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South Korean, Australian firms to work on offshore, transborder CCS
Queensland polystyrene spill: volunteers clean up as government response lags – video
Sunshine Coast locals have spent days on their hands and knees picking polystyrene balls off the beach. More than a week has passed since the balls were discovered, yet it is still unclear which government agency is responsible for leading the cleanup and investigating the cause.
Reports from volunteers indicate the balls spread over at least 5km of coastline and riverbank
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Continue reading...China introduces capacity payments to power stations to boost thermal plant profitability
People who build wind turbines at sea do not care if whales live or die. Monsters! | First Dog on the Moon
Donald Trump said it so it must be true
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Snakes alive: Sydney woman reunited with pet pythons allegedly dumped on street by ex
‘My two precious pythons have been safely returned to me,’ the woman wrote on social media on Monday
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A Sydney woman has been reunited with her two pet pythons after they were allegedly dumped on a Coogee street by her ex-partner more than three weeks ago.
The owner took to social media in October requesting community help to find the 2.5-metre snakes named Bagel and Mango. They were allegedly discarded on a main street in Coogee by her ex-boyfriend on 21 October.
Continue reading...Views split on whether a NZ biodiversity market is the best course
Woodside boosts investment in molten silicon energy storage hopeful
Oil and gas major tips more money into Adelaide energy storage minnow 1414 Degrees, increasing its bet on the company's molten silicon industrial heat solution.
The post Woodside boosts investment in molten silicon energy storage hopeful appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Australia’s biggest coal state reaches 100 pct “potential” renewables for first time
NSW - the state with the biggest capacity of coal fired generators - reaches more than 100 per cent "potential" renewables for first time as coal output hits record low.
The post Australia’s biggest coal state reaches 100 pct “potential” renewables for first time appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Flattening the solar duck: Why households should also face negative export tariffs
Should we panic about negative electricity prices, or – as one industry expert argues – embrace them as an indispensable part of a two-sided market?
The post Flattening the solar duck: Why households should also face negative export tariffs appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Tailem Bend solar farm doubles in size with completion of stage two – battery to come
The second stage of what was one of South Australia's first large-scale solar farms has been completed, with the commissioning of an additional 87MW.
The post Tailem Bend solar farm doubles in size with completion of stage two – battery to come appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Australian politicians, conservation groups call on govt to end native forest logging
Murray-Darling water buybacks won't be enough if we can't get water to where it's needed
Origin dances an offshore wind jig with Bluefloat as it confirms special dividend
Origin says it is looking at partnering in an offshore wind project near Newcastle with Bluefloat as it confirms a special dividend if the bBookfield-led takeover bid is approved.
The post Origin dances an offshore wind jig with Bluefloat as it confirms special dividend appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Growing NZ cities eat up fertile land – but housing and food production can co-exist
China likely to see structural decline in emissions next year, report says
ANALYSIS: EU carbon price faces tug-of-war between bulls and bears in year-end drama
“Just a bump in the road?” Hydrogen supply and cash crunch hits Fortescue partner
Plug Power, one of the key partners to Andrew Forrest's green hydrogen ventures, crashed on Friday after it raised concerns about its ability to continue business.
The post “Just a bump in the road?” Hydrogen supply and cash crunch hits Fortescue partner appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Deal to resettle climate-hit Tuvalu residents shows world ‘what’s at stake’, European officials say
German and EU officials say the treaty between Australia and the Pacific island country should spur global cut to emissions
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Australia’s residency offer to citizens from the low-lying Pacific country of Tuvalu must spur the world to dramatically cut emissions, two senior European officials have declared.
Germany’s climate envoy, Jennifer Morgan, said the deal “puts a very clear pointer on what’s at stake” as the negotiators prepare for next month’s UN climate summit, adding that “all countries have to scale up their ambition for 2030”.
Continue reading...We need a global treaty to solve plastic pollution – acid rain and ozone depletion show us why
The Guardian view on farming’s green transition: the politics aren’t looking good | Editorial
This month’s Cop28 climate summit will focus on greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture. Governments need to take note
One of our era’s great and inconvenient truths is that global food production and the climate emergency are intimately linked. Drought, flood and other extreme weather events threaten farming ecosystems across the world. At the same time, greenhouse gas emissions from animal agriculture play a major role in global heating. We know that the default western diet, with its heavy emphasis on meat and dairy, is harming the planet. Eating habits in wealthy countries will have to change, and livestock numbers be reduced, if climate targets are to be met and vulnerable food systems saved.
At the end of the month, this message will be heard front and centre in the next round of the UN climate negotiations. At Cop28 in Dubai, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization will foreground the need to transform patterns of consumption and production if the goal of limiting temperature rises to 1.5C is to be met. The emphasis on the impact of food systems is welcome and overdue. For various reasons it has been badly neglected at previous summits.
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