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G7 Countries agree to end coal financing before end of 2021

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2021-05-24 07:50

G7 efforts to stamp out coal accelerate ahead of a major June meeting - another source of pressure for Australia's reticent leadership.

The post G7 Countries agree to end coal financing before end of 2021 appeared first on RenewEconomy.

Categories: Around The Web

Stop removing your solar panels early, please. It's creating a huge waste problem for Australia

The Conversation - Mon, 2021-05-24 06:14
New research found lots of incentives to chuck out working solar panels and replace them with new ones. This may be creating huge amounts of unnecessary waste. Deepika Mathur, Research Fellow, Northern Institute, Charles Darwin University Imran Muhammad, Associate Professor of Urban and Regional Planning, Massey University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Scott Morrison’s claim Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions are falling does ‘not stack up’

The Guardian - Mon, 2021-05-24 03:30

Fossil fuel and other emissions not linked to the land and agriculture increased by 7% over the past 15 years, analysis finds

Despite official accounts showing Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions are falling, its contribution to the climate crisis has increased over the past 15 years once areas beyond the federal government’s control – the drought and emissions from land and forests – are excluded.

Scott Morrison told a climate leaders summit hosted by the US president, Joe Biden, last month that Australia had cut its emissions by 19% since 2005. The prime minister said it was “more than most other similar economies” had done and the country was “on the pathway to net zero”.

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The Guardian view on recycling plastics: keep it in the UK | Editorial

The Guardian - Mon, 2021-05-24 03:30

Turkey is the latest country to reject the role of world’s dustbin. With their environment bill, ministers have a chance to end this vandalism

The international plastics recycling market is broken. It is doubtful whether it ever worked. For most of the last decade, China was the world’s largest importer of recyclable materials, some of which were used in manufacturing. But it banned these imports as part of a “beautiful China” policy aimed at improving the environment.

Malaysia was the next country to fight back against being treated as the “dumping ground of the world” – as its environment minister, Yeo Bee Yin, put it in 2019. More than 200 facilities were closed, and thousands of tonnes of waste returned, amid growing evidence of the involvement of organised crime in the global waste business. Now Turkey has rejected the role of international rubbish bin: after a Greenpeace investigation found plastics dumped in rivers, on beaches and in illegal waste mountains, it announced that most plastic waste imports (which included 209,642 tonnes from the UK in 2020) will be banned in six weeks’ time.

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Ocean Rebellion co-founder alleges police tried to intimidate him

The Guardian - Mon, 2021-05-24 01:21

Rob Higgs alleges plainclothes officers turned up unannounced at his premises

The co-founder of the eco activist group Ocean Rebellion has filed a complaint to police alleging that officers have tried to intimidate him before next month’s G7 summit in Cornwall.

Rob Higgs, an artist and campaigner, has alleged that at least a dozen plainclothes officers turned up unannounced at his Cornish studios, his home and his boat.

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Prince Charles: small-scale family farms must be at heart of sustainable future

The Guardian - Mon, 2021-05-24 01:00

Exclusive: ‘Rapid transition to regenerative farming’ needed, says prince, as data reveals 100,000 UK farms lost since 1990

The Prince of Wales has called for small family farmers in the UK and across the world to come together in a cooperative movement using sustainable farming methods, and for their plight to be at the centre of environmental action.

Small farmers, in the UK and EU, are facing their biggest upheavals in more than a generation, with the loss of farm subsidies and new post-Brexit trade deals in the UK, and sweeping reforms to the EU’s common agricultural policy to be announced this week in Brussels.

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Small farms have a huge role to play in our sustainable future | Charles, Prince of Wales

The Guardian - Mon, 2021-05-24 01:00

Small-scale agriculture needs the tools and confidence to deal with the rapid changes society has to make

  • Charles, Prince of Wales is the heir apparent to the British throne

Family farmers form the backbone of our rural communities. Their hard work puts high-quality food on our tables, which is produced to some of the highest standards in the world, and their careful stewardship knits together the environmental and social fabric of our beautiful and iconic landscapes. They are a remarkable breed; adaptable, resilient and incredibly hardworking. And they are no stranger to innovation through adversity. Their very diversity brings great strengths to our environment, to our rural communities and to disease management. All this must be taken into account as agriculture starts this massive transition, especially as more than 110,000 smaller family farms have already been lost since 1990.

To me, it is essential the contribution of the small-scale family farmer is properly recognised – they must be a key part in any fair, inclusive, equitable and just transition to a sustainable future. To do this, we must ensure that Britain’s family farmers have the tools and the confidence to meet the rapid transition to regenerative farming systems that our planet demands.

