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South Carolina AG sides with oil industry in climate-related lawsuit
Canadian investment firm makes first SAF plunge with $1.1 bln backing
Sovereign carbon buyers to press ahead with Article 6 deals despite lack of UN clarity
Italy’s Marmolada glacier could disappear by 2040, experts say
Rising temperatures causing largest glacier in Dolomites to lose 7-10cm of depth a day, according to scientists
The Marmolada glacier, the largest and most symbolic of the Dolomites, could melt completely by 2040 owing to rising average temperatures, experts have said.
Italian scientists who are monitoring glaciers and the impact of climate emergency, and who took part in a campaign launched by environmentalist group Legambiente, the international commission for the protection of the Alps (Cipra), with the scientific partnership of the Italian Glacier Committee, said on Monday the Marmolada was losing between 7 and 10cm of depth a day.
Continue reading...Authors of controversial paper on Indigenous territories respond to debate
Marsupial of the year heats up as koala and glider take on animal that mates itself to death
The Project hopes competition will raise big money for underfunded organisations working to protect beloved species
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Tense competition is brewing between the greater glider and the koala in Australia’s marsupial of the year vote but there are hopes a silky-tailed species that “mates themselves to death” could win over voters and maybe even save it from heading towards extinction.
Network Ten’s The Project launched the competition in collaboration with organisations and charities that work with or help preserve the habitat of marsupials, many of them endangered, in a bid to raise funds for them.
Continue reading...Big tech company snags lowest price yet for DAC removal credits
Measurement technology company partners with Toronto-based firm for CDR, CCS value chains monitoring
Japanese carmaker to help Thailand develop framework for privately managed OECMs
G20 countries turning backs on fossil fuel pledge, say campaigners
Promise to ‘transition away from fossil fuels’ made at Cop28 climate talks has been left out of draft resolutions
Campaigners have claimed some of the world’s largest economies are turning their backs on a pledge made last year to transition away from fossil fuels.
Ministers from the G20 group of developed and developing countries, including the US, UK, China and India, will meet in Rio de Janeiro on Wednesday to discuss the global approach to the climate crisis.
Continue reading...UK offshore oil and gas emissions slip, although intensity per barrel set to rise
Australia hosting COP31 could transform climate action in the region, but will be expected to up its game, NGOs say
Verra lifts suspension of Southern Cardamom REDD+ project after 14-month investigation
Asset management firm funds major reforestation project in Malawi
Marketplace partners with tech firm to boost transparency in carbon removal with MRV data
Global Carbon Council consults on Article 6.2 eligibility standard
Land use sectors can do much better for EU climate goals, with the right policy push -study
We examined anti-protest laws across the west. Britain stood out, and not in a good way | Linda Lakhdhir
Under the Tories, non-violent climate protesters were jailed for up to five years – and there is little sign that Labour will change tack
- Linda Lakhdhir is the legal director of Climate Rights International
In December 2023 when Stephen Gingell was sentenced to six months in prison for slow marching for half an hour on the Holloway Road in north London, the sentence was considered shocking. Unfortunately, it is far from the exception. In fact, my organisation, Climate Rights International, has spent the past eight months looking into restrictions on climate protests among western democracies and has found that the UK – mostly under the Conservatives – has introduced some of the harshest anti-protest legislation in recent years.
You may remember Morgan Trowland and Marcus Decker, who were sentenced to multi-year prison sentences in April 2023 for climbing the cables of the Queen Elizabeth II bridge to object to new oil, gas and coal projects. The three-year sentence imposed on Trowland was, at the time, the longest ever for a climate protest in the UK. But, it has since been surpassed. In July, in a case that made international headlines, five fossil-fuel protesters were sentenced to four- and five-year sentences after participating in a Zoom call about staging climate protests on the M25.
Linda Lakhdhir is the legal director of Climate Rights International
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