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COP29: Brazil’s Para state to launch call for forest concession tenders
Large home retailer invests €1.5 bln to speed up fossil fuel phaseout
Indian regulator releases draft rules for carbon trading on power exchanges
UK prepares to ban new coal mines
Global securities regulators group unveils recommendations to improve voluntary carbon market integrity, transparency
Farm income falls in England after extreme weather and subsidy cuts
Defra data shows lower income for most farm types but small boost from payments for nature-friendly schemes
Income fell on almost all farm types in England last year, as extreme weather hit yields and the government cut subsidies.
Farmers fear future hits to their industry after a hugely unpopular change to agricultural property relief which means some farms will be saddled with a large, unexpected tax bill, and a surprise, severe cut to the EU-derived basic payments scheme meaning a shortfall in cash that they had not predicted.
Continue reading...COP29: Norway calls for clean cookstoves to be included in outcome statement
World’s largest known coral discovered in Solomon Islands
Gigantic multicoloured organism is visible from space and has grown for between 300 and 500 years
The world’s largest known coral, visible from space, has been discovered in the waters of the Solomon Islands.
With a circumference of 183 metres, the gigantic multicoloured organism is an intricate network of individual coral polyps that have grown for between 300 and 500 years.
Continue reading...Singapore tech company to develop framework to automate coral farming
COP29: Ghana Article 6 activities mobilise $800 mln, says president
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Latvia’s emission allowance funds mismanaged, state audit finds
Impact investor to put $6 mln into Amazon conservation
COP29: South Korea seeks Article 6 opportunities in blue carbon, forestry projects
Trump promise to repeal Biden climate policies could cost US billions, report finds
Trump could stop in its tracks US’s emergence as clean energy superpower and forfeit billions in investment
The United States’s blossoming emergence as a clean energy superpower could be stopped in its tracks by Donald Trump, further empowering Chinese leadership and forfeiting tens of billions of dollars of investment to other countries, according to a new report.
Trump’s promise to repeal major climate policies passed during Joe Biden’s presidency threatens to push $80bn of investment to other countries and cost the US up to $50bn in lost exports, the analysis found, surrendering ground to China and other emerging powers in the race to build electric cars, batteries, solar and wind energy for the world.
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