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COP27: Bahamas eyes 9 Mt in blue carbon sales by 2030, to seek new route to market after FTX collapse
China, Europe and US could decarbonise shipping without IMO -study
Cycle power and gender rights: days eight and nine at Cop27 – in pictures
Activists mark Gender Day at the climate summit in Sharm el-Sheikh as ministers convene to discuss finance
Continue reading...Climate activists throw black liquid at Gustav Klimt painting in Vienna – video
Climate activists in Austria have attacked a painting by Gustav Klimt, with one throwing a black, oily liquid at it and another glueing himself to the glass covering the painting. Members of Letzte Generation Österreich (Last Generation Austria) tweeted that they had targeted the 1915 painting Death and Life at the Leopold Museum in Vienna to protest against their government’s use of fossil fuels. After throwing the liquid at the artwork, which was not damaged, one activist was pushed away by a museum guard while another glued his hand to the glass over the painting
- Climate activists throw black liquid at Gustav Klimt painting in Vienna
- Climate protesters glue themselves to National Gallery artwork
- Just Stop Oil campaigners glue themselves to Da Vinci copy in Royal Academy
COP27: Canada, Chile announce initiative to triple CO2 pricing coverage by 2030
Fish passes give endangered twaite shad chance to swim up Severn River and spawn
Return of one of one of Britain’s rarest fish confirmed after DNA found in water samples above fish passes
For nearly two centuries, one of Britain’s rarest fish has been shut out of its spawning grounds by large weirs.
But the endangered twaite shad has now returned to its historic spawning habitat on the River Severn, thanks to four new fish passes that enable the migratory fish to negotiate weirs and swim up river to lay eggs.
Continue reading...Climate activists throw black liquid at Gustav Klimt painting in Vienna
Pair attack Death and Life painting in Leopold Museum in protest against fossil fuel ‘death sentence’
Climate activists in Austria have attacked a painting by Gustav Klimt, with one throwing a black, oily liquid at it and another gluing himself to the glass covering the painting.
Members of Letzte Generation Österreich (Last Generation Austria) tweeted that they had targeted the 1915 painting Death and Life at the Leopold Museum in Vienna to protest against their government’s use of fossil fuels.
Continue reading...COP27: China eyes Article 6 credits to boost ETS offset supply -govt advisor
Corals spawn in Australia’s first offshore nursery on the Great Barrier Reef – video
Coral cuttings were grown on underwater frames and then planted in patches of bare reef at Fitzroy Island near Cairns. Four years later the corals have spawned for the first time and scientists hope to use the same technique to boost coral cover in other locations on the reef
Continue reading...My suffragette grandmothers are regarded as heroes now – as will climate protesters | Helen Pankhurst
Whether or not you agree with their tactics, activists blocking roads and stopping traffic are on the right side of history
“When the anti-suffrage members of the government criticise militancy in women, it is very like beasts of prey reproaching the gentler animals who turn in desperate resistance at the point of death.” These words were spoken by Emmeline Pankhurst some 110 years ago. As the great-granddaughter of Emmeline, and the granddaughter of Sylvia Pankhurst, I’m often asked to make comparisons between the suffragette movement and the environmental movements of today. People regularly ask me whether I endorse the tactics of climate activists such as Just Stop Oil.
The climate activists who recently threw tomato soup on a Vincent van Gogh painting might easily be regarded as gentle beasts turning to desperate resistance. The climate crisis is already deadly for many around the world: in east Africa, one person dies of climate-induced hunger every 36 seconds. My great-grandmother advised suffragettes to go to the House of Commons and refuse to leave; to break windows; to “attack the secret idol of property”. The point she was making was that within every cause there is room for people to find their own versions of activism and militancy. The choice of tactics must not divide the movement.
Continue reading...Dutch heavy industry “hardly” improving its carbon intensity, says NEa
Euro Markets: Midday Update
COP27: Cambodia secures deals with corporates for 10 mln REDD+ credits
The Egyptian human rights activists unable to attend Cop27
Conference in Sharm el-Sheikh follows decade-long crackdown on civil society in Egypt
“Honestly, what I want is to be in Sharm el-Sheikh and just scream,” said Amr Magdi of Human Rights Watch. Like dozens of other prominent human rights defenders, researchers and environmentalists, Magdi has been unable to attend Cop27 as he is exiled from Egypt because of his work.
“I just want to tell everyone about the injustice happening in Egypt. I can’t do it personally and I’m trying to do it with my work. I’m even helping others who are able to travel there to do this,” he said.
Continue reading...Indonesia to receive $20 bln to accelerate shift from coal in finance deal at G20 summit
COP27: Turkey to bid to host COP31, Czechia and Brazil reported to seek 2024-25 climate summits
China issues sectoral guidelines for non-ferrous metals to peak emissions by 2030
Australia Market Roundup: Regulator approves 11 soil carbon projects as ACCU prices climb
It should not be controversial to say a population of 8 billion will have a grave impact on the climate | John Vidal
It’s time to ditch the generations-long argument between those who blame overpopulation and those who worry about consumption
- John Vidal is a former Guardian environment editor
By a remarkable coincidence, just as governments, campaigners and business owners are meeting in Egypt to address climate breakdown today, the world is officially crashing past the symbolic 8 billion population milestone . This means global population is on its way to 10 billion or more by the turn of the century.
But there will be no attempt by countries at Cop27 to connect the inexorable growth of human numbers with the seemingly unstoppable rise in temperatures. Despite the fact that the several billion more people expected to be alive in 70 years’ time will put more pressure on resources and will produce far more emissions, the population explosion is yet again being ignored, sidestepped or denied by world leaders.
John Vidal was the Guardian’s environment editor. He is the author of McLibel: Burger Culture on Trial
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Continue reading...Cop27: news organisations around the world join call for climate justice – live
A joint editorial published by the Guardian and more than 30 partners calls for rich countries to pay their fair share towards solving the climate crisis
It’s only Tuesday but the end of the climate summit is rapidly approaching. Governments are focused on the final political agreement that will come out of Egypt. Every word matters and as we saw at the end of Cop26 last year, arguments in the final few hours can come down to whether the text includes “phase out” or “phase down” in a particular clause. Ministers arrived over the weekend in anticipation of the final tussle over wording. The role of 1.5C, finance, and loss and damage are understood to be the key dividing points.
Carbon Brief’s senior policy editor Simon Evans has a useful thread on what we might expect from the first draft of the cover decision.
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