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BRIEFING: Brazil looks to ammonia, tech opportunities as carbon pricing goes global
Dutch company plans to develop first nature credits in mid-2025 under Verra’s framework
Energy firm unveils plans for UK’s first utility-scale green hydrogen project
BRIEFING: Carmakers look at carbon removal credits while awaiting clarity on Scope 3 emissions
Brussels considers extending CBAM downstream to crack down on carbon leakage
Australia picks first methodology under Nature Repair Market scheme, opens consultations
CDC Biodiversite flags biodiversity metric “misconceptions”
Stretchy dairy cheese now possible without cows, company says
Existing plant-based cheeses often fail to deliver the textures that dairy lovers prize
Stretchy dairy cheese could now be made without any cows, after the development of yeast strains that produce the crucial milk proteins.
The key to the development, by Israeli company DairyX, is producing casein proteins that are able to self-assemble into the tiny balls that give regular cheese and yoghurt their stretchiness and creaminess. Existing plant-based cheeses often fail to deliver the textures that dairy lovers prize, and the company believes it is the first to report this breakthrough.
Continue reading...New partnership plans to roll out clean energy tax credit futures platform under the Inflation Reduction Act
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Microbes bliss out on white noise, scientists find sound sweet spot that could reverse landscape damage
US carbon refiner to support food supply chain by making protein from CO2
Japanese steelmaker facing ‘impossible’ net-zero challenge, report says
Tech startup, financial firm partner to develop cooling materials, create carbon credits
Respira unites with investment firm to launch funds for nature-based projects
Swedish platform sees first commercial biodiversity credit transaction
China’s transformation plan may discourage new coal, report says
Most soft plastic collected for recycling is burned, campaigners say
Everyday Plastic calls supermarket takeback schemes a diversion and says there is too much plastic packaging
Seventy per cent of soft plastic collected in supermarket recycling schemes and tracked after collection ended up being burned, an investigation by campaigners has found.
By placing trackers inside packages of soft plastic that were collected by Sainsbury’s and Tesco in July 2023 and February 2024, campaigners found that most of them ended up being incinerated rather than recycled.
Continue reading...Coal generators are learning how to shut down for solar in significant boost to renewable switch
The post Coal generators are learning how to shut down for solar in significant boost to renewable switch appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Battery hybrids favoured as wind and solar shortlisted projects make final bids in biggest ever tender
The post Battery hybrids favoured as wind and solar shortlisted projects make final bids in biggest ever tender appeared first on RenewEconomy.