Feed aggregator

China’s Guangdong cuts free allocation to industrial emitters under regional ETS

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2025-03-12 19:44
China's Guangdong province will reduce the free allocation of CO2 permits to industrial emitters regulated under its emissions trading scheme, as it seeks to further strengthen the operation of the regional carbon market.
Categories: Around The Web

INTERVIEW: Interactive map platform to help decarbonise agribusiness launches

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2025-03-12 19:00
A Swiss startup on Wednesday launched a free web platform that leverages publicly available geospatial data to create interactive, high-resolution maps of land use change emissions factors, aiming to help decarbonise agribusiness in line with GHG Protocol and Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) guidelines.
Categories: Around The Web

The UK’s gamble on solar geoengineering is like using aspirin for cancer

The Guardian - Wed, 2025-03-12 19:00

Injecting pollutants into the atmosphere to reflect the sun would be extremely dangerous, but the UK is funding field trials

Some years ago in the pages of the Guardian, we sounded the alarm about the increasing attention being paid to solar geoengineering – a barking mad scheme to cancel global heating by putting pollutants in the atmosphere that dim the sun by reflecting some sunlight back to space.

In one widely touted proposition, fleets of aircraft would continually inject sulphur compounds into the upper atmosphere, simulating the effects of a massive array of volcanoes erupting continuously. In essence, we have broken the climate by releasing gigatonnes of fossil-fuel carbon dioxide, and solar geoengineering proposes to “fix” it by breaking a very different part of the climate system.

Raymond T Pierrehumbert FRS is professor of planetary physics at the University of Oxford. He is an author of the 2015 US National Academy of Sciences report on climate intervention

Michael E Mann ForMemRS is presidential distinguished professor at the University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of Our Fragile Moment: How Lessons from Earth’s Past Can Help Us Survive the Climate Crisis

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Australian regulator extends carbon abatement contract delivery deadline

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2025-03-12 17:41
Australia’s Clean Energy Regulator has agreed to reschedule the delivery deadline for carbon abatement contracts (CACs) to the end of the calendar year, as it waits on the government to decide future exit window arrangements.
Categories: Around The Web

Changes to bathing water status test will deny rivers protection, say critics

The Guardian - Wed, 2025-03-12 17:00

Campaigners say introduction of feasibility test in England and Wales over bathing status is ‘snub to communities’

Rivers are unlikely to be granted the protections of bathing water status under the government’s changes to the system, campaigners have said.

River activists have reacted with fury as details of the reforms were revealed on Wednesday.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Amazon forest felled to build road for climate summit

BBC - Wed, 2025-03-12 16:02
The infrastructure required to host COP30 in Belém is undermining the cause, campaigners say.
Categories: Around The Web

NZ methane target review risks confusion for emissions accounting

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2025-03-12 15:56
The New Zealand government risks causing confusion should it decide to change how it accounts for methane emissions, an environmental group has warned.
Categories: Around The Web

A bloke at the dog park said the government was controlling the cyclones. He is accidentally sort of correct | First Dog on the Moon

The Guardian - Wed, 2025-03-12 15:38

If you don’t believe the scientists, will you believe the insurance companies?

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

PREVIEW: RGGI Q1 allowance sale battered sub-$20 amidst US-Canada tariff tit-for-tat uncertainty

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2025-03-12 14:19
Market participants and analysts largely expect RGGI’s first quarterly permit sale to clear sub-$20 amid ongoing macro uncertainty from US-Canada tariff-driven volatility and lack of regulatory clarity.
Categories: Around The Web

In the middle of cyclone preparation I found a baby bird – one tiny, wild life amid the wind and rain | Jessie Cole

The Guardian - Wed, 2025-03-12 12:44

My homeplace has experienced four natural disasters in eight years. But I’d never seen the like of this bird before, vibrantly green and startlingly beautiful

We were midway through our cyclone preparation when my mother broke her leg. She stepped into her bedroom to retrieve something, tripped and fell, and that was that. My mother is 74 and hardy, so this sudden break took us by surprise. Once I got her home, leg in brace, we’d lost significant time, and my household was down to one functional human: me.

This is the fourth natural disaster I’ve experienced in the last eight years. One-in-100-year floods (2017), unprecedented bushfires (2019), one-in-1,000-year floods (2022) and now Cyclone Alfred. Cyclones are a new threat. I’ve lived in my homeplace, in northern New South Wales, for almost 50 years and we’ve never had a cyclone cross land in our vicinity. We were, as they say, in uncharted waters.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

US EPA terminates $20 bln GHG reduction programme grants

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2025-03-12 12:42
The administrator of the US EPA announced Tuesday that the agency was pulling $20 billion in awards towards GHG reduction schemes from federal grant recipients following a review into alleged financial mismanagement.
Categories: Around The Web

Northern Territory’s growing saltwater crocodile population gorging on nine times more prey than 50 years ago

The Guardian - Wed, 2025-03-12 12:36

Research shows apex predators are increasing in numbers and excreting important nutrients into Top End waterways

The growing saltwater crocodile population in the Northern Territory has led to the creatures gorging on nine times more prey than they did 50 years ago, with the apex predators contributing important nutrients to Top End waterways, new research suggests.

Saltwater crocodile populations have increased exponentially in recent decades, from less than 3,000 in 1971, when a ban on hunting was introduced, to more than 100,000 animals today.

Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news email

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Vermont leads transportation decarbonisation efforts, overall US progress must gain pace -report

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2025-03-12 12:32
Vermont leads US states working to improve climate outcomes within the transportation sector, but even top performers must accelerate progress to meet decarbonisation targets, according to a report released this month.
Categories: Around The Web

Lunar eclipse to grace pre-dawn sky

BBC - Wed, 2025-03-12 11:30
UK skywatchers will see a partial but still hopefully spectacular eclipse before dawn on Friday.
Categories: Around The Web

US EPA asks SCOTUS to review state pollution control ruling

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2025-03-12 11:26
The US EPA has appealed to the Supreme Court against a lower court ruling that denied its request to transfer a case regarding air pollution plans to a different venue.
Categories: Around The Web

Pages

Subscribe to Sustainable Engineering Society aggregator