Feed aggregator
Brussels to offer €1.2 bln in second green hydrogen auction
Who should hold the next prime minister to account? Our best hope lies with the Green party | George Monbiot
The party’s manifesto, which pledges to use a wealth tax to revitalise our public services, shows it can push Labour to raise its ambitions
All governments betray the hopes of their supporters. But Labour is getting its betrayal in early. By ruling out a wealth tax and other measures that could fund our collapsing public services and our increasingly desperate care and welfare needs; by failing to denounce the unfolding genocide in Gaza; by remaining silent about the curtailment of our rights to protest; by breaking its promises on everything from a national care service to the abolition of the House of Lords and a right to roam, Keir Starmer’s party appears to wear betrayal as a badge of honour. This country is desperate for change, but while Starmer mumbles the word in every sentence, he offers as little as he can get away with.
Why? Labour’s anticipatory betrayal is motivated by anticipatory compliance. This means avoiding conflict with billionaire-owned media, the financial, property and fossil fuel sectors, by giving them what they want before they ask. You could call this approach “political realism”. But the “realistic” result is a politics dominated by the sinister rich. Dysfunction and misrule are baked in.
George Monbiot is a Guardian columnist
Guardian Newsroom: Election results special. Join Gaby Hinsliff, John Crace, Jonathan Freedland and Zoe Williams on 5 July
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...World faces “staggering” oil glut by end of decade, threatening rise in demand, warns IEA
Removals registry launches new protocol for biogenic carbon capture
WRI-led initiative drafts strategy to restore 50 mln hectares in Latin America by 2030
ANALYSIS: New UK government could fast-track UK-EU ETS link-up, driving price and market parity
Voluntary corporate disclosures often ‘insufficient’ to address nature-related risks, study says
Issuances of poor-quality voluntary credits fall in 2024, finds rating agency
Chemical industry urges faster green transition after EU elections
Wreck of Shackleton’s ship Quest found, last link to ‘heroic age of Antarctic exploration’
The vessel, which sank off the coast of Canada in 1962, was used by the explorer on his final voyage to the continent
The wreck of the ship on which renowned Antarctic explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton died has been found off the coast of Labrador, Canada, searchers have announced.
Locating the Quest – a schooner-rigged steamship which sank on a 1962 seal hunting voyage – represents a last link to the “heroic age of Antarctic exploration”, said search leader John Geiger.
Continue reading...INTERVIEW: Selling biodiversity net gain units might take 10 years, land manager says
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Explorer Shackleton's last ship found on ocean floor
Construction begins on new big battery next to one of Australia’s oldest wind farms
The post Construction begins on new big battery next to one of Australia’s oldest wind farms appeared first on RenewEconomy.
SK Market: Monthly KAU auction sells out, though price remains low amid dim demand
Can Labour clean up England’s dangerously dirty water?
Party has vowed to end sewage scandal if it wins power, but experts say it will have to act quickly and ambitiously
Since the UK’s general election was called, the Labour party has been seeking to capitalise on voters’ fury over the sewage filling England’s rivers and seas.
The debt-ridden, leaking, polluting water industry, owned largely by foreign investment firms, private equity and pension funds, has overseen decades of underinvestment and the large-scale dumping of raw sewage into rivers. It has become one of the touchstone issues of this election, with voters across the political spectrum angry at the polluting of waterways treasured by local communities. Groups have sprung up to look after rivers and lakes; protests pop up most weekends along the coast.
Continue reading...Rare birds at risk as narco-gangs move into forests to evade capture – report
Cocaine traffickers have put two-thirds of Central America’s key habitats for threatened birds under threat, study finds
Cocaine consumption is threatening rare tropical birds as narco-traffickers move into some of the planet’s most remote forests to evade drug crackdowns, a study has warned.
Two-thirds of key forest habitats for birds in Central America are at risk of being destroyed by “narco-driven” deforestation, according to the paper, published on Wednesday in the journal Nature Sustainability.
Continue reading...RWE’s gigawatt scale wind project in Queensland awaits EPBC decision
The post RWE’s gigawatt scale wind project in Queensland awaits EPBC decision appeared first on RenewEconomy.