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ANALYSIS: Voluntary carbon market welcomes ICVCM renewables decision, cites limited price impact
For those with power and rich donors – the AC is always on, even if it’s melting outside | George Monbiot
This has been a summer of extreme heat around the world. The Guardian is investigating how it harms our planet and leaves the world’s most vulnerable people exposed to its impact
A staple of dystopian science fictions is an inner sanctum of privilege and an outer world – chemical desert/airless waste/District 12 – peopled by the desperate poor. The insiders, living off the exploited labour of the outlands, are indifferent to the horrors beyond their walls. Well, here we are.
Even as extreme heat raged across the southern United States this summer, the governors of Florida and Texas struck down heat protections for outdoor workers. Construction companies and agricultural firms lobbied against the rights of workers to water, shade and rest breaks when temperatures soar – and Ron DeSantis and Greg Abbott, two men also lavishly funded by the fossil fuel industry, gave them what they wanted.
Continue reading...Euro Markets: Midday Update
Scientists say nature-based credit markets must prove additionality before sales
Japanese power giant joins Australian CCS hopeful, government hands out more permits
Spanish wind and solar projects secure loans to bolster EU energy independence
Chinese dairy firm to introduce biogas project, create international credits
Singapore sends energy transition bill to Parliament for first reading
US carbon removals firm launches sales platform
Japanese trio to develop integrated decarbonisation solution
Sea lions wearing cameras and trackers map new habitats
Another non-China solar giant fails as American PV pioneer SunPower files for bankruptcy
The post Another non-China solar giant fails as American PV pioneer SunPower files for bankruptcy appeared first on RenewEconomy.
‘I turned into a solar nerd’: money and fun were the unexpected benefits of installing panels
Our former environment correspondent had solar panels installed in 2010 and later added a heat pump. He’s totted up the energy generated and cash saved over the years
An abiding memory of a day in August 2010, the first time my solar panels were connected to the grid, was of the builders downing tools and watching the electricity meter whiz round backwards.
It was a sunny day and they were supposed to be finishing the plastering and insulation, but the novel sight of the old-style electricity meter in reverse was too entertaining.
Continue reading...The windfall contract that will underpin the cost of building Australia’s biggest battery project
The post The windfall contract that will underpin the cost of building Australia’s biggest battery project appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Tasmania fast tracks Bell Bay wind project as it head for federal review
The post Tasmania fast tracks Bell Bay wind project as it head for federal review appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Take a tour of the South Australian seabed on the back of a sea lion - video
Eight Australian sea lions were enlisted to map the ocean floor by sticking cameras with satellite tracking to their backs. Almost 90 hours of footage and 500km later, conservationists hope to have much clearer ideas on how to protect the sea lions. “I can watch this stuff for hours,” says Prof Simon Goldsworthy. “It’s like the best slow TV ever. You just don’t know what you’re going to see next.”
Continue reading...‘Best slow TV ever’: scientists mount cameras on endangered sea lions to map Australia’s ocean floor
Eight females from two seal colonies have filmed almost 90 hours across more than 500km, helping scientists map 5,000 sq km of habitat
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The Australian sea lions glide and dart through underwater tunnels, over seagrass beds and rocky reefs, searching for a meal and dancing with dolphins around a giant bait ball of fish – all the action captured by a camera stuck on their back.
“I can watch this stuff for hours,” says Prof Simon Goldsworthy. “It’s like the best slow TV ever. You just don’t know what you’re going to see next.”
Continue reading...UK failing to monitor apparently falling wasp populations, expert warns
Gardeners and pest controllers say wasps, important predators and pollinators, appear to be in sharp decline
The UK is not doing enough to track wasp populations as numbers appear to plummet, a leading expert has warned.
While there were national monitoring schemes for some invertebrates, including bees and butterflies, there was no such programme in place for wasps, said Dr Gavin Broad, principal curator of wasps at the Natural History Museum.
Continue reading...Work begins on world-first megawatt-scale wave energy project
The post Work begins on world-first megawatt-scale wave energy project appeared first on RenewEconomy.