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Queen's Brian May quits RSPCA over its food welfare label

BBC - 3 hours 13 min ago
The association has had to run spot checks on farms using its label amid welfare concerns.
Categories: Around The Web

Laos, Australia, and GGGI consult on Article 6

Carbon Pulse - 3 hours 28 min ago
Laos, which is chair of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) this year, held an event Thursday to consult on Article 6, while it also hosted a meeting of ASEAN energy ministers.
Categories: Around The Web

Taiwan releases voluntary guidelines to avoid corporate greenwashing

Carbon Pulse - 3 hours 41 min ago
Taiwan's environment ministry has released a set of operational guidelines for companies to declare carbon neutrality that includes the proper use of offsets, in the hope of avoiding corporate greenwashing.
Categories: Around The Web

UK supermarkets not doing enough to tackle antibiotic misuse, report says

The Guardian - 3 hours 53 min ago

Findings come amid growing concerns about overuse of medicines in farm animals and rise of superbugs

None of the UK’s large supermarket chains are ensuring their suppliers use antibiotics in the most responsible way, an assessment by campaigners has found, despite heightened concerns about their overuse in farm animals.

Supermarkets play an important role in the fight against superbugs, because most of the world’s antibiotics are used on livestock and retailers can enforce strict standards on the farm suppliers they use. Resistant bacteria known as superbugs are rapidly developing, posing an increasing risk to human health.

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Categories: Around The Web

UK weather: 66 flood warnings in England as more heavy rain expected

The Guardian - 4 hours 14 min ago

Rail services and roads disrupted in parts of England and Wales with further downpours forecast

The Environment Agency has warned drivers their cars can be swept away in just 30cm (12in) of water as more than 60 flood warnings were issued in England after heavy rain overnight, with further downpours to come.

Flooding disrupted rail services in England and Wales on Thursday morning and caused the M5 motorway to be closed in both directions in Gloucestershire.

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Categories: Around The Web

CN Markets: CEA price rebounds to 100 yuan level, trading activity picks up

Carbon Pulse - 4 hours 29 min ago
The Chinese emissions market saw more fluctuations over the past week, with the permit price climbing back to the 100 yuan ($14.26) level amid growing compliance demand.
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North Sea oil and gas firms in UK ‘failing to invest in renewable energy’

The Guardian - 4 hours 53 min ago

Three-quarters plan to invest solely in continued fossil fuel production between now and 2030, research shows

North Sea oil and gas companies are failing to switch their investments to renewable energy, research has shown.

Three-quarters of the offshore oil and gas companies operating in the UK plan to invest solely in continued fossil fuel production between now and the end of the decade, according to data compiled by the analyst company Rystad.

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Australia pledges cash for SAF pilot

Carbon Pulse - 5 hours 23 min ago
Australia has pledged more cash towards creating its own supply of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) with funding of A$36.8 million ($25.3 mln) coming from Canberra and ground zero for jet-zero Queensland.
Categories: Around The Web

Flooding hits England – in pictures

The Guardian - 5 hours 53 min ago

Parts of England were struck by flash floods after more than a month’s rain fell in 24 hours. Heavy rainfall in Northamptonshire, Bedfordshire and London caused widespread travel disruption and damage to properties

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CWNYC24: FEATURE – VCM continues struggle to define what makes a ‘good enough’ carbon credit

Carbon Pulse - 6 hours 19 min ago
At the spate of voluntary carbon events scattered in high-rises across New York this week, one topic persisted: how does the market evolve into the trustworthy, functioning, and effective global climate finance driver and unleash the billions of corporate dollars needed for net zero.
Categories: Around The Web

INTERVIEW: Undeterred by policy inadequacy, Pakistani non-profit hopes to turn the tide for country’s voluntary carbon market

Carbon Pulse - 6 hours 45 min ago
A non-profit in Pakistan is endeavouring to get the much-needed carbon finance into the country heavily impacted by climate change, despite the lack of clear pathways for offset projects to scale.
Categories: Around The Web

Week in wildlife in pictures: a penguin ballerina, the spooky spookfish and a sociable octopus

The Guardian - 6 hours 53 min ago

The best of this week’s wildlife photographs from around the world

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Categories: Around The Web

A wondrous fish has made a miraculous return to UK seas. Why are ministers so keen to see them killed? | George Monbiot

The Guardian - 6 hours 53 min ago

We should be celebrating the revival of the bluefin tuna – but a ravenous fishing industry, backed by government and ‘science’, is already licking its lips

Over the past three weeks, I’ve been watching one of the greatest natural spectacles on Earth, here in south Devon. At a certain station of the tide, within a few metres of the coast, the sea erupts with monsters. They can travel at 45mph. They grow to 2.5 metres (8ft 2in) in length and 600kg in weight. They herd smaller fish – saury and garfish in this case – against the surface, then accelerate into the shoal so fast that they overshoot sometimes 2 or 3 metres into the air. Bluefin tuna. They are here, on our southern coasts, right now.

When I’ve mentioned this on social media, some people refuse to believe me: you must be seeing dolphins, they say. Yes, I often see dolphins too, and it’s not hard to spot the difference. They don’t believe it because we have forgotten that our coastal waters were once among the richest on Earth. Bluefin and longfin tuna were common here. So were several species of whale, including sperm, fin, humpback and Atlantic grey, and a wide range of large sharks. Halibut the size of barn doors hunted the coastal shallows. Cod reached almost 2 metres in length, haddock nearly a metre, turbot were the size of tabletops, oysters as big as dinner plates, shoals of herring and mackerel were miles long.

George Monbiot is a Guardian columnist

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Categories: Around The Web

Once thought to be extinct, the night parrot is back in the news! Is it saved? | First Dog on the Moon

The Guardian - 7 hours 10 sec ago

Why are so many settler Australians haunted by this almost mythical bird? Why?

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Australia may be facing another La Niña summer. We’ve found a way to predict them earlier, to help us prepare

The Conversation - 9 hours 21 min ago
Signs of this potential La Niña are emerging fairly late. But new research may help make predictions earlier. Mandy Freund, Lecturer, Climate Science Geography, The University of Melbourne Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

Advisory body urges Canada to redouble efforts to reach climate targets, adopt 2035 goal

Carbon Pulse - 10 hours 7 min ago
A Canadian advisory body released a pair of reports Thursday with recommendations for the country to reach its 2030 climate targets and encouraged the government to adopt 2035 interim goals.
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Washington CFS adjustments to prioritise new methane reduction projects

Carbon Pulse - 11 hours 41 min ago
The Washington Department of Ecology (ECY) wants to prioritise new methane reductions through the forthcoming Clean Fuel Standard (CFS) rulemaking, according to staff at an environmental justice webinar on Thursday.
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