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Winter’s unseasonal warmth and clear skies are glorious – but a forbidding sign of danger to come | Paul Daley
After the polar blast of a few weeks back, we have opened our eyes to the luminous full bloom of premature spring
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These unseasonal late-winter days of warmth and clear skies, of the sudden necessity of shorts and T-shirts for the morning dog-walk, are at once glorious and somewhat disconcerting.
Spring – the season of renewal, of awakening, of birth and perhaps re-birth – demands to be celebrated. But somehow this year, all of its ridiculously early harbingers feel double-edged for their presaging of the realities of climate change and sea-level rise.
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Continue reading...Australian Geographic nature photographer of the year 2024 – in pictures
A drone image of two humpback whales ‘bubble-net feeding’ by Western Australian photographer Scott Portelli has taken out the top prize in the 2024 Australian Geographic nature photographer of the year competition. This is a cooperative hunting strategy used by humpbacks that allows as many of them as possible to feed in a short time. It is widely believed the whales developed this feeding method after they were hunted to near extinction. The image was chosen from 1,856 entries and the exhibition is now on at the South Australian Museum until Sunday 3 November
Continue reading...A quarter of existing forests could be converted into agricultural lands by 2100, study says
South Australia ringfences over A$11 mln to support nature restoration on private lands
INTERVIEW: Plastics inventor eyes ‘carbon-negative’ SAF using carbohydrates as feedstock
ETS2 can soften impact of EU tariffs on Chinese electric cars, experts say
Rising unilateralism from big players threatening Article 6 carbon markets, report argues
DATA DIVE: Brazil by far the most affected by Verra’s new consolidated REDD+ carbon methodology
New UK govt drops legal defence of oil and gas field licences
Ed Miliband’s withdrawal of legal backing puts UK oil and gas projects in doubt
Government says it will not challenge reviews of approval given to controversial Jackdaw and Rosebank fields
The future of two of the UK’s most controversial oil and gas projects has been thrown into doubt, after the energy secretary, Ed Miliband, withdrew government support for the companies in two legal cases brought by campaigners.
The Jackdaw oilfield, operated by Shell, was given approval in 2022, and Greenpeace applied for a judicial review shortly after the decision. Last year, the previous Conservative government gave the green light to Equinor-operated Rosebank, the UK’s biggest untapped oilfield, against the recommendation of climate advisers. Greenpeace and Uplift demanded a judicial review, arguing that the approval was incompatible with the UK’s legally binding climate commitments, and saying that ministers’ original analysis ignored the devastating impact of burning oil from the site.
Continue reading...UK may unveil tougher emissions targets at Cop29 climate summit
Campaigners hail Labour’s ‘proactive approach’ after series of policy U-turns under Conservatives
The UK government is considering making further commitments on cutting greenhouse gas emissions, likely to be announced at the UN climate summit this year.
It is hoped the plan will help kickstart global ambitions on cutting emissions and encourage other countries to follow suit.
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