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CP Daily: Friday September 17, 2021
WCI emitters added to short positions for second consecutive week as financials remain static
Lowest WCI auction volumes since Q1 announced ahead of Nov. 17 sale
*Manager, Market Development, Family Forest Carbon Program, American Forest Foundation – Washington DC/Remote
CARBON FORWARD 2021: Amid global carbon credit boom, experts gather to discuss risks, opportunities
UN says world on pathway to 2.7C of warming despite Paris targets
The Guardian view on autumn: as summer ends, fresh starts abound
Though the days turn cold and the night draws in, we should not mourn; this time of year is full of richnesses and new beginnings too
So, after a late short blaze of summer, autumn is here. The leaves are turning, the blackberries are mostly eaten. So much of our approach to the season in literature and music has a dying fall: “Nothing gold can stay”, as Robert Frost put it. Not that summer was especially golden in the UK this year. Many, deprived of the long warm days of beach-going and picnics they had hoped for, feel it never happened at all. And now there is a rising drumroll of warning about winter infection rates, NHS overwhelm and rocketing heating costs.
True, the swifts are leaving, and geese honk across the sky. The mornings are darker and evenings shorter – one definition of autumn is that it begins on the equinox, 21 September, when dark and light are equal; another is based on average temperature, and kicks the season off on 1 September – but a flock of swallows waiting for the signal to go is a wonderful thing. And other birds, including knots, waxwings, fieldfares, light-bellied brent geese and redwings are just arriving.
Continue reading...Climate change: Biden urges world leaders to cut methane gas emissions
US and EU pledge 30% cut in methane emissions to limit global heating
Major commitment with deadline of 2030 is big advance towards reaching 1.5C goal set out in Paris agreement
The US and the EU made a joint pledge on Friday to cut global methane emissions by almost a third in the next decade, in what climate experts hailed as one of the most significant steps yet towards fulfilling the Paris climate agreement.
The pledge came as the UN secretary-general, António Guterres, warned of a “high risk of failure” at vital UN climate talks, called Cop26, set for Glasgow this November.
Continue reading...‘We feel vindicated’: life by a landfill after vital high court ruling
People living amid toxic fumes hope ruling will force Walleys Quarry to make urgent changes
When she returned to her home in the village of Knutton, outside Newcastle-under-Lyme, after a trip to London on Thursday, the landfill fumes hit Helen Vincent like a brick wall. “We were saying to each other: ‘Oh how nice was the fresh air in London?’ You won’t hear many people say that,” she laughed.
Vincent had been in London for a landmark high court ruling which ordered the Environment Agency to do more to protect five-year-old Mathew Richards from the landfill’s hydrogen sulphide fumes, which doctors said were shortening his life expectancy.
Continue reading...Climate change: UN warning over nations' climate plans
Antarctic: Exhibition recalls Ernest Shackleton's final quest
Global coral cover has fallen by half since 1950s, analysis finds
Overfishing, a heating planet, pollution and habitat destruction have devastated reefs, scientists warn
The world’s coral reef cover has halved since the 1950s, ravaged by global heating, overfishing, pollution and habitat destruction, according to an analysis of thousands of reef surveys.
From the 1,430-mile (2,300km) Great Barrier Reef in Australia to the Saya de Malha Bank in the Indian Ocean, coral reefs and the diversity of fish species they support are in steep decline, a trend that is projected to continue as the planet continues to heat in the 21st century.
Continue reading...US Carbon Pricing and LCFS Roundup for week ending Sep. 17, 2021
Motorway blockades and Green deal crusaders: the UK’s new climate activists
With the UN’s Cop26 climate talks on the horizon, activists are finding new ways to make politicians pay attention
A new wave of climate activism, which has seen motorways blocked and politicians confronted by young people, is attempting to put pressure on the UK government before the UN Cop26 climate conference in Glasgow later this year.
Insulate Britain staged its first protest on Monday and has since brought large sections of the UK’s busiest motorway to a standstill to demand action to tackle the escalating climate emergency.
Continue reading...Loggerhead sea turtle emerges from egg on north Adriatic coast – video
Eggs laid on a sandy beach in northern Italy by a loggerhead sea turtle, or Caretta caretta, have hatched in what scientists described as an 'exceptional' event possibly caused by global heating. It was the first hatching of Caretta caretta sea turtle eggs ever recorded on the north Adriatic coast
Continue reading...New offset-backed crypto currency aims to drive up voluntary carbon prices
‘Truly peculiar’: loggerhead turtles born in most northern spot ever recorded
Nine sea turtles hatch on beach in Jesolo, Veneto, in what scientists describe as ‘exceptional’ event
Eggs that were laid on a sandy beach in northern Italy by a loggerhead sea turtle, or Caretta Caretta, have hatched in what scientists describe as an “exceptional” event possibly brought on by global heating. It was the first time that the hatching of Caretta Caretta sea turtle eggs had been recorded along the northern Adriatic coast.
Nine sea turtles were born on Wednesday night on the beach in Jesolo, a popular seaside resort close to Venice where their mother had deposited 82 eggs, about 25 metres from the sea, overnight on 9 July.
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