Feed aggregator
Thanks to carbon offsetting, oil majors’ net zero pathways won’t stray far from fossil fuels -researchers
Without new protection and restoration policies, another 1.3 mln hectares of Colombian forests at risk by 2040, study warns
Cases of ‘climate washing’ mount across the world’s courts -report
Human remains thought to be found in Titan sub debris
Bowen kicks off capacity scheme with doubling of NSW battery tender to replace coal
Labor begins roll-out of Capacity Investment Scheme, more than doubling size of auction in NSW to fill a gap created by planned coal plant closures.
The post Bowen kicks off capacity scheme with doubling of NSW battery tender to replace coal appeared first on RenewEconomy.
California offset issuances rebound towards 2022 levels through H1, as CCO-0 total jumps
More incentives, supportive policies needed to help BECCS reach its full decarbonisation potential -report
We could need 6 times more of the minerals used for renewables and batteries. How can we avoid a huge increase in mining impacts?
Stop using ‘carbon neutral’ claims, advises VCMI as it launches Claims Code for companies
EU willing to join exploratory talks on geoengineering, warns against distraction from global mitigation efforts
The wretched state of Thames Water is one of the best arguments for public ownership we have | Adrienne Buller
Water privatisation in England and Wales has achieved just one thing: the enrichment of executives and overseas shareholders
Thames Water is on the brink of collapse, with emergency plans being drawn up to take the company into temporary public ownership. It’s an extraordinary state of affairs: how could a business with a regional monopoly over an essential service not manage to maintain a financially sustainable footing? The answer: an extractive ownership model has seen the company loaded with debt, and returns for its investors prioritised over the needs of both people and the environment. As interest rates have risen sharply over recent months, this inherently precarious business model has come under acute and seemingly fatal pressure.
The story of Thames Water is emblematic of wider failures of privatisation. Since the late 1980s, water companies in England and Wales have paid out £72bn to shareholders. To help pay for this generosity, the water companies – which were sold off without debts – have borrowed on an exceptional scale, accumulating a debt pile of £53bn.
Mathew Lawrence is director of Common Wealth and co-author of Owning the Future with Adrienne Buller
Continue reading...Japan approves first rice paddy methane project under J-Credit scheme
Voluntary carbon stakeholders urge UN body to consider different crediting rules across removals types
Watering Wednesday campaign aims to get UK streets to look after local trees
Charity Trees for Streets says dry weather has put pressure on saplings, which need about 50 litres a week
As young street trees struggle and wilt in the summer heat, people are being urged to step into action with their watering cans to help.
Hundreds of people are already looking after their local trees as part of the Watering Wednesday campaign launched by Trees for Streets, and some residents have set up rotas and allocated particular saplings to specific families.
Continue reading...8 Ursae Minoris b: Scientists unlock mystery of planet that escaped death
Climate crisis linked to rising domestic violence in south Asia, study finds
Increase of 1C in average annual temperature connected to more than 6% rise in physical and sexual domestic violence
As deadly heatwaves sweep through cities in India, China, the US and Europe amid the climate crisis, new research has found that rising temperatures are associated with a substantial rise in domestic violence against women.
A study published in JAMA Psychiatry on Wednesday found a 1C increase in average annual temperature was connected to a rise of more than 6.3% in incidents of physical and sexual domestic violence across three south Asian countries.
Continue reading...‘Whatever it takes’: the activists who risk prison to shatter Australia’s climate complacency
Protesters are taking increasingly extreme action to highlight ecological collapse – and new, more draconian laws are failing to stop them
- Follow our Australia news live blog for the latest updates
- Get our morning and afternoon news emails, free app or daily news podcast
Brad Homewood has two jobs. His paid gig requires the 50-year-old to drive a mini-mix concrete truck around suburban Melbourne. His volunteer work has resulted in him being arrested 13 times for taking part in protests meant to disrupt an economic system driving a climate and ecological emergency.
Last week Homewood glued himself to a nine-metre metal pole erected in the middle of a road at the entrance of the Port of Melbourne’s Appleton Dock. Traffic was stopped for two hours before emergency service workers could separate him from the pole and remove him from the site.
Continue reading...AECOM releases biodiversity assessment metric for Singapore, eyes SE Asia roll-out
CEFC and super fund pitch in for Blackrock’s massive Waratah “shock absorber” battery
CEFC and NGC Super Fund back BlackRock's investment in the $1 billion Waratah Super Battery, one of the biggest grid "shock absorbers" in the world.
The post CEFC and super fund pitch in for Blackrock’s massive Waratah “shock absorber” battery appeared first on RenewEconomy.
So what if fossil fuel lobbyists have to declare themselves at Cop28? That won’t curb their power| Amy Westervelt
Oil and gas companies don’t just have a seat at the Cop table: they are in charge of the table
Earlier this month, the UN announced it will require fossil fuel lobbyists to identify themselves as such when registering for the Cop28 climate summit. The move was applauded by campaigners and politicians alike, but it’s a shockingly small first step towards matching the boldness demanded by UN secretary general, António Guterres, when it comes to rooting out fossil fuel influence. In a speech earlier this month, Guterres called for the phase out of fossil fuels themselves, and said oil majors must “cease and desist influence peddling and legal threats designed to knee-cap progress.”
The UN’s move to transparently label lobbyists at Cop28 looks a lot like damage control after recent embarrassing revelations, such as there having been more oil lobbyists than any one nation’s delegation at Cop26 in Glasgow. But to actually rid Cop of fossil fuel influence, the UN has to go far beyond finally unmasking industry lobbyists; it needs to hold up a mirror to its own enabling behaviour over the years, then reverse all of it.
Continue reading...