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Scott Morrison’s climate and Covid19 policy: It’s not a race
Scott Morrison's defining failure as prime minister is his inability to treat any crisis as urgent. That has caused failure for climate and Covid.
The post Scott Morrison’s climate and Covid19 policy: It’s not a race appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Why Alan Finkel is wrong about climate action
Resistance is not futile, as Alan Finkel might have us believe. There are so many reasons why climate action can and must go much faster.
The post Why Alan Finkel is wrong about climate action appeared first on RenewEconomy.
From this week, every mainland Australian state will allow genetically modified crops. Here's why that's nothing to fear
Leaked draft suggests Brussels planning early EU ETS supply cuts, inclusion of int’l shipping
The Guardian view on getting to net zero: the crunch is coming | Editorial
Bold climate targets are meaningless without policies to meet them. The PM should grab the chance to make Cop26 a success
Targets are all very well. But not if there is no way of reaching them. In which case, they are a sham. This is the problem now confronting the government. The UK’s stated goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 78% by 2035 compared with 1990 levels is very ambitious. “Remarkable” was the word used last week by Lord Deben (the former Conservative environment secretary John Gummer). He chairs the climate change committee (CCC) that advises the government. Its latest reports make an unflattering contrast between impressive aims and the absence of plans to meet them.
A strategy setting out how the UK intends to meet its net zero pledge is promised before the Cop26 climate talks in Glasgow in November. But there is little sign so far that ministers grasp the scale of the challenge. Not a single government department, the CCC finds, is moving at the necessary pace. Transport, agriculture, buildings, industry: in all the key emissions-producing sectors bar power generation, there has been an alarming lack of progress. Cuts to the aid budget now overseen by the Foreign Office mean that it too is implicated. Support for poor countries as they make the transition away from fossil fuels has long been recognised as a crucial element of the global climate process.
Continue reading...UK carbon prices to stick near £50 for now but could easily double by 2023 -analysts
Mining holds the key to a green future – no wonder human rights activists are worried
Renewable energy will rely heavily on an industry already berated for human rights violations
Interest in Dogger Bank was once restricted to insomniac enthusiasts for the BBC’s Shipping Forecast. Not anymore. Today, the shallow sandbank located 120 miles off the UK’s north-eastern shoreline, is home to the world’s largest windpower project. When fully operational, giant turbines will transmit 3.6 gigawatts (GW) of electricity, enough to power 5m homes, into the national grid at prices well below current levels.
Welcome to the beginning of the end of the fossil fuel era. Across the world, solar and wind now represent the cheapest source of new electricity generation – and prices are tumbling. Electric vehicle (EV) batteries are driving oil towards obsolescence. Stripped of government subsidies and corporate lobbying carbon-based fuels are a busted flush. The future of energy is green – and the future can’t come soon enough to tackle the climate crisis.
Continue reading...Oregon legislature passes ambitious clean energy bill that sets 100% goal
Appeal to identify 'La Botaniste' who slipped from history
Strawberry fields forever? New variety tastes great … and grows all summer
Experts say they have found the ultimate version of the fruit. It’s called Ace, but now we just need enough foreign pickers
It would be easy to dismiss it as a marketing gimmick. A strawberry called Ace, announced on the eve of Wimbledon – surely, you cannot be serious? But the academics and strawberry breeders of the East Malling research institute are not given to cheap slogans. Malling Ace is a super strawberry that is creating more excitement in the world of horticulture than even the possibility of another Andy Murray title.
“The Ace name sort of indicates what we felt about it – it really, really does excel,” said Adam Whitehouse, who led the Malling Ace project. “It’s a new variety that has been fast-tracked through our system because it really did stand out and it caused a lot of excitement at such an early stage.”
Continue reading...UK’s climate pledges lead the world, but its policy falls badly short
UK government has made historic climate promises in the past year, for which it deserves credit. But it has been too slow to follow these with delivery.
The post UK’s climate pledges lead the world, but its policy falls badly short appeared first on RenewEconomy.
12 arrested in raids on Extinction Rebellion sites in London
Police seize equipment from three premises before what officers expect will be busy weekend of protests
Police in London have raided a warehouse used by Extinction Rebellion, as well as an arts centre that was exhibiting some of the structures used in the demonstrations that blockaded newspaper printing plants last year.
The Met is under increased scrutiny as the group plans further protests against the owners of the UK’s press outlets this weekend, alongside supporters of the Black Lives Matter campaign against racial injustice.
Continue reading...Grasshopper bred in captivity returns to East Anglia marshes
Citizen zookeepers release endangered large marsh grasshopper in former strongholds
Britain’s largest grasshopper is being bred in captivity by citizen zookeepers and returned to marshes across East Anglia in a move to revive the endangered species.
The large marsh grasshopper, an elusive green insect that can appear in a striking pink-and-yellow form, is too isolated in fragments of wetland to hop back to its former strongholds.
Continue reading...Key govt advisor says cement, aluminium to be brought into China ETS in 2022
CP Daily: Friday June 25, 2021
Speculators’ CCA length sees more gradual rises as prices hit new peak
Coalition fails to meet endangered species targets to stem decline of birds, mammals and plants
Ecology experts say failure to hit five-year goals concerning although feral cat progress promising
A Coalition government strategy to save Australia’s endangered wildlife has failed to meet targets to stem the decline of many birds, mammals and plants.
The final-year report of the five-year threatened species strategy, which was introduced under the former environment minister Greg Hunt, has found five out of the strategy’s 13 targets were met, three were partially met and five were not met.
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