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WCI, RGGI compliance entities build net long positions amid April expiry
EU lawmaker opposition to ETS2 eases as MEPs eye earlier start for businesses
Renewable Energy Group sees LCFS, RIN revenue increase in Q1
UK forest carbon scheme tightens up on additionality
The Guardian view on guerrilla gardening: go forth and grow | Editorial
Requiring councils to list neglected public land on which to plant fruit and vegetables would be a good thing
The weakening of the human connection to nature might be good for economic growth but is bad for people. A tipping point was reached in 2020 when human-made materials – such as steel, concrete and plastic – were found to weigh more than all life on Earth. Continuing to grow concrete forests rather than real ones is shortsighted. Simply being in the nearest wood, with attention and sensory intent, has such health benefits that the Woodland Trust successfully lobbied for it to be prescribed by doctors.
Yet slipping from popular culture is the wonder and beauty of the natural world. For every three nature-related words in hit songs of the 1950s, researchers found, there was only slightly more than one 50 years later. It is not a moment too soon that teenagers will be able to take a natural history GCSE, given that for decades children have been able to name more video game characters than wildlife species. In 2017, polls suggested that a third of young children thought cheese came from plants.
Continue reading...ANALYSIS: Hydro drought to compound tight EU energy supply, support EUAs
European airlines confident in partial recovery of pre-pandemic demand in 2022
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Shipping firm signs up to carbon credit scheme for vessel retrofits
The week in wildlife – in pictures
The best of this week’s wildlife pictures, including a lounging monitor lizard, breeding puffins and bluebells
Continue reading...Australian waste sector wants more offset market influence, calls for methodology expansion
Football must do more to tackle climate change: this is how clubs and fans can help | Barney Weston
We are in ‘Fergie time’ when it comes to reducing our carbon footprint but it is not too late to chart a path to sustainability
Climate change is a defining global issue, and football is not exempt. Roughly a quarter of England’s 92 league clubs could be regularly flooded within the next three decades, and the average grassroots pitch in England already loses five weeks a season to bad weather. Sport is also a significant contributor to climate change, with an estimated global carbon footprint the equivalent size of Tunisia’s – and that is at the low end of estimates.
It’s tempting to ask fans to reduce our carbon bootprint – but how can we use public transport on matchdays, when it’s often too expensive and sometimes unavailable? There were no trains running from the north-west to Wembley when Liverpool and Manchester City competed in the FA Cup semi-final. The FA provided 100 buses, enough for 5,000 fans.
Continue reading...BRIEFING: As Ontario election campaign kicks off, legacy of cap-and-trade demise lingers
Australia Market Roundup: AgriProve sees through new batch of soil carbo schemes, as Labor commits to SM and CER reform
“Coal fired power stations will close, regardless of who’s in office:” Bowen
Labor's Chris Bowen says what Angus Taylor won't – that Australia's coal power stations are going to close.
The post “Coal fired power stations will close, regardless of who’s in office:” Bowen appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Win or lose, Cannon-Brookes is forcing coal die-hards to face the future
However it plays out, there is much at stake in the battle between Mike Cannon-Brookes and AGL Energy – not just for AGL, but for the rest of the fossil fuel industry.
The post Win or lose, Cannon-Brookes is forcing coal die-hards to face the future appeared first on RenewEconomy.
A climate scientist on India and Pakistan's horror heatwave, and the surprising consequences of better air quality
Great Solar Business Podcast: A wrap on the Smart Energy Conference
Hear the highs and lows, inspiration and learnings, from this week’s Smart Energy Conference with Luke Beattie from Solar Gain and Karl Jensen from Solar Juice.
The post Great Solar Business Podcast: A wrap on the Smart Energy Conference appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Costly and impractical: IRENA warns against hydrogen blending in gas networks
A major international energy body warns that hydrogen blending in mains gas networks is likely to be costly and impractical.
The post Costly and impractical: IRENA warns against hydrogen blending in gas networks appeared first on RenewEconomy.
ESB bows to industry pressure on controversial grid access reforms
ESB dumps controversial congestion management model and puts forward four new alternatives, including - for the first time - ones favoured by investors.
The post ESB bows to industry pressure on controversial grid access reforms appeared first on RenewEconomy.