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Climate crisis is driving US heatwave, says Joe Biden – video

The Guardian - Thu, 2021-07-01 05:58

The US president blamed the climate crisis for a record-breaking heatwave when he met governors from western states as fierce wildfires burn in northern California. 'Climate change is driving a dangerous confluence of extreme heat and prolonged drought,' Biden said. 'Wildfires are not a partisan phenomenon. They don't stop at a county or a state line or country line for that matter.'

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Australia’s threatened species plan has failed on several counts. Without change, more extinctions are assured

The Conversation - Thu, 2021-07-01 05:58
Given the scale of the problem, five years was never enough time to turn things around. Clearly, we must reflect honestly on our successes and failures so far. Euan Ritchie, Professor in Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, Centre for Integrative Ecology, School of Life & Environmental Sciences, Deakin University Ayesha Tulloch, DECRA Research Fellow, University of Sydney Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Euro Markets: EUAs withstand UK auction pressure as gas rally continues

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2021-07-01 04:55
EUAs extended their six-week high on Wednesday to close in on their all-time record, as surging gas prices and optimism about the bloc's market reforms outweighed pressure from Britain's fortnightly auction.
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RGGI revenues could lessen burden to Pennsylvania coal communities -report

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2021-07-01 03:34
RGGI auction revenues could ease the burden on Pennsylvania coal communities that could see power plant closures in the coming years as more coal-fired generation becomes unprofitable, according to think-tank analysis published on Wednesday.
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UN aviation emissions body decried for hiring industry lobbyist

The Guardian - Thu, 2021-07-01 01:03

Campaigners criticise appointment of Michael Gill as ICAO’s director of legal affairs and external relations

Environmental groups have criticised the UN body tasked with cutting global aircraft emissions for hiring a former senior airline industry lobbyist to a senior role.

Campaigners say the recruitment of Michael Gill to the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) reflects its flaws and bias toward the industry.

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Amazon eagle faces starvation in 'last stronghold'

BBC - Thu, 2021-07-01 01:00
One of the world's largest eagles has "nearly zero" chance of surviving deforestation, study shows.
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Canada is a warning: more and more of the world will soon be too hot for humans | Simon Lewis

The Guardian - Thu, 2021-07-01 00:35

Without an immediate global effort to combat the climate emergency, the Earth’s uninhabitable areas will keep growing

The climate crisis means that summer is a time of increasingly dangerous heat. This week in the Pacific north-west, temperature records are not just being broken, they are being obliterated. Temperatures reached a shocking 47.9C in British Columbia, Canada. Amid temperatures more typically found in the Sahara desert, dozens have died of heat stress, with “roads buckling and power cables melting”.

Related: How did a small town in Canada become one of the hottest places on Earth?

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Vestas strengthens investment in wooden turbine tower manufacturer

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2021-06-30 22:15

Vestas increases investment in Swedish wooden wind turbine manufacturer Modvion.

The post Vestas strengthens investment in wooden turbine tower manufacturer appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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How did a small town in Canada become one of the hottest places on Earth? | Eric Holthaus

The Guardian - Wed, 2021-06-30 20:20

The unprecedented heatwave in the Pacific north-west risks becoming the new normal if we don’t act now

On Sunday, the small mountain town of Lytton, British Columbia, became one of the hottest places in the world. Then, on Monday, Lytton got even hotter – 47.9C (118F – hotter than it’s ever been in Las Vegas, 1,300 miles to the south.

Lytton is at 50 deg N latitude – about the same as London. This part of the world should never get this hot. Seattle’s new all-time record of 108F, also set Monday, is hotter than it’s ever been in Miami. In Portland, the new record of 116F would beat the warmest day ever recorded in Houston by nearly 10 degrees.

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Japan casts wide net in funding new batch of JCM projects

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2021-06-30 20:12
Japan’s environment ministry has selected 11 new carbon-cutting projects for co-funding under its Joint Crediting Mechanism, picking schemes in Indonesia, Mexico, the Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam.
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Brussels plans inclusion of int’l shipping in EU carbon market from 2023 -draft

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2021-06-30 19:53
The European Commission is planning to bring international shipping into the EU ETS from 2023, with a transition period ramping up emissions coverage for the sector thereafter, according to a leaked draft.
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China’s Baotou Steel strikes 50-mln tonne forest carbon offset deal

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2021-06-30 18:40
Chinese steel giant Inner Mongolia Baotou Steel Union Co. has agreed to buy 50 million Chinese Certified Emissions Reductions (CCERs) over 25 years from a domestic forestry and paper company, a deal that could be worth up to 1 billion yuan ($155 mln).
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Video: New electric motorcycle launched in Australia

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2021-06-30 17:17

evoke motorcycleNigel Morris test rides the all-new electric Evoke, and talks to its distributors.

