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INTERVIEW: PPA buyers need to temper price expectations, says consultancy
Goals to stop decline of nature in England ‘off track’, report warns
Audit of Environmental Improvement Plan finds it inadequate as government announces overhaul of goals
Goals to stop the decline of nature and clean up the air and water in England are slipping out of reach, a new report has warned.
An audit of the Environmental Improvement Plan (EIP), which is the mechanism by which the government’s legally binding targets for improving nature should be met, has found that plans for thriving plants and wildlife and clean air are deteriorating. This plan was supposed to replace the EU-derived environmental regulations the UK used until the Environment Act was passed in 2021 after Brexit.
Continue reading...Trade row won’t hurt US and China’s emissions talks, says US climate chief
John Podesta says negotiations ‘to find a path forward’ continue with urgent discussions planned for Cop29
Trade frictions and increasing tension between the US and China won’t affect climate negotiations between the two superpowers if he can help it, the US climate chief has pledged.
John Podesta, a senior adviser to Joe Biden on international climate policy, said the relationship between the world’s two biggest emitters and largest economies was critical to climate action, despite what appears to be a deepening gulf over trade policy.
Continue reading...ANALYSIS: Long way to go before SBTi decides on voluntary carbon credit use under net-zero standard
Carbon RX and Manitoba rancher ink deal for grassland carbon credits
DATA DIVE: The countries and sectors facing the highest CCS costs in Europe
TNFD, GRI release joint guidelines to enhance disclosure alignment
INTERVIEW: Steelmakers flag unsolved issues with CBAM, warn of ‘very high risks’
Carbon removals firm closes $30 mln Series A funding
Miner and maritime heavyweight ink MoU for clean shipping
One approach to measuring biodiversity credits gains momentum -research
Euro Markets: Midday Update
New Zealand on track to meet first emissions budget, Climate Change Commission finds
ICVCM launches forum to help cash flow to local communities, Indigenous Peoples
Voluntary carbon credits on the table under SBTi revision of corporate net-zero standard
INTERVIEW: Most biodiversity credit methodologies fail to address uncertainty
BP scales back plans for biofuel projects, focuses on oil
Japan livestock farming hub to promote offset projects, develop crediting methodology
Global methane emissions rising at fastest rate in decades, scientists warn
Researchers call for immediate action to reduce methane emissions and avert dangerous escalation in climate crisis
Global emissions of methane, a powerful planet-heating gas, are “rising rapidly” at the fastest rate in decades, requiring immediate action to help avert a dangerous escalation in the climate crisis, a new study has warned.
Methane emissions are responsible for half of the global heating already experienced, have been climbing significantly since around 2006 and will continue to grow throughout the rest of the 2020s unless new steps are taken to curb this pollution, concludes the new paper. The research is authored by more than a dozen scientists from around the world and published on Tuesday.
Continue reading...Fortescue tests green ammonia market with world’s biggest shipping company
The post Fortescue tests green ammonia market with world’s biggest shipping company appeared first on RenewEconomy.