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WWF releases conditions for voluntary biodiversity credits market
Public prosecutors demand transparency, local stakeholders consultation in Brazil’s Para $180 mln J-REDD deal
UK CCUS ambitions potentially ‘misleading’, ‘waste of money’ -report
Indonesia’s new president stresses need for energy security, domestic biofuels
TfL could be forced to pay millions over Dutch lorry drivers’ low emission zone fines
Hauliers’ group Transport in Nood BV launched judicial review earlier this year over fines issued in Ulez and Lez
Transport for London (TfL) could be forced to pay back millions of pounds in low emission zone fines issued to Dutch lorry drivers after agreeing they had been issued unlawfully.
The body said it had agreed to settle a claim regarding the Ulez fines after a company representing dozens of Dutch haulage companies launched a legal challenge into the ultra-low emission zone (Ulez) and low emission zone (Lez) fines earlier this year.
Continue reading...DAC carbon removal tech efficiency hinges on local climate, researchers find
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Taiwan launches domestic offset platform, mulls cross-border carbon trading mechanism
Seaweed company plans for J-Blue credit issuance by next year
Solar will leap four-fold by 2030, ending the rule of King coal and overtaking all other grid supplies
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Weather tracker: Hurricane Oscar gathers strength in Atlantic as Australia swelters
Oscar, 10th hurricane of 2024 season, batters Turks and Caicos and Bahamas and threatens Cuba and Canada
Hurricane Oscar has become the 10th hurricane of the 2024 Atlantic season, battering the Turks and Caicos Islands on Saturday night and the far southern Bahamas on Sunday.
The disturbance that eventually became Oscar was initially given a low chance of tropical development by the US National Hurricane Center. It began on 10 October as a tropical wave across western Africa, bringing thunderstorms and gusty winds to the Cabo Verde Islands, before moving westwards over the Atlantic. However, it struggled to become sufficiently organised at it progressed, as dry air inhibited further thunderstorm development.
Continue reading...Russian carbon registry conducts first int’l sale
Japanese gas partners sign on for CCS study
UK rivers contain ‘cocktail of chemicals and stimulants’ endangering aquatic life
Exclusive: Researchers find 61% of fresh waters in the UK contain high levels of phosphate and nitrate
The UK’s rivers contain a cocktail of chemicals and stimulants including caffeine, antidepressants and painkillers from water company sewage releases, polluting freshwaters at levels which can pose a risk to aquatic life, testing has found.
Results from three days of testing in rivers by 4,531 volunteers for the environmental research group Earthwatch showed that, in addition to the chemical mix in rivers, 61% of fresh waters in the UK were in a poor state because of high levels of the nutrients phosphate and nitrate, the source of which is sewage effluent and agricultural runoff. England had the worst level of poor water quality in rivers, with 67% of freshwater samples showing high levels of nitrate and phosphate.
Of the 91 samples already analysed, 100% contained caffeine, with levels in 80% of these samples presenting some risk to aquatic life, said Woods.
Nicotine was found in 25% of samples, with concentrations that present some risk to aquatic life found in 7% of samples. The antidepressant venlafaxine was found in 30% of samples analysed, with 13% of samples containing levels that posed a risk to aquatic life.
The antibiotic trimethoprim was found in 10% of samples, all at concentrations that posed some level of risk to aquatic life.
Diclofenac, a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug, was in 11 % of samples, all of which showed some level of risk.
In 5% of samples, the fungicide tebuconazole was present as a result of agricultural runoff.
The neonicotinoid acetamiprid, used for pet flea treatment, was present in 19% of samples, all showing some level of risk to aquatic life.
Earthwatch said the results showed the strong contribution that citizen science played in presenting a clearer picture of the health of rivers.
Continue reading...Queensland’s energy future under a cloud as LNP sends mixed messages on coal, emissions
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Baseload coal and peaking gas paradigm “no longer fit” for modern grid, says AEMO chief
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SwitchedOn Podcast: World-first community pilot to help spark the electrification of everything
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Start date for could be Australia’s biggest renewable energy hub pushed out to end of decade
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Construction underway on first 300MWh battery in massive solar and storage hub
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