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Used solar panels could supply Australia’s next resource boom: study
The post Used solar panels could supply Australia’s next resource boom: study appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Queensland solar farm locks in global tech giant Amazon as energy off-taker
The post Queensland solar farm locks in global tech giant Amazon as energy off-taker appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Current reporting frameworks aid compliance, but prepare for evolving climate regulations -experts
Unique tools used to monitor leakage from CO2 sequestered under US lake
US carbon marketplace startup releases livelihood impact index for smallholder farmers
Voluntary carbon credits could near $250/t by 2050, as 2024 seen as ‘make or break’ year for market -analysts
European fossil fuel electricity generation falls to record low in 2023 -report
Industry criticises proposed reporting rules under Massachusetts’ Clean Heat Standard
South Dakota House committee approves two carbon pipeline bills
EU co-legislators reach provisional deal on net zero industry act
Labor’s fuel-efficiency standards may settle the ute dispute – but there are still hazards on the road
AI unlocks ancient text owned by Caesar's family
BP’s new boss should be clearer on green strategy – fudging pleases no one | Nils Pratley
Shareholders on all sides want to know where the oil giant stands on renewables, yet Murray Auchincloss opts for ambiguity
If in doubt, throw cash at the shareholders. It’s a safe tactic for a new chief executive assailed on two sides by investors with conflicting grumbles. BP’s Murray Auchincloss seized his debut moment. There will be $3.5bn of share buy-backs in the first half of this year, accelerating to a total of $14bn by the end of next. The shares rose 5%. For a week or two, that might stop people pointing out how BP’s share price has lagged its peers’.
Yet shareholders of all hues – those who want to transition faster out of fossil fuels and those who can’t see the point – surely also wanted to hear a clear statement from Auchincloss on where he stands in the great debate. How will BP prioritise its spending of cash that isn’t going on buy-backs and dividends?
Continue reading...EU Commission plans for 280 Mt of carbon capture by 2040
NextEra-backed carbon removals startup secures Series A funding
Brussels backs off agriculture emissions cuts in recommended 90% target for 2040
Argentina’s new law to compromise glaciers, biodiversity -media
Corporate climate disclosure on the rise, but few firms hitting top marks, finds report
EU Commission withdraws divisive pesticides bill
After 38 attacks on art, climate protesters have fallen into big oil’s trap – it’s time to change tack | Giovanni Aloi
Repetition has blunted the art museum protests so much that the pumpkin soup assault on the Mona Lisa felt pathetic. More effective tactics are needed
How many of the 38 environmental protests staged in museums in 2022 can you remember? How many of the more recent ones only generated widespread outrage? Did any of them lead to tangible change? The protesters’ cause is serious, the threat is very real, the message is important and urgent. But is it not getting through to the public?
Sixty years ago, Andy Warhol’s Brillo Boxes and multiplied Marilyn Monroe screen-prints exposed modern repetition as an ideal of mindlessness – an inescapable capitalist pattern ingrained in the oversaturated modes of production and consumption that distract and overwhelm while nurturing an irreducible sense of modern apathy. How many times is too many? Repetition is a complex phenomenon: it can deepen or hollow out experiences depending on how it is deployed. Repeated ad libitum anything shocking quickly becomes commonplace. Aware of the risk, good artists try not to repeat themselves; instead they strive to constantly reinvent. From Friedrich Nietzsche to Søren Kierkegaard, Jean Baudrillard, Walter Benjamin, Mark Fisher, Frantz Fanon, Robert Hughes, and Amia Srinivasan, modern thinkers have dwelled extensively on the all-pervasive pacifying powers of unwitting repetitiveness. The shock of the new quickly melts into the air.
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