The post Video: New electric motorcycle launched in Australia appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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Big oil and gas kept a dirty secret for decades. Now they may pay the price

The Guardian - Wed, 2021-06-30 17:00

Via an unprecedented wave of lawsuits, America’s petroleum giants face a reckoning for the devastation caused by fossil fuels

After a century of wielding extraordinary economic and political power, America’s petroleum giants face a reckoning for driving the greatest existential threat of our lifetimes.

An unprecedented wave of lawsuits, filed by cities and states across the US, aim to hold the oil and gas industry to account for the environmental devastation caused by fossil fuels – and covering up what they knew along the way.

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The climate crisis is a crime that should be prosecuted | Mark Hertsgaard

The Guardian - Wed, 2021-06-30 17:00

Fossil fuel companies lied for decades about climate change, and humanity is paying the price. Shouldn’t those lies be central to the public narrative?

Every person on Earth today is living in a crime scene.

This crime has been going on for decades. We see its effects in the horrific heat and wildfires unfolding this summer in the American west; in the mega-storms that were so numerous in 2020 that scientists ran out of names for them; in the global projections that sea levels are set to rise by at least 20ft. Our only hope is to slow this inexorable ascent so our children may figure out some way to cope.

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A heatwave in Seattle? Extreme weather is no longer ‘unprecedented’ | Arwa Mahdawi

The Guardian - Wed, 2021-06-30 16:00

This is serious enough for the 1% to start building bunkers ready for environmental collapse

A few years ago, the author and academic Douglas Rushkoff got invited to a swanky private resort to talk to a bunch of obscenely rich hedge fund guys about the future of technology. He thought they were going to ask him how technology was going to improve the world, but they were far more interested in discussing the “Event”, their cutesy term for the collapse of civilisation. “How do I maintain authority over my security force after the Event?” one CEO, who had just finished building an underground bunker system, reportedly asked. The rest of the conversation, detailed by Rushkoff in a Guardian feature, continued in that vein.

That Rushkoff piece was published in 2018, but I’ve found myself thinking about it a lot over the past few days. Why? Because the Event is starting to feel imminent. If that sounds alarmist, just take a look at the weather. Severe storms have caused extensive flooding in Detroit. Canada just set its highest temperature on record: a village in British Columbia reached 46.1C (115F) on Sunday. The US’s Pacific north-west also broke heat records over the weekend, with Portland, Oregon, reaching 44.4C (112F). Seattle, which isn’t exactly known for its sunshine, just had triple-digit temperatures for three days straight, breaking another record. The US National Weather Service in Washington has called the current heatwave “historic, dangerous, prolonged and unprecedented”.

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India's Bharti invests $500m in UK space start-up OneWeb

BBC - Wed, 2021-06-30 15:37
The cash injection comes after the British government and Bharti Global bailed out the company last year.
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“Inflection point:” Is AGL demerger too late to save the fossil fuel behemoth?

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2021-06-30 15:19

AGL's Loy Yang power station.AGL confirms details of planned business split, an emergency response from a business caught off guard by the pace of the clean energy transition.

The post “Inflection point:” Is AGL demerger too late to save the fossil fuel behemoth? appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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Offsets being used in Colombia to dodge carbon taxes – report

The Guardian - Wed, 2021-06-30 15:00

Fossil fuel levy can be avoided by buying carbon offsets that may have no benefit for climate

Forest protection carbon offsets that may have no benefit to the climate have been used by polluters to avoid paying carbon taxes in Colombia, according to a report.

In 2016, a levy of about $5 (£3.60) was introduced in the South American country to cover the use of some fossil fuels. However, companies that emit carbon dioxide can avoid paying the tax by buying carbon offsets from Colombian emission reduction projects, including those that conserve threatened natural carbon banks such as peatlands, forests and mangrove swamps.

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Lunch for a dragonfly – an ignominious end for Britain’s biggest butterfly

The Guardian - Wed, 2021-06-30 15:00

The demise of the freshly emerged swallowtail makes me ponder all butterflies’ chances of survival

Last week, I witnessed a wondrous and slightly horrifying spectacle of nature.

I was admiring a swallowtail, Britain’s largest native butterfly, as it jinked over a waterway on the Norfolk Broads. Suddenly, an emperor dragonfly cruised in and grabbed the butterfly. There was a mid-air tussle for five seconds, before the iridescent blue dragonfly dropped into the reed bed with its prize.

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