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Canadian watchdog estimates a C$1.1 bln impact in fuel charges proceeds following carbon levy exemption, C$3 bln in rebate payments
RGGI Market: RGAs surpass Cost Containment Reserve trigger levels on modest volume
PREVIEW: Imminent Brazil ETS vote faces several unresolved issues ahead of COP28
Denial is over. Climate change is happening. But why do we still act like it's not?
Antigua and Barbuda environment ministry distances itself from “trillion-dollar” blue carbon venture
Defra’s failure to protect and restore water bodies ‘unlawful’, high court rules
Landmark finding in judicial review over management of Costa Beck river could force overhaul of government’s plans
The government and environment agency failed in their duty to restore and protect waterways from pollution, the high court has ruled in a significant case that could force an overhaul of the government’s plans.
Fish Legal and Pickering Fishery Association took the government to judicial review over its river basin management plan for the Costa Beck river in the Humber district, which had a reputation as one of the best fly fishing spots in the UK until a few years ago.
Continue reading...Just Stop Oil protesters’ jail terms potentially breach international law, UN expert says
Sentences risk silencing public concerns about the environment, climate change rapporteur Ian Fry says
Long sentences handed to two Just Stop Oil protesters for scaling the M25 bridge over the Thames are a potential breach of international law and risk silencing public concerns about the environment, a UN expert has said.
In a strongly worded intervention, Ian Fry, the UN’s rapporteur for climate change and human rights, said he was “particularly concerned” about the sentences, which were “significantly more severe than previous sentences imposed for this type of offending in the past”.
Continue reading...ANALYSIS: Observers welcome late agreement on Article 6 crediting, concerned by gaps
EU extends state aid flexibility for another six months
Brazilian state signs $3 million agricultural carbon credit agreement with major bank
VCM Report: Carbon credit demand boosted as oil major returns to the market
Björk turns up the volume in attack on industrial salmon farming in open pens
Icelandic singer condemns ‘terrible suffering’ of salmon farming with proceeds from her new single with Rosalía going to activists
The Icelandic singer Björk has condemned industrial salmon farming in open pens as “extraordinarily cruel”, as she announced her debut song with the Catalan singer Rosalía, which will be available on Tuesday 21 November.
The pair will donate the proceeds of the single, a love song based on a recently recovered recording Björk made two decades ago, to activists opposing the controversial industry in Iceland.
Continue reading...Communications Manager, Carbon Markets and Technical Solutions, Agreena – London/Copenhagen
First auction for 2023 Swiss carbon permits sells out
EU’s Von der Leyen confirms second green hydrogen auction on eve of the first
Restaurants, pets and holidays: how UK’s well-off have outsize carbon footprints
Data shows baby boomers have highest emissions and London has lower footprint than rest of UK
• The great carbon divide: charting a climate chasm
Restaurants, pets and foreign holidays are among the reasons why the UK’s most well-off people rack up carbon footprints far greater than those on low incomes, according to data shared with the Guardian.
The biggest carbon divide is in aviation, with the richest 10% in the UK – the 6.7 million people paid more than £59,000 a year – causing more than six times more climate-heating emissions from flights than the poorest 10%. Spending on electrical items, homeware and furniture also contributes to the outsize impact of the wealthy, who splash out four times more on these goods.
Continue reading...Revealed: the huge climate impact of the middle classes
Carbon emissions of richest 10% is up to 40 times bigger than poorest, and ignoring divide may make ending climate crisis impossible, experts say
The richest 10% of people in many countries cause up to 40 times more climate-heating carbon emissions than the poorest 10% of their fellow citizens, according to data obtained by the Guardian.
Failing to account for this huge divide when making policies to cut emissions can cause a backlash over the affordability of climate action, experts say.
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