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South Australia’s oldest wind farm signs up for new long term power deal
The post South Australia’s oldest wind farm signs up for new long term power deal appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Top 50 global corporations falling short on 1.5C-aligned emission cuts -study
Anthony Albanese is setting himself up as the fossil fuel export king of Australia
The post Anthony Albanese is setting himself up as the fossil fuel export king of Australia appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Heat from El Niño can warm oceans off West Antarctica – and melt floating ice shelves from below
Antarctica’s sea ice hit another low this year – understanding how ocean warming is driving the loss is key
We can’t eradicate deadly cane toads – but there’s a way to stop them killing wildlife
Peru draws backlash over proposed J-REDD+ methodology, which could slash carbon crediting -media
The Guardian view on Europe’s troubled green deal: make the case, not concessions | Editorial
Leaders need to persuade others of the need for environmental measures rather than capitulate in the face of political headwinds
Last month, a survey of public opinion in Germany, France and Poland found that a majority in each country would support more ambitious policies to tackle the climate emergency. The same study also found unexpectedly widespread support for pan-European action linking green goals to other priorities such as economic security. Who knew, at a time when warnings of a popular “green backlash” are rife?
Unfortunately, Europe’s politicians are now on a very different page. Rattled by farmers’ protests – which radical-right parties have swiftly co-opted as a new front in their culture wars – Brussels and national governments have been busily sounding a disorderly, panicked retreat on environmental targets. Since the turn of the year, the U-turns and capitulations have come thick and fast.
Continue reading...US economist raises social cost of carbon to $225/tonne
NY-based carbon removals project developer completes planting of 10 mln trees
Australia among hotspots for toxic ‘forever chemicals’, study of PFAS levels finds
Australian limits on acceptable levels of these toxic chemicals in drinking water ‘orders of magnitude’ higher than in US
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High levels of so-called forever chemicals have been found in surface and groundwater all over the world, with Australia one of several hotspots for toxic PFAS, a University of New South Wales study has found.
Researchers examined groundwater samples from around the world and found 69% had per-and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) at levels above Canada’s safe drinking water criteria and 32% had levels higher than the US proposed drinking water hazard index.
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