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Poland aims for 56% renewables in electricity mix by 2030
Hottest summer on record could lead to warmest year ever measured
This year will more than likely end up the warmest humanity has measured, reports European climate service
Summer 2024 sweltered to Earth’s hottest on record, making it even more likely that this year will end up as the warmest humanity has measured, the European climate service Copernicus reported on Friday.
And if this sounds familiar, that’s because the records the globe shattered were set just last year as human-caused climate change, with a temporary boost from an El Niño, keeps dialing up temperatures and extreme weather, scientists said.
Continue reading...RGGI auction races to another record clear with strong compliance bid
Experts call for COP16 to address Amazon crimes destroying nature
Investors should start with materiality when addressing Scope 3 emissions -report
Analysts propose carbon clearing house to support integration of carbon removals in UK ETS
Wetland restoration project in Italy to sell biodiversity tokens, two European companies to buy
INTERVIEW: Navigating the imminent CORSIA carbon credit supply crunch
VCM MONTHLY DATA: Olympics lift August voluntary carbon retirements to break seasonal trend
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Higher emissions and EU carbon prices if no CBAM solution is found for UK power exports to EU -analysts
Indian developer signs Ghana deal for Paris-aligned cookstoves carbon project
EU failing to enforce illegal fishing rules, say campaigners
Activists says EU court ruling on transparency makes mockery of laws to protect the environment
Campaigners have said that the EU is failing to enforce rules on illegal fishing, and allowing member states to conceal information that could help uncover breaches of fishing law.
The court of justice of the EU ruled on Thursday that member states could keep vital details of their implementation of fishing rules under wraps, in a blow to environmental campaigners hoping to use the information to show whether the regulations are working.
Continue reading...Australian Senate committee recommends passage of Future Made in Australia Bill, despite design concerns
Forest biodiversity unit pilot launches in Congo
CN Markets: CEAs moves near 93 yuan, weekly trading volume stable
British govt lobbied to cut biodiversity net gain exemptions
Australia’s cities are losing their colourful and melodious birds. We need to bring back this natural joy | Andres Felipe Suarez-Castro and Rachel Oh for the Conversation
Our study links urbanisation, particularly the increase in built infrastructure and the loss of green space, to a decline in the bird communities we find most attractive
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The birds that fill our mornings with songs and our parks and gardens with colour are disappearing from our cities, our new study has found.
We examined 82 bird species across 42 landscape types in Brisbane. The range of landscapes encompassed parks, bushland reserves, and industrial and residential areas.
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