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US details plan for $35 mln pilot CDR purchasing programme
Activists stage Rosebank oilfield protest outside offices of Labour frontbench
Party urged to commit to revoking licence for site in North Sea and back comprehensive Green New Deal
Young climate activists staged sit-down protests outside the offices of every member of Labour’s shadow cabinet on Friday, calling on the party to take a tougher line on the proposed new Rosebank oilfield and back a comprehensive Green New Deal.
This week the UK’s biggest untapped oilfield was given the go-ahead despite widespread opposition from scientists, poverty campaigners and climate and energy experts.
Continue reading...Judge allows private prosecution of Southern Water over pollution claims
Fish Legal win permission to summon firm to face allegations linked to diesel pollution of River Test
A judge has given permission for a private prosecution to go ahead against a water company accused over the pollution of one of the UK’s most cherished fishing rivers.
Southern Water will appear in court in February to face allegations linked to diesel pollution in the River Test in Hampshire.
Continue reading...I’m a suburban Melbourne renter. Here’s how I weaned my home off gas and saved money on energy bills | Nelli Stevenson
After ditching central heating and focusing on power efficiency, we’ve cut our gas usage by 83% and are well on the way to paying off our new appliances
- Change by Degrees is our new Saturday column offering life hacks and sustainable living tips to help reduce your household’s carbon footprint
- Got a question or tip for reducing household emissions? Email us at changebydegrees@theguardian.com
Come winter, there’s one three-letter subject that really dominates the outer suburbs of Melbourne, and if you guessed AFL, I’m afraid you’ve missed the mark.
I live in the quiet, leafy west, where houses were built cheaply and quickly, which leaves us all groaning about one thing: gas. These big spacious houses cost an absolute bomb to heat in winter.
Continue reading...Mozambique to place community benefits at heart of new carbon regulatory framework -report
Biden to sell three oil and gas leases over five years, angering climate advocates
Administration releases plan, which represents lowest number of lease sales since 1980, but is still set to increase oil production
The Biden administration on Friday released a plan to sell as many as three offshore oil and gas leases over the next five years, garnering criticism from some climate advocates.
Set to govern potential sales through late 2028, the hotly anticipated plan from the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, a part of the interior department, includes no auctions for next year, and represents the lowest number of lease sales since the program began in 1980.
Continue reading...Major institutions urge the EU to accelerate energy transition to ensure competitiveness
How a thinktank got the cost of net zero for the UK wildly wrong
Civitas’s deeply flawed report was timed to follow the PM’s speech in which he called for an honest approach to the issue
Imagine demanding an “honest” debate over the cost of net zero in a report full of errors that even a schoolboy would be embarrassed about. Then imagine getting coverage of your report in the Sun, Times, Daily Mail, Daily Express and Spectator.
Sound impossible? Well, let me tell you how Civitas, one of the thinktanks housed at 55 Tufton Street in London, did exactly that, and nearly got away with it.
Continue reading...Euro Markets: Midday Update
‘The dog’s very happy’: water-conscious Gotlanders compete for ugliest lawn title
Competition aimed at encouraging Swedish island residents to save water is being copied elsewhere
Dry, brown grass is no longer a source of shame on one Swedish island where residents have been competing over the “ugliest lawn” in an attempt to save water – and it seems the trend is spreading.
“It was the easiest competition to win, I didn’t have to do anything,” said this year’s winner Stina Östman, a resident of Sweden’s largest island of Gotland, who has mixed feelings about her victory. “It’s always nice to win, even if you are the worst,” she said.
Continue reading...Textile industry body looks to set industry biodiversity foundation in new report
Biden is right to praise the auto strike. His climate agenda depends on it | Kate Aronoff
The president has a golden opportunity to prove that green jobs will bear dividends for the working class
Joe Biden had to choose a side in the United Auto Workers’ contract fight with the “big three” American automakers, and he did. This week, he became the first US president to walk a picket line while in office when he joined strikers in Belleville, Michigan, offering enthusiastic support for their demands. Biden should be thanking the UAW for handing him a golden opportunity: to prove that the green jobs his administration is creating will be good, union jobs, too, and that climate policy will bear dividends for the working class.
Republicans cosplaying solidarity have tried to exploit the strike to score cheap political points. As Republican presidential hopefuls debated this week, Donald Trump told a rally at a non-union plant in Michigan that the strike wouldn’t “make a damn bit of difference” because the car industry was “being assassinated” by “EV mandates”. (Whether there were any union members or even autoworkers in the room isn’t clear.) Ohio senator JD Vance has similarly blamed autoworkers’ plight on “the premature transition to electric vehicles” and “Biden’s war on American cars”.
Kate Aronoff is a staff writer at the New Republic and the author of Overheated: How Capitalism Broke the Planet – And How We Fight Back
Continue reading...Mining giant notes bumps in road from brown to green
Think tank develops blue recovery bond framework to tackle overfishing
INTERVIEW: Photosynthesis-enhanced trees shown to grow faster, decompose slower, says startup
New Zealand cancels 21.5 mln Kyoto credits
Weather tracker: South Africa floods kill at least 11 people
Cape Town mayor declares major incident as roads closed and 80,000 people left without electricity
Extreme rain and strong winds across South Africa’s Western Cape province have caused flooding, torn off roofs, destroyed crops and damaged roads this week. It is estimated that the 48-hour rainfall totals between Sunday and Monday were between 100mm to 200mm (4-8in) in this region.
According to the Cape Town Disaster Risk Management Centre, 12,000 people were affected, but a further 80,000 people were left without electricity, according to the national power utility. The mayor of Cape Town signed a major incident declaration for additional resources and relief measures as 80 roads have been closed, 200 farm workers have been stranded and rail services have been suspended in the Western and Eastern Cape provinces.
Continue reading...The week in wildlife – in pictures
The best of this week’s wildlife photographs, including a hummingbird hawk moth, capybaras and a newly discovered tarantula
Continue reading...Is this Australia’s most trusting bird? No wonder it is endangered | First Dog on the Moon
I shall lay my eggs here on this beach where they have been safe for thousands of years
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