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Speculators discard California carbon and RGGI net length, WCA holdings data becomes available
Field testing for ocean-based carbon removal is necessary, but hurdles are steep, experts say
Paraguayan Senate passes carbon credit regulation bill with amendments
EU ministers to discuss power market reform next month
The Guardian view on British attitudes: a nation of possibilities | Editorial
This year’s 40th annual survey of the way we think reveals a country that, for all its flaws, is more liberal and more social democratic than before
The problem with modern Britain, said Liz Truss in a recent interview, is that it remains in thrall to social democratic ideas ushered in by New Labour in 1997 and which the Conservatives have not been bold enough in combatting or reversing. This will have been news to much of the public, particularly those who remember the long years of Conservative austerity after 2010 and the Tory party’s self‑expulsion of Britain from the European Union after 2016. Neither of these dominant events of the last 13 years was a flagship social democratic policy last time we looked.
Yet Ms Truss is almost right in one respect. The British public has been moving slowly and steadily in a more social democratic direction in recent years. The publication this week of the 40th annual British Social Attitudes survey provides some of the evidence. It reveals, for instance, that the public does not only want government to fund health care and pensions, it also wants it to reduce income differences between the rich and the poor. The public supports further increases in taxes and spending in order to fund public services too, in spite of the fact that taxes are already high by historic standards.
Continue reading...LCFS Market: California prices snap back towards $70 after aggressive selling halts
TNFD urgently needs to consider metrics beyond MSA, consultant says
Rating agency warns CCP labelled credits won’t guarantee each credit is worth a tonne of CO2
Malta and Spain urge EU to identify more ports as carbon leakage hotspots for ships amid a jump in activity
Why solar batteries are increasingly worth buying for Australian homes in 2023 | Finn Peacock
The economics of solar batteries has changed considerably in recent years, and could now reduce your total power bill – and emissions
- Change by Degrees is our new Saturday column offering life hacks and sustainable living tips to help reduce your household’s carbon footprint
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For many years, the idea of installing home batteries in Australia was, to put it bluntly, a bad deal.
Salespeople would spin numbers in their favour, conveniently ignoring the 20-plus-year payback period on a battery with just a 10-year warranty.
Continue reading...Climate karma: do we have a hope in hell? | Fiona Katauskas
Right this way, sir
Continue reading...UAE oil company executives working with Cop28 team, leak reveals
Exclusive: two PR professionals from national oil firm listed as providing ‘support’ to team running UN climate summit
Senior executives from the UAE’s national oil company are working with the Cop28 team as the country ramps up its PR campaign ahead of the major UN climate summit later this year, leaked internal records show.
Two PR professionals from the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (Adnoc) are identified as providing “additional support” to the team running the summit, according to a Cop28 communications strategy document obtained by the Centre for Climate Reporting (CCR) and the Guardian. It adds to growing evidence of blurred lines between the UAE’s Cop28 team and its fossil fuel industry.
Continue reading...'We made it': tears of joy as Brazil backs Indigenous land rights – video report
Brazil's supreme court has blocked efforts to dramatically strip back Indigenous land rights in what activists called a historic victory for the South American country's original inhabitants. Nine of the court's 11 members voted against what rights groups had dubbed the 'time limit trick' - an agribusiness-backed attempt to prevent Indigenous communities claiming land they did not physically occupy in 1998
Continue reading...UAE carbon developer explores partnership with bank to accelerate climate investments
Sunak’s net zero U-turn will hurt those he says he wants to help – Labour must stand up for them | Fatima Ibrahim
The prime minister is out of step with voters, who want to see bold action on the climate crisis, leaving an opening for Keir Starmer
On Tuesday, the UN secretary general, António Guterres, told the annual gathering of world leaders at the UN general assembly that on the climate crisis, “actions are falling abysmally short” and that leaders should take “drastic steps now”. He also reminded the world that G20 countries were responsible for 80% of greenhouse emissions and that “they must lead”.
But Rishi Sunak was elsewhere, the first British prime minister in a decade to miss this opportunity to show international climate leadership. And just hours after the speech, news broke of his plans to weaken domestic climate commitments.
Continue reading...Euro Markets: Midday Update
Bee-killing pesticides banned in EU found at unsafe levels in English rivers
Campaigners hit out at government for ‘ignoring science’ as it considers allowing use of a toxic neonicotinoid
Bee-killing pesticides have been found at dangerous levels in English rivers, as the government considers allowing the use of one that is banned in the EU.
Environmental groups and farmers are waiting to hear whether a toxic neonicotinoid, thiamethoxam, will be approved by the government for English sugar beet farms for a fourth consecutive year. Wildlife campaigners say it is “unacceptable” that ministers have “ignored the science” and allowed the use of these dangerous chemicals.
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