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BRIEFING: Ease grid, planning constraints to turbocharge UK onshore wind
Video shows explosion in London refuse truck after combustible items put in bin
Footage shows bin and debris fired into street after items wrongly placed in residential bin were crushed
A crew of refuse workers in north London narrowly escaped injury when combustible items that had been packed into a bin exploded after being loaded into a refuse truck.
Footage shows the moment of the explosion, caused after combustible items such as batteries, aerosol or gas canisters were wrongly placed into a residential bin.
Continue reading...CWNYC24: African govt alliance forged to generate ITMO credits from large carbon reforestation project
Scope of EU ETS expected to broaden out from 2026 -report
Old divisions resurface as EU debates green industrial future
Buyers pay premium for voluntary carbon credits linked to SDG claims -report
INTERVIEW: Carbon taxes ‘work well in the power sector’, but not elsewhere
Recycling rate falls in UK as just 44% of household waste is recycled
England’s recycling rate decreased in 2022 as rest of UK improved but country still lags behind Europe
Just 44% of UK household waste is being recycled, government statistics show, as the recycling rate in England is going down instead of improving.
The UK recycling rate for waste from households was 44.1% in 2022, the latest year the government had data for, down from 44.6% in 2021.
Continue reading...Chilean govt spearheads high sea protection initiative
Colombia tops the list of most attractive country to invest in carbon, finds index
Guyana launches global alliance with biodiversity credits focus
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Voluntary carbon ratings agency offers network service to help buyers find the right credits
China’s Chongqing introduces incentive mechanism for local ETS
Great news, everybody! We’re about to be over-run by giant spiders | Nell Frizzell
It’s that time of year when homes fill with hairy eight-legged monsters. At least they keep the flies under control …
It is giant spider season and I am delighted. As someone who is ravaged by flying insects all summer, I welcome these eight-legged death machines into my home with open arms. Speckle-backed Tegeneria? Be my guest! I would far rather something that looks like an animated tomato stalk occasionally scuttled across my curtain than be beset by a swarm of fruit flies, bluebottles or midges. I have even heard that spiders might eat clothes moths, although I think for them to have a significant impact on numbers I would have to lean even further into my Miss Havisham alter ego and stroll around bedecked by webs.
I wasn’t always this way. As a child, I was as terrified of spiders as I am today by droughts and unfiled tax returns. I would watch in amazed horror as my country-born mother picked up arachnids the size and heft of dogs and calmly threw them out the window. There were whole cupboards I refused to open for fear of spiders. Once, after accidentally walking into a web during a game of hide and seek, I actually vomited at the thought of a spider being close to my skin (they found me quite quickly after that).
Continue reading...Britain’s tropical rain and parched Amazon are new norms in a messed-up climate | Jonathan Watts
On my return to the UK from Brazil I’ve seen how northern latitudes are behaving like the equatorial margins
Returning to British suburbia from the Brazilian Amazon is always disconcerting, but it has been doubly weird in the past few days because the London commuter belt has been inundated with volumes of rain that normally belong in the tropics.
Mini-tornadoes, flash floods and the dumping of a month’s worth of rain in a single day have flooded transport hubs, high street pubs, and the shrubs of semidetached homes.
Come friendly bombs and fall on Slough!
It isn’t fit for humans now,
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