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Dangerous climate tipping points will affect Australia. The risks are real and cannot be ignored
PREVIEW: Brussels set to recommend emissions targets for 2040
VCM Report: Corporates not waiting for ICVCM’s CCP label to retire carbon credits
Mining surveys for precious metals will prevent deforestation, says Guyanese minister
Global shipowners’ body supports emissions levy to set up decarbonisation fund
FEATURE: Shipping emissions calculations, contracts, risk affect EU ETS cost pass-through
Ancient sea sponges at centre of controversial claim world has already warmed by 1.7C
Findings in leading scientific journal that globe has breached key warming milestone challenged by climate science experts
Between 30 metres and 90 metres below the surface of the Caribbean Sea, an ancient sponge species that grows a hard skeleton has been quietly recording changes in the ocean temperature for hundreds of years.
Now those sponges are at the centre of a bold and controversial claim made in a leading scientific journal that, since the start of the Industrial Revolution, the planet may have already warmed by 1.7C – half a degree more than estimates used by the United Nation’s climate panel.
Continue reading...Kenyan court orders investigation into land dispute between carbon trader and local community
Morocco carbon tax plans gain new momentum after EU CBAM
Germany set to tender for new hydrogen-ready gas-fired power plants
Verra begins publication of average processing times in reform efforts
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Is AI really the biggest threat when our world is guided more by human stupidity? | Nouriel Roubini
There is both hope and hype for what artificial intelligence can do for growth – if politicians can tame its destructive potential
Since returning from this year’s World Economic Forum (WEF) meeting in Davos, I have been asked repeatedly for my biggest takeaways. Among the most widely discussed issues this year was artificial intelligence – especially generative AI (“GenAI”). With the recent adoption of large language models (like the one powering ChatGPT), there is much hope – and hype – about what AI could do for productivity and economic growth in the future.
To address this question, we must bear in mind that our world is dominated far more by human stupidity than by AI. The proliferation of megathreats – each an element in the broader “polycrisis” – confirms that our politics are too dysfunctional, and our policies too misguided, to address even the most serious and obvious risks to our future. These include climate change, which will have huge economic costs; failed states, which will make waves of climate refugees even larger; and recurrent, virulent pandemics that could be even more economically damaging than Covid-19.
The WEF zeitgeist is, in my experience, a counter-indicator of where the world is really heading. Policymakers and business leaders are there to flog their books and spew platitudes. They represent the conventional wisdom, which is often based on a rear-window view of global and macroeconomic developments.
Continue reading...Biodiversity credits to play a critical role in boosting private investments in nature, study says
Study proposes framework to include blue carbon in Singapore’s emissions reporting
European Greens call for climate neutrality by 2040 in election manifesto
Nordic companies lag behind on biodiversity risk management, study finds
Minister consulted BP over ‘right incentives to maximise’ oil production, FoI reveals
Exclusive: Meeting took place days after BP reported record profits while households were squeezed by high energy bills
The energy and climate minister Graham Stuart asked BP about the incentives required to “maximise” extraction of oil and gas from the North Sea, documents released under freedom of information rules have revealed.
Stuart’s meeting with the corporation’s UK boss, Louise Kingham, last year came days after BP had announced a record profit of $28bn (£23bn) for 2022, raised its dividend to shareholders, and rowed back on its aim to cut its carbon emissions by 2030. Households were also enduring very high energy bills. BP will report its profits for 2023 on Tuesday.
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