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INTERVIEW: Nigeria project expects to generate up to 6 Mt worth of Paris-aligned carbon credits per year
French govt eyes expansion of national biodiversity credit scheme
Early warning system for climate tipping points given £81m kickstart
Ambitious UK project aims to forecast climate catastrophes using fleets of drones, cosmic ray detection, patterns of plankton blooms and more
An ambitious attempt to develop an early warning system for climate tipping points will combine fleets of drones, cosmic ray detection and the patterns of plankton blooms with artificial intelligence and the most detailed computer models to date.
The UK’s Advanced Research and Invention Agency (Aria), which backs high-risk, high-reward projects, has awarded £81m to 27 teams. The quest is to find signals that forewarn of the greatest climate catastrophes the climate crisis could trigger. Tipping points occur when global temperature is pushed beyond a threshold, leading to unstoppable changes in the climate system.
Continue reading...Available CORSIA credit supply pool around 200 mln, says ratings agency
Voluntary carbon integrity initiative seeks views on host country support scheme
Carbon removal standard updates registry, certification platforms
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Marine biodiversity credits attracting high interest, alliance says
National biodiversity plans falling short of key UN targets, study shows
First marine carbon removal tests show “minimal” impacts on wildlife, but more needed
Standards-setter approves three dMRV pilots in effort to boost verification
Carbon capture pilot to launch at UK energy-from-waste facility, support CCS cluster
French oil major announces partnership to decarbonise two of its European refineries
EU urged to align its Clean Industrial Deal with moving geopolitics
Carbon market veteran debuts app for individual investors
Japan releases NDC, energy policy to 2040
Europe’s LNG imports drop as gas demand falls to 11-year low -data
EU consults on Finland’s request to expand ETS2 to new sectors
EU lagging behind on carbon removal policies and funding, research shows
Sunscreen’s impact on marine life needs urgent investigation, study finds
The chemical compounds that block UV rays may lead to bleaching of coral and a decrease in fish fertility
Urgent investigation is needed into the potential impact sunscreen is having on marine environments, according to a new report.
Sunscreens contain chemical compounds, known as pseudo persistent pollutants, which block the sun’s ultraviolet (UV) rays and can lead to bleaching and deformity in coral or a decrease in fish fertility.
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