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Cost of nature loss much higher than governments estimate, study shows
Dutch company to pilot biodiversity credit project in Australia
We can’t pretend we’re doing enough if we want to give the Great Barrier Reef a chance to survive | Adam Morton
With mass bleaching events so frequent, the prognosis is bad. Australia must lead with its actions on emissions and phasing out fossil fuel development
What will it take for us to collectively pay attention? Not a new question, but a reasonable one after the official declaration that the Great Barrier Reef is suffering through another mass bleaching event driven by global heating – the fifth since 2016.
There is no clearer visual demonstration of the climate crisis than what is happening to the reef. It’s a globally unique landmark, made up of thousands of individual reefs and islands and an extraordinary and eccentric array of species. It has been growing into its modern form, spread across an area the size of Italy, for about 8,000 years. People travel from across the planet to witness it. And we can literally see the impact of climate change on it as it changes colour and loses life in real time.
Continue reading...INTERVIEW: Brazilian rainforest state to build bridge between smallholder farmers and the carbon market
Sadiq Khan says roadside pollutants falling faster in London than rest of UK
Exclusive: Mayor hails ‘remarkable progress’ in improving air quality after report showing much of change is result of Ulez
Sadiq Khan has hailed what he said was remarkable progress in improving London’s air quality under his tenure as mayor, after a study showed roadside pollutant levels falling faster in the city than elsewhere in the UK.
The report, produced by the Greater London Authority (GLA) and Transport for London (TfL), said a good proportion of the improvement was the result of the ultra-low emission zone (Ulez), which was extended to all London boroughs last summer.
Continue reading...Nature data gaps are narrowing as technologies improve, experts say
Labour would aim for zero-waste economy by 2050, says Steve Reed
Shadow environment secretary says other countries have same target and it would save billions of pounds
A Labour government would aim for a zero-waste economy by 2050, the shadow environment secretary has said.
Steve Reed said the measure would save billions of pounds and also protect the environment from mining and other negative actions, while speaking at the Restitch conference in Coventry, held by the thinktank Create Streets.
Continue reading...Euro Markets: Midday Update
FEATURE: EU testing the waters on ETS3 for agriculture
CF ASIA: Japan considers inclusion of international CDR projects in domestic carbon market
CF ASIA: Asian countries should allow offsets in their compliance schemes, banker says
CF ASIA: Managing reputational risks difficult but vital, carbon developer says
Weather tracker: Much of southern Australia on heatwave alert
Adelaide region expected to be worst affected with average temperatures forecast to be up by 10C
Southern parts of Australia are expected to suffer a short heatwave starting on Friday and lasting until next Tuesday. The Adelaide region will be worst affected, with highs of about 36C anticipated in the city on Friday, which is 10C above the seasonal norm.
Daytime maximums are then set to remain above 35C until Tuesday, while minimum temperatures are not forecast to drop below 25C. This will be the longest March run of high temperatures in Adelaide in four years, with only one March day above 35C being recorded over this period.
Continue reading...The week in wildlife – in pictures: a stinky frog, a curious gopher and bald eagle eggs
The best of this week’s wildlife photographs from around the world
Continue reading...Vietnam signs forest credit deal with US buyer
CN Markets: CEA price reaches all-time high as traders expect tougher ETS regulations
A glorious lineage, or an expensive disaster? Paris is at war over 300 wild rabbits | Agnès Poirier
The animals that inspired Rodin and fed the French resistance may soon be banished from Les Invalides – but not if protesters have anything to do with it
Paris is the theatre of many battles, but none has been more burlesque than the fight to save or annihilate – according to which side of the argument you belong – the wild rabbits living in the shadow of Napoleon’s tomb. Three hundred or so of these furry friends, or fiends, have been digging thousands of tunnels underneath the manicured lawn of the Esplanade des Invalides, ruining the 16-hectare (40-acre) site overseen by the French military.
Gnawing on electrical cables and garden hoses, they have transformed the grass plot into gruyère, as well as leaving behind tons of their signature round droppings. The military personnel must be feeling their skills are wasted, spending precious hours each day, as they now must do, collecting rabbit caca.
Continue reading...Major Japanese firms join Africa-focused carbon credit initiative
CF ASIA: India at least half a year away from seeing first project in domestic market
Cancer-causing PCB chemicals still being produced despite 40-year-old ban
Exclusive: Research reveals byproduct PCBs may pose ‘growing, unmonitored environmental and human health risk’
Industry could be producing more cancer-causing PCB chemicals today than at any other point in history, despite their production having been banned more than 40 years ago.
PCBs, or polychlorinated biphenyls, are human-made substances that were used as coolants and lubricants in electrical equipment until they were banned due to their links to health problems and because they do not break down easily in the environment.
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