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Jersey becomes ‘ark’ for endangered lizards rescued from oil spill

The Guardian - Sun, 2021-05-23 15:45

Skinks and geckos saved from disaster on Mauritian islets have successfully bred in zoo

Endangered reptiles rescued from Mauritian islands that were contaminated by a devastating oil spill have bred successfully in captivity for the first time, raising hopes that populations can be restored to the wild.

Bojer’s skink – a small, shiny reptile only found on tiny islets off Mauritius – has been bred by Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust scientists at Jersey zoo. Two other imperilled species, the lesser night gecko and Bouton’s skink, have also been brought to the zoo, with the geckos breeding successfully as well.

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How schools are turning the tide on nature deprivation

BBC - Sun, 2021-05-23 09:45
'Miss? What's a duck?' The question that convinced one school to adopt nature-friendly learning.
Categories: Around The Web

Virgin Galactic rocket plane flies to edge of space

BBC - Sun, 2021-05-23 02:54
Sir Richard Branson's spaceplane completes the first of three key test flights above New Mexico.
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'Science should be at the centre of all policy making'

BBC - Sat, 2021-05-22 22:28
Coronavirus has shown how good science should be embedded in all big decisions, writes Prof Ruth Morgan.
Categories: Around The Web

China's Zhurong rover takes first drive on Mars

BBC - Sat, 2021-05-22 22:21
China is now the second country after the US to operate a rover on the Red Planet.
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Animal rights activists blockade McDonald's distribution centres across UK – video

The Guardian - Sat, 2021-05-22 22:12

Animal rights protesters have set up blockades at four McDonald’s distribution centres across Britain, which they say will affect about 1,300 restaurants. Activists from Animal Rebellion used trucks and bamboo structures to blockade distribution sites at Hemel Hempstead, Basingstoke, Coventry and Heywood from about 4.30am on Saturday, the group said. The group wants McDonald’s to commit to becoming fully plant-based by 2025

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Last chance: memento mori images created with animal skulls

The Guardian - Sat, 2021-05-22 16:29

In the Tradition: Memento Exstingui, a project by the photographer Michele Turriani, draws attention to the plight of endangered animals that appear on the IUCN red list. It is inspired by the ‘memento mori’ and ‘vanitas’ art genres, which remind us of the transience of life and the inevitability of death. The skulls come from the Powell-Cotton Museum in Kent

  • Photographs by Michele Turriani
  • Words by Stephen Moss
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Categories: Around The Web

UK animal rights group blockades four McDonald’s depots

The Guardian - Sat, 2021-05-22 16:11

Activists plan 24-hour protest in attempt to get company to turn fully plant-based by 2025

Animal rights protesters have set up blockades at four McDonald’s distribution centres across Britain, which they say will affect about 1,300 restaurants.

Activists from Animal Rebellion used trucks and bamboo structures to blockade distribution sites at Hemel Hempstead, Basingstoke, Coventry and Heywood in Greater Manchester from about 4.30am on Saturday, the group said.

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Categories: Around The Web

CP Daily: Friday May 21, 2021

Carbon Pulse - Sat, 2021-05-22 10:12
A daily summary of our news plus bite-sized updates from around the world.
Categories: Around The Web

Covid-19: Sewage testing ramped up in England

BBC - Sat, 2021-05-22 09:42
Programme to test wastewater for the virus that causes Covid now covers two-thirds of England's population.
Categories: Around The Web

Financial firms’ CCA position nears all-time high as allowances prices soar before Q2 auction

Carbon Pulse - Sat, 2021-05-22 06:52
Speculators’ California Carbon Allowance (CCA) length surged to near record levels over the past week as prices jumped on the secondary market, while emitters cut their carbon permit holdings just before the Q2 WCI sale, according to US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) data published Friday.
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PREVIEW: EU summit set to highlight member state divisions over non-ETS sectors

Carbon Pulse - Sat, 2021-05-22 06:42
The 27-nation EU’s leaders will meet next week to discuss national emissions reduction targets for sectors not covered by the bloc’s carbon market, with the closed-door debate set to highlight divisions among member states ahead of major policy proposals coming in July.
Categories: Around The Web

Euro Markets: EUA rebound runs out of fuel as UKAs buck trend to hit new record

Carbon Pulse - Sat, 2021-05-22 05:59
EU carbon prices on Friday failed to extend their rebound from Wednesday’s two-week low, with sellers re-emerging as UKA prices went in the opposite direction to hit a new record high.
Categories: Around The Web

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