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EU announces record €3 bln spending on clean energy from carbon trading revenues
Set more ambitious climate targets to save Great Barrier Reef, Unesco urges Australia
Reef escapes being classed ‘in danger’ for now but the government must submit a progress report to World Heritage committee by February 2025
Unesco has urged Australia to set more ambitious climate targets for the Great Barrier Reef in a list of recommendations to preserve its status as a world heritage site.
The report, published in Paris late on Monday, did not recommend the reef be placed on a list of sites “in danger” – a threat that has hung over the reef for years – when the 21-country world heritage committee meets next month.
Continue reading...International standards body announces fresh plan to harmonise emissions disclosure landscape
World Bank, IMF operationalise climate action framework with first Madagascar project
EU ETS should apply to all types of CO2 from waste incineration, NGO argues
Save UK steel jobs through low-carbon investment, says think-tank
INTERVIEW: Climate targets ‘untouchable’, but other Green Deal laws must be rewritten, says EU election winner
Euro Markets: Midday Update
EBRD urged to improve biodiversity safeguards, rule out offsetting
Mission 2025 group launches to push govts to meet Paris Agreement goals
China steel industry should seek carbon financing opportunities from emissions markets, report says
Swedish carbon startup raises $5.5 mln to launch blockchain-based removal token
AXA Climate, tech company launch forestry insurance to protect against increasing natural disasters
Japanese consultancy to explore tokenisation of domestic carbon credits
Software firm raises carbon offset buying one-third as it continues pivot to removals
ANALYSIS: The Nature Restoration Law – what’s next for EU companies?
South Korea secures Article 6 partnerships with Cambodia and Bangladesh, holds talks with several others
‘Fraught with danger’: wild honey gathering in Nepal – in pictures
For generations the Gurung community in Taap, about 175km (110 miles) west of the capital, Kathmandu, and other villages in the districts of Lamjung and Kaski, have scoured the steep Himalayan cliffs for honey. The villagers say the proceeds, split among them, are drying up as the number of hives has declined over the past decade, although some also earn a living from growing crops of rice, corn, millet and wheat
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