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Why scientists are studying whales with a crossbow
Sucking carbon from the air essential to limit warming, but it’s going to need a lot of energy
The post Sucking carbon from the air essential to limit warming, but it’s going to need a lot of energy appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Top UK ports see boost after EU ETS expansion to shipping
Energy Insiders Podcast: Is there a problem with renewables?
The post Energy Insiders Podcast: Is there a problem with renewables? appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Carbon removal company secures lease for DAC manufacturing facility in Arizona
Communities will be given right to turn eyesores into parks, says Labour
Exclusive: Party wants to appeal to voters’ patriotism by improving access to nature and green spaces
Local communities would be given the right to buy up derelict eyesores and turn them into parks under a Labour government, while walkers and swimmers would gain access to hundreds of miles of river pathways, the party has pledged.
Labour will make a direct appeal to voters’ patriotism, presenting the restoration of nature as a matter of national identity and status.
Continue reading...British Columbia details stakeholder concerns with CCS offset protocol
Victoria is raising minimum rental standards – it’s good news for tenants and the environment
Xpansiv quickly adds CCP label to credits tagged with high integrity stamp
Musk's Starship rocket makes breakthrough ocean landing
Countryside access curbs in England ‘cost six times’ Scotland’s right to roam
Exclusive: Data shows implementing policy that closes 92% of English countryside cost £69m over five years
England’s model for countryside access cost six times more to implement than Scotland’s right to roam policy, new figures reveal.
In England, only 8% of the countryside is open for walking, picnicking and other outdoor activities. This includes footpaths, the coastal path, mountains, moors, heaths and downs. In Scotland, all of the countryside is open for access as long as guidelines are followed such as leaving no trace and not harming farmland.
Continue reading...20 years of clarity needed in “confusing” UK nature markets, rewilding group says
LNG expansion plans threaten biodiversity-rich regions, study says
More than half of EU climate finance in 2022 came in the form of loan-like instruments -NGO
INTERVIEW: Europe set to miss first-mover advantage in solar perovskite revolution
Companies seek the ‘early mover advantage’ when investing in biodiversity, KPMG says
More intense, frequent tropical cyclones may devastate seabird colonies – study
Up to 90% ‘lost in the blink of an eye’, say scientists studying Cyclone Ilsa’s effect on birds on Western Australian island
Increased tropical cyclones due to global heating could lead to dramatic declines in seabird populations, according to a new study.
Scientists found that after Cyclone Ilsa – a category-5 tropical cyclone – hit Bedout Island in Western Australia in April 2023, several seabird populations experienced a collapse of 80-90% due to the storm at the internationally important breeding site.
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