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Nature financing initiative launches with European Space Agency funding

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-04-14 20:07
A satellite data-driven nature financing initiative supported by the European Space Agency has launched with six pilots, including a biodiversity credit indicator project.
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China to permit new coal power plants until at least 2027

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-04-14 19:06
Construction of new coal plants in China will be allowed until at least 2027, according to an action plan released Monday by the country's top regulators.
Categories: Around The Web

Australian voluntary cancellations plummet in March

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-04-14 18:16
Clean Energy Regulator data showed just 154,000 Kyoto-era carbon credits were cancelled in Australia’s national accounts in March, a substantial slide compared to the previous month when 417,000 credits were cancelled.
Categories: Around The Web

Katy Perry set for space with all-women crew on Blue Origin rocket

BBC - Mon, 2025-04-14 17:54
Six women—including pop star Katy Perry—are set to blast off into space as part of an all-women suborbital mission
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Engie’s sustainability consultancy arm to shut Singapore offices

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-04-14 17:08
French utility company Engie’s sustainability and energy management consulting arm Engie Impact will shutter its offices in Singapore on Oct. 31.
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BRIEFING: Australia on the cusp of biochar boom, but policymakers yet to catch on

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-04-14 14:36
Australia is on the verge of massively boosting its production of biochar thanks to a single large project, but the sector and its benefits are still relatively unknown in policymaker circles, according to proponents.
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Most bike lanes in inner Melbourne have less than 40% tree cover – that’ll get worse, new maps show

The Conversation - Mon, 2025-04-14 06:08
Hot sunny days can make footpaths, bike lanes and city streets unbearable. If we want people to ditch the car, we’re going to need more trees, research shows. Judy Bush, Senior DECRA Research Fellow, The University of Melbourne Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

‘Unprecedented’ sightings of Asian hornets raise fears for UK bees

The Guardian - Sun, 2025-04-13 16:00

Early reports have led experts to believe there could be a surge in the deadly invader, threatening native species

They have bright yellow legs, are about 25mm (almost 1in) long, and a single colony, if left unchecked, can “butcher” 90,000 pollinating insects in just one season.

Since the first UK sighting in 2016 of Vespa velutina – the Asian or yellow-legged hornet – beekeepers and scientists have waged a vigorous campaign to minimise the damage this invasive species can do to Britain’s biodiversity and bee colonies.

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Why resurrect the dire wolf when existing animals are facing extinction? | Martha Gill

The Guardian - Sun, 2025-04-13 02:30

It’s not as sensational as recreating long-dead species, but conserving modern-day fauna is far more pressing

The parable of the Mars mission: we’d rather spend trillions sending ourselves to a yet unlivable planet than look after the one we have. And swiftly on its heels, the parable of the dire wolf. We’d rather resurrect a 12,500-year-old species from the dead than save our existing wild animals. Of course we would. Recycling is boring; doing the very thing 90s science fiction movies warned us not to do is fun.

We are not quite on the verge of bringing back ancient species. But last week the PR campaign for doing so began in earnest. Colossal Biosciences – a company known for trying to revive the dodo, the mammoth and the thylacine – has unveiled three large adorable white puppies, claiming it has created “the world’s first successfully de-extincted animal”: the dire wolf, made famous by Game of Thrones. It invited author George RR Martin to look; he duly burst into tears.

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US Senate considers charging data centres, cryptominers for GHG emissions

Carbon Pulse - Sat, 2025-04-12 10:16
A new US Senate bill introduced Friday would set emissions limits on electricity consumed by data centres and cryptomining facilities.
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