Feed aggregator

Meat, oil and pesticide industry lobbyists turned out in record numbers at Cop16

The Guardian - 2 hours 47 min ago

Questions raised over influence after 1,261 business and industry delegates registered for biodiversity summit in Colombia

Record numbers of business representatives and lobbyists had access to the UN’s latest biodiversity talks, analysis shows.

In total 1,261 business and industry delegates registered for Cop16 in Cali, Colombia, which ended in disarray and without significant progress on a number of key issues including nature funding, monitoring biodiversity loss and work on reducing environmentally harmful business subsidies.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Losses mount for carbon credit financier after it writes off two more projects

Carbon Pulse - 4 hours 48 min ago
A Toronto-based carbon credit financier has seen its financial losses mount after it was forced to write off two more projects.
Categories: Around The Web

Corpse flowers and flesh flies: why so many plants and fungi stink like death warmed up

The Conversation - 6 hours 13 min ago
The stench of a rare corpse flower make us retch. But you’re not the target – the plant wants to lure carrion beetles and flesh flies Gregory Moore, Senior Research Associate, School of Agriculture, Food and Ecosystem Sciences, The University of Melbourne Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

Singapore development agency launches grant programme to fund Article 6 credit projects

Carbon Pulse - 6 hours 34 min ago
Singapore’s Economic Development Board (EDB) has launched a pilot grant programme to support companies in the city-state developing early-stage carbon projects that could generate high-quality credits under Article 6.
Categories: Around The Web

White House rolls out marine CO2 removal research strategy

Carbon Pulse - 6 hours 37 min ago
The Biden administration and the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) released a federal strategy for accelerating marine CO2 removal (mCDR) research on Tuesday.
Categories: Around The Web

US appeals court upends White House authority to enforce NEPA regulations

Carbon Pulse - 6 hours 48 min ago
A federal appeals court on Tuesday determined that the White House environmental council lacks authority to enact rules under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), overturning decades of regulatory practice.
Categories: Around The Web

Energiewende faces fresh headwinds as Germany calls snap election

Carbon Pulse - 6 hours 57 min ago
Several key energy and climate plans - including hydrogen-ready gas-fired power plants and carbon capture utilisation and storage (CCUS) projects - face uncertainty in Germany as the country prepares for a snap election on Feb. 23, 2025.
Categories: Around The Web

Canada plans to tax the small business carbon tax rebate overdue for five years

Carbon Pulse - 7 hours 12 min ago
The federal government plans to tax the carbon tax rebate still owed to small businesses five years into Canada’s federal carbon levy, a non-profit said Tuesday.
Categories: Around The Web

Global carbon emissions up again in 2024, scientists say

Carbon Pulse - 7 hours 45 min ago
Global carbon emissions from fossil fuels have reached a record high in 2024, according to new research by scientists who estimate a 50% chance that global warming will exceed 1.5C consistently in around six years.
Categories: Around The Web

Carbon removal marketplace launches category for pre-vetted ARR credits with community benefits

Carbon Pulse - 7 hours 45 min ago
A London-based carbon removal (CDR) marketplace has launched a category specifically for afforestation, reforestation, and revegetation (ARR), it announced Wednesday.
Categories: Around The Web

Global carbon emissions inch upwards in 2024 despite progress on EVs, renewables and deforestation

The Conversation - 7 hours 45 min ago
As world leaders gather at COP29 to consider reducing emissions, the latest global carbon budget shows CO₂ emissions from fossil fuels are still going up, not down, despite some promising signs. Pep Canadell, Chief Research Scientist, CSIRO Environment; Executive Director, Global Carbon Project, CSIRO Corinne Le Quéré, Royal Society Research Professor of Climate Change Science, University of East Anglia Glen Peters, Senior Researcher, Center for International Climate and Environment Research - Oslo Judith Hauck, Helmholtz Young Investigator group leader and deputy head, Marine Biogeosciences section at the Alfred Wegener Institute, Universität Bremen Julia Pongratz, Professor of Physical Geography and Land Use Systems, Department of Geography, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich Pierre Friedlingstein, Chair, Mathematical Modelling of Climate, University of Exeter Robbie Andrew, Senior Researcher, Center for International Climate and Environment Research - Oslo Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

‘No sign’ of promised fossil fuel transition as emissions hit new high

The Guardian - 7 hours 46 min ago

Despite nations’ pledges at Cop28 a year ago, the burning of coal, oil and gas continued to rise in 2024

There is “no sign” of the transition away from burning fossil fuels that was pledged by the world’s nations a year ago, with 2024 on track to set another new record for global carbon emissions.

The new data, released at the UN’s Cop29 climate conference in Azerbaijan, indicates that the planet-heating emissions from coal, oil and gas will rise by 0.8% in 2024. In stark contrast, emissions have to fall by 43% by 2030 for the world to have any chance of keeping to the 1.5C temperature target and limiting “increasingly dramatic” climate impacts on people around the globe.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Donald Trump is a blow to Australia on climate and trade. Here’s how we minimise the damage | Ross Garnaut

The Guardian - 7 hours 51 min ago

During the US time out, Australia and its allies must remain steady and seek to deepen cooperation among themselves

The idea of open international exchange that framed the Australian reforms of the late 20th century and its subsequent economic success are being challenged in the 21st century. The challenge is intensified by the restoration of Donald Trump as president of the United States. He is committed to higher protection, tax cuts that will set record highs for budget deficits, a trade war with Australia’s largest trading partner with a risk of worse, and separation of the United States from the rules-based international trading system. He is also committed to withdrawal from international cooperation and domestic action to reduce climate-changing emissions of greenhouse gases. Global financial crisis is not out of the question.

These developments will damage Australian interests. Global long-term interest rates set a base against which Australian rates settle, and will be higher than they would otherwise have been. International inflation will be higher, increasing Australia’s own inflation challenge. Australia is the developed country that has most to lose from a failure to stop global heating. Australia has more to gain economically than any other country from success in the world achieving net zero carbon emissions, as an exporter of zero-carbon goods to countries which lack rich renewable energy and biomass resources of their own.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Fate of EU’s Ribera hangs in balance as Parliament conservatives call for her resignation over Spanish floods

Carbon Pulse - 9 hours 25 min ago
The approval of former Spanish ecology minister Teresa Ribera as the European Commission’s new executive vice-president in charge of competition and the green transition was delayed on Tuesday evening, amid calls for her to resign over the government’s handling of the deadly floods that hit the region of Valencia.
Categories: Around The Web

Pages

Subscribe to Sustainable Engineering Society aggregator