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BNP Paribas, French NGO launch impact loan vehicle for coral reef conservation, target $35 mln
INTERVIEW: Europe’s net-zero agenda must get to grips with geopolitics
'Godfather of AI' shares Nobel Physics Prize
One of Australia’s oldest coal generators refused bank guarantees, operating status under threat
The post One of Australia’s oldest coal generators refused bank guarantees, operating status under threat appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Singapore opens decarbonisation plans for comment ahead of NDC submission
Fewer than 10 of these orchids remain in the wild. Victoria was about to burn them into extinction
Critically endangered flowers get stay of execution after local environmental group threatens legal action against Victorian government
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A critically endangered orchid has received a late reprieve after a local environmental group threatened legal action against the Victorian government, prompting officials to cancel a planned burn of its habitat.
The bald-tip beard orchid – a species with fewer than 10 plants remaining in the Australian wild – was thought extinct until rediscovered in 1968 at a site near Whroo, in central Victoria, where the last surviving wild population has persisted.
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Continue reading...Taiwan plans to introduce domestic version of CBAM next year, minister says
Environment summit taking place in Sydney while greater glider habitat is logged is ‘bullshit’, advocates say
Harvesting in Bulga state forest, inland from Port Macquarie, is just 400km from global nature-positive summit the government is hosting
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Forest campaigners have accused the federal government of hypocrisy for hosting a global nature-positive summit in Sydney while logging resumed in public forest 400km away in mid-north New South Wales.
The NSW Forestry Corporation has started its harvesting operations in Bulga state forest, inland from Port Macquarie. The area is a stronghold for threatened species including endangered koalas and the endangered greater glider – Australia’s largest gliding possum.
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Continue reading...Proposed nature metrics need to be more rigorous, global nature summit hears
UK may approve bee-killing pesticide despite election promise to ban it
Exclusive: Environment groups urge government to stick to its promises and refuse pesticide application
UK ministers are considering allowing the use of a bee-killing pesticide next year despite promising during the election to ban it.
Neonicotinoids are banned in the EU because they are toxic to bees, but have been authorised for use every year in the UK since 2021.
Continue reading...Vietnam rules out int’l sales of pilot ETS carbon units
BHP, Indian steel giant sign MoU for new ways to make commodity more cleanly
Water companies must return £158m over poor performance
700 million plastic bottles: we worked out how much microplastic is in Queensland’s Moreton Bay
Australia will protect a vast swathe of the Southern Ocean, but squanders the chance to show global leadership
My pilgrimage to the vanishing Sphinx snow patch
Britons urged to dig out unwanted electricals to tackle copper shortage
Items such as cables and old tech could contain £266m worth of metal vital for decarbonisation drive, study finds
Scientists have called for people to go “urban mining” after a study revealed that old cables, phone chargers and other unused electrical goods thrown away or stored in cupboards or drawers could stave off a looming shortage of copper.
The research found that in the UK there are approximately 823m unused or broken tech items hiding in “drawers of doom” containing as much as 38,449 tonnes of copper – including 627m cables – enough to provide 30% of the copper needed for the UK’s planned transition to a decarbonised electricity grid by 2030.
Continue reading...Tiny parasitic wasp helps save one of world’s rarest birds from extinction
Wasps released on Nightingale Island have protected Wilkins’ bunting by halting spread of mould-causing insects
A tiny parasitic wasp has given a lifeline to one of the world’s rarest bird species by killing off an invasive insect that was threatening its survival.
The Wilkins’ bunting lives on Nightingale Island, part of the Tristan da Cunha group; the world’s most remote inhabited archipelago. It eats the fruit of the Phylica arborea, the island’s only native tree.
Continue reading...VicGrid seeks green tick for transmission line to connect Australia’s first offshore wind farms
The post VicGrid seeks green tick for transmission line to connect Australia’s first offshore wind farms appeared first on RenewEconomy.