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INTERVIEW: Cloud service provider evaluates carbon projects for potential to offset residual emissions
Ireland risks up to €26 bln in costs for missing 2030 climate targets -report
Sweden and Ghana strike two new Article 6 deals
IPCC’s next assessment report stuck after contentious talks, including on carbon removals
Africa Group, Russia talk “fair” climate action, bemoaning CBAM
Euro Markets: Midday Update
The fact that humans can only survive on Earth doesn’t bother Trump – and I know why | George Monbiot
He is surrounded by people who have grandiose plans and dreams beyond our planet. Vengeful nihilism is a big part of the Maga project
In thinking about the war being waged against life on Earth by Donald Trump, Elon Musk and their minions, I keep bumping into a horrible suspicion. Could it be that this is not just about delivering the world to oligarchs and corporations – not just about wringing as much profit from living systems as they can? Could it be that they want to see the destruction of the habitable planet?
We know that Trump’s overriding purpose is power. We have seen that no amount of power appears to satisfy his craving. So let’s consider power’s ultimate destination. It is to become not only an emperor, but the last of the emperors: to close the chapter on civilisation. It is to scratch your name indelibly upon a geological epoch. Look on my works, ye vermin, and despair.
George Monbiot is a Guardian columnist
Continue reading...WWF launches Deforestation-Free Leather Fund with $10 mln target
Durable CDR market continues to face cost, regulatory hurdles -survey
Exposure to combination of pesticides increases childhood cancer risk – study
Study on cancer data in US agricultural heartland finds children more at risk than if exposed to just one pesticide
Exposure to multiple pesticides significantly increases the risk of childhood cancers compared with exposures to just one pesticide, first-of-its-kind research finds, raising new fears that children are more at risk to the substances’ harmful effects than previously thought.
The study’s authors say they are the first to look at the link between exposures to multiple widely used pesticides and the most common childhood cancers. Most research considers pesticides’ toxicity on an individual basis, and the substances are regulated as if exposures occur in isolation from one another.
Continue reading...European Investment Bank to back French voluntary biodiversity credits
DNA detectives in Antarctica: probing 6,000 years of penguin poo for clues to the past
UK waste-to-energy operator launches next phase of carbon capture programme, with first pilot in Wales
Allowing power storage, sales would boost EV uptake -EU association
Wooden spoons are making us sick? I thought that was fish slices | Arwa Mahdawi
Another day, another health scare. I’m struggling to know which dangers I should take seriously
If you want to stir up online controversy, wooden spoons are the perfect tool with which to do so. Every few years, influencers go viral with warnings about how the wooden spoons in your kitchen are covered in disgusting gunk and if you don’t boil them immediately you will poison yourself and everyone you love.
In 2023, for example, a woman called Lulaboo Jenkins posted a TikTok video of her boiling spoons. Millions of people watched the water turn brown and it triggered a deep-cleaning craze. The Guardian’s Tim Dowling had a go, detailing the results in an article that prompted more than 1,000 comments. Who knew spoons could inspire such a feverish response? (Well, Jenkins, I suppose.)
Continue reading...CARBON FORWARD ASIA: Singapore working on sustainable claims guidance as APAC companies take wait-and-see approach
Solar developer unveils plan for “world’s deepest” undersea cable to link Australia and NZ grids
The post Solar developer unveils plan for “world’s deepest” undersea cable to link Australia and NZ grids appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Revealed: how Wall Street is making millions betting against green laws
Guardian analysis finds fossil-fuel and mining firms have won $92bn of public money from states, with a growing number of cases backed by financial speculators
Financial speculators are investing in a growing number of lawsuits against governments over environmental laws and other regulations that affect profits, often generating lucrative awards, the Guardian has found.
For a long time, litigation finance thrived primarily in the realm of car crashes and employment claims. “Had an accident that wasn’t your fault?” was the industry’s billboard catchphrase, offering to finance lawsuits in exchange for a cut of any payout.
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