Feed aggregator

UK waste-to-energy operator launches next phase of carbon capture programme, with first pilot in Wales

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2025-03-05 21:27
A UK waste-to-energy operator is moving ahead with the next phase of its carbon capture technology programme, installing the only active carbon capture and storage (CCS) pilot in Wales and a new pilot plant in West Yorkshire.
Categories: Around The Web

Allowing power storage, sales would boost EV uptake -EU association

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2025-03-05 21:00
By allowing owners of electric vehicles in Europe to store excess electricity, and to sell it back to the grid, the bloc could boost uptake while they save considerably, an EU industry association has said.
Categories: Around The Web

Wooden spoons are making us sick? I thought that was fish slices | Arwa Mahdawi

The Guardian - Wed, 2025-03-05 21:00

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...
Categories: Around The Web

CARBON FORWARD ASIA: Singapore working on sustainable claims guidance as APAC companies take wait-and-see approach

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2025-03-05 20:12
A Singapore industry group is working with stakeholders to develop a sustainable claims guidance for the carbon industry that it hopes can be applied to the broader Asia-Pacific region.
Categories: Around The Web

Revealed: how Wall Street is making millions betting against green laws

The Guardian - Wed, 2025-03-05 20:00

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

Read more: Fearing toxic waste, Greenland ended uranium mining. Now, they could be forced to restart - or pay $11bn

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.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Offtakes eat up biochar market, benefit early buyers who pay up front -report

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2025-03-05 19:00
Biochar offtakes struck by early bird buyers are locking in available supply at discounted rates, likely crowding latecomers out due to limited leftover supply and unaffordable prices, according to information published Wednesday by a carbon removals (CDR) marketplace.
Categories: Around The Web

CARBON FORWARD ASIA: Much work ahead for Vietnam’s carbon market launch, analyst says

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2025-03-05 18:52
The ministry overseeing Vietnam’s soon-to-appear pilot carbon market is about to merge with another in the biggest government shake-up in decades, though it's impact on the scheme launch date remains uncertain.
Categories: Around The Web

CARBON FORWARD ASIA: Insured carbon credits can command premiums, but cost and liquidity challenges remain

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2025-03-05 18:23
Carbon credits that come with insurance can fetch a premium of up to 40% and are 75% more likely to trade, the Carbon Forward conference in Singapore heard on Wednesday.
Categories: Around The Web

CARBON FORWARD ASIA: Australian Coalition election win might see major Safeguard carve-outs

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2025-03-05 17:06
A Coalition party win at the imminent Australian election would not see the updated Safeguard Mechanism repealed, but it could be weakened or see large sectors, such as LNG, carved out, a conference heard this week.
Categories: Around The Web

China includes ETS sectoral expansion in 2025 work plan

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2025-03-05 16:49
China will prioritise several carbon-related measures this year, including the planned expansion of the coverage of industries in the national ETS and enhancing the capacity for emissions accounting and verification, according to the annual government work report released on Wednesday.
Categories: Around The Web

Fast-growing duckweed can go from garden menace to nutritional dish

The Guardian - Wed, 2025-03-05 16:00

The plant multiplies quickly, is rich in vitamins, and eaten across Asia. Why isn’t it on supermarket shelves?

In the summer sun, duckweed (Wolffia globosa) can be a menace. It grows so fast it covers a pond in a few days, blocking out the light for the life below. But it is this ability to multiply and its high nutritional value that has made it a potentially valuable food.

Although commonly eaten in Asia, where varieties of duckweed are also known as water lentils or watermeal, it has taken nearly 10 years for scientists to convince the European Food Safety Authority that it is a vegetable that is safe to eat.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

New Zealand publishes draft land-use classification framework

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2025-03-05 15:52
The New Zealand government has developed a draft land-use classification (LUC) framework for the country, which delineates carbon forestry from indigenous and exotic plantations.
Categories: Around The Web

Half of world’s CO2 emissions come from 36 fossil fuel firms, study shows

The Guardian - Wed, 2025-03-05 15:01

Researchers say data strengthens case for holding firms to account for their contribution to climate crisis

Half of the world’s climate-heating carbon emissions come from the fossil fuels produced by just 36 companies, analysis has revealed.

The researchers said the 2023 data strengthened the case for holding fossil fuel companies to account for their contribution to global heating. Previous versions of the annual report have been used in legal cases against companies and investors.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Over half of global fossil CO2 emissions in 2023 tied to 36 companies -report

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2025-03-05 15:01
Emissions from major oil, gas, coal, and cement producers increased in 2023 compared to the previous year, with more than half of fossil fuel CO2 emissions linked to just 36 companies, according to a report released Wednesday.
Categories: Around The Web

CARBON FORWARD ASIA: Article 6.4 market sees unclear near-term outlook, despite efforts to advance integrity

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2025-03-05 14:33
The emerging Article 6.4 market has the potential of being a high-quality benchmark for international carbon trade with more stringent requirements, but it remains unclear to what extent the approach can be utilised, panellists told a conference Wednesday.
Categories: Around The Web

World’s biggest iceberg runs aground after a near-40-year journey from Antarctica

The Guardian - Wed, 2025-03-05 14:16

Scientists are studying whether the grounded A23a iceberg might help stir nutrients and make food more available for penguins and seals

The world’s biggest iceberg appears to have run aground roughly 70km (43 miles) from a remote Antarctic island, potentially sparing the crucial wildlife haven from being hit, a research organisation said Tuesday.

The colossal iceberg A23a – which measures roughly 3,300 sq km and weighs nearly 1tn tonnes – has been drifting north from Antarctica towards South Georgia island since 2020.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Brisbane on alert: these maps show the suburbs most likely to flood during Cyclone Alfred

The Conversation - Wed, 2025-03-05 14:13
The maps show the predicted flood extent for the most at-risk areas of Brisbane, based on Bureau of Meteorology forecasts. Matt Garrow, Editorial Web Developer Nicole Hasham, Energy + Environment Editor Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

Pages

Subscribe to Sustainable Engineering Society aggregator