services (PES) in the week ending Feb. 16.
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BRIEFING: Indonesia’s ETS is expanding, but multiple handbrakes are holding it back, experts say

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-02-17 15:56
Indonesia’s power sector emissions trading scheme (ETS) entered its second phase at the beginning of this year, however multiple policy and regulatory issues mean it has yet to be an effective tool for emissions reductions, according to experts.
Categories: Around The Web

Lethal second-generation rat poisons are killing endangered quolls and Tasmanian devils

The Conversation - Mon, 2025-02-17 14:12
Second generation rat poisons are so potent that they’re banned for home use in Europe and North America. But here, you can pick them up at Bunnings or Coles. Robert Davis, Associate Professor in Conservation, Edith Cowan University Judy Dunlop, Research Fellow in Molecular and Life Sciences, Curtin University Melissa Snape, Adjunct Assistant Professor in Ecology, University of Canberra Stephanie Pulsford, Adjunct Fellow in Ecology, Australian National University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

How Trump's 'drill, baby, drill' pledge is affecting other countries

BBC - Mon, 2025-02-17 13:04
Some major carbon-emitting countries are hinting they may follow suit as the US opts to ramp up fossil fuels.
Categories: Around The Web

Maritime biofuels risk causing environmental disaster, warn green groups

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-02-17 10:01
A group of 69 environmental NGOs have urged the International Maritime Organization (IMO) to cast off biofuels for decarbonising the shipping industry because of their potential impact on ecosystems and communities, as key talks kick off on Monday to address the sector's climate impact.
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Tanzania passes law to bolster carbon credit market, boost climate finance

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-02-17 08:36
Tanzania’s parliament has passed a law aimed at bolstering the country’s carbon credit market, seeking to increase revenue from carbon trading while addressing climate financing challenges.
Categories: Around The Web

‘I feel constant anxiety’: how caring for a seriously unwell pet can lead to stress and burnout

The Conversation - Mon, 2025-02-17 05:07
Just as caring for a human loved one can come at great personal cost, a growing body of research shows people with a seriously ill pet experience ‘caregiver burden’. Susan Hazel, Associate Professor, School of Animal and Veterinary Science, University of Adelaide Tracey Taylor, PhD Candidate, School of Animal and Veterinary Sciences, University of Adelaide Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

Permafrost GHG loss may persist under global net-zero, net-negative emissions -study

Carbon Pulse - Sun, 2025-02-16 21:44
Melting permafrost in the northern hemisphere is likely to continue releasing greenhouse gases even under stringent climate mitigation efforts, potentially weakening the effectiveness of CO2 removal (CDR) strategies, a new study warns.
Categories: Around The Web

A tale of two suckers: Donald Trump’s plastic straws and Keir Starmer | Stewart Lee

The Guardian - Sun, 2025-02-16 20:00

The US president has scrapped paper straws because they allegedly ‘explode’ – a bit like the PM’s reputation if he keeps refusing to confront him on the big issues

It’s difficult to know whether to set any store by Donald Trump’s bleak and yet also often banal pronouncements, which read as if handfuls of offensive concepts have been tossed into the air by a monkey, read out in whatever order they landed and then made policy. Until it’s clear they can’t work. At which point, the monkey must toss again.

But this month, Trump, whose morning ablutions increasingly appear to consist of dousing himself in sachets of the kind of cheap hot chocolate powder I steal from three-star hotels, like a flightless bird stuck in the machine that glazes Magnum lollies, declared he wanted to build his hotels on the mass graves of Gaza. Hasn’t Trump seen The Shining? It won’t end well. Pity those whose children have the misfortune to die next to a monetisable stretch of shoreline. And hope humanity’s next wave of mass killings happens somewhere uneven and way inland that hopefully wouldn’t even make a decent golf course.

Stewart Lee tours Stewart Lee vs the Man-Wulf this year, with a Royal Festival Hall run in July

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a letter of up to 250 words to be considered for publication, email it to us at observer.letters@observer.co.uk

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Categories: Around The Web

Cat person or dog person? It’s which animal we loathe that matters in the end | Andrew Anthony

The Guardian - Sun, 2025-02-16 05:00

A councillor’s alleged attempt to blow up a bird-prowling moggie reveals the pet-loving divide runs deep

The resignation last week of James Garnor, a parish councillor in Whittlebury, Northamptonshire, may look like further proof of the maxim, established by the infamous Jackie Weaver lockdown meeting, that low-level politics produce high-level emotions. However, the cause of his undoing was nothing as trivial as democratic principles; it illustrates a far more profound question that, sooner or later, we all confront: are you a cat or a dog person?

Garnor, we may safely conclude, is not a cat person. He quit following allegations that he rigged up a bird table with a firework device so that it exploded when a cat paid a visit. The consequences of this shocking but non-lethal incident, which took place back in 2023, have only now come to a head, but it’s fair to say that, as anti-cat statements go, a remote-detonated IED is at the extreme end of things.

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Categories: Around The Web

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