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BRIEFING: Business groups nervous as final talks near on EU’s Green Claims Directive
Australian state pulls together big data for better CCS mapping
CN Markets: CEA price rebound to 90 yuan level, trading volumes increase
Environmentally harmful subsidies grow to $2.6 trillion per year, study says
Japanese govt, UN agency partner with private sector to scale sustainable coffee in Tanzania
Airline operators face future CORSIA compliance risk as Article 6 negotiations drag on -report
One year of Guardian Europe: different stories through a new lens
On 20 September 2023, the Guardian launched a new digital edition for a continent in the grip of dramatic political and social change. This is what we’ve learned so far – and how you can help us do more
A year ago today we launched Guardian Europe, a new digital edition of the Guardian to help bring journalism about the world to Europe and journalism about Europe to the world.
It has been a dramatic year for the continent, with moments of intense political peril, from huge far-right electoral surges to extraordinary people power and progressive fightbacks. It has also been a year of sporting joy at the Paris Games and Euro 2024. We’ve been there to capture it all, and we’re very grateful that millions of you have joined us.
Continue reading...Weather tracker: Shanghai hit by its ‘strongest typhoon in 75 years’
More than 400,000 people evacuated, hundreds of flights cancelled and many roads shut due to flooding and winds
Typhoon Bebinca struck the east coast of China this week, making landfall near Shanghai, a city of almost 30 million people, on Monday. Bebinca developed into a typhoon to the east of the southern Japan islands late last week, before traveling westwards through the East China Sea and making landfall in Shanghai at approximately 7.30am local time (00.30BST).
The Chinese media say it is the strongest typhoon to hit Shanghai in 75 years. Wind speeds were reported to have reached just over 150km/h (about 94mph), making it equivalent to a category 1 hurricane, albeit just shy of a category 2 in strength. Before Bebinca, Shanghai had been hit directly by only two typhoons, one in 1949 and another in 2022, as they usually track further south.
Continue reading...INTERVIEW: Biodiversity credit rebranding into ‘nature asset’ could unlock corporate demand
AU Market: Bank forecasts ACCU price to climb 50% by next year as Safeguard demand begins to awake
Week in wildlife in pictures: Hampshire beaver babies, bubbly lizards and a shopaholic koala
The best of this week’s wildlife photographs from around the world
Continue reading...Carbon credit platform, French utility subsidiary in partnership to boost transparency, innovation in VCM
Fish! Do they have feelings? Now everyone wants to know about the emotional lives of fish! | First Dog on the Moon
Do fish feel despair or longing? Do they yearn for a simpler time?
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US investment manager launches venture to earn carbon credits from planting oyster farms
Wildfires ravaging northern Portugal – in pictures
Since last week, wildfires have been raging in central and northern Portugal. At least seven people have died and 50 have been injured. More than 5,000 firefighters have been mobilised to battle the blazes
Continue reading...INTERVIEW: Either have a market or don’t, Australian project veteran tells government, industry
More solar companies in Germany cut jobs amid weakening rooftop demand
The post More solar companies in Germany cut jobs amid weakening rooftop demand appeared first on RenewEconomy.
South Australia joins Denmark in elite club of two, “pushing the boundaries” of renewable energy integration
The post South Australia joins Denmark in elite club of two, “pushing the boundaries” of renewable energy integration appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Food companies team up to cut emissions in dairy farming
‘You basically have free hot water’: how Cyprus became a world leader in solar heating
The country, which has more 300 days of sunshine a year, has embraced rooftop systems that harness the sun’s energy
The Thriamvos company truck pulls up at noon outside the four-storey building in the heart of Nicosia.
It’s the third rooftop installation of a solar-powered water heating system that Petros Mihali and his assistant, Soteris, have made in the Cypriot capital since their working day began at 7am.
Continue reading...