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Rooftop solar could cut global warming by up to 0.13C by 2050 -study
Canada opens investigation into US renewable diesel imports
Republican lawmakers seek Delaware’s exit from RGGI
Alberta warns Canada’s clean electricity rules threaten grid reliability, affordability
CDM panel approves “marginal”, more granular approach to clean cooking projects
EU member states approve Poland’s push for more free EUAs for district heating
Toppled private spacecraft can't complete Moon mission
IRA dismantling opens opportunity window for EU -researchers
West of England unveils industrial decarbonisation plan including CCS, clean power
Switzerland told it must do better on climate after older women’s ECHR win
Council of Europe says Swiss government failing to respect human rights court’s ruling on emissions
The Swiss government has been told it must do more to show that its national climate plans are ambitious enough to comply with a landmark legal ruling.
The Council of Europe’s committee of ministers, in a meeting this week, decided that Switzerland was not doing enough to respect a decision by the European court of human rights last year that it must do more to cut its greenhouse gas emissions and rejected the government’s plea to close the case.
Continue reading...Harmonised biodiversity credit markets ‘promising’ tool to scale nature finance -report
Bids in EU’s latest clean hydrogen auction quadruple the available budget
Denmark receives two bids for coastal CO2 storage permits
INTERVIEW: US rollback on nature looms over resuming plastic treaty talks
Euro Markets: Midday Update
The secret life of the Congo rainforest – in pictures
Using high-definition camera traps on trails in Congo’s Nouabalé-Ndoki national park, Will Burrard-Lucas, a photographer for the Wildlife Conservation Society, has captured Africa’s most elusive and rarely seen animals
Continue reading...US pulls funding from international loss and damage, energy transition programmes
ICVCM doing better job to identify project quality than CORSIA, says ratings agency
Just Stop Oil protesters’ jail sentences shortened after appeal
Sixteen activists argued sentences had not adequately taken into account their conscientious motivation
Six protesters jailed for their roles in various climate demonstrations have had their sentences reduced on appeal.
The Just Stop Oil co-founder Roger Hallam was originally jailed for five years for agreeing to disrupt traffic by having protesters climb on to gantries over the M25 for four successive days. His sentence was reduced to four years.
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