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Green hydrogen can help slash curtailment costs in UK by absorbing surplus renewable energy
INTERVIEW: Carbon standard to pilot nature stewardship credits in 2025
France to launch first-ever carbon storage projects
How to ditch disposable cups - and transform the way you enjoy coffee | Maddie Thomas
These cafes are determined to steer customer habits back away from single-use cups
- Change by Degrees offers life hacks and sustainable living tips each Saturday to help reduce your household’s carbon footprint
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Almost everyone has a reusable cup (or three) in their kitchen cupboard, but the convenience of disposable cups often triumphs on the morning coffee run.
In Australia, an estimated 1.8bn single use coffee cups go to waste each year, and the number exceeds 500bn globally.
Continue reading...CBAM must tackle recycled aluminium emissions loophole, industry and NGOs say
Soil database would boost agricultural biodiversity credits, says Mirova exec
Callirius, Cula partner to boost monitoring and financing for biochar projects
Plastic offsetting project in Indonesia suspended following community complaints -media
South Pole secures fresh funding for changes under new leadership
Japan introduces market maker scheme to boost carbon trading liquidity
Euro Markets: Midday Update
ANALYSIS: CBAM hedging unlikely to have impact on EU ETS market, experts say
Biodiversity conservation actions found to be effective in two-thirds of cases
British succulent society chair quits over row about taking specimens from wild
Group banned plants ‘removed from habitat’ from its shows – causing uproar from enthusiasts
A furious row has blown up in the UK’s leading succulent society over the practice of taking desirable specimens from the wild, with the chair resigning in protest over the behaviour of his fellow enthusiasts.
Succulents have risen in popularity in recent years: they are attractive and hardy.
Continue reading...Exotic spiders flourishing in Britain as new jumping species found in Cornwall
Global warming and international trade offering increasingly hospitable environment
Some are small and jumpy; others are large and intimidating – if you’re a humble housefly. Exotic spiders are flourishing in Britain as international trade offers ample opportunities for spider travel and global heating provides an increasingly hospitable climate.
A jumping spider new to science has been identified living on the University of Exeter’s Penryn campus in Cornwall. The nearest known relative of the 3-4mm-long Anasaitis milesae is found in the Caribbean, making it highly likely that this tiny species – alongside 17 other non-native jumping spider species – found its way to Britain from distant climes.
Continue reading...More than half of world’s plastic pollution linked to 56 companies, study finds
CN Markets: CEAs jump more than 10%, top 100 yuan for the first time
World could add 40% new LNG capacity before decade’s end, report says
Weather tracker: heavy rainfall causes flooding and death in east Africa
Rain in Kenya, Tanzania and Burundi kills at least 90 people and damages farmland and infrastructure
Eastern Africa has experienced heavy rain in recent weeks, with flooding in Kenya, Tanzania and Burundi. About 100,000 people have been displaced or otherwise affected in each country, with 32 reported deaths in Kenya and 58 in Tanzania, alongside damage to farmland and infrastructure.
There are also fears that large areas of standing water could give rise to outbreaks of waterborne diseases.
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