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Argentine oil and gas province seeks net zero via carbon markets

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2024-08-29 09:25
An Argentine province known for its reliance on extractive industries hosted a carbon markets seminar this week, aiming to leverage offsets to help achieve net zero emissions alongside oil and gas development.
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New Shetland windfarm could power nearly 500,000 homes

BBC - Thu, 2024-08-29 09:22
The islands are the windiest part of the UK, which means it will be rare for the turbines not to be spinning.
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Manatee mummy and calf charm wildlife photo judges

BBC - Thu, 2024-08-29 09:11
The photo is among several highly commended in this year's Wildlife Photographer of the Year contest
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Young wildlife photographer of the year 2024 – preview

The Guardian - Thu, 2024-08-29 09:01

Selected from almost 60,000 entries from 117 countries and territories, the winners of the 60th competition will be announced on 8 October. The 100 winning images will be on display at the Natural History Museum in London from 11 October

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Key Asian banks see progress in establishing decarbonisation pathways, but more action needed

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2024-08-29 07:00
Banks in Japan, Singapore, and South Korea have made strides in developing decarbonisation strategies and establishing climate-related objectives, but more decisive action is needed to align with global climate commitments, a report has found.
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How low can we go? To cut the carbon that goes into buildings to net zero, we need radical change

The Conversation - Thu, 2024-08-29 06:30
Construction activity will use up almost half of the world’s remaining carbon budget to keep global warming under 1.5°C unless we totally rethink our approach. Philip Oldfield, Head of School and Professor of Architecture, UNSW Built Environment, UNSW Sydney Gerard Reinmuth, Professor of Practice, University of Technology Sydney William Craft, Associate Lecturer and Researcher, School of Built Environment, UNSW Sydney Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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They come from above: here’s why magpies, magpie-larks and lapwings swoop in spring

The Conversation - Thu, 2024-08-29 06:22
Springtime in Australia and New Zealand means one thing: it’s swooping season. Meg Edwards, Lecturer in Wildlife Science, University of Southern Queensland Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Ocean heat is changing marine food webs – with far-reaching consequences for NZ fisheries and sea life

The Conversation - Thu, 2024-08-29 06:22
As the ocean warms, toxic algal blooms are on the rise in the waters off New Zealand, causing the highest number of shellfish harvest closures in a decade. Anne Rolton Vignier, Scientist in Shellfish and Algal Biology, Cawthron Institute Kirsty Smith, Scientist in Algal Ecology, Cawthron Institute Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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US awards further $15 mln for small landowner access to climate markets

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2024-08-29 03:01
A US federal department announced Wednesday that it is awarding $15 million to nine projects aimed at helping under-served and small-acreage landowners to access emerging climate markets.
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Oman environment authority signs agreement to generate forest carbon credits

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2024-08-29 02:13
Oman's Environment Authority (EA) has entered into a cooperation agreement with the nation's main energy association (OPAL) in a bid to scale up investment in afforestation carbon projects, according to local reporting this week.
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Revealed: US airlines lobbied EU over its plan to monitor plane emissions

The Guardian - Thu, 2024-08-29 02:00

Lobbyists from Airlines for America argued against European Commission draft rules to report cocktail of pollutants, freedom of information requests show

US airlines lobbied against plans to monitor the damage wrought by planet-heating pollutants pumped out of planes in a previously undisclosed meeting with the European Commission, the Guardian can reveal.

Lobbyists from Airlines for America and some of its member companies met representatives of the European Commission’s climate team in May in a meeting that is not logged on the participants’ pages in the EU transparency register. The commission said the meeting took place at a technical level and that it is under no obligation to publish details of meetings at lower levels of its hierarchy.

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Mexican Yucatan IFM project yields first batch of 380,000 carbon credits

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2024-08-29 01:36
Developers announced on Wednesday the first tranche of issuance from an improved forest management (IFM) project in Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula region.
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FEATURE: Voluntary carbon market lacks mechanism to purge disreputable actors

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2024-08-29 01:28
Voluntary carbon market (VCM) institutions, ranging from registries to ratings agencies and insurers, are often unable to weed out bad actors in repeated infringements with industry standards, lacking consistent policies or criteria to do so, market players told Carbon Pulse.
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INTERVIEW: UK should take a ‘maximalist approach’ to renewables investment to achieve targets

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2024-08-29 01:07
The UK should redesign its contracts for difference (CfD) scheme to take a ‘maximalist approach’ to renewable energy investment if it is to speed up the rollout of clean energy fast enough to meet its targets, according to a trade body.
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This bird came back from extinction - now scientists in a glider are teaching it to migrate

The Guardian - Thu, 2024-08-29 01:00

Extinct in central Europe for 300 years, 36 northern bald ibis are following an ultralight aircraft on their long-forgotten migration route from Austria to Spain

The northern bald ibis was extinct in central Europe for 300 years. Now, it has returned – and scientist “foster parents” aboard a tiny plane are teaching the birds to fly their long-forgotten migration routes.

Thirty-six of these endangered birds are now following an ultralight aircraft 1,740 miles (2,800km ) from Austria to Spain, on a trip that could take up to 50 days to complete.

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Without new gas, the Australian warns, an ‘energy crisis’ is nigh – but is the scary rhetoric justified?

The Guardian - Thu, 2024-08-29 01:00

Australia needs more gas in the short term because of our sluggish transition to renewables – but at worst the shortfall may lead to some rationing

The gas industry has been unleashing a firehose of rhetoric in recent days over concerns Australia could suffer a shortage of gas.

In a series of articles in the Australian newspaper under the banner “Gas Crisis”, industry figures and the Coalition’s energy spokesman, Ted O’Brien, claim a shortage is going to “destroy” the economy, cause a “crippling energy crisis” and have Australians suffering the ignominy of “cold showers”.

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Verra rejects 37 Chinese rice cultivation projects, sanctions proponents, VVBs

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2024-08-29 00:55
Verra has taken ‘unprecedented action’ after rejecting 37 rice cultivation projects based in China and also imposing sanctions against the proponents and validation and verification bodies (VVBs) involved, the standard body announced Wednesday.
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Several countries ignoring Glasgow pledge to pump public money into fossil fuels, finds report

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2024-08-28 23:50
Several countries, including the US, have been violating their commitment to the Clean Energy Transition Partnership (CETP) to reduce public finance for fossil fuel projects, finds a report.
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World reliant on US to reach geological CO2 storage potential -report

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2024-08-28 23:43
The world will only be able to hit a global storage rate of 16 billion tonnes of CO2 per year by 2050, assuming the US contributes 60% of this total, according to a new scientific paper.
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