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First towers go up in Australia’s biggest electricity transmission project
Transgrid lifts first massive towers on what will be country’s largest electricity transmission upgrade, fast tracking switch to renewables.
The post First towers go up in Australia’s biggest electricity transmission project appeared first on RenewEconomy.
New cars sold in EU must be zero-emission from 2035
Poole harbour oil spill washes up on wildlife haven Brownsea Island
Exclusive: National Trust concerned at danger to rich mix of ecosystems including lagoon, woodland, salt marsh and reedbed
Oil from the Perenco pipeline leak in Poole harbour has washed up on the shores of Brownsea Island, an internationally important wetland and marine conservation zone.
Nearly 200 barrels of reservoir fluid – a brine mixture that is about 15% oil – leaked into the waters of Ower Bay on Sunday from the pipeline sparking a major incident and urgent clean-up operation.
Continue reading...EU CO2 cars law and other Fit for 55 files get signed off by energy ministers
Space scientists reveal brightest gamma explosion ever
Verra proposes revisions to cookstoves offset methodology inherited from CDM
Finnish startup raises cash for carbon negative concrete plans
TNFD releases long-awaited final draft on nature-related financial disclosure rules
Britons who do not pave over garden could receive water bill discount, Ofwat says
Cheaper rates could be applied to those who install water butts under plans unveiled by regulator
Water bill discounts could be given to people who do not pave over their front gardens and install water butts, under plans unveiled by the regulator.
Customers could also be charged dynamically based on how much water they use, with people who reduce their usage paying less than heavy users, Ofwat announced on Tuesday.
Continue reading...Net zero tsar and senior Tories among those urging biomass subsidies rethink
Exclusive: Jacob Rees-Mogg and Chris Grayling express concern at system under which Drax made £617m in 2022
The UK government should rethink its subsidies for burning wood for fuel, former Conservative ministers and the net zero tsar have said.
The energy company Drax, which burns forest biomass, made £893m in direct government subsidies in 2021. The level of support fell to £617m in 2022 as electricity prices exceeded an agreed “strike price” agreed to encourage renewable investment.
Continue reading...Albanese government faces decisions on coalmines that could add 16m tonnes of CO2 emissions annually
Australia Institute analysis tracks 28 proposed developments referred to Tanya Plibersek for approval
The Albanese government could have to make decisions on whether to approve up to 28 coalmine developments that would make it harder to meet targets set under its newly approved climate policy, according to a new analysis.
A coalmine tracker website published by the Australia Institute includes a breakdown of all projects that have been formally referred to the government for approval under national laws.
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Continue reading...Plastics cause wide-ranging health issues from cancer to birth defects, landmark study finds
First analysis of plastics’ hazards over life cycle – from extraction to disposal – also shows ‘deep societal injustices’ of impact
Plastics are responsible for wide-ranging health impacts including cancers, lung disease and birth defects, according to the first analysis of the health hazards of plastics across their entire life cycle – from extraction for manufacturing, through to dumping into landfill and oceans.
Led by the Boston College Global Observatory on Planetary Health in partnership with Australia’s Minderoo Foundation and the Centre Scientifique de Monaco, the review found “current patterns of plastic production, use, and disposal are not sustainable and are responsible for significant harms to human health … as well as for deep societal injustices”.
Continue reading...The US is the world’s richest country. So why can’t I get a glass of clean drinking water? | Arwa Mahdawi
This weekend, 8,000 gallons of latex were accidentally dumped in the Delaware River – and tap water across the country is laced with disturbing chemicals
My wife is wonderful in every way, but I realised over the weekend that she is simply not built for the apocalypse. On Sunday, I was scrolling through Twitter and having a nice cup of tea when I saw a tweet from a guy called Ya Fav Trashman about a chemical spill that might affect Philadelphia drinking water. “Equipment failure” at a Trinseo chemical facility had dumped more than 8,000 gallons (about 30,000 litres) of “latex emulsion product” into the Delaware river. You can’t just boil or filter these chemicals out of your water.
I immediately spat out my Delaware River tea. (Perhaps the latex was why it was going down so smoothly?) “Yikes,” I said. “We’d better get some bottled water.” My wife volunteered to go to the nearest shop. She came back with … two bottles.
Continue reading...Euro Markets: Midday Update
US public would buy offsets if they knew about them, finds survey
Thames Water ordered to fix leaks before pumping millions of litres from rivers
Environment Agency tells supplier to rethink plans to tackle droughts by pumping water from Thames and Severn
Thames Water has been told by the Environment Agency it needs to do more to fix the 630m litres of water it leaks a day before it starts taking water from the River Thames or from Wales to tackle drought problems.
The company has published its ideas for tackling climate crisis-induced droughts across London and the south-east, which include abstracting millions of litres a day from the River Thames and replacing it with treated effluent, to taking 155m litres a day from Wales.
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