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UN shipping body inches closer to key carbon levy decision with release of impact assessment
Canadian carbon offset developer postpones London listing, citing market conditions
New EU rules on industrial, livestock emissions enter into force
DATA DIVE: Carbon markets could scale from small share of climate finance flows with smart policy
UK, Laos sign MoU to collaborate on carbon markets, energy transition
Choughs breed in Kent for first time in 200 years
Unexpected fledging is result of long-term restoration project to bring red-billed birds back to Kent coastline
The chough, a charismatic cliff-dwelling corvid, has bred in Kent for the first time in two centuries.
A young pair among eight birds released last year defied expectations to successfully breed this summer, making a nest on Dover Castle and rearing one chick, which fledged in June.
Continue reading...Japanese companies to set up SAF Scope 3 carbon credit scheme
Global summit set for London in 2025 to tackle green energy revolution
Social Carbon to release methodology for peatland restoration
New guide launches to provide insights into jurisdictional REDD+ carbon market
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Report counts 40 challenges for biodiversity net gain scheme
India to approve up to 20 carbon methodologies, operationalise voluntary market by year-end
CN Markets: CEA price remains stable, though weekly trading volume drops
South Korea urged to include coal phase-out in 2035 NDC
Former Sea Shepherd captain Paul Watson arrested on a Japanese warrant from 2012 – what next?
Week in wildlife – in pictures: a feisty sea lion, a retiring elephant and a fleeing fox
The best of this week’s wildlife photographs from around the world
Continue reading...Global trading house, Korean securities firm eye Paris-aligned charcoal project in Ghana
Oil-rich Nigerian state teams up with UK firm for blue carbon projects
Environmentalist becomes first juror to swear oath on river water
Paul Powlesland, the co-founder of Lawyers for Nature, says he considers the River Roding to be sacred
When jurors are called to court, they are required to swear on a holy book or make a secular promise to tell the truth.
So court officials were perplexed when the environmental activist and barrister Paul Powlesland was called for jury service and produced a vial of river water and asked to swear on the River Roding.
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