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‘Citizen scientists’ to check UK rivers for sewage and pollution
Big River Watch scheme asks general public to help monitor state of rivers after years of deregulation
Rivers will be checked for sewage and other pollution by the general public this month in an attempt to assess the health of British waterways.
Cuts to the UK regulators and a change in the law to allow water company self-monitoring of pollution in England mean there is little independent monitoring of the state of rivers in the UK.
Continue reading...Producers slash holdings across North American carbon markets, financials build CCA and RGGI net length
US forest management firm’s 2023 CO2 removals surpassed emissions by almost 600%
US fossil fuel industry reports results of methane emissions reduction efforts
US green methanol tech company lures $4.5 mln investment
Researchers urge revised carbon crediting methods to better protect high-risk forest areas
FEATURE: Carbon projects with hard currency needs face FX risk
Germany rejects 215,000 emissions reductions units from eight projects in China
Corporate greenwashing unevenly hits share price of offenders, study finds
Stranded astronauts' capsule to head home without them
US EPA cracks down on illegal HFC usage, imports with new enforcement alert
AI could expand access to carbon markets for sustainable rice farming, says report
Former Gabon environment minister beefs up board of CTrees
Poland aims for 56% renewables in electricity mix by 2030
Hottest summer on record could lead to warmest year ever measured
This year will more than likely end up the warmest humanity has measured, reports European climate service
Summer 2024 sweltered to Earth’s hottest on record, making it even more likely that this year will end up as the warmest humanity has measured, the European climate service Copernicus reported on Friday.
And if this sounds familiar, that’s because the records the globe shattered were set just last year as human-caused climate change, with a temporary boost from an El Niño, keeps dialing up temperatures and extreme weather, scientists said.
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