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Australia’s Hysata opens “giga-scale” plant for world’s most efficient hydrogen electrolyser
Hysata plans "giga-scale" production of what it says is world's most efficient hydrogen electrolyser technology after landing another $24 million in government funds.
The post Australia’s Hysata opens “giga-scale” plant for world’s most efficient hydrogen electrolyser appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Wind project proposes turbine shut down system to protect wedge-tailed eagles
Plans to build an up to 300MW wind farm could include the same turbine curtailment devices used at Cattle Hill to protect wedge-tailed eagles.
The post Wind project proposes turbine shut down system to protect wedge-tailed eagles appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Creating ‘sponge cities’ to cope with more rainfall needn't cost billions – but NZ has to start now
Trapped: Australia’s extraordinary alpine insects are being marooned on mountaintops as the world warms
Offshore wind: Consultation opens on fourth development zone off Illawarra coast
Consultation opens on Australia's fourth offshore wind energy development zone, and the second for New South Wales, off the coast of the Illawarra region.
The post Offshore wind: Consultation opens on fourth development zone off Illawarra coast appeared first on RenewEconomy.
New Zealand fund to prop up more decarbonisation projects
UK government drives to improve business decarbonisation plans
Author walks out of Edinburgh book festival over sponsor’s fossil fuel links
Activist Mikaela Loach staged a protest over investment firm’s ‘bankrolling’ of the climate crisis
A leading climate crisis author has staged a walkout at Edinburgh international book festival in protest at its sponsor’s links to fossil fuel companies.
The author and climate activist Mikaela Loach interrupted a discussion about changing the climate narrative on Saturday evening to lead a demonstration about the festival’s main sponsor, the investment company Baillie Gifford.
Continue reading...Fears many Australians will abandon home insurance as premiums jump 50% in high-risk areas
Median premiums across all areas rose 28% in the year to March, and actuaries warn climate disasters are driving them to unaffordable heights
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Home insurance premiums have climbed by 50% in high-risk parts of Australia as global heating increases the frequency and cost of climate disasters, a new report has found.
The Actuaries Institute’s research on home insurance affordability and funding for flood costs, released on Monday, found median home insurance premiums rose by 28% in the year to March, sitting at an average of $1,894 across all states.
Continue reading...As temperatures soar and wildfires burn abroad, summer dread is returning to my body
As the Australian summer approaches, my apprehension is both a daily shock and uncannily normalised – and I know I’m not the only one feeling it
These days, when I come back into the house after being out on the land, it’s dust that I drop, not the mud I carried in on my boots and clothes during the past three years when the rain kept everything, and everyone, sodden most of the time. The rain that also kept at bay the feeling of impending disaster that now attaches itself to the arrival of an Australian summer.
Not that La Niña was safe, as all of those whose homes and habitats were washed away know. But in the early months of 2023, as if the weather gods had snapped a finger, soaked turned to parched, and I find myself here again. Borne by news of soaring temperatures and wildfires in the northern hemisphere, the shift from a medium to a high likelihood of the arrival of El Niño to the official declaration of its onset, and the feeling of hardening earth under my feet, summer dread is returning to my body.
Continue reading...Carbon-capture gold rush an ‘insult’ to locals in emissions-hit Louisiana
US government plans to roll out carbon capture rather than phase out fossil fuels prompts outcry in heavily industrial state
Millions of dollars of investments in new carbon capture projects in Louisiana – with more announced this week, are unwelcome developments to some environmental activists in the state.
“We’ve been trying to fix the oil and gas damage, while at the same time trying to push the transition away from it,” said Monique Hardin, director of law for the Deep South Center for Environmental Justice.
Continue reading...Rishi Sunak ‘will rue his green group attacks come election time’
Academics – and polls – say majority of voters back action on climate change and will punish Tories for ‘weak tactic’
The prime minister Rishi Sunak’s decision to intensify attacks on green groups and exploit opposition to environmental protests could rebound badly for his party at the next general election, academics have warned.
They argue that public support for achieving net zero emissions by 2050 in the UK is now entrenched and unlikely to be overturned. This view is backed by opinion polls, which show that 71% of the British public support moves that will lead to curtailment of the country’s fossil fuel emissions.
Continue reading...Companies pay almost €800m for right to build offshore wind farms in German tender
Investors have agreed to pay €784 million $A1.32 billion) for the right to build wind farms in four locations in the North Sea in Germany’s latest offshore wind tender.
The post Companies pay almost €800m for right to build offshore wind farms in German tender appeared first on RenewEconomy.
‘An utter disgrace’: 90% of England’s most precious river habitats blighted by raw sewage and farming pollution
Observer investigation reveals the shocking state of the country’s protected freshwater sites of special scientific interest
More than 90% of freshwater habitats on England’s most precious rivers are in unfavourable condition, blighted by farming pollution, raw sewage and water abstraction, an Observer investigation reveals.
None of the approximately 40 rivers with protected habitats in England are in overall good health, according to an analysis of government inspection reports. These include the River Avon in Hampshire, the Wensum in Norfolk and the Eden in Cumbria.
Continue reading...Prospectors hit the gas in the hunt for ‘white hydrogen’
The zero-emission fuel may exist in abundant reserves below ground. Now large sums are being invested to look for it
For more than a decade, the village of Bourakébougou in western Mali has been powered by a clean energy phenomenon that may soon sweep the globe.
The story begins with a cigarette. In 1987, a failed attempt to drill for water released a stream of odourless gas that one unlucky smoker discovered to be highly flammable. The well was quickly plugged and forgotten. But almost 20 years later, drillers on the hunt for fossil fuels confirmed the accidental discovery: hundreds of feet below the arid earth of west Africa lies an abundance of naturally occurring, or “white”, hydrogen.
Continue reading...Sunak’s anti-green drive tells us this: we’re heading for the stupidest general election yet | Zoe Williams
Lacking policies or ideas, today’s Tories sow division and spread hopelessness in a bid to disrupt the unity of progressive voters
As Rishi Sunak transforms himself into the driver’s champion and rightwingers savage net zero targets as a fascist plot of the wokerati, get ready for the thing you thought impossible: a general election even stupider than the last. Essentially, it’s looking as if it will be a referendum on whether climate change exists. What better time for such a dumb question, than right when we can all see it?
It won’t always be expressed so simply. Sometimes it will be: “Who will stand up for the humble driver of diesel cars, already squeezed in so many directions, in ways that I, not even quite a billionaire, can totally understand?” Other times it will be: “What can we do about Just Stop Oil protesters, who pose an existential threat to society with their vile and undemocratic tactics?” Probably only at the Faragist fringes will people openly repudiate the goal of net zero, while the Conservative core picks more contestable battles on low-traffic neighbourhoods, oil and gas licences, heat pumps.
Zoe Williams is a Guardian columnist
Continue reading...Global heating likely to hit world food supply before 1.5C, says UN expert
Water scarcity threatening agriculture faster than expected, warns Cop15 desertification president
The world is likely to face major disruption to food supplies well before temperatures rise by the 1.5C target, the president of the UN’s desertification conference has warned, as the impacts of the climate crisis combine with water scarcity and poor farming practices to threaten global agriculture.
Alain-Richard Donwahi, a former Ivory Coast defence minister who led last year’s UN Cop15 summit on desertification, said the effects of drought were taking hold more rapidly than expected.
Continue reading...When it comes to the climate crisis, no man is an island | Fiona Katauskas
Although some wish they were
Continue reading...