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Sinopec, China Resources announce first block trade in China ETS

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2021-07-21 20:57
Oil and gas firm Sinopec on Wednesday bought 100,000 CO2 permits from industrial conglomerate China Resources Holdings in the first off-screen block trade since China's national emissions trading market launched last week.
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Catastrophic floods could hit Europe far more often, study finds

The Guardian - Wed, 2021-07-21 20:36

Slow-moving storms such as recent deluge in Germany could become 14 times more frequent by 2100

Catastrophic floods such as those that struck Europe recently could become much more frequent as a result of global heating, researchers say.

High-resolution computer models suggest that slow-moving storms could become 14 times more common over land by the end of the century in a worst-case scenario. The slower a storm moves, the more rain it dumps on a small area and the greater the risk of serious flooding.

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Japan pitches massive increase in renewables use at the cost of LNG, coal

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2021-07-21 17:22
Japan will double the share of renewables in its energy mix by 2030 and make large cuts in LNG and coal consumption, according to a proposal released by the nation’s industry ministry Wednesday.
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'Die of cold or die of stress?': Social housing is frequently colder than global health guidelines

The Conversation - Wed, 2021-07-21 16:05
One quarter of monitored social housing properties recorded winter temperatures below World Health Organisation standards for more than 80% of winter, new research shows. Daniel Daly, Research Fellow at the Sustainable Buildings Research Centre, University of Wollongong Federico Tartarini, Associate research fellow, University of Wollongong Gordon Waitt, Professor of Geography, University of Wollongong Michael Tibbs, Energy Efficiency Researcher, University of Wollongong Paul Cooper, Senior Professor, Sustainable Buildings Research Centre (SBRC), University of Wollongong Theresa Harada, Research Fellow at Australian Centre for Culture, Environment, Society and Space, University of Wollongong Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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NSW kills “zombie” gas licences, but brings Narrabri back from the dead

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2021-07-21 15:53

Canva - Burning oil and gas from flare structure - optimisedNSW tries to please all – and fails – with plan to cancel out unused gas exploration licences while re-approving those in areas set to see an explosion of new gas projects.

The post NSW kills “zombie” gas licences, but brings Narrabri back from the dead appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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'Squiggly wiggly' fossils rise from a Jurassic sea

BBC - Wed, 2021-07-21 15:12
Scientists are excavating one of the most important Jurassic sites ever discovered in the UK.
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How floating wind microgrids are powering oil and gas rigs

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2021-07-21 15:09

Odfjell Oceanwind is renting out its WindGrid technology – mobile offshore wind units of 11MW each that serve microgrids powering oil and gas rigs.

The post How floating wind microgrids are powering oil and gas rigs appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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Restoring our lives to normality after Covid is not the solution, it’s the problem | Jeff Sparrow

The Guardian - Wed, 2021-07-21 15:05

As Australians have been preoccupied by coronavirus, a wider environmental calamity has unfurled. The emergency isn’t over, it’s only just beginning

Build back better. In the early days of Covid-19, that slogan rang out everywhere: a pledge to harness disruption for positive change.

For a time, everything felt possible. There are no atheists in foxholes and, we discovered, no free marketeers in a pandemic, as even the most conservative governments pledged to spend on a scale previously unimaginable.

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Men cause more climate emissions than women, study finds

The Guardian - Wed, 2021-07-21 15:00

Both spend similar amounts of money but men use cars much more, Swedish analysis shows

Men’s spending on goods causes 16% more climate-heating emissions than women’s, despite the sum of money being very similar, a study has found.

The biggest difference was men’s spending on petrol and diesel for their cars. The gender differences in emissions have been little studied, the researchers said, and should be recognised in action to beat the climate crisis.

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Britain’s rivers are suffocating to death | George Monbiot

The Guardian - Wed, 2021-07-21 15:00

Water that should be crystal clear has become a green-brown slop of microscopic algae because of industrial farm waste

There’s more below the surface than we thought – something even worse than the water companies’ disgusting habit of filling our rivers with raw sewage. After a deep dive into the data, the team that made Rivercide last week discovered that while sewage now dominates our perceptions of river pollution, it’s not their major cause of death.

