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CP Daily: Friday December 22, 2023
Registered participants for Washington’s cap-and-trade scheme pick up in Q4
Emitters grow V23 and V24 CCA holdings, as speculators conduct the same in RGGI
Taiwan voluntary carbon exchange sees trades on launch day
Latin American airline group in 400k Brazilian offset deal
VCMI’s new flexibility claim idea could backfire, report warns
BHP, China’s Baowu complete mining car wheel decarbonisation pilot
Emerging markets hedge fund takes strategic stake in VCM financier
ANALYSIS: How carbon capture could help bring Britain back closer to the EU
Jaguar corridor investment fund targets raising up to $130 mln by mid-2024
‘It feels very fun and freeing’: US sees ebike boom after years of false starts
Sales surge as cities and states look to cut pollution from cars and improve options for Americans to get around
After several years of false starts, electric bikes are finally entering the American mainstream, amid booming sales of a multiplying number of models on offer and as more states offer incentives for people to ditch their cars and shift to two, motor-assisted, wheels.
This year could be considered “the year of the ebike”, according to John MacArthur, a transport researcher at Portland State University. Ebike sales in the United States leaped by 269% between 2019 and 2022, with the market size expected to have grown further in 2023, to be worth $2.59bn.
Continue reading...Freeze of EU-US steel tariffs to pave way for end to trade war, says EU industry
Carbon credit retirements for 2023 set to match 2022 levels, defying fears of dented market confidence
Fund launches call for climate contribution projects ahead of fourth cash allocation
ART programme lists Burkina Faso REDD+ concept
UK lawmakers urge govt to consider curbing aviation demand, account for carbon-intensive SAFs
No escape from CBAM: Indian industries bound to be severely impacted by new UK policy -experts
Euro Markets: EUAs post fifth increase in a row as market shrugs off 22% increase in auction volumes
EU nations seek to keep rules for climate-related equity indices despite red tape cull
‘We are not hardcore hippies’: why our family chose a low income in order to have a richer life
Despite a typical suburban upbringing – and two PhDs – Jonathan Cornford and his family decided to restrain their consumption
- Change by Degrees offers life hacks and sustainable living tips each Saturday to help reduce your household’s carbon footprint
- Got a question or tip for reducing household emissions? Email us at changebydegrees@theguardian.com
When my wife, Kim, and I got married in 1995 we decided, in our youthful idealism, that we would try to “live simply so that others might simply live”. It turns out that living simply can sometimes be quite complicated. Nevertheless, from the outset it was clear to us that living simply should involve living on a lower income than the Australian norm. We were sort of downshifters, except we had never shifted up in the first place.
The bulk of our married life has been spent living at an income level that put us in the bottom 20% of Australian households. We now have two older teenagers, and for most of their lives our family technically hovered around the Australian household poverty line. But “poverty” has been very far from our experience.
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