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Airbus UK to build satellite to monitor Sun storms
Tech giants pledge to contract 20 mln nature-based voluntary carbon credits
UK breakthrough could slash emissions from cement
The claim of a $600bn carbon capture windfall for Australia is based on heroic assumptions and selective analysis | Temperature Check
Projections of the size and scale of a future CCS industry should come with heavy doses of scepticism
As far as bonanzas go, a claim this week that Australia could pull in almost $600bn by storing carbon dioxide from other countries is one that puts even the Aukus nuclear submarine deal in the shade.
The oil and gas industry lobby group Australian Energy Producers made the claim, reported in the Australian, pointing to a study carried out by global energy analysts Wood Mackenzie.
Continue reading...Microsoft to buy 36k carbon removals from biochar producer, adds another 1 Mt to Danish BECCS deal
BRIEFING: EUA price must hit €150/t to push ship owners to adopt greener fuel
First sea trials of slow steaming software for shipping industry sharply cut CO2 emissions
Over 50% of the world’s mangrove ecosystems at risk of collapse by 2050, IUCN says
Rhino bond has lessons for biodiversity credits, expert says
EU ministers face six tests for strengthening green competitiveness, says think tank
Failing to modernise grid will massively set back EU on climate targets -industry
Once too soft, now too hard: Snowy 2.0 tunnelling machine Florence comes to a stop again
The post Once too soft, now too hard: Snowy 2.0 tunnelling machine Florence comes to a stop again appeared first on RenewEconomy.
FEATURE: Fish farming marine destruction claims highlight challenge in meeting GBF targets
Borrowdale rainforest in Lake District declared national nature reserve
Five nature reserves will be created each year for next five years to celebrate coronation of King Charles
A temperate rainforest in the Lake District has been declared a national nature reserve in a move that will protect the rare ancient habitat for future generations.
The Borrowdale rainforest is one of the few surviving examples of a “mysterious and untouched” landscape that covers less than 1% of the UK.
Continue reading...Euro Markets: Midday Update
First five corporate nature positive strategies approved by campaign group
Australian conference holds record buy side, emitter attendee numbers
Carbon tech startup launches free voluntary credit insight platform
Investor group teams up to finance nature-based carbon removal project in Panama
Trigger-happy councils mowing down our spring flowers? There’s a better way to do things | Phineas Harper
The No Mow May campaign has persuaded local authorities to protect biodiversity. But bigger changes are needed
This time last year, residents of the council estate where I live in Greenwich were left in tears after local authority contractors mowed down scores of newly planted purple alliums on our shared lawn just days after they’d bloomed. In minutes, one man with a strimmer had reduced the flowers that my neighbours, many of whom do not have private gardens, had grown over months to mere mulch.
Shamefaced, this year the council sought to make amends by sowing a biodiversity meadow near where the alliums had met their fate. The new wildflowers were doing well – on track to compensate for the previous year’s blunder – until, to the consternation of residents, they were yet again mown down by council contractors. Even the local authorities’ own efforts to improve the biodiversity of the borough proved no match for its trigger-happy lawnmower men.
Phineas Harper is a writer and curator
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