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CERAWeek: US DOE Secretary says agency will honour loans previously awarded by Biden administration

Carbon Pulse - 2 hours 14 min ago
US DOE Secretary Chris Wright said Monday that while the agency will take a new approach with its Loan Program Office (LPO), the administration will honour loans already awarded to projects under former President Joe Biden's administration.
Categories: Around The Web

VCM Report: ICVCM tough cookstove announcement met with indifference, retirement levels slide

Carbon Pulse - 2 hours 47 min ago
The Integrity Council for the Voluntary Carbon Market (ICVCM)took a tough stance last week on cookstove methodologies, although it seemed to have been with indifference by the market that seems more focused on CORSIA, the aviation emissions scheme, and worrying about rating agency grades.
Categories: Around The Web

Satellite tool launched in UK to monitor nature-based carbon projects

Carbon Pulse - 2 hours 56 min ago
A UK-based investment manager and a remote sensing company have released a new satellite-powered tool to conduct due diligence on nature-based carbon projects, they announced Monday.
Categories: Around The Web

Central and Eastern Europe needs more funding to cut waste emissions -report

Carbon Pulse - 3 hours 1 min ago
The EU is not allocating enough budget to help Central and Eastern European countries decarbonise their municipal waste, making it harder for them to catch up with the bloc's environmental targets, according to a report published on Monday. 
Categories: Around The Web

EU energy traders call for more market integration rather than gas market rules

Carbon Pulse - 3 hours 9 min ago
The European Commission should focus on increasing energy market integration, and not interfere too much in how the bloc's gas markets function, European energy traders have said.
Categories: Around The Web

Danish energy firm partners with CDR platform to offset non-electric emissions

Carbon Pulse - 3 hours 14 min ago
A Danish renewable energy company will purchase carbon credits from a carbon removal (CDR) platform under a two-year partnership, the two firms announced Monday.
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Assemblage-level conservation ready for wide adoption in biodiversity preservation, researchers say

Carbon Pulse - 3 hours 31 min ago
US-based researchers are calling on conservationists and policy makers to broaden their approach when acting to protect endangered species and limit global biodiversity loss.
Categories: Around The Web

Brazil emphasises forest conservation, climate finance needs in first COP30 letter

Carbon Pulse - 3 hours 44 min ago
Brazilian COP30 President-Designate Andre Correa do Lago on Monday published his first open letter, emphasising forest conservation, pledging to create an advisory body of past COP presidencies, and highlighting the importance of international climate finance reform.
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Basalt shows limited CO2 removal as soil and rock choice prove critical for ERW -report

Carbon Pulse - 4 hours 32 min ago
Basalt demonstrated little to no measurable CO2 removal (CDR) in a large-scale greenhouse experiment on enhanced rock weathering (ERW), which tracked the chemical interactions of 17 soils and 14 rock amendments over four years.
Categories: Around The Web

To win the bush, Australian politics needs to embrace its 'curves' | Nick Rodway

The Guardian - 5 hours 17 min ago

Regional voters are often stereotyped so I propose a new demographic category ahead of the election: conservative, uncommitted rural voters with environmental sympathies

Recently, an arborist operating in my town in remote north-western Australia put out a public statement. He found it necessary, given the number of queries he had received, to explain his reasons for cutting down native vegetation.

It sounds like the start of a joke, but what this contractor’s earnest explanation illustrates is how in tune regional voters can be with their environs.

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A beaver: to get attention they will slap the water with their tails | Helen Sullivan

The Guardian - 5 hours 17 min ago

They prefer to carry branches in their teeth, like dogs. And when they swim, they hold their front paws to their chests, like a severe governess in a Victorian novel

The heads of beavers, large rodents known for building dams, are their own kind of highly complex dam structure, with various retractable walls that let water in or keep it out. They can close valves in their nostrils and ears and a special membrane over their eyes; their epiglottis, the flap that stops water entering the lungs, is inside their nose instead of their throat; they use their tongue to shield their throats from water; and their lips to shield their mouths – their lips can close behind their front teeth. Their teeth are rust-orange, because they are strengthened with iron.

