Feed aggregator
Orange juice producer and partners launch Brazil’s first carbon credit methodology for agribusiness
INTERVIEW: Carbon exchange board member urges SBTN, TNFD to include biodiversity credits in their frameworks
Offset developer partners with Kenyan business consortium to support carbon markets, scale climate finance
CWNYC24: Voluntary carbon integrity body teams up with pan-African initiative to scale market access
Climate scientists call on Labour to pause £1bn plans for carbon capture
Letter says technologies to produce blue hydrogen and capture CO2 are unproven and could hinder net zero efforts
Leading climate scientists are urging the government to pause plans for a billion pound investment in “green technologies” they say are unproven and would make it harder for the UK to reach its net zero targets.
Labour has promised to invest £1bn in carbon capture, usage and storage (CCUS) to produce blue hydrogen and to capture carbon dioxide from new gas-fired power stations – with a decision on the first tranche of the funding expected imminently.
Lock the UK into fossil fuel production for generations to come.
Result in huge upstream emissions from methane leaks, transport and processing of liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the US.
Rely on carbon capture and storage (CCS) during the production of hydrogen – technology they say has been abandoned in the vast majority of similar projects around the world.
Pose a danger to the public if there are any leaks from pipes carrying the captured carbon. At least 45 people had to be taken to hospital after a leak in the US.
Continue reading...EU’s carbon removal certification paves way for ‘climate positive buildings’
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Prince William says make peace with nature
Global plans for CCS not enough to meet Paris Agreement target, finds report
67 countries commit to ending plastic pollution by 2040 before final negotiations
UK government, Dutch bank commit $55 mln to Latin American reforestation strategy
US consulting firm to launch nature credit pilot in Indonesia
Australia Market Roundup: ACCU Scheme ‘finely balanced’ as regulator issues 740,000 units
Miner signs on for 360 battery-powered mining haul trucks in decarbonisation push
Labor’s coalmine expansion approvals undermine its credibility on the global stage | Adam Morton
How does a massive coal push lasting decades line up with what it has pledged? Leaders of low-lying Pacific nations might appreciate some answers
- Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast
The most obvious point to make about Tanya Plibersek’s approval of three coalmine expansions on Tuesday is the most important. The potential climate impact is substantial, and far beyond anything else we have seen approved so far by the Albanese government.
Labor has been criticised for its support of new fossil fuel developments before, but the four coal developments it had backed prior to this were relatively small. They are expected to add about 156m tonnes of heat-trapping carbon dioxide to the atmosphere if fully developed.
Continue reading...Activists board coal train as Albanese government approves three coalmine expansions – video
Nine climate protesters have stopped a coal train headed to the Port of Newcastle in opposition to the federal government’s approval of three new mining projects. Rising Tide, the group behind the move, said in a statement that the three projects – Whitehaven Coal’s Narrabri thermal coal project to 2066, Mach Energy’s Mount Pleasant thermal coal project to 2058 and Yancoal’s Ashton coal project to 2064 – would create 1.4bn tonnes of emissions
Continue reading...EU greenlights ETS2 scope extension in Netherlands, Austria
Indonesia, Japan seek to promote mutual recognition of carbon trade
We disrupted the Labour conference because war and climate breakdown was not what Britons voted for | Jack McGinn
Until the government changes its stance on the environment and the war in Gaza and Lebanon, there is nothing to celebrate
On Monday morning, we walked into the main hall of Labour’s annual conference in Liverpool, before the keynote speech of the chancellor, Rachel Reeves. What we did next, you might have seen.
Shortly after Reeves began her address, two of us stood to speak out on Labour’s complicity in suspected Israeli war crimes, and the party’s ties to climate-wrecking corporations. We were there on behalf of Climate Resistance, a group campaigning to end the cosy relationship between politics and the fossil fuel industry. Just like arms manufacturers, oil companies have been guilty of hindering democratic processes with donations and lobbying, putting human lives on the line for their own profits.
Jack McGinn is a climate activist with Climate Resistance
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...