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Serbia joins central and southern Europe regional energy exchange as part of preparations for CBAM
Toxic gas, livelihoods under threat and power outages: how a seaweed causes chaos in Caribbean
Leaders have failed to tackle invasion of sargassum, which may have a bumper year in 2024
Schools evacuated due to toxic gas. Smelly tap water at home. Tourist operators and fishers struggling to stay in business. Job losses. Power outages affecting tens of thousands of people at a time. Dangerous health problems. Even lives lost.
Such crises were some of the consequences of sargassum seaweed in the islands of the Caribbean in 2023, which have become common in the region since 2011, when massive blooms began inundating the shorelines in the spring and summer months.
Continue reading...Japanese, Thai developers ink deal for JCM project
UK waste-to-energy plans to add CCS to generate carbon-negative power
“Ghost roads” tearing down tropical forests in Asia-Pacific -research
China releases ecological protection compensation scheme regulations, highlights market-based instruments
SBTi staff call for CEO to be sacked, immediate reversal of Scope 3 offset use decision -Reuters
China’s coal plant build hits new high in 2023, driving global growth
Dazzling artwork found at ancient city of Pompeii
FEATURE: Pressure mounts to include plastic credits in UN treaty, verifiers point to increasing interest
Who complains about church bells or cicadas in France? You’d be surprised | Dale Berning Sawa
Visitors to the countryside objecting to a variety of rural noises are such a problem that legislators feel compelled to act
The French parliament is taking aim at noise complaints in the countryside. Lawmakers say they are well acquainted with the problem of residents who have moved to the countryside from the big cities bemoaning the way livestock, church bells and other rural sounds impinge on their newly claimed right to pastoral quiet.
A new law aims to stop these néoruraux (rural newcomers) from taking farmers to court over farming activities that were already happening long before they arrived. Opposition MPs have derided the new bill as hot air, because it mostly just reorganises existing bits of legislation. But what is new is an emphasis on what the justice minister, Éric Dupond-Moretti, calls le vivre-ensemble: living together in a respectful way – something I feel is sorely needed.
Dale Berning Sawa is a freelance writer based in London
Continue reading...Australia should aim for 65-75% emissions cuts in 2035 NDC, Climate Change Authority paper says
“Ambitious and visionary:” Praise and some skepticism greets green manufacturing Act
The post “Ambitious and visionary:” Praise and some skepticism greets green manufacturing Act appeared first on RenewEconomy.
PM’s Made in Australia plan could compel Big 4 banks to unlock $400 billion in sustainable finance
The post PM’s Made in Australia plan could compel Big 4 banks to unlock $400 billion in sustainable finance appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Coalition nuclear plan would force consumers to wait 20 years longer for 30% higher electricity bills
The post Coalition nuclear plan would force consumers to wait 20 years longer for 30% higher electricity bills appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Cotton demand driving deforestation in Brazil’s Cerrado linked to European fashion giants -report
Why an intention to conserve an area for only 25 years should not count for Australia’s target of protecting 30% of land
Solar farms in space may get real after tests on wireless energy beam
The post Solar farms in space may get real after tests on wireless energy beam appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Great Barrier Reef suffering ‘most severe’ coral bleaching on record – video
Concern that the Great Barrier Reef may be suffering the most severe mass coral bleaching event on record has escalated after a conservation group released footage showing damage to the reef deep below the surface.
Dr Selina Ward, a marine biologist and former academic director of the University of Queensland’s Heron Island Research Station, says it is the worst bleaching she had seen in 30 years working on the reef. 'It's absolutely heartbreaking,' she says.
Ward says Australia can't expect to save the reef while opening new fossil fuel developments. 'We really are running out of time. We need to reduce our emissions immediately.'
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