Feed aggregator

Trump to declare ‘national energy emergency’, reverse US climate commitments -media

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-01-20 18:48
Incoming US President Donald Trump is set declare a national energy emergency when he officially takes office on Monday, in a move aimed at unleashing fossil fuel production while reversing America’s commitment to fight climate change, according to media reports.
Categories: Around The Web

Korean steelmakers may face US tariffs as extra carbon permit allocation deemed subsidy

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-01-20 18:21
Top steelmakers in South Korea could face additional tariffs imposed by the US, as extra permit allocation to steel companies under the Korean emissions trading scheme is considered to constitute a subsidy, according to a recent judicial decision.
Categories: Around The Web

Japanese conglomerates establish new venture to create, trade nature-based carbon removals credits

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-01-20 17:53
One of Japan’s largest trading houses in partnership with a leading shipping conglomerate has established a venture to create, trade, and retire nature-based carbon removals credits, they announced Monday.
Categories: Around The Web

NZ Market: NZU price remains rangebound, as minister expands portfolio  

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-01-20 16:26
New Zealand carbon allowances remain below the auction price floor with little movement expected until the next government auction in March, as the country’s climate minister has been given a broader remit in a cabinet shakeup.
Categories: Around The Web

LATAM Roundup: Mexico eyes ETS as subnational CO2 taxes spread, Honduras targets Article 6

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-01-20 15:56
The administration of new Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum last week stated it would prioritise operationalising the country’s long-delayed emissions trading system (ETS), potentially leading a recent wave of ETS plans in the region, though subnational CO2 taxes continue as the dominant carbon pricing mechanism in the North American country.
Categories: Around The Web

CARBON FORWARD MIDDLE EAST: Gulf could enter ‘VCM 2.0’ with homegrown ODS projects

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-01-20 15:51
Ozone-depleting substance (ODS) refrigerant gas projects are scarce but on the rise in a voluntary carbon market (VCM) angling to prove its integrity, and they could gain a foothold in Gulf countries best known as buyers, according to the regional lead for a VCM standard speaking in Abu Dhabi.
Categories: Around The Web

Australia announces A$2 bln green aluminium production credit scheme

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2025-01-20 15:38
Australia is putting A$2 billion ($1.24 bln) behind a green aluminium industry that will use clean energy rather than coal in the production process, offering credits to smelters under a 10-year plan.
Categories: Around The Web

1080 baits are used to kill foxes, cats and dingoes – but other animals can be more likely to eat them

The Conversation - Mon, 2025-01-20 14:28
Even though 1080 is derived from native plants, not all of Australia’s native species are resistant to this lethal poison. Rachel Mason, PhD candidate in Conservation Biology, Deakin University Anthony Rendall, Lecturer in Conservation Biology, School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Deakin University Euan Ritchie, Professor in Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, School of Life & Environmental Sciences, Deakin University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

From securing pets to building ‘insect hotels’ – here are 7 ways to attract birds to your garden

The Conversation - Mon, 2025-01-20 05:16
New research highlights the need for a broader approach to attracting fairy-wrens and other beloved birds to our gardens. Rochelle Steven, Lecturer in Environmental Management, Murdoch University David Newsome, Assoc. Professor of Environmental Science, Murdoch University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

Treasury seeks to keep water firm fines earmarked for sewage cleanups

The Guardian - Mon, 2025-01-20 00:58

Exclusive: Restoration fund in England could be ‘siphoned off’ to be used for general government spending, not repairing rivers

Rachel Reeves’s Treasury is looking to keep millions of pounds levied on polluting water companies in fines that were meant to be earmarked for sewage cleanup, the Guardian has learned.

The £11m water restoration fund was announced before the election last year, with projects bidding for the cash to improve waterways and repair damage done by sewage pollution in areas where fines have been imposed.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

‘Net zero hero’ myth unfairly shifts burden of solving climate crisis on to individuals, study finds

The Guardian - Sun, 2025-01-19 11:40

Shifting responsibility to consumers minimises the role of energy industry and policymakers, University of Sydney research suggests

It’s not unusual to see individuals championed as heroes of climate action, with their efforts to install rooftop solar and buy electric cars promoted as pivotal in the fight to save the planet.

Hero figures can motivate others to follow suit, but a University of Sydney study suggests the way the energy sector shapes this narrative sets individuals up to fail.

Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news email

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

There’s no fortune to be made, but there’s a reason we keep looking for these glassy treasures down in the mud | Mic Looby

The Guardian - Sun, 2025-01-19 05:00

Sifting for bottles together never gets old – it’s the idea that something so fragile could have survived for so long in one piece and in one place

My family and I have a weird hobby. We like to dig for old bottles. It’s something we stumbled upon, quite literally, one soggy weekend.

On a visit to the family farm, we were exploring a shady gully below the house, where an occasional creek meandered down the hill. One of the kids tripped on a jutting ridge in the mud. Dug up and sluiced out, the object revealed itself to be a round, honey-hued medicine bottle.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Clean water campaigners claim victory in Windermere sewage case

The Guardian - Sun, 2025-01-19 03:00

United Utilities has dropped legal fight to block access to data on the discharge of treated sewage in Lake District

The water company United Utilities has conceded defeat in its legal battle to block public access to data on treated sewage it is discharging into Windermere in the Lake District.

Company officials initially claimed that data from phosphorus monitors at a main sewage treatment works at the lake was not environmental information. The company also wanted to block access to data from Cunsey Beck, a site of special scientific interest, which flows into Windermere.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Pages

Subscribe to Sustainable Engineering Society aggregator