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Australian firm launches nature certificates tied to microplastics clean-up
Voluntary carbon ratings agency launches tool to flag project investment risks
To decarbonise Asia’s JETP members, halt new coal and incentivise renewables, paper argues
All we wanted was to protect the River Wye from pollution. Now we’re stuck in a catch-22 | Oliver Bullough
To protect our local river we had to prove it was being used for swimming. But that, bizarrely, is the reason we were rejected
The state of Britain’s rivers is incredibly depressing: the water companies dump too much sewage, the farmers dump too much muck, and the regulators are too cowed and underfunded to do their job and stop them.
It wasn’t always this way. As a child I used to swim in the River Wye and I remember the clouds of mayflies in the summer, as well as huge leaping salmon. It was thanks to this wealth of wildlife that the Wye was classified as a special area of conservation along its whole length. Sadly, however, thanks to the failure of the Welsh and British governments to protect the river, much of this abundance is gone, and the Wye’s official status is now “unfavourable – declining”, thanks to pollution from manure and sewage.
Oliver Bullough is the author of Butler to the World: How Britain Became the Servant of Tycoons, Tax Dodgers, Kleptocrats and Criminals
Continue reading...Australian industries divided over the need of a CBAM, consultation submissions show
Japanese startup raises $1.5 mln in seed funding for completing DAC prototype, business expansion
INTERVIEW: Corporate alliance forms to explore potential of biodiversity credit market
“Real climate action to be proud of:” UK’s largest people-owned wind farm powers up
The post “Real climate action to be proud of:” UK’s largest people-owned wind farm powers up appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Project developer, financial advisory launch facility to fund NBS in Amazon, Africa
Offshore wind: Who’s who in the race to build Australia’s first project
The post Offshore wind: Who’s who in the race to build Australia’s first project appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Is bioenergy ever truly green? It depends on 5 key questions
Australian battery developer says its new lithium sulfur chemistry passes nail stab test, without exploding
The post Australian battery developer says its new lithium sulfur chemistry passes nail stab test, without exploding appeared first on RenewEconomy.
State government grant to back local manufacture of standalone power systems and wind turbine parts
The post State government grant to back local manufacture of standalone power systems and wind turbine parts appeared first on RenewEconomy.
UNSW cites PV module failures from poor materials as it pushes to be Solar Sunshot testing hub
The post UNSW cites PV module failures from poor materials as it pushes to be Solar Sunshot testing hub appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Rapidly rising levels of TFA ‘forever chemical’ alarm experts
Trifluoroacetic acid found in drinking water and rain is thought to damage fertility and child development
Rapidly rising levels of TFA, a class of “forever chemical” thought to damage fertility and child development, are being found in drinking water, blood and rain, causing alarm among experts.
TFA, or trifluoroacetic acid, is a type of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substance (PFAS), a group of human-made chemicals used widely in consumer products that do not break down for thousands of years. Many of the substances have been linked to negative effects on human health.
Continue reading...Six-minute EV battery hopeful faces court over alleged failure to disclose “parlous state” of US gigafactory
The post Six-minute EV battery hopeful faces court over alleged failure to disclose “parlous state” of US gigafactory appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Coalition’s O’Brien prompts walkout at solar event after claiming renewables will lead to blackouts
The post Coalition’s O’Brien prompts walkout at solar event after claiming renewables will lead to blackouts appeared first on RenewEconomy.