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“War on woke banks:” Macquarie joins mass exit from net zero alliance. Will Australia’s Big Four follow suit?
The post “War on woke banks:” Macquarie joins mass exit from net zero alliance. Will Australia’s Big Four follow suit? appeared first on RenewEconomy.
INTERVIEW: US NGO highlights blue carbon potential for Louisiana wetlands
Japanese developer builds new rice project in Philippines as JCM methodology coverage expands
Australia govt appoints industry veterans to Clean Energy Regulator
Amsterdam carbon finance firm raises €1 mln for fertiliser insetting
SK Market: Monthly carbon auction cancelled as spot market remains bearish
ICAO establishes platform to fund initiatives that decarbonise aviation
Solar panels could cut fuel-poor UK families’ energy bills by 24%, says study
Call for means-tested grants or loans to cover upfront costs that prevent poorer households from benefiting
Poorer households could cut their energy bills by a quarter if solar panels were installed on their rooftops, a report has found.
However, the upfront costs mean that those who stand to benefit most from decreased energy bills are prevented from getting panels installed, according to the Resolution Foundation thinktank.
Continue reading...World’s largely unprotected peatlands are ticking ‘carbon bomb’, warns study
Bogs and swamps are a colossal carbon store but their continued destruction would blow climate change targets
The world’s peatlands are “dangerously underprotected” despite the colossal amount of climate-heating carbon dioxide already being emitted due to their destruction, a study has warned.
Peatlands occupy just 3% of all land, but contain more carbon than all of the world’s forests. However, farmers and miners are draining the peatlands, releasing so much CO2 that if they were a country, they would be the fourth biggest polluter in the world after China, the US and India.
Continue reading...‘A house battery you can drive around’: how some Australians are selling power from their cars back to the grid | Scott Dwyer, Jaime Comber and Kriti Nagrath for the Conversation
The technology is new, chargers are expensive and regulations hard to navigate – but all that could soon change
Our cars sit unused most of the time. If you have an electric vehicle, you might leave it charging at home or work after driving it. But there’s another step you could take. If you have a bidirectional charger, you can set it to sell power back to the grid when demand is high.
Fewer than 10 people across Australia actually do this, because the technology – known as vehicle-to-grid (V2G) – is very new. To date, it only works with a single car model (Nissan Leaf) and a single charger (Wallbox Quasar 1). We’ve estimated the number of users based on sales of this charger. The chargers are expensive and there’s a thicket of regulations to navigate.
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You originally think of it as a car you can also use to power your house. [But actually] it’s a house battery you can drive around.
Continue reading...No coal, gas or nuclear: Greens cut deals to “Dutton-proof” Labor’s flagship renewable policies
The post No coal, gas or nuclear: Greens cut deals to “Dutton-proof” Labor’s flagship renewable policies appeared first on RenewEconomy.
NSW strikes land deal for massive new wind and battery storage project in south-west
The post NSW strikes land deal for massive new wind and battery storage project in south-west appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Floating solar tech that harvests clean power and water heads to Australia under new deal
The post Floating solar tech that harvests clean power and water heads to Australia under new deal appeared first on RenewEconomy.
NT strips funding from green groups, boosts fossil fuels, in foretaste of Dutton administration
The post NT strips funding from green groups, boosts fossil fuels, in foretaste of Dutton administration appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Plan for very big battery near very small town joins queue for federal approval
The post Plan for very big battery near very small town joins queue for federal approval appeared first on RenewEconomy.
US fund purchases British Columbia forestland for nearly C$70 mln
Australia’s investment in large-scale wind and solar hits six-year peak
Experts say latest results show clean energy investment is getting back on track, with $9bn committed in 2024
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Investment in large-scale wind and solar in Australia has reached its highest level in six years, with $9bn in capital committed to projects in 2024, new industry data shows.
According to the Clean Energy Council, financial commitments were made for 4,346MW of new renewable capacity last year. This was the highest level of investment the sector had seen since 2018, when industry was delivering on the bipartisan Renewable Energy Target.
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Continue reading...WATCH: Astronaut's view of Northern Lights from International Space Station
Washington proposes ODS protocol revisions under cap-and-invest scheme
Germany to viability of building wind projects up to 280 kms off the coast
The post Germany to viability of building wind projects up to 280 kms off the coast appeared first on RenewEconomy.