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Producers and speculators trade positions on CCA vintages, RGGI length
US agtech firm with voluntary carbon offerings announces $250 million raise
Carbon credit certifier strikes partnership to develop blue carbon methodologies
Diverse mix of seedlings helps tropical forests regrow better, study finds
Malaysia trial shows quicker recovery compared with areas replanted with four or just a single native species
Replanting logged tropical forests with a diverse mixture of seedlings can help them regrow more quickly than allowing trees to regenerate naturally, a study has shown.
Satellite observations of one of the largest ecological experiments in the world in the Malaysian state of Sabah have revealed how lowland rainforest recovered over a decade.
Continue reading...Developer plans boom in African bamboo carbon projects, although Kenyan expansion in limbo
Verra says academic criticism of REDD methodologies addressed in its new approach
FEATURE: Nascent biochar industry eyes link to use case in search of higher value
Investment in renewables and clean cooking tops $1 trillion, but more is needed, warns UN
UK biomass strategy under scrutiny as critique grows over environmental impact of burning pellets
US legislators introduce bill for national programme on carbon removal R&D
Don’t listen to Barnaby Joyce – New England loves renewable energy | RK Crosby
The loud bloke in a hat’s pro-nuclear, anything-but-renewables stance is out of touch with his NSW electorate
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Let’s play a game. What’s the biggest myth in Australian politics?
There are certainly lots of candidates, but for me, it is that Barnaby Joyce enjoys widespread support in New England.
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Continue reading...Largest UK ETS emitter to receive £500 mln to exit coal, but thousands of jobs at risk
Indian voluntary carbon credits face quality challenge, warns climate expert
Rockefeller Foundation pledges over $1 bln to advance global climate solutions
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Oil companies granted licences to store carbon under the North Sea
Government hopes companies including Shell will be able to store up to 10% of the UK’s annual carbon emissions
Oil companies have been granted licences by the government that it hopes will enable them to store up to 10% of the UK’s carbon emissions in old oil and gasfields beneath the seabed.
The government awarded more than 20 North Sea licences covering an area the size of Yorkshire to 14 companies that plan to store carbon dioxide trapped from heavy industry in depleted oil and gasfields.
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