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North Dakota approves permit for contentious CO2 pipeline after months of deliberations
Australia to invest $125m in Pacific island off-grid and community scale renewables
The post Australia to invest $125m in Pacific island off-grid and community scale renewables appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Washington state’s cap-and-trade scheme records strong compliance in inaugural year
BRIEFING: RMI to analyse decarbonisation pathways for EITEs in Washington
CFTC: Investor CCA sentiment sours with regulatory delays, emitters boost overall holdings across North American carbon markets
Fossil fuel bosses get ‘red carpet’ at Cop29 despite concerns over influence
Revealed: more than 100 executives given special guest badges as activists challenge role of oil and gas firms at talks
The host country of this year’s UN climate summit, Azerbaijan, has rolled out “red carpet” treatment to fossil fuel bosses and lobbyists, the Guardian can reveal.
At least 132 oil and gas company senior executives and staff were invited to the Cop29 summit, and had special badges denoting they were guests of the presidency.
Continue reading...Valencia's president apologises for handling of deadly floods – video
The president of the Spanish province of Valencia, Carlos Mazón, rejected calls for his resignation amid growing public anger over his management of the recent devastating floods that killed more than 210 people in the area. He conceded mistakes were made but claimed the unprecedented and 'apocalyptic' scale of the disaster overwhelmed the system
Valencia’s president admits mistakes in flood response but will not resign
Almost half of Valencia’s flood victims were aged over 70, figures show
The Guardian view on UN climate talks: rich and poor nations can strike a win-win deal | Editorial
At Cop29 the global south needs to unite for sustainable growth, leveraging resources and negotiating transformative climate finance pacts
More than a century of burning coal, oil and gas has fuelled intense heatwaves, prolonged droughts, heavier rains and devastating floods. To prevent even more severe impacts, the UN global climate summit, Cop29, must deliver tangible results to keep global temperature rises below 2C – the limit defined in the 2015 Paris agreement. Achieving this goal means human societies can only emit a finite amount of additional carbon dioxide, known as the world’s “carbon budget”.
Developed nations have exceeded their carbon budgets, while developing countries remain within theirs. Carbon dioxide lingers in the atmosphere for centuries, turning past unchecked fossil fuel use into a costly planetary bill. Between 1870 and 2019, the US, EU, Russia, UK, Japan, Canada and Australia – home to just 15% of the global population – accounted for over 60% of atmospheric carbon dioxide, according to the Delhi-based Centre for Science and Environment.
Continue reading...Scottish CCS firm enters partnership to issue carbon removals credits from Scotch whiskey production
COP29: Global efforts to cut methane emissions grow, mobilising $500 mln
COP29: Tanzania agrees deal to distribute 1 mln cookstoves
Move towards renewable energy is unstoppable, says Ed Miliband
Exclusive: UK energy secretary says at Cop29 that people see the economic advantages of making the transition
Renewable energy is now “unstoppable”, and no government can prevent the shift to a global low-carbon economy, UK energy secretary Ed Miliband has said.
He said the UK was acting out of national self-interest by taking a global lead on cutting greenhouse gas emissions and boosting financial help available to poor countries at crunch UN climate talks this week.
Continue reading...COP29: US energy secretary confident in EV tax credits’ durability post Trump win
Future of several RSPB nature reserves at risk as charity cuts costs
Some cafes and visitor centres to close with job losses while reserves in Suffolk and Hertfordshire among those in peril
The future of several RSPB nature reserves is in doubt as it introduces cuts, citing cost of living pressures.
The bird charity told its workers at an all-staff meeting on Thursday that cafes and visitor centres across some of its sites would be closing, and staff would be made redundant. It also said it was in the process of transferring ownership of some of its sites to other companies.
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