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Extinction Rebellion's future is far less radical than its past | Rupert Read
The time for alarmist messages is over, and the organisation could help unite people in positive action
- Rupert Read is co-director of the Climate Majority Project
Gail Bradbrook, co-founder of Extinction Rebellion, has been found guilty of criminal damage, after she broke a window at the Department for Transport in an ecologically motivated protest against HS2 in 2019.
The timing of Bradbrook’s verdict is almost exquisitely ironic. Five years ago last week, Extinction Rebellion was launched in Parliament Square. Back then, a principal term of criticism lobbied at XR was that it was “alarmist”. Five years on, it’s plainly visible that it was not.
Rupert Read is the author of Extinction Rebellion: Insights from the Inside and Co-Director of the Climate Majority Project
Continue reading...Quinbrook eyes 16-hour batteries for Sun Cable in massive storage deal with China’s CATL
Quinbrook signs 10 GWh supply deal with China battery giant CATL, including for the use of 16-hour batteries at the world's biggest solar and storage project Sun Cable.
The post Quinbrook eyes 16-hour batteries for Sun Cable in massive storage deal with China’s CATL appeared first on RenewEconomy.
AU Market: ACCU delivery failure a key market risk, analysis says
UK forests face catastrophic ecosystem collapse within 50 years, study says
‘Alarming’ new research warns of risk to British woodlands from disease, extreme weather and wildfires, unless ‘call to action’ is heeded now
UK forests are heading for “catastrophic ecosystem collapse” within the next 50 years due to multiple threats including disease, extreme weather and wildfires, researchers have warned, with trees dying on a large scale.
The study, published in the journal Forestry, was put together by a panel of 42 researchers, with 1,200 experts consulted. Lead author, Dr Eleanor Tew, head of forest planning at Forestry England and visiting researcher at the University of Cambridge, described the finding as “sobering and alarming”.
Continue reading...Chubby frog, broad-toothed rat and impish marsupial among growing list of species under threat
More native plants and species at risk of extinction as Australia enters worst bushfire season since 2019’s black summer
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More than 20 plants and animals have been added to the government’s threatened species list as politicians look ahead to another challenging bushfire season.
A chubby frog, eight kinds of crayfish and a river fish with no scientific description have been added to the growing list of threatened native wildlife.
Continue reading...Japan to debut climate transformation bond in 2024
Politics with Michelle Grattan: Former climate minister Greg Combet on Australia's mission to reach net-zero
Plastic waste ‘spiralling out of control’ across Africa, analysis shows
Predicted 116m tonnes of waste annually by 2060 is six times higher than in 2019, driven by demand in sub-Saharan Africa
Plastic waste is “spiralling out of control” across Africa, where it is growing faster than any other region, new analysis has shown.
At current levels, enough plastic waste to cover a football pitch is openly dumped or burned in sub-Saharan Africa every minute, according to the charity Tearfund.
Continue reading...Climate fatigue isn't a sign that Europeans are in denial – it's a sign of their fear | Francesco Grillo
While Europe is battered by the climate crisis, governments must reassure voters that green costs will be fairly shared
“At a time when we should be accelerating action, there is backtracking … We are hurtling towards disaster, eyes wide open.” A few months ago, the UN secretary general António Guterres used these words to warn that the collective battle against the climate crisis is losing political steam. Guterres was right: the collective response is pitiful. But it’s not just the politicians.
Clear evidence of climate fatigue emerges from recent opinion polls on voting intentions in the next European parliament elections, in June 2024. While European green parties are expected to lose more than a third of their seats, rightwing climate-sceptic conservatives are expected to win big.
Francesco Grillo is a visiting fellow at the European University Institute, Florence and director of the thinktank Vision
Continue reading...CP Daily: Tuesday November 7, 2023
Global fossil fuel output still outpacing climate pledges and must be tackled, says UN-backed report
‘Insanity’: petrostates planning huge expansion of fossil fuels, says UN report
Plans by nations including Saudi Arabia, the US and UAE would blow climate targets and ‘throw humanity’s future into question’
The world’s fossil fuel producers are planning expansions that would blow the planet’s carbon budget twice over, a UN report has found. Experts called the plans “insanity” which “throw humanity’s future into question”.
The energy plans of the petrostates contradicted their climate policies and pledges, the report said. The plans would lead to 460% more coal production, 83% more gas, and 29% more oil in 2030 than it was possible to burn if global temperature rise was to be kept to the internationally agreed 1.5C. The plans would also produce 69% more fossil fuels than is compatible with the riskier 2C target.
Continue reading...Gas cookers pump out toxic particles linked to childhood asthma, report finds
Scientists find average levels of nitrogen dioxide almost twice as high in homes cooking with gas as in those cooking without
Gas cookers are pumping toxic particles linked to childhood asthma into kitchens, living rooms and bedrooms across Europe, a report has found.
Dutch scientists measured the air quality in 247 homes and found average levels of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) were almost twice as high in those cooking with gas as in those cooking without. One in four homes with gas cookers breached hourly pollution levels set by the World Health Organization, while none of the homes in the control group, which used electric cookers, broke the limits.
Continue reading...NGOs, utilities welcome California’s potential cap-and-trade amendments, oil association pushes back
Bowen says accelerating switch to renewables essential to “keep the lights on”
In a speech in Adelaide, federal energy minister doubles down on 82% renewables target and hints at new policy initiatives to "amplify" efforts to reach it.
The post Bowen says accelerating switch to renewables essential to “keep the lights on” appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Energy Estate backs CSG water treatment tech with view to green hydrogen future
A company addressing the coal-seam gas industry's waste brine problem is on Energy Estate's radar, both as a renewables customer and a green hydrogen partner.
The post Energy Estate backs CSG water treatment tech with view to green hydrogen future appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Woodside CCS in early stages as company continues wait-and see approach to energy transition
China releases methane reduction plan though targets remain vague
'Virtually certain' that 2023 will be warmest year after October record
2023 on track to be the hottest year on record, say scientists
Last month was hottest October since records began, with average global temperature thought to be 1.7C above late-1800s levels
The world is set to have been hotter in 2023 than in any other year on record, scientists have declared, before a landmark climate summit this month.
“We can say with near certainty that 2023 will be the warmest year on record, and is currently 1.43C above the pre-industrial average,” said Samantha Burgess, the deputy director of the Copernicus Climate Change Service. “The sense of urgency for ambitious climate action going into Cop28 has never been higher.”
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