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Canadian financier receives over 1 mln Article 6 credits from Rwandan cookstove project
BRIEFING: Experts advocate for open carbon removal frameworks, too soon to call winners
BRIEFING: How to derisk the European CCUS value chain
Safe sex for seagulls? Why bird contraception plan in Worcester may not fly
Councillor has reportedly suggested using pills to control gulls, but experts say it may not be ethical or practical
Their brazen chip-snatching, swooping and aggressive squawking has earned seagulls a reputation as the scourge of seaside towns, terrorising unsuspecting tourists and enraging residents alike.
And as the marauding birds have ventured inland and established urban colonies, towns have deployed spikes, netting and even birds of prey as deterrents. Now Worcester city councillors appear to be contemplating a new escalation in the battle: bird contraceptives.
Continue reading...BRIEFING: Singapore, India, and others drive ‘big year’ for Asian voluntary carbon markets
COP16: INTERVIEW – South Pole launches habitat bank for Colombian biodiversity compliance market
US project developer receives 1.9 mln carbon credits for orphan well plugging
Final talks on EU’s Green Claims Directive to be delayed until next year
Green Climate Fund approves over $1 billion in fresh funding
COP16: TNFD hits target of 500 adopters
COP16: Global standard for biodiversity uplifts certifies first three projects
BRIEFING: With a year until full implementation, how Europe’s CBAM is driving ETS policy in Vietnam, China, and Taiwan
Denmark to reduce CO2 emissions tax for companies at risk of carbon leakage
CN Markets: CEAs touch fresh all-time high, liquidity remains stable
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Clean cooking organisation updates cookstoves methodology
Australian regulator publishes Safeguard facilities’ emissions intensity data
‘We have emotions too’: Climate scientists respond to attacks on objectivity
Researchers criticised and gaslighted after sharing fears with Guardian say acknowledging feelings is critical to their work
Climate scientists who were mocked and gaslighted after speaking up about their fears for the future have said acknowledging strong emotions is vital to their work.
The researchers said these feelings should not be suppressed in an attempt to reach supposed objectivity. Seeing climate experts’ fears and opinions about the climate crisis as irrelevant suggests science is separate from society and ultimately weakens it, they said.
Continue reading...Sliver of cool surface water 2mm deep helps oceans absorb CO2, say scientists
Subtle temperature difference between ‘ocean skin’ and water beneath found to drive more CO2 absorption
A sliver of cool surface water less than 2mm deep helps oceans absorb carbon dioxide, a British-led team of scientists has established after months of voyages across the Atlantic painstakingly measuring gas and temperature levels.
The subtle difference in temperature between the “ocean skin” and the layer of water beneath it creates an interface that leads to more CO2 being taken in, the scientists observed.
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