Feed aggregator
Energy Insiders Podcast: Australia’s first offshore wind farm
Eric Coldham from Star of the South discusses the massive 2GW offshore wind project in Victoria that could be up and running in 2028. Plus: Te gas bauble bursts.
The post Energy Insiders Podcast: Australia’s first offshore wind farm appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Just 3% of world’s ecosystems remain intact, study suggests
Pristine areas in the Amazon and Siberia may expand with animal reintroductions, scientists say
Just 3% of the world’s land remains ecologically intact with healthy populations of all its original animals and undisturbed habitat, a study suggests.
These fragments of wilderness undamaged by human activities are mainly in parts of the Amazon and Congo tropical forests, east Siberian and northern Canadian forests and tundra, and the Sahara. Invasive alien species including cats, foxes, rabbits, goats and camels have had a major impact on native species in Australia, with the study finding no intact areas left.
Continue reading...Oil firm CEOs’ pay is an incentive to resist climate action, study finds
Lucrative pay and share options linked to continued extraction of fossil fuels by ExxonMobil, Chevron, Shell and BP
Lucrative pay and share options have created an incentive for oil company executives to resist climate action, according to a study that casts doubt on recent net-zero commitments by BP and Shell.
Compensation packages for CEOs, often in excess of $10m (£7.2m), are linked to continued extraction of fossil fuels, exploration of new fields and the promotion of strong market demand through advertising, lobbying and government subsidies, the report says.
Continue reading...Kidston pumped hydro construction to start this month after Genex locks in finance
Construction of Australia's first pumped hydro project in several decades to begin after Genex locks in final contracts and finance.
The post Kidston pumped hydro construction to start this month after Genex locks in finance appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Solar Insiders Podcast: The new controls on solar, EVs and air-con
As rooftop solar installations set new records, new protocols are governing what and when is being generated and consumed in the home.
The post Solar Insiders Podcast: The new controls on solar, EVs and air-con appeared first on RenewEconomy.
OECD says Australia is 2nd dirtiest economy per capita, tells it to clean up
The OECD's criticism of Australia's climate record comes two months before former finance minister Matthias Cormann takes over as secretary-general.
The post OECD says Australia is 2nd dirtiest economy per capita, tells it to clean up appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Tilt seeks better offer than $2.75bn renewables play backed by AGL
Trading halted in Tilt Renewables as company flags potential higher bid than the agreed $2.75 billion offer from a consortium led by AGL.
The post Tilt seeks better offer than $2.75bn renewables play backed by AGL appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Failure is not an option. Australia must radically scale up its climate targets now | Will Steffen for the Conversation
To contribute fairly to keeping warming well below 2C, we have to cut emissions by 75% this decade – a daunting but achievable task
In May 2011, almost precisely a decade ago, the government-appointed Climate Commission released its inaugural report. Titled The Critical Decade, the report’s final section warned that to keep global temperature rises to 2C this century, “the decade between now and 2020 is critical”.
As the report noted, if greenhouse gas emissions peaked around 2011, the world’s emissions-reduction trajectory would have been easily manageable: net zero by around 2060, and a maximum emissions reduction rate of 3.7% each year. Delaying the emissions peak by only a decade would require a trebling of this task – a maximum 9% reduction each year.
Continue reading...Solar could deliver 76 per cent of global energy needs, new study says
New study says solar will be dominant source of energy by 2050, accounting for three quarters of energy needs as both heat and transport sectors go electric.
The post Solar could deliver 76 per cent of global energy needs, new study says appeared first on RenewEconomy.
What would a Morrison/Taylor net zero target look like?
Could Scott Morrison set a net zero by 2050 target without changing Australia's current go-slow on climate policy? Definitely, yes.
The post What would a Morrison/Taylor net zero target look like? appeared first on RenewEconomy.
CP Daily: Wednesday April 14, 2021
China carbon market faces surplus of 1.56 bln allowances for 2019-20, analysts find
Canadian ETF provider seeks approval for carbon neutral North American blue chip index funds
Shell, C-Quest ink deal to generate 60 mln VERs from African cookstoves
California mints 260k new offsets with DEBs-eligible ODS projects netting the bulk
'Failure is not an option': after a lost decade on climate action, the 2020s offer one last chance
Sydney's disastrous flood wasn't unprecedented, and we can expect more major floods in just 10 years
LCFS Market: California credits inch back from recent plunge
Report claiming global temperature rise will top 1.5C by 2030s divides scientists
Climate Council report says most emissions cuts need to occur in the next decade to keep global heating below 2C
A report by the Climate Council claiming that the global average temperature rise will likely breach 1.5C by the 2030s has caused division in the scientific community.
The report, published on Thursday, follows controversy over similar arguments made in a review by the Australian Academy of Science, which said global aspiration of limiting global heating to 1.5C was now “virtually impossible” to achieve.
Continue reading...WWF Australia creates legal fund to fight projects threatening forests after Black Summer bushfires
Move comes after environment group identified six areas on east coast it says need more protection in wake of fires
WWF Australia is setting up a legal fund for community groups to challenge development decisions in forests they say are under threat from land clearing in the aftermath of the 2019-20 bushfire disaster.
The funds will pay for legal firm the Environmental Defenders Office to represent communities in areas such as the South Coast of New South Wales, where the destruction of habitat that could provide refuge to threatened wildlife has been fiercely contested since the Black Summer fires.
Continue reading...