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Thames Water tests for vomiting bug contamination as families fall sick
Exclusive: after cryptosporidium outbreak in Devon, residents in south-east London report stomach cramps and diarrhoea
Thames Water has sent samples of water for lab testing after dozens of people reported becoming unwell with stomach cramps, vomiting and diarrhoea in south-east London.
Earlier this month, unsafe drinking water led to more than 100 cases of a waterborne disease in Devon, with people asked to boil their water because of contamination fears.
Continue reading...The Maldives faces existential threat from a climate crisis it did little to create. We need the world’s help now | Mohamed Muizzu
Small islands like ours face an uncertain future. We can adapt – but climate finance that we badly need must be unlocked
- Mohamed Muizzu is the president of the Maldives
For the Maldives, the existential threat of the climate crisis, particularly sea level rise, has been a reality we have grappled with for decades. In 1989, recognising the urgency of our situation, with our islands standing just one metre above sea level, we brought this issue to the global stage for the first time.
This early recognition of our vulnerability sparked a national transformation as we embarked on proactive climate resilience and adaptation measures. Thirty-five years later, has the rest of the world truly been listening? If you look at how the world’s reaction to the climate crisis is funded, the answer is clearly “no”.
Continue reading...Stripe launches fellowship programme to support ideas to boost carbon removal demand
Nearly 175 arrested as climate protesters target France’s TotalEnergies and key investor
Demonstrators gathered outside Paris meetings of energy giant and Amundi, with some forcing their way into fund manager’s tower block
The head of TotalEnergies has told shareholders that new oilfields have to be developed to meet global demand, as the annual meetings of the French energy giant and one of its biggest shareholders were picketed by climate activists.
Police said they detained 173 people among hundreds who gathered outside the Paris headquarters of Amundi, one of the world’s biggest investment managers and a major TotalEnergies shareholder.
Continue reading...Partial repeal of US IRA tax credits coupled with carbon fee could generate over $2 trillion -report
UK, European saltmarshes store less carbon than previously thought, researchers find
Canadian tech firm to unveil voluntary carbon protocol targeting large-scale battery storage
Extinct ‘mountain jewel’ plant returned to wild - in secret location
BC, Kwiakah First Nation establish new forest conservation zone supported by carbon credit sales
Traders build net length across North American carbon markets, save for Washington
Canadian Indigenous project developer to build Calgary 10 Mt/yr CCS hub with Japanese multinational
ANALYSIS: Voluntary carbon investors shift credit buying behaviour, but demand rebound still a way away
ANALYSIS: Investment in nature-based, engineered carbon removals should not be zero sum, say stakeholders
‘Beautiful one day. Nuclear the next?’ Labor can’t wait for a fight on Dutton’s energy plan
Kevin Rudd ran a successful scare ad against John Howard in 2007. While costs and attitudes have changed a little since then, some messages still resonate
During the 2007 federal election campaign, Labor ran a TV scare ad in Queensland about the then prime minister’s plan to introduce nuclear power.
“John Howard says a nuclear industry is a solution to climate change but he won’t say where the reactors should go,” the voiceover says, to golden waterfront scenes and a lazily twanging guitar. “He refuses to talk about a list of possible sites for reactors that includes Rockhampton, Bundaberg, Mackay, Townsville, the Sunshine Coast – even Bribie Island.”
Continue reading...WWF takes legal action against Norway over deep sea mining spat
‘Kitty cat’ storms hitting US heartland are growing threat to home insurance
Smaller secondary systems that create hailstorms and tornadoes pack a punch that is causing billions of dollars in damages
This story was originally published by Grist and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration
The rising cost of homeowner’s insurance is now one of the most prominent symptoms of the climate crisis in the US. Major carriers such as State Farm and Allstate have pulled back from offering fire insurance in California, dropping thousands of homeowners from their books, and dozens of small insurance companies have collapsed or fled from Florida and Louisiana following recent large hurricanes.
Continue reading...High integrity forest initiative releases methodology for biodiversity, climate units
New financing approach key to scaling nature tech market, report says
Government wins court case over River Wye pollution
UK importing more bricks than ever and carbon cost is rising, study reveals
Imports have risen since Brexit despite brick producers saying UK can make enough for its own use
The UK is importing more of its bricks than ever and the carbon cost of each brick is rising, research has shown.
The UK is the number one country in the world for brick importation, according to data from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Observatory of Economic Complexity.
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