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DATA DIVE: The impact on climate of 14 years of Conservative rule in Britain
Jim Ratcliffe’s Ineos pulls launch of Fusilier electric SUV
Company blames delay on weak demand and confusion over government policies on ‘tariffs, timings, and taxation’
Sir Jim Ratcliffe’s Ineos has delayed the launch of its Fusilier electric SUV, blaming weak consumer demand and uncertainty about government policies.
Ratcliffe only unveiled plans to produce the low-emission vehicles in February, with production expected to begin in 2027.
Continue reading...Climate fund selects nature-based, clean energy carbon projects for investment from 2024 group
France to invest over €10 bln in offshore wind, despite far-right hostility
Standard announces new voluntary carbon biochar methodology
UK urged to speed up transition from oil and gas in the North Sea
FEATURE: Growth of interconnected electricity grids bolsters energy security
Voluntary carbon integrity body faces criticism for missing additionality failures in more than 400,000 landfill gas credits
Ecuador inks €23.4 mln REDD deal with German development bank as nation warms to offsetting
World's oldest cave art found showing humans and pig
After our first cold water swim our teeth chatter and hands ache – and I imagine the spirit of Mum not far away | Nova Weetman
We’ve been back twice a week since that first morning. It’s still freezing and we’re still slow, but the shock of it has gone
When my mum died in 2012, I found a box of her old life-saving medals that she’d been awarded as a teenager. She grew up in public housing in Williamstown, with a full-time working mother and a father who never really returned postwar. She used to say swimming saved her. It gave her a purpose, a sense of place, somewhere to belong when life at home was hard. Later she taught my brother and me to swim, and then my children, instilling in each of us a love of the water that has never gone.
My grandmother stayed in her one-bedroom high-rise tower flat facing the Williamstown beach until she had to move into an aged care home. For her, the smell of the salty sea drifting across land to her window on the fifth floor made her feel home. Gran wasn’t a swimmer, but she was a great supporter of the life saving club, earning lifetime membership in 1961. And when I checked, her name is still on the honour roll.
Continue reading...Dick Smith enters nuclear debate but CSIRO analysis shows his argument in meltdown
The entrepreneur claims agency exaggerated the costs of the Coalition plan despite it using best-case scenario South Korea as the benchmark
High-profile entrepreneur Dick Smith entered the ongoing radioactive debate on nuclear energy this week, accusing government agencies of misleading ministers over the costs of reactors and the practicalities of renewables.
But Smith’s complaints about what the Australian Energy Market Operator’s plan for the future of the grid says, or how CSIRO calculated the costs of nuclear, are themselves misleading.
Continue reading...Argentine developers to market first biodiversity credits at COP16
Austria sets out carbon management strategy for hard-to-abate emissions
Environmental intelligence firm raises $10 mln to mainstream nature risk reporting
EU ETS could amass 1.7 bln surplus allowances by 2030 unless hydrogen production rises –analyst
Artificial light on coastlines lures small fish to their doom, coral reef study finds
Light pollution acts as ‘midnight fridge’, drawing in young fish, then predators, according to tests in French Polynesia
Artificial light shining from coastlines around the world is acting like “a midnight fridge” full of tasty snacks, threatening young fish who can be drawn to it and who are then eaten by predators also attracted by the brightness, according to a study.
It has long been established that light pollution hampers people’s ability to see the night sky and harms migrating birds, insects and other animals. But its impact on marine ecosystems has rarely been taken into account, said Jules Schligler, the lead author of the study at the international coral ecosystem research centre in Mo’orea, French Polynesia.
Continue reading...Hurricane Beryl: Record-breaking sign of warming world
After asking ‘What about the climate?’ for 14 years, I’m standing down as an MP. But I have hope | Caroline Lucas
Voters and politicians now know slow, incremental change just won’t cut it. The next government must be bold and brave
- Caroline Lucas is a former Green MP
When I entered parliament back in 2010 as the first Green MP, I used every possible trick in the book to push the environment up the UK’s political agenda. In the early days, progress was agonisingly slow. Simply making the case that Britain should be powered by renewables, not fossil fuels, was a daily battle. Every single budget, I would stand up and ask the same question: what about the climate? And then, quite quickly, things finally began to change.
I’ll never forget the moment I realised the environment movement had finally entered the political mainstream. The shift dawned on me during the school strikes five years ago, which brought over a million people worldwide out on to the streets in protest. I stood on top of a makeshift platform on a fire engine outside parliament and saw a vast crowd of young people, stretching as far as the eye could see, demanding climate justice and action.
Caroline Lucas is an environmental activist and former Green MP
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