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CF NORTH AMERICA: Canadian regulators prepare offset protocols amid uncertain demand
Energy tsars call for “stability in policies” to get on with enormous transition to renewables
The post Energy tsars call for “stability in policies” to get on with enormous transition to renewables appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Peter Dutton’s energy policy is a political death wish – and utterly irresponsible in the face of the climate emergency | Ian Lowe
As well as spending billions subsidising fossil fuels, we are spending billions more repairing the damage global heating is doing
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Peter Dutton’s proposed energy policy, in the face of our climate emergency, is utterly irresponsible. Not just irresponsible environmentally, but also economically. Given community attitudes, it looks like the silliest political death wish in recent history.
Joëlle Gergis’s recent Quarterly Essay, Highway to Hell, was a frightening reminder of the price we are already paying for climate change. In property damage from floods and fires as well as lost agricultural production, the bills keep rolling in. As well as spending billions subsidising fossil fuels, we are spending billions more repairing the damage global heating is doing. It would be in our direct interest to be urging a rapid increase in ambition from the inadequate Paris targets. Becoming the first country in the world to weaken our response would undermine the growing impetus for a concerted program of action. We should be increasing the rate of decarbonisation, not slowing it.
Continue reading...CF NORTH AMERICA: Canada’s industrial carbon pricing can survive even with political turnover
Tests show 30 year-old solar panels still operating at 79.5 per cent of original capacity
The post Tests show 30 year-old solar panels still operating at 79.5 per cent of original capacity appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Boost in renewables brings California emissions in April to record lows
Climate holdout Japan drove Australia’s LNG boom. Could the partnership go green?
‘Magical’: 17m insects fly each year through narrow pass in Pyrenees, say scientists
Exeter University study has origins in 1950 discovery by ornithologists who ‘chanced upon a spectacle’
It is a weird and wonderful sight: millions of migratory insects funnelling through a single narrow pass high in the Pyrenees, looking like a dark flying carpet and emitting a low, deep hum.
A team of scientists from a British university that has been studying the phenomenon for the last four years has now concluded that more than 17 million insects fly each year through the 30 metre-wide Puerto de Bujaruelo on the border of France and Spain.
Continue reading...CF NORTH AMERICA: Canadian carbon offset fund announces RFP towards first Quebec project
Canada announces second carbon credit offtake agreement for CCS tech
Ag-based project developer generates first-ever carbon credits from the US rice industry
Talks on a new global climate finance goal grind to a halt at UN mid-year climate conference
Extreme heat is a killer for outdoor sporting events – let’s plan properly to keep everyone safe
Harmful gases destroying ozone layer falling faster than expected, study finds
Scientists say atmospheric levels of damaging gases peaked five years ahead of projections, as substances phased out
International efforts to protect the ozone layer have been a “huge global success”, scientists have said, after revealing that damaging gases in the atmosphere were declining faster than expected.
The Montreal protocol, signed in 1987, aimed to phase out ozone-depleting substances found primarily in refrigeration, air conditioning and aerosol sprays.
Continue reading...UPDATE – Academics find holes in Verra’s new consolidated voluntary carbon methodology for REDD+
Iceland grants country’s last whaling company licence to hunt 128 fin whales
Conservationists criticise ‘disappointing’ and ‘dangerous’ move to allow harpooning of fin whales after curbs last year
Iceland has granted a licence to Europe’s last whaling company to kill more than 100 animals this year, despite hopes the practice might have been halted after concerns about cruelty led to a temporary suspension last year.
Animal rights groups described the news as “deeply disappointing” and “dangerous”.
Continue reading...Kenya adds ‘flower power’ to extensive carbon markets engagement, forex goals -media
BRIEFING: CSRD to help inform investment decisions and level playing field in company disclosures
Australia’s power and gas companies want Coalition to retain Labor’s 2030 climate target
Coal and gas-fired power plant owners say interim target an important step to net zero by 2050
The owners of Australian coal and gas-fired power plants have joined the country’s leading business groups in saying the Coalition should keep Labor’s 2030 climate target if it wins the next election.
The Australian Energy Council, which represents electricity companies and gas wholesalers and retailers, the Business Council of Australia and the Australian Industry Group said maintaining an interim target – legislated as a 43% cut compared with 2005 levels – was an important step in getting to net zero emissions by mid-century.
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