Feed aggregator

Vietnam introduces variable solar tariff rates to encourage geographical, technological spread

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-04-11 17:37
Vietnam has approved a framework for solar tariffs and introduced a new pricing scheme as part of efforts to control its fast-growing power sector carbon emissions by putting 30 gigawatts of new solar on the grid by  the early 2030s.
Categories: Around The Web

Japanese airline to explore sustainable farming project, eyes carbon credit business

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-04-11 17:02
A major airline in Japan has decided to embark on a pilot project that will help create a sustainable farming model with the use of batteries and renewable energy while generating carbon credits, it announced Friday.
Categories: Around The Web

Turbo chooks moved into our garden and had babies without telling us! What a dilemma | First Dog on the Moon

The Guardian - Fri, 2025-04-11 16:30

The chickens aren’t really happy about it either – whomst would be a chicken

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Will global climate action be a casualty of Trump’s tariffs?

The Guardian - Fri, 2025-04-11 16:00

Clean energy investors likely to pull back from US, but other countries may seize opportunity to speed transition

Donald Trump’s upending of the global economy has raised fears that climate action could emerge as a casualty of the trade war.

In the week that has followed “liberation day”, economic experts have warned that the swathe of tariffs could trigger a global economic recession, with far-reaching consequences for investors – including those behind the green energy projects needed to meet climate goals.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Coalition plan to dump fuel efficiency penalties would make Australia a global outlier

The Conversation - Fri, 2025-04-11 15:54
Penalties are crucial. Without them, automakers have no incentive to supply fuel-efficient, low-CO₂ emitting vehicles to the Australian market. Anna Mortimore, Lecturer, Griffith Business School, Griffith University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

Developer launches biochar facility under GGGI’s flagship programme in the Philippines

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-04-11 15:30
A Singapore-headquartered biochar developer has commissioned the first production facility in the Philippines’ that converts agricultural waste into biochar by using second generation pyrolysis technology, it has announced.
Categories: Around The Web

Peter Dutton’s climate policy backslide threatens Australia’s clout in the Pacific – right when we need it most

The Conversation - Fri, 2025-04-11 15:13
As China seeks to expand its influence in our region, Pacific leaders have questioned Opposition Leader Peter Dutton’s climate action stance. Wesley Morgan, Research Associate, Institute for Climate Risk and Response, UNSW Sydney Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

Starlings fall to record low in UK’s 2025 Big Garden Birdwatch

The Guardian - Fri, 2025-04-11 15:00

RSPB urges people to support threatened birds by cutting lawns less frequently and avoiding pesticides

Fewer starlings than ever have been spotted by participants in the RSPB’s Big Garden Birdwatch, raising fears for their numbers.

The bird conservation charity is urging Britain’s gardeners to keep their lawns wild by not cutting them too often, and to avoid the use of pesticides, which reduce the number of insects to eat and can poison birds.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Australian project developers highlight other ACCU demand sources if Safeguard weakened

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-04-11 14:44
There are other sources of demand for carbon credits if the Coalition wins the upcoming election and are successful at weakening the Safeguard Mechanism, a conference heard Friday.
Categories: Around The Web

Toads risk their lives crossing a Somerset road to mate. This year, a patrol rescued thousands

The Guardian - Fri, 2025-04-11 14:00

Charlcombe Lane near Bath is one of only five roads in UK closed for migration during breeding season

Why did the toad cross the road? To get to the other side, of course. But also, to reproduce.

Nearly 4,000 toads, frogs and newts have been rescued as they tried to cross one of only five roads closed for the migration season in the UK each year to reach a breeding lake on the other side.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

The big lesson for Europe? Trump backed down under pressure

The Guardian - Fri, 2025-04-11 14:00

The EU neither ‘kissed ass’ nor unleashed its most powerful trade weapon. Now it must provide the world with an alternative to US chaos

My condolences to everyone who spent days trying to play 5D chess with Donald Trump’s market-exploding tariff mess. Where Trump is involved, there is a cloud of malevolent chaos, and there is grift amid the chaos. What grandmasters there are to be found are almost certainly grandmasters of grift.

When markets dump $10tn in three days and then gain trillions back in a single afternoon on the erratic decisions of one deeply corrupt person, you can be sure that a small number of people have made immense sums of money out of that volatility. Were the people responsible for abnormal spikes buying into the markets (including call options on various indexes and exchange-traded funds) on Wednesday morning – and again, 20 minutes before the tariff announcement went public – extraordinarily lucky? Were they in the right Signal group? Or were they just simply following Trump on Truth Social, where he posted: “THIS IS A GREAT TIME TO BUY!!! DJT” –just a few hours before dropping the news that he was kind of pulling back.

Alexander Hurst is a Guardian Europe correspondent

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

PR campaign may have fuelled food study backlash, leaked document shows

The Guardian - Fri, 2025-04-11 14:00

Eat-Lancet report recommended shift to more plant-based, climate-friendly diet but was extensively attacked online

A leaked document shows that vested interests may have been behind a “mud-slinging” PR campaign to discredit a landmark environment study, according to an investigation.

The Eat-Lancet Commission study, published in 2019, set out to answer the question: how can we feed the world’s growing population without causing catastrophic climate breakdown?

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

WCI Markets: CCAs roiled as White House draws battle lines with state-run ETS schemes, tariff turnabouts upend macro markets

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-04-11 11:34
California Carbon Allowance (CCA) prices whipsawed in after-hours churn Tuesday amid White House executive orders (EOs) calling for termination of state-run ETS programmes, with partial recovery after lawmakers reaffirmed support for defending state jurisdiction over policymaking.
Categories: Around The Web

Pages

Subscribe to Sustainable Engineering Society aggregator