Their back feet are webbed like a duck’s; on land, their front feet act like hands, digging, grasping and carrying things from the riverbed to the surface – rocks, for example, tucked under their chins and cradled by their arms. When they swim, they do so while holding their front paws to their chests, like a severe governess in a Victorian novel, or a child pretending to be a rabbit. They prefer to carry branches in their teeth, like dogs. The biggest beavers weigh 50kg.

As boats will sometimes lie along the shore,
with part of them on land and part in water,
and just as there [...]

the beaver sets himself when he means war,
so did that squalid beast lie on the margin
of stone that serves as border for the sand.

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Categories: Around The Web

Saudi carbon credits could help meet 5% of big domestic companies’ mitigation goals by 2050 -report

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-03-10 23:38
Saudi Arabia’s renewable energy, mangrove afforestation, and carbon capture potential, if fully exploited, could address major companies’ long-term mitigation goals in a low-demand scenario under strong assumptions, according to a report published Sunday.
Categories: Around The Web

Uzbekistan sets course for national biodiversity credit, offset markets

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-03-10 23:26
Uzbekistan has released a strategy to attract finance for nature protection and restoration, including plans to establish national frameworks for biodiversity credit and offset markets.
Categories: Around The Web

INTERVIEW: Bio-based pesticides have potential to be carbon negative

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-03-10 23:04
Integrating waste biomass into the fermentation process can make it carbon negative, according to a Belgium-based startup that's developing protein-based biocontrols to protect crops against pests and diseases.
Categories: Around The Web

Households near new pylons to get hundreds off energy bills

BBC - Mon, 2025-03-10 22:57
The government says it could help reduce opposition to new projects needed to deliver more clean energy.
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Irish peatland standard for ecosystems certificates launches

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-03-10 22:34
An Irish government-backed non-profit has launched a voluntary standard for generating ecosystem certificates from peatland with biodiversity, carbon, and wildfire reduction benefits.
Categories: Around The Web

Euro Markets: Midday Update

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-03-10 22:33
European carbon prices advanced strongly with natural gas on Monday morning after a weekend attack on Ukraine by Russian forces using a gas pipeline indicate that shipments from Russia would not resume in the near term, while the European Commission president reiterated the bloc's pivot away from Russian gas.
Categories: Around The Web

“We stayed the course”, EU’s von der Leyen says 100 days into her mandate

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-03-10 21:14
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen reaffirmed her commitment to the EU’s climate goals for 2030 and 2050 during a press conference on Sunday marking the first 100 days of her new mandate.
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Immigration’s a hot topic – and it applies to non-native plants, animals and insects, all over the world | Tim Blackburn

The Guardian - Mon, 2025-03-10 21:00

Biodiversity is great in theory, but there are reasons to fend off invasive alien species and the knock-on effect of their presence

Britain would be a wasteland if it weren’t for immigration. Fifteen thousand years ago, most of the country was buried a kilometre deep in ice – not ideal conditions for life. That all changed as we moved out of the last ice age into the current, milder climate phase. The ice sheets retreated, leaving an empty landscape for anything with the wherewithal to seize the opportunity and move in. Tens of thousands of species did, mainly heading north from the European continent to which Britain was then joined. The result was a native biota where almost every species is an immigrant. Our ancestors were among them.

Immigration is a natural process, but it’s one that has been fundamentally changed thanks to humanity’s wanderlust. As we’ve moved around the world we have taken many other species along with us – some deliberately, some accidentally – to areas they couldn’t have reached without our assistance. These include many of the most familiar denizens of the British countryside. Grey squirrel, ring-necked parakeet, horse chestnut, rhododendron – none of these would be in Britain if they hadn’t been brought by people. They are what ecologists call aliens. Anywhere people live you’ll also find aliens.

Tim Blackburn is professor of invasion biology at University College London and author of The Jewel Box: How Moths Illuminate Nature’s Hidden Rules

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