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Direct payments key to success of EU ETS2, says green watchdog
ArcelorMittal warns of trade disruptions impacting steel demand
Global ocean summit draws $9 bln in marine protection pledges
Climate advocacy group warns EU ETS2 may lead to political disaster
Indian firms partner to launch biochar carbon credit platform
Researchers urge standardisation across UN, VCM forest carbon crediting methodologies
RWE posts 2% increase in EU fossil fuel generation over first quarter
Germany faces limited marine carbon removal options for net zero target -report
Nature-related finance needs to change Indigenous engagement, UNEP FI says
India launches green hydrogen certification scheme, inks deals with Japan, Singapore
BioCarbon lists second project under biodiversity credit programme
Commercial nuclear fusion in sight as landmark project completes heart of new reactor
BRIEFING: Verra flags confusion among developers over how to meet key plastic programme requirements
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Tony Blair risks sending absolutely wrong message, say climate experts
Former PM also sparks Labour fury, with top MP accusing him of ‘handing talking points’ to Tories and Reform
Climate experts and politicians have criticised Tony Blair for claiming that any strategy that relied on rapidly phasing out fossil fuels was “doomed to fail”.
The former prime minister’s comments, published in a report from the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change (TBI), prompted an internal row in Labour, with some accusing him of playing into the hands of a narrative used by rightwing parties to delay climate action.
Continue reading...Private equity firms tied to over 500 fossil fuel assets, new tracker reveals
Chicken megafarm in Shropshire must not be built, clean river group tells court
‘Huge volumes of chicken muck’ entering rivers are harmful to fish and plants, campaigners argue at Cardiff high court
Clean river campaigners have told a court that planning permission for a poultry megafarm in Shropshire is unlawful and should be overturned.
In the high court in Cardiff on Wednesday, Dr Alison Caffyn argued that the council had failed to take into account all the environmental impacts of the industrial chicken units, which will house 230,000 birds at any one time, in particular the effects of spreading manure on land.
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