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A £4bn UK 'mini Tesla' choosing to list stock in US is worrying
A vibrant, buzzy stock market for tech companies is very useful if you’re planning a green revolution
Right on cue, here comes a £4bn stock market listing of a young and exciting UK electric vehicle company – a mini Tesla, if you wish. It’s just the thing for ministers to crow about, you might think: evidence that the UK possesses a few fast-growing tech innovators capable of injecting oomph into the government’s loose 10-point sketch for a green revolution.
There’s just one drawback. Arrival, with its head office in London and operations in Oxfordshire, will not be arriving on the London Stock Exchange. It is listing in New York on Nasdaq, via injection into one of those special purpose acquisition companies, or SPACs, that are all the rage on Wall Street this year.
Continue reading...The Guardian view on Johnson's green jobs plan: the right way to start | Editorial
The prime minister has correctly identified the challenge, but his record invites doubt that he can turn his rhetoric into reality
Boris Johnson’s comfort zone is the future. He is weak at managing the day-to-day business of a government and bad at making hard choices quickly. For that reason, he is poorly suited to the role of prime minister during a pandemic, but better at the job of selling a “green industrial revolution” for the recovery phase.
The launch on Wednesday of a 10-point plan for net zero carbon emissions allowed Mr Johnson to indulge his predilection for hyperbole. He wants Britain to be the “world’s number one centre for green technology and finance” and “the Saudi Arabia of wind”. Those are fine aspirations. Regular readers of Mr Johnson’s rhetoric know to check the small print.
Continue reading...