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Gold Standard adds two more voluntary carbon methodologies for shipping
Greta Thunberg arrested during Gaza war protest in Copenhagen – video
Footage shows Danish police apprehending the activist Greta Thunberg at a Gaza war protest. Six demonstrators were detained at the scene, at the University of Copenhagen, after about 20 people blocked the entrance to a building and three entered, a police spokesperson told Reuters
Continue reading...UN-backed nature finance initiative to launch at COP16
CME scraps C-GEO futures as integrity-focused voluntary carbon contracts start to replace old market
RWE boss calls on policymakers to stop ‘misusing’ EU ETS
US carbon project developer calls for European SAF mandates to integrate removals, questions ETS integration
Future of EU agriculture report dismisses carbon trading as ‘premature’
EU lawmakers call on China, Saudi Arabia to contribute more to climate finance
Six companies bid to develop CO2 storage in Norway’s North Sea
England’s nature farming budget to be cut by £100 mln, article says
Data centres to emit billions through 2030, drive carbon removal demand, say analysts
Wave energy device ready for launch in Albany’s King George Sound
The post Wave energy device ready for launch in Albany’s King George Sound appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Europe’s farming lobbies recognise need to eat less meat in shared vision report
Dialogue with green groups results in agreement on ‘urgent, ambitious and feasible’ reforms in agriculture
Europe’s food and farming lobbies have recognised the need to eat less meat after hammering out a shared vision for the future of agriculture with green groups and other stakeholders.
The wide-ranging report calls for “urgent, ambitious and feasible” change in farm and food systems and acknowledges that Europeans eat more animal protein than scientists recommend. It says support is needed to rebalance diets toward plant-based proteins such as better education, stricter marketing and voluntary buyouts of farms in regions that intensively rear livestock.
Continue reading...Australia’s states need more work to meet emission and renewables targets -report
Carbon data dashboard’s new strategy aims to boost coverage, support Article 6
BNP Paribas venture fund raises €150 mln to invest in nature, climate tech startups
Accounting for Nature, University of Oxford partner to enhance biodiversity measurement
Physicist MV Ramana on why nuclear power is not the solution to world’s energy needs
In his new book, the professor says nuclear is costly, risky and takes too long to scale up. Can he win over converts?
You’d be forgiven for thinking that the debate on nuclear power is pretty much settled. Sure, there are still some naysayers, but most reasonable people have come to realise that in an age of climate crisis, we need low-carbon nuclear energy – alongside wind and solar power – to help us transition away from fossil fuels. In 2016, 400 reactors were operating across 31 countries, with one estimate suggesting roughly the same number in operation in mid-2023, accounting for 9.2% of global commercial gross electricity generation. But what if this optimism were in fact wrong, and nuclear power can never live up to its promise? That is the argument MV Ramana, a physicist, makes in his new book. He says nuclear is costly, dangerous and takes too long to scale up. Nuclear, the work’s title reads, is not the solution.
This wasn’t the book Ramana, a professor at the University of British Columbia, planned to write. The problems with nuclear are so “obvious”, he wagered, they don’t need to be spelled out. But with the guidance of his editor, he realised his mistake. Even in the contemporary environmental movement, which emerged alongside the anti-war and anti-nuclear movements, there are converts. Prominent environmentalists, understandably desperate about the climate crisis, believe it is rational and reasonable to support nuclear power as part of our energy mix.
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