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US startup launches ocean-based CDR project off North Carolina coast in race for sub-$100/t abatement price tag
UK businesses urged to launch collective carbon offsetting fund
Big ag uses distract, delay, and derail tactics to avoid climate action, undermine emissions impact -think tank
Canadian government seeks feedback on federal offset projects on crown, public land
US Department of Energy to fund R&D into methane-spewing orphaned wells
California city voters to decide on Chevron’s refinery tax measure this November
US algae-based CDR firm announces Series B funding worth tens of millions of dollars
Global hotel chain launches community of low-carbon properties
Our cities’ secret gardens: we connect with nature in neglected green spaces just as much as in parks
Blood thinner could be used to treat cobra venom, global study suggests
Snakebites, the ‘deadliest of neglected tropical diseases’ often impact rural communities the most, but a new study offers hope
A commonly used blood thinner can be used as an antidote to cobra venom, an international study has found, research that a Queensland expert has called “really exciting”.
In the study, published in the Journal of Science Translational Medicine on Thursday, Prof Nicholas Casewell described snakebites as the “deadliest of neglected tropical diseases, with its burden landing overwhelmingly on rural communities in low and middle income countries”.
Continue reading...US government urged to declare wildfire smoke and extreme heat major disasters
Fourteen attorneys general petition federal emergency officials as millions in US under excessive heat advisories
Fourteen state attorneys general are urging the federal government to declare extreme heat and wildfire smoke major disasters. The petition comes as millions of people in the south and north-east face excessive heat advisories, and large swaths of the western US and Canada battle ongoing wildfires.
“The likelihood of high-severity extreme heat and wildfire smoke events is increasing due in part to climate change,” wrote the Arizona attorney general, Kris Mayes, in a letter submitted to the Federal Emergency Management Agency on Tuesday. “We urge Fema to update its regulations to prepare for this hotter, smokier future.”
Continue reading...Gaps in UK carbon accounting regulations make tracking emissions more complicated, says report
With this king’s speech, Starmer has staked everything on the long game. But politics has a habit of moving fast | Martin Kettle
The NHS, child poverty, defence: Labour is selling itself on its ability to get some big things done
Britain’s new government has just reached the point where things get serious. The king’s speech marks the ceremonial divide between Labour’s pinch-yourself fortnight following the 4 July election landslide and the start of the hard slog of delivery, by which Keir Starmer’s government will actually be judged next time. It’s the end of the overture and the start of the drama itself, the part that really matters.
Before the election there was a debate among those around Starmer about how to approach the opening days in government. Some wanted the new government to immediately trigger a blizzard of activity to show that Labour was active and a contrast to the Conservatives. In this view, promoted in particular by Starmer’s chief of staff, Sue Gray, the first 100 days were crucial, an agenda-driven opportunity to reignite confidence in government.
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