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Millions swelter as central and eastern US placed under excessive heat watch

The Guardian - 1 hour 54 min ago

Meteorologists predict scorching temperatures for the weekend before weather cools just in time for Labor Day

Millions of Americans will continue to swelter as Labor Day weekend approaches, with much of the country under some kind of excessive heat watch.

The brutal heatwave the US midwest suffered earlier this week has spread to the eastern half of the country, with more than 20 million people under some kind of a heat alert.

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Categories: Around The Web

What if Big Oil championed – and profited from – the green transition? Here’s how it could work

The Conversation - 2 hours 35 min ago
Repurposing fossil fuel infrastructures to supply clean fuels might make more immediate economic and environmental sense than mass electrification of transport and industry. Richard Meade, Senior Research Fellow in Economics and Social Sciences, Auckland University of Technology, and Adjunct Associate Professor, Centre for Applied Energy Economics and Policy Research, Griffith University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

Week in wildlife in pictures: a sea lion takeover, an unlucky caiman and a hungry gull

The Guardian - 3 hours 52 min ago

The best of this week’s wildlife photographs from around the world

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Categories: Around The Web

VCMI opens consultation on its Scope 3 Emissions Guidance amid plea for the SBTi to follow suit

Carbon Pulse - 5 hours 21 min ago
The Voluntary Carbon Markets Integrity Initiative (VCMI) officially launched a public consultation on its Beta Scope 3 Emissions Guidance on Thursday, with the VCMI executive director expressing hope that SBTi would align with its carbon crediting guidance.
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After wood pellet reporting failures, it’s time for a proper review of Drax’s subsidies | Nils Pratley

The Guardian - 5 hours 27 min ago

Before biomass firm is promised a penny extra from billpayers, Ed Miliband should commission a review of its business model

A finding that you submitted dodgy data to the regulator on where your wood pellets come from sounds like very bad news if, like the biomass power generator Drax, you are the lucky recipient of £500m-plus of subsidies every year and are trying to keep the handouts flowing beyond their scheduled end date of 2027.

But shares in Drax did not collapse on Thursday. City analysts judged that the end of Ofgem’s investigation represented an excellent development for the company – “a clear positive”, said RBC, and “a positive read-across” for the chances of getting a new contract with the government, thought Jefferies.

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COP29 president asks parties to support transparency framework with early submissions

Carbon Pulse - 5 hours 29 min ago
The incoming Azerbaijan presidency of the COP29 climate conference on Thursday distributed a letter to all parties and observers encouraging early submission of climate progress reports to help accelerate the newest UNFCCC transparency framework.
Categories: Around The Web

INTERVIEW: Carbon removal offtake template clarifies buyer demands in opaque voluntary market

Carbon Pulse - 6 hours 40 min ago
A template for carbon removal (CDR) offtake agreements sheds light on what buyers want in a voluntary market that is characterised by opacity and often limited legal capacity among smaller suppliers, according to specialist law firm.
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Winter’s unseasonal warmth and clear skies are glorious – but a forbidding sign of danger to come | Paul Daley

The Guardian - 8 hours 6 min ago

After the polar blast of a few weeks back, we have opened our eyes to the luminous full bloom of premature spring

These unseasonal late-winter days of warmth and clear skies, of the sudden necessity of shorts and T-shirts for the morning dog-walk, are at once glorious and somewhat disconcerting.

Spring – the season of renewal, of awakening, of birth and perhaps re-birth – demands to be celebrated. But somehow this year, all of its ridiculously early harbingers feel double-edged for their presaging of the realities of climate change and sea-level rise.

