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The Guardian view on reclaiming the Seine: hope for 21st century rivers | Editorial
Paris 2024 has pointed the way towards a brighter future for urban waterways in post-industrial cities
It was an American modernist poet who captured best the ancient, elemental status of rivers. In one of his best-loved poems, Wallace Stevens celebrated their “third commonness with light and air / A curriculum, a vigor, a local abstraction”. Life-supporting and place-defining, the great rivers of the world have nurtured and sustained our cities, but more latterly been blighted by the toxic legacy of industrialisation.
The successful staging of Olympic events in a cleaned-up River Seine therefore deserves to be seen as a social and environmental milestone, as well as a sporting one. The remarkable spectacle of triathlon competitors diving from the Pont Alexandre III, as the Eiffel Tower loomed large on a blue-skied summer morning, will take some beating as a signature image of Paris 2024.
Continue reading...Germany publishes long-awaited draft law to transpose EU carbon market directive, implement ETS2
Utah’s Great Salt Lake rings climate alarm bells over release of 4.1m tons of carbon dioxide
Study has found that the lake, which has lost 73% of its water, released climate-warming emissions
For years, scientists and environmental leaders have been raising alarm that the Great Salt Lake is headed toward a catastrophic decline.
Now, new research points to the lake’s desiccating shores also becoming an increasingly significant source of greenhouse gas emissions. Scientists have calculated that dried out portions of the lakebed released about 4.1m tons of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases in 2020, based on samples collected over seven months that year.
Continue reading...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.
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