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Alberta rebates may weaken Canada’s carbon price signal, but don’t expect feds to act
Nova Scotia eschews reserve volume for final regular cap-and-trade sale
New Australian laws for ‘engineering’ the ocean must balance environment protection and responsible research
New transmission lines are controversial for nearby communities. But batteries and virtual lines could cut how many we need
VCM Report: Vintage roll drives rebound in standardised spot contracts, as VCMI aviation signal provides added boost
Netherlands gets EU approval for programme to support industry GHG cuts
UK should press pause on deep-sea mining, Labour says
David Lammy says Labour government would join growing list of countries and multinationals opposing rush to mine the seabed
The Labour party has said the UK should back the call for a precautionary pause on deep-sea mining, ahead of a crucial meeting of nations in Jamaica to decide the future of the industry.
David Lammy, the shadow foreign secretary, said the Labour party was adding its voice to a growing list of countries and businesses urging that moves to start mining be halted “until and unless” there was clear scientific evidence that it could be done safely and the marine environment would be protected by new regulations.
Continue reading...Nigeria issues warning against unauthorised carbon trading
Transparent mouse could improve cancer drug tests
Drop carbon offsetting-based environmental claims, companies urged
New guidance says carbon credits should only be used to contribute to climate mitigation
Companies should drop offsetting-based environmental claims and adopt a “climate contribution” model instead, according to a new quality standard.
In a new code of practice, the Voluntary Carbon Markets Integrity Initiative (VCMI) has published guidance on how companies should use carbon credits as part of high-quality corporate action. It recommends that firms should disclose their emissions every year, show they are successfully meeting a science-based target aligned with the Paris agreement, and only use carbon credits to contribute to climate mitigation, moving away from claims that they have “cancelled out” their emissions by purchasing offsets.
Continue reading...A deer: famous for their antlers but why not their tails? | Helen Sullivan
In Celtic mythology they’re known as “fairy cattle”
The word deer comes from dēor and der, which in old and middle English meant, simply, “animal”. The Dutch word “dier” still means this. The sense of a deer as an animal, as opposed to a human – it has been found to have referred to ants, fish and foxes – may come from “wilddēornes”, the origin of wilderness or wild-animal-ness.
Deer still seem to embody this mysterious animal-ness: four-legged wildness, dainty and strong, mysterious and controlled. You may say it is all in the antlers: I say it is all in the tail. I saw a small herd of fallow deer in London’s Clissold park recently. A doe walked up to the fence as I walked past, then turned away and flicked her white tail: a flash of white, like a shooting star you’re not sure you’ve seen, like the tap of a fluffy wand, like a cute cursor blinking.
Continue reading...Heatwave last summer killed 61,000 people in Europe, research finds
Hottest summer on record – fuelled by climate crisis – brought unusually high mortality rates, statistics show
Searing heat killed more than 60,000 people in Europe last summer, scientists have found, in a disaster made deadlier by greenhouse gases baking the planet.
EU statisticians rang alarm bells in August, as sweltering heat, withering drought and raging fires consumed much of the continent, after seeing unusually high numbers of people die during Europe’s hottest summer on record.
Continue reading...Uzbekistan gets $46 mln World Bank grant to facilitate international carbon markets access
London wildfire response hit by crew shortages - report
Euro Markets: Midday Update
ANALYSIS: Governments set down marker in tackling cookstove over-crediting
Rangers ‘heartbroken’ after 600 dead Arctic tern chicks found in Northumberland
Bird flu suspected as cause of death of vulnerable migratory birds at Long Nanny, the biggest UK breeding colony
National Trust rangers have described their “heartbreak and worry” after recovering more than 600 dead chicks at Britain’s largest mainland colony of Arctic terns.
The trust said on Monday that Long Nanny, on the coast of Northumberland, had been hit by a suspected outbreak of avian flu during the peak of the breeding season.
Continue reading...Consultancy publishes framework to help businesses act on biodiversity impact
SK subsidiary recieves Korean offsets through asphalt production project
UK should quit ‘climate-wrecking’ energy treaty, say official advisers
Climate Change Committee recommends leaving energy charter treaty, which critics say is ‘weaponised’ by fossil fuel firms
The UK should quit a controversial energy treaty to stop it delaying vital climate action and triggering huge taxpayer payouts to fossil fuel companies, according to the government’s official advisers.
The energy charter treaty (ECT) is a system of secret courts that enables companies to sue governments over policies that would cut their future profits. Companies have sued over phasing out coal-fired power stations, ending offshore oil drilling and banning fracking. The UK’s Climate Change Committee said Britain should withdraw from the ECT because recently proposed reforms did not go far enough.
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