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Australian Geographic nature photographer of the year 2024 – in pictures

The Guardian - 8 hours 6 min ago

A drone image of two humpback whales ‘bubble-net feeding’ by Western Australian photographer Scott Portelli has taken out the top prize in the 2024 Australian Geographic nature photographer of the year competition. This is a cooperative hunting strategy used by humpbacks that allows as many of them as possible to feed in a short time. It is widely believed the whales developed this feeding method after they were hunted to near extinction. The image was chosen from 1,856 entries and the exhibition is now on at the South Australian Museum until Sunday 3 November

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A quarter of existing forests could be converted into agricultural lands by 2100, study says

Carbon Pulse - 8 hours 41 min ago
Over a quarter of existing forests worldwide, 320 million hectares, could become agriculturally productive by the end of the century due to the effects of climate change, with potentially grave impacts on biodiversity, a paper said on Thursday.
Categories: Around The Web

South Australia ringfences over A$11 mln to support nature restoration on private lands

Carbon Pulse - 8 hours 44 min ago
South Australia has announced the allocation of A$11.4 million ($8 mln) in grants to help landowners enhance and protect nature within their properties.
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INTERVIEW: Plastics inventor eyes ‘carbon-negative’ SAF using carbohydrates as feedstock

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2024-08-29 23:16
The inventor behind the commercialisation of biodegradable plastic has turned his hand to scaling up sustainable aviation fuel (SAF), and says that producing from corn carbohydrates can be 'carbon negative', lower cost, and more energy efficient than using CO2 as a feedstock.
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ETS2 can soften impact of EU tariffs on Chinese electric cars, experts say

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2024-08-29 23:04
The EU needs to advance preparations for its upcoming carbon market for road transport and heating fuels, known as ETS2, as new tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles may convert into higher costs for consumers, experts told Carbon Pulse.
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Rising unilateralism from big players threatening Article 6 carbon markets, report argues

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2024-08-29 22:55
Article 6 is under threat from rising unilateralism, especially from some of the most influential parties, while isolated efforts to raise integrity in the voluntary carbon market will not be enough, a new report has argued, urging countries to unite around UN carbon markets to drive sufficient climate finance to meet the Paris Agreement goals.
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DATA DIVE: Brazil by far the most affected by Verra’s new consolidated REDD+ carbon methodology

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2024-08-29 22:46
Brazil’s carbon sector is set to be most affected by the changes to the REDD+ project assessment methodologies by credit certifier Verra, according to new data analysis carried out by Carbon Pulse.
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New UK govt drops legal defence of oil and gas field licences

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2024-08-29 22:34
The Labour Party-led UK government, in power since July, will not defend against green groups’ legal challenges to the previous Conservative government’s oil and gas licences for two major new sites off the coast of Scotland, it announced on Thursday.
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Ed Miliband’s withdrawal of legal backing puts UK oil and gas projects in doubt

The Guardian - Thu, 2024-08-29 21:53

Government says it will not challenge reviews of approval given to controversial Jackdaw and Rosebank fields

The future of two of the UK’s most controversial oil and gas projects has been thrown into doubt, after the energy secretary, Ed Miliband, withdrew government support for the companies in two legal cases brought by campaigners.

The Jackdaw oilfield, operated by Shell, was given approval in 2022, and Greenpeace applied for a judicial review shortly after the decision. Last year, the previous Conservative government gave the green light to Equinor-operated Rosebank, the UK’s biggest untapped oilfield, against the recommendation of climate advisers. Greenpeace and Uplift demanded a judicial review, arguing that the approval was incompatible with the UK’s legally binding climate commitments, and saying that ministers’ original analysis ignored the devastating impact of burning oil from the site.

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UK may unveil tougher emissions targets at Cop29 climate summit

The Guardian - Thu, 2024-08-29 21:47

Campaigners hail Labour’s ‘proactive approach’ after series of policy U-turns under Conservatives

The UK government is considering making further commitments on cutting greenhouse gas emissions, likely to be announced at the UN climate summit this year.

It is hoped the plan will help kickstart global ambitions on cutting emissions and encourage other countries to follow suit.

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Euro Markets: Midday Update

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2024-08-29 21:28
European carbon prices slipped back to test a support level from the start of the week amid weaker natural gas prices, shrugging off the strongest auction in three weeks as EU-wide emissions continued to decline, while UK Allowances rose to a seven-week high.
Categories: Around The Web

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