On the border between Wales and England, we found a great river dying before our eyes. The Wye is covered by every possible conservation law, but in just a few years it has spiralled towards complete ecological collapse. The vast beds of water crowfoot, the long fluttering weed whose white and yellow flowers once bedecked the surface of the river, and which – like mangroves around tropical seas – provide the nurseries in which young fish and other animals grow and adults hide and breed, have almost vanished in recent years. Our own mapping suggests a loss of between 90% and 97%.

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WA joins Zero Carbon Certification Scheme for hydrogen

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2021-07-21 14:43

from Unsplash western Australia carbon for conservation abatement - optimisedThe McGowan Government has become a founding member of the Smart Energy Council's Zero Carbon Certification Scheme to boost the State's fledgling renewable hydrogen industry.

The post WA joins Zero Carbon Certification Scheme for hydrogen appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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Australia lifted fossil fuel subsidies more than any G20 nation, says BNEF

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2021-07-21 14:09

scott morrison SnowyAustralia had biggest increase in fossil fuel support of any G20 nation over last five years, at nearly $300 per person in 2019.

The post Australia lifted fossil fuel subsidies more than any G20 nation, says BNEF appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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Plans unveiled for biggest battery storage system in Victoria

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2021-07-21 11:00

A two-hour battery storage systems on the Mornington Peninsula will be the biggest in the state if built on schedule by the end of 2022.

The post Plans unveiled for biggest battery storage system in Victoria appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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CP Daily: Tuesday July 20, 2021

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2021-07-21 10:18
Presenting CP Daily, Carbon Pulse’s free newsletter. It’s a daily summary of our news plus bite-sized updates from around the world. Subscribe here TOP STORY Green hydrogen could get free allocation in EU carbon market reform -official The European Commission is considering broadening the scope of product benchmarks under the EU’s carbon market rules for industry […]
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Climate Action Reserve proposes forecast carbon credit methodology for forest fuel treatments

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2021-07-21 07:30
Offset registry Climate Action Reserve (CAR) on Monday announced it is developing an ex-ante crediting methodology for fuel treatments, including prescribed burns, in order to reduce the severity of wildfires in the western US.
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Disheartened by existing voluntary carbon offerings, market veterans launch ‘fair and transparent’ offset service

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2021-07-21 06:55
Amid a global voluntary carbon market it says is hamstrung by profiteering, criminal activity, and a lack of regulation, a team of market veterans has launched a new carbon offset firm with the goal of providing for its customers a 'genuine, fair, and transparent' path to net zero.
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If you see something, say something: why scientists need your help to spot blue whales off Australia’s east coast

The Conversation - Wed, 2021-07-21 06:08
There have been just six verified sightings of the pygmy blue whale off Sydney in 18 years. Rare sightings like these are crucial, because the giants are considered 'data deficient'. Vanessa Pirotta, Wildlife scientist, Macquarie University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Gas generation slumps in first half of 2021, as wind and solar continue to shine

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2021-07-21 06:00

AGL's Torrens Island power station near Adelaide.Gas generation declined again in first half of 2021, including in NSW where renewables now supply 17 times more electricity.

The post Gas generation slumps in first half of 2021, as wind and solar continue to shine appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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Green hydrogen could get free allocation in EU carbon market reform -official

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2021-07-21 04:36
The European Commission is considering broadening the scope of product benchmarks under the EU’s carbon market rules for industry to include clean production methods - a measure that could grant free allowances for green hydrogen or clean steel production, a senior EU official said.
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Coalition believes it has numbers to stop Great Barrier Reef being listed as ‘in danger’

The Guardian - Wed, 2021-07-21 03:30

Exclusive: Diplomatic email suggests whirlwind lobbying trip by Sussan Ley has won over at least nine of 21 members on World Heritage Committee

Australia’s global lobbying offensive to keep the Great Barrier Reef off the world heritage “in danger” list has secured support from at least nine of the 21-member committee that will make the decision, according to a diplomatic email seen by Guardian Australia.

Australia’s Paris-based ambassador to Unesco, Megan Anderson, said in the email she believed the government had won enough support to delay the decision on the “in danger” listing until at least 2023.

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