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France’s appetite for frogs’ legs is endangering species in Asia, say campaigners
Scientists and vets are urging the president to afford the world’s most traded species better protections
France’s hunger for frogs’ legs is “destructive to nature” and endangering amphibians in Asia and south-east Europe, a group of scientists and vets have warned.
More than 500 experts from research, veterinary and conservation groups have called on Emmanuel Macron, the French president, to “end the overexploitation of frogs” and afford the most traded species better protections.
Continue reading...New life springs from rescued Sycamore Gap tree
Speculators gear down North American carbon holdings, compliance builds length in CCAs, RGGI
Alberta should support federal carbon contracts for difference, says former minister
US DOE should streamline funding, permitting, and structures -report
Washington seeks feedback on CFS update looking to spur in-state SAF production
EU aircraft operators emitted 105 mln tonnes during CORSIA-eligible flights in 2022, data shows
Energy industry concerned about Connecticut climate bill electrification shift
Oil-producing Nigerian state grants British firm right to generate millions of voluntary carbon credits
ANALYSIS: Role of VCM, legislative snags delay Brazil ETS passage
Offset project developer to acquire London-based carbon trading platform
‘Carbon neutral’ fee charged by ride-hailing company risks greenwashing -NGO
UK government announces £4.5 mln water credit pilot with tap aerators
Green Climate Fund approves $500 mln for climate projects, discusses REDD+
Restored coral reefs grow as fast as healthy ones but are less biodiverse, study finds
Multinational commodity supplier targets Scope 3 emissions in Argentina
ICE to launch “mini-EUA” contract to attract wider participation, including from smaller investors
Oil industry has sought to block state backing for green tech since 1960s
Research shows industry lobbying against support for solar panels and electric cars while enjoying subsidies itself
The oil industry has fought against government support for clean technologies for more than half a century, the Guardian can reveal, even as vast subsidies have propped up its polluting business model.
It lobbied lawmakers to block support for low-carbon technologies such as solar panels, electric cars and heat pumps as far back as the 1960s, analysis shows. Trade associations in the US and Europe stymied green innovations under the guise of supporting a “technology neutral” approach to avoiding the damage done by burning their fuels.
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