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Swiss DAC company, global consulting firm sign 15-year CDR offtake deal
EU-based forest carbon removal developer secures new funding
‘Hydrogen village’ plan in Redcar abandoned after local opposition
Government says insufficient hydrogen production available to replace home gas supplies
A plan to test the use of hydrogen to heat homes in a village in the north-east of England have been abandoned after months of strong opposition from concerned residents.
The government said the Redcar “hydrogen village” scheme, which had been expected to start in 2025, will not go ahead because there would not be enough local hydrogen production for the trial to replace the home gas supplies with the low-carbon alternative.
Continue reading...US-based exchange operator pivoting cryptocurrency trading tech towards carbon markets
EU legislators agree on due diligence rules that force large companies to set climate neutrality plans
State energy ministers give themselves power to force coal generators to stay open
State energy ministers give themselves power to force coal generators to stay open if a fast-tracked closure puts grid reliability at risk.
The post State energy ministers give themselves power to force coal generators to stay open appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Australia could be at 99 pct renewables by 2032, if green exports take off as hoped
The green export scenario - the basis of the hope that Australian can be a renewable superpower - suggests the grid could reach 99 per cent renewables within a decade.
The post Australia could be at 99 pct renewables by 2032, if green exports take off as hoped appeared first on RenewEconomy.
AEMO’s jaw dropping prediction for coal power – all but gone from the grid in a decade
AEMO's new planning blueprint says coal will exit five years early, households will play key role with rooftop PV, EVs and electric homes, but rollout of large scale wind and solar needs to quicken.
The post AEMO’s jaw dropping prediction for coal power – all but gone from the grid in a decade appeared first on RenewEconomy.
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Call me all the names you want – I won’t stop telling the truth about livestock farming | George Monbiot
I’ve been accused of being a ‘soyboy’ and ‘in the pay of Big Lettuce’ by one of the most destructive industries on Earth
Everything that makes campaigning against fossil fuels difficult is 10 times harder when it comes to opposing livestock farming. Here you will find a similar suite of science denial, misinformation and greenwashing. But in this case, it’s accompanied by a toxic combination of identity politics, nostalgia, machismo and the demonisation of alternatives. If you engage with this issue, you don’t just need a thick skin; you need the skin of a glyptodon.
You will be vilified daily as a “soyboy”, a “hater of farmers” and a dictator who would force everyone to eat insects. You will be charged with undermining western civilisation, destroying its masculinity and threatening its health. You will be denounced as an enemy of Indigenous people, though generally not by Indigenous people themselves, for many of whom livestock farming is and has long been by far the greatest cause of land-grabbing, displacement and the destruction of their homes.
George Monbiot is a Guardian columnist
Continue reading...Launch of collaborative project to ship and store captured CO2 from south to north UK
EU co-legislators strike a provisional deal to redesign the bloc’s electricity market
Major Japanese power company announces nature-based carbon investment alongside LNG contract
Microsoft signs carbon removal offtake agreement with biochar producer
Japanese companies team up with regional governments to create forest-based offsets
NZ’s Climate Commission urges new govt to sort out ETS in final advice on second emissions budget
COMMENT: Westpac says no to deforestation – others will soon have to
Consortium seeks GHG acreage in Australia for CCS
Decline of rare UK bat linked to tree felling for British empire’s fleets
Rife deforestation 500 years ago aligns with western barbastelle slump, finds study of bat DNA
The examples of flora and fauna disappearing because of human excesses over the past 50 years are manifold, but research has found that the decline of a characterful bat began in the UK when its trees were felled for shipbuilding 500 years ago.
Experts from the University of Exeter and the Bat Conservation Trust (BCT) have concluded that a 99% drop in Britain’s western barbastelle bat populations began when trees were chopped down in the early days of Britain’s empire building.
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