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Santos “confident” it has enough ACCUs to meet projected Barossa Safeguard requirements
UK among rich countries not paying fair share to restore nature – report
Only two countries provide fair amount to compensate lower-income nations for biodiversity loss, with most paying less than half what they should, says ODI
The UK, Canada, New Zealand, Italy and Spain are among the rich countries contributing less than half their fair share of nature finance to poor countries, a new report has found.
Developed nations have agreed to collectively contribute a minimum of $20bn annually for nature restoration in low and middle-income countries by 2025. This money is in addition to the $100bn agreed for climate finance.
Continue reading...No costing, no clear timelines, no easy legal path: deep scepticism over Dutton’s nuclear plan is warranted
‘Space hairdryer’ regenerates heart tissue in study
Kicking out gas: Canberra lays out plan to become Australia’s first all electric city
The post Kicking out gas: Canberra lays out plan to become Australia’s first all electric city appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Most people in petrostates want quick switch to clean energy, UN poll finds
Largest ever climate survey also finds majority want countries to set aside differences to fight global heating
Most people in the world’s biggest fossil fuel producing countries want their countries to transition quickly to clean energy to fight the climate crisis, according to the largest ever climate opinion poll, conducted by the UN.
Many of these states have profited heavily from fossil fuel exploitation, but the 77-nation poll shows their citizens are deeply concerned about the impacts of global heating on their lives. In China and India, the biggest coal producers, 80% and 76% respectively want a quick green transition.
Continue reading...Fossil fuel use reaches global record despite clean energy growth
Report finds developing countries are increasing reliance on coal, gas and oil as overall demand for energy rises
The world’s consumption of fossil fuels climbed to a record high last year, driving emissions to more than 40 gigatonnes of CO2 for the first time, according to a global energy report.
Despite a record rise in the use of renewable energy in 2023, consumption of fossil fuels continued to increase too, an annual review of world energy by the Energy Institute found.
Continue reading...How the small Pacific island nation of Vanuatu drastically cut plastic pollution
With lagoons once choked by rubbish, pressure from the appalled community led the government to ban certain single-use products
For generations, the people of Erakor village in the Pacific nation of Vanuatu would pass their time swimming in the local lagoon. Ken Andrew, a local chief, remembers diving in its depths when he was a child, chasing the fish that spawned in its turquoise waters.
That was decades ago. Now 52, Andrew has noticed a more pernicious entity invading the lagoon: plastic.
Continue reading...Nuclear thuggery: Coalition will not take no for an answer from local communities or site owners
The post Nuclear thuggery: Coalition will not take no for an answer from local communities or site owners appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Peter Dutton’s nuclear plan is an economic disaster that would leave Australians paying more for electricity | Tristan Edis
Almost all nuclear power plants in Europe and North America were constructed in the 1970s and 1980s
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The Peter Dutton-led Coalition has announced that, if elected, the government will build seven nuclear power stations located across every mainland state.
One can understand the appeal of nuclear power to those who are unfamiliar with the history of the technology. Nuclear power has been with us for many decades, supplying large amounts of emission-free power across a wide number of democratic, developed countries in Europe and North America. Why wouldn’t we make use of a power source that can be turned up and down independent of the weather and which other developed nations have used for decades?
Continue reading...Australia’s first floating wind farm edges closer with feasibility licence awarded to 2GW project
The post Australia’s first floating wind farm edges closer with feasibility licence awarded to 2GW project appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Canada to ban open-net pen salmon farming in British Columbia
Environmentalists hail decision to end practice in five years but aquaculture industry warns of 6,000 jobs at risk
Canada will ban open-net pen salmon farming in British Columbia coastal waters in five years, the government has announced, a decision that has been welcomed by environmental groups but opposed by the aquaculture industry.
The Liberal government made the decision in 2019 to transition to closed containment technologies to protect declining wild Pacific salmon populations.
Continue reading...Drought forces Tasmania to fire up its biggest gas plant for first time in five years
The post Drought forces Tasmania to fire up its biggest gas plant for first time in five years appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Verra, Malaysian Forest Fund sign deal to align forest carbon initiatives
Biorefinery firm finalises CCS agreements for its Nebraska facilities
Very late and over budget: Why newest large nuclear plant in US is likely to be the last
The post Very late and over budget: Why newest large nuclear plant in US is likely to be the last appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Over 80% of rich countries fail to meet fair share of biodiversity financing target, report shows
Hidden emissions from CCUS push could derail the UK’s net zero strategy -think tank
Veteran North American carbon, energy trader joins European utility
GenCost doesn’t just rule out nuclear, it makes solar thermal impossible to ignore
The post GenCost doesn’t just rule out nuclear, it makes solar thermal impossible to ignore appeared first on RenewEconomy.