Feed aggregator
Washington discusses electric utlitity allocation adjustments under cap-and-trade programme for 2026
INTERVIEW: Canada’s Green Party centres affordability, sovereignty in climate-oriented election bid
WCI Markets: Lawmakers’ support for ETS extension boosts CCAs, but scepticism lingers
Project to suck carbon out of sea begins in UK
Fossil fuel advertising to get same treatment as tobacco and gambling in Greens policy plan
The post Fossil fuel advertising to get same treatment as tobacco and gambling in Greens policy plan appeared first on RenewEconomy.
California power sector emissions again hit historic lows in February as renewables gain generation share, natural gas declines
New project to test seaweed’s role in improving crop yields and soil health
INTERVIEW: NGOs formally challenge EU omnibus proposal
US agtech firm approaches 1 mln credits issued in fourth carbon crop
About 15% of world’s cropland polluted with toxic metals, say researchers
Scientists sound the alarm over substances such as arsenic and lead contaminating soils and entering food systems
About one sixth of global cropland is contaminated by toxic heavy metals, researchers have estimated, with as many as 1.4 billion people living in high-risk areas worldwide.
Approximately 14 to 17% of cropland globally – roughly 242m hectares – is contaminated by at least one toxic metal such as arsenic, cadmium, cobalt, chromium, copper, nickel or lead, at levels that exceed agricultural and human health safety thresholds.
Continue reading...Rural communities could be destroyed if UK signs US trade deal, says former food tsar
Exclusive: Henry Dimbleby joins farmers in voicing fears of lower standards and a poor deal for British food producers
Britain’s rural communities could be “destroyed”, the former government food tsar has said, if ministers sign a US trade deal that undercuts British farming standards.
Ministers are working on a new trade deal with the US, after previous post-Brexit attempts stalled. Unpopular agreements signed at the time with Australia and New Zealand featured tariff-free access to beef and lamb and were accused of undercutting UK farmers, who are governed by higher welfare standards than their counterparts. Australia, in a trade deal signed by Liz Truss in late 2021 that came into effect in 2023, was given bespoke sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) standards aimed to not be more “trade-restrictive than necessary to protect human life and health”.
Continue reading...