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Vanishing act: Panama’s Guna people forced to move as the sea swallows their island – in pictures

The Guardian - Wed, 2024-11-06 18:00

Earlier this year, families from the Indigenous Guna people on the tiny island of Gardi Sugdub became the first to undergo a climate-related relocation by the Panamanian government because of the threat of rising sea levels. Hundreds of residents moved to Isber Yala, a new town built on the mainland. But many fear that the relocation has put their traditions and culture in peril

Photographs by Euan Wallace

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Washington votes to retain state’s carbon market

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2024-11-06 17:41
Washington voters appear to have decided to retain the state’s cap-and-trade programme by rejecting a ballot measure that sought to dismantle it, preliminary election results showed.
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I tried to warn Valencia’s government about flooding, but it didn’t listen | Juan Bordera

The Guardian - Wed, 2024-11-06 17:00

The rightwing regional authorities ignored the climate-crisis science and dismissed the weather forecast – the consequences are their responsibility

  • Juan Bordera is a climate journalist and an independent MP for Compromís in the Valencian parliament

It’s almost impossible to describe what we have experienced in the flooded villages and towns around the city of Valencia. Many of those villages and towns are in ruins, with at least 217 dead and others to be pulled out of the mud. There are many areas that still need urgent help. There are towns without water or electricity that have not been able to clean up. There are still flooded garages, buildings on the verge of collapse, and health problems that may result from the accumulated water.

But what also defies belief is the regional Valencian government’s sheer negligence in its pre- and post-disaster management. Let me try to summarise some of the most serious shortcomings.

Juan Bordera is a climate journalist and an independent MP for Compromís in the Valencian parliament. He has donated his fee for this article to a fundraiser for those affected by the storm

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In an era of environmental crises, women closest to the destruction must be heard | Omaira Bolaños

The Guardian - Wed, 2024-11-06 16:00

My mother showed me the importance of Indigenous and Afro-descendant women in protecting the natural world. Yet they continue to face barriers and discrimination in their work

I learned about the importance of women in small communities from my mother. She was a peasant woman – a campesina as we say in Colombia – in the mountains near Cali, where I grew up. She searched the forest for food and cultivated the earth to grow vegetables to feed me and my four siblings. It is women like her that I try to empower with my work supporting the collective rights of Indigenous and Afro-descendant women in Asia, Africa and Latin America.

In an era of environmental crises, people from such communities have an outsized role in preventing the destruction of nature and slowing the climate crisis. Colombia, where the biodiversity Cop16 was held last week, is home to 10% of all life on Earth, stretching from thick mangrove forest of the Pacific coast to the Amazon rainforest. Many of the communities I work with live alongside this rich nature and have made its survival part of their culture, something increasingly recognised in conservation. This is true from the Arctic Circle to the Indonesian forest. My job is to make sure women in these places receive practical support and a fair share of growing financial assistance.

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The extreme floods which devastated Spain are hitting more often. Is Australia ready for the next one?

The Conversation - Wed, 2024-11-06 15:56
To prepare for more intense floods supercharged by climate change, we have to build infrastructure able to tolerate new extremes Conrad Wasko, ARC DECRA Fellow in Hydrology, University of Sydney Andrew Dowdy, Principal Research Scientist in Extreme Weather, The University of Melbourne Seth Westra, Professor of Hydrology and Climate Risk, University of Adelaide Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Emissions cuts could alter global ocean heat balance through 2100, researchers warn

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2024-11-06 15:28
Efforts to cut greenhouse gas emissions later this century could drastically alter the way oceans absorb and distribute heat, with lasting impacts on climate patterns, a new study has found.
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Central bank-led NGFS releases new climate risk scenarios, predicting deeper economic impacts by 2050

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2024-11-06 15:03
The Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS) on Tuesday released its latest climate macro-financial scenarios, signalling increased economic risks from climate change by mid-century.
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UK ‘falling behind’ on sewage pollution regulation while EU tightens rules

The Guardian - Wed, 2024-11-06 15:00

EU member states agree to update urban waste water treatment directive

The UK is falling further behind on sewage pollution regulation as the EU tightens its rules to clean up Europe’s waterways, say critics.

EU member states agreed on Tuesday to update the urban waste water treatment directive to strengthen rules to clean up sewage and chemical pollution from treatment plants. European countries will have to update their sewage systems and treatment plants so that large amounts of human waste and chemicals are removed from rivers by a deadline of 2035. The companies deemed responsible will be required to pay for the infrastructure changes.

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Solving the true age of Cassius, the world’s largest captive crocodile who died last week

The Guardian - Wed, 2024-11-06 14:54

George Craig looked after the 5.5-metre croc for decades. But after the keeper retired from the park, Cassius stopped eating and went into ‘very quick decline’

Researchers are trying to determine the true age of the world’s largest saltwater crocodile in captivity, who died on the weekend.

Cassius, a Guinness World Record holder thought to be at least 110 years old, died at Marineland Melanesia on Green Island, just off Cairns, where he lived since 1987.

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Record Q2 deficits shave Oregon’s CFP credit bank, programme surplus nears 1.5 mln

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2024-11-06 13:46
With the highest quarterly net deficits in programme history, Oregon’s Clean Fuels Program (OCFP) credit surplus increased to just under 1.5 million in the second quarter of 2024, according to state data published Tuesday.
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Brazil’s Senate postpones vote on updated national ETS legislation

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2024-11-06 12:06
Brazil's Senate on Tuesday postponed voting on a new compromise version of long-awaited national cap-and-trade legislation until next week.
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Only one of Australia’s most popular tuna brands passes sustainability test, according to first-of-its-kind review

The Guardian - Wed, 2024-11-06 12:02

Australian Marine Conservation Society finds Safcol’s No Net Tuna is only entirely ‘green’ product on a red, amber or green scale

Environmentalists have given the green tick to just one brand of canned tuna as industry heavyweights threaten dwindling fishing populations and other marine life.

For the first time, the Australian Marine Conservation Society has evaluated the nation’s most popular tuna brands and classed them as green, amber or red based on their sustainability credentials.

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EU’s incoming energy commissioner to promote electrification as ETS2 hits housing

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2024-11-06 09:47
The European commissioner-designate for energy and housing will pursue electrification to shield vulnerable citizens from increasing energy prices, a prospect made more real by ETS2, he told the European Parliament on Tuesday afternoon.
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Ethanol producer completes diagnosis of CO2 well leak in Illinois

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2024-11-06 08:44
An Illinois agribusiness facing regulatory action in connection to a leaking CO2 injection well has completed a diagnosis estimating the amount of CO2 that escaped via a problematic monitoring well.
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