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INTERVIEW: DAC developer launches pilot facility, plans to scale new chemical approach
Virginia lawmakers poised to reach budget deal that excludes rejoining RGGI -media
Compliance players build length across North American carbon markets, speculators book V24 profits
‘Only hope we’ve got’: the audacious plan to genetically engineer Australia’s endangered northern quoll
In a revolutionary approach, scientists are hoping that modifying the marsupial’s genes to resist cane toads’ toxin will save it from extinction
In a laboratory in the University of Melbourne earlier this year, PhD student Pierre Ibri was running an experiment that could prove to be a critical step in an audacious plan to save Australia’s endangered northern quoll.
In plastic trays were groups of tissue cells of another Australian marsupial – the common and mouse-like fat-tailed dunnart – that he was subjecting to the toxin of the cane toad, an invasive amphibian that has cut a swathe through populations of native animals in Australia’s north.
Continue reading...Gigawatt-scale solar and battery project near Queensland coal plant wins federal green tick
The post Gigawatt-scale solar and battery project near Queensland coal plant wins federal green tick appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Northern Lights in dazzling display across the UK
Tunnel of love? Cautious adders get a helping hand
EUA cancellations associated with coal closures set to cut supply by 160 Mt by 2030 -analyst
Mexican body introduces national carbon standard in push for voluntary market transparency -media
Chilean province moves to establish local offsetting exchange -media
The climate crisis is no laughing matter, no matter what those on Radio 4’s Today programme think | Bill McGuire
As a scientist, I’m faced with indifference and a failure to understand the reality of the climate crisis every day. We must wake people up
- Bill McGuire is professor emeritus of geophysical and climate hazards at UCL
Do you find climate breakdown funny? Do you think it’s a laughing matter that we are on track to bequeath to our children and their children a planet changed for the worse beyond all recognition? I don’t – and I’m sure the presenters of Radio 4’s Today programme don’t either. But I couldn’t help feeling we were having a bit of a Don’t Look Up moment yesterday, hearing them brush off predictions by top climate scientists that our world will end up at least 2.5C hotter as depressing and “gloomy”. This is not to say that laughter and grim news shouldn’t or can’t go together. I work with comedians to help get the climate crisis message across, but we use humour to aid understanding and to help cope, not to denigrate and mock.
The truth is that most people, including many professional journalists, and most politicians, don’t really “get” climate breakdown. Partly this reflects a heads-in-the-sand attitude, but mainly it flags a poor understanding of just how bad things are set to get.
Continue reading...Two Just Stop Oil protesters attack Magna Carta’s glass case
Group says two women in their 80s took hammer and chisel to protective glass at British Library
Two Just Stop Oil protesters have smashed the glass around Magna Carta at the British Library.
The Rev Sue Parfitt, 82, and Judy Bruce, 85, a retired biology teacher, targeted the protective enclosure with a hammer and chisel on Friday morning.
Continue reading...CF TURKIYE: Registries will include carbon project lifecycle updates to boost transparency in voluntary market
CF TURKIYE: Sustainable development is key priority for Turkish carbon markets stakeholders
CF TURKIYE: Turkish renewables projects dampened by voluntary market woes
Nepal urged to involve private sector in Article 6
Euro Markets: Midday Update
UK investor launches nature blueprint for renewables
Belgian lime products manufacturer signs MoU with British carbon capture firm
Adder girl! Tunnels aim to encourage British snakes to mix and breed
Trust builds passes under road bisecting Berkshire commons for increasingly endangered venomous snake
How did the adder cross the road? It didn’t – it was too scared.
Now, however, road-shy populations of the increasingly endangered snake are being given a helping hand with the construction of Britain’s first adder tunnels.
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