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Japanese knotweed and other invasive species cost UK £4bn a year, research suggests
Ash dieback most expensive, while cost of tackling alien species has more than doubled since 2010, says study
From Japanese knotweed to a fungus that kills ash trees, tackling invasive non-native species now costs the UK economy about £4bn, up from £1.7bn in 2010, research suggests.
There are about 2,000 invasive non-native species (Inns) in the UK, and about 12 new ones establish themselves each year, adding, along with inflation, to the rise in costs.
Continue reading...US startup incubator acquires Canadian voluntary carbon broker and marketplace
Oil giant Shell warns cutting production 'dangerous'
UN insurers’ climate group ditches requirement to set GHG targets
Renovation of Cavers Castle held up by great crested newts
Germany agrees to resume domestic ETS price hike in 2024 after one-year pause -media
ICE launches first Alberta carbon programme futures, as speculator builds credit positions
Maligned COP28 host UAE to spend $US54bn push to triple renewables by 2030
Controversial COP28 host UAE says it will spend more than $US50 billion tripling its renewable capacity by 2030, with focus on hydrogen exports.
The post Maligned COP28 host UAE to spend $US54bn push to triple renewables by 2030 appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Beavers to make Nene Wetlands return after 400 years
Carbon management firm to sell Canadian biochar credits, as ArcelorMittal invests in biocarbon company
Methane credit developer inks pre-purchase agreement with global commodity trader
Policymakers significantly undercounting CO2 emissions from global wood harvesting, researchers say
The Guardian view on Toyota’s electric car battery: a boost only if we embrace public transport | Editorial
Reducing carbon emissions is necessary. But the future of ‘mobility’ must involve much more besides private cars
Driving an electric car on a single charge from London to Milan sounds like an impossible dream. Yet Japanese carmaker Toyota claims that by 2027 motorists will be able to buy such a vehicle. Running the air conditioner at full blast might reduce such an impressive range, but Toyota says drivers will be able to recharge in 10 minutes before they are back on the road. If this all sounds too good to be true, that’s because it probably is.
What Toyota says it has found nothing less than the holy grail of battery technology – the so-called solid state solution – which has long eluded the industry. Instead of a liquid core, the new battery has a solid one between electrodes. This means it is smaller and can store more energy – delivering a bigger range for the same weight. The heavy flammable liquid cores can also overheat and explode. Since 2017, UK emergency services have attended hundreds of electric vehicle fires.
Continue reading...Time to worry about car tyre pollution, Chris Whitty tells MPs
Chief medical officer says move to electric cars can reduce impact of exhausts, but may bring different problem to the fore
Ministers need to start looking seriously at the health risks from vehicle tyre wear as the impact of pollutants from car exhausts gradually reduces, Sir Chris Whitty has told MPs.
Giving evidence to the environmental audit committee, England’s chief medical officer said improvements in emissions from petrol and diesel vehicles, and a shift towards electric cars, were reducing the extent of dangerous pollutants such as nitrogen oxides.
Continue reading...EU political groups face major discussions ahead of nature law vote next week
Insufficient shipping carbon levy could lead to unmanageable regional regulatory differences, says industry
New tool launched to create standardised reports of carbon credit projects at any stage of development
Tech company seeks to become alternative standard for digital carbon market
Tuesday was world’s hottest day on record — breaking Monday’s record
Average global temperature hits 17.18C and experts expect record to be broken again very soon
World temperature records have been broken for a second day in a row, data suggests, as experts issued a warning that this year’s warmest days are still to come – and with them the warmest days ever recorded.
The average global air temperature was 17.18C (62.9F) on Tuesday, according to data collated by the US National Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP), surpassing the record 17.01C reached on Monday.
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