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Colorado adopts regulations to realise state’s geothermal energy potential
US EPA calls emergency halt appeal to SCOTUS against power plant regulations “meritless”
Net Zero Economy Authority offers lifeline for coal and gas workers as plants close
The post Net Zero Economy Authority offers lifeline for coal and gas workers as plants close appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Big polluters targeting esports industry with advertising deals, report reveals
Oil firms, petrostates, airlines and carmakers ‘doubling down’ on sector that is popular with young people
Oil companies, petrostates, airlines and carmakers are among the big polluters bombarding the esports industry with adverts, a study has found.
Esports, short for electronic sports, are competitive video games watched by spectators, with multiplayer games such as League of Legends and Defense of the Ancients 2 attracting peak viewer figures in the millions.
Continue reading...Suriname offers up 1.5 mln sovereign rainforest carbon credits to corporates
Renewable records season arrives early as solar pushes sunshine state to new highs
The post Renewable records season arrives early as solar pushes sunshine state to new highs appeared first on RenewEconomy.
A near 100 per cent renewable grid is readily achievable and affordable
The post A near 100 per cent renewable grid is readily achievable and affordable appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Sydney’s shiny new Metro service is great – now can we fix the city’s busted bus stops?
Water campaigners are right about enforcement. Labour’s plans are still too vague | Nils Pratley
Without regulatory reforms and proper funding, the country will lack a muscular enforcer to strike fear among polluters
The organisers of the March for Clean Water – that’s Feargal Sharkey and River Action, supported by organisations that range from Surfers Against Sewage to the RSPB to the Women’s Institute – make an excellent point: while it’s nice that the government will bring a water bill to parliament, the initiatives revealed so far “are not nearly extensive enough to address the scale of the UK’s water pollution crisis”.
You bet. None of the four “initial steps” announced by the environment secretary, Steve Reed, last month are likely to cause sleepless nights in any boardroom. The first, to ensure companies’ funding for infrastructure investment is ringfenced, read like a description of how the regulatory system in England and Wales was always supposed to work. One fears that the second, to add the protection of customers and the environment to companies’ articles of association, will be cosmetic; directors can always be fuzzy about how they interpret their fiduciary duties.
Continue reading...INTERVIEW: Argentine carbon developer bypasses voluntary market, citing barriers to entry
Brazil sends 1,500 firefighters to combat Amazon forest blazes
Environment minister says severe drought is ‘aggravating’ factor as smoke engulfs Porto Velho city
The Brazilian government has deployed almost 1,500 firefighters to the Amazon as the most severe drought in decades is turning the rainforest’s usually moist vegetation into kindling and flames.
Despite a sharp decrease in deforestation since the president, Lula da Silva, took power in January 2023, there have reportedly been 59,000 fires in the forest since the start of the year, the highest number since 2008, according to satellite data from the National Institute for Space Research.
Continue reading...Oil demand from shipping sector to peak by mid-2020s -consultancy
Jail term for climate protester, 77, is disproportionate, says Carla Denyer
Green MP tells home secretary sending Just Stop Oil activist to prison is unjust and waste of resources
A 20-month prison sentence handed to a 77-year-old woman for a climate protest on the M25 is disproportionate, unjust and a waste of resources, the Green MP Carla Denyer has said.
In a letter to Yvette Cooper, the home secretary, Denyer called the jailing of Gaie Delap three weeks ago “an example of an ongoing and serious problem with disproportionate sentencing for climate activists”.
Continue reading...We must restore nature to avoid global catastrophe, warns biodiversity summit president
Just cutting carbon emissions will not prevent climate breakdown, says Susana Muhamad before Cop16 in Colombia
Humanity risks catastrophic global heating if it focuses only on decarbonisation at the expense of restoring the natural world, Colombia’s environment minister has said in the lead-up to the world’s key nature summit later this year.
Susana Muhamad, who will be president of the UN biodiversity Cop16 summit in Cali in October, said that a singular focus on cutting carbon emissions while failing to restore and protect natural ecosystems would be “dangerous for humanity” and risk societal collapse.
Find more age of extinction coverage here, and follow the biodiversity reporters Phoebe Weston and Patrick Greenfield on X for all the latest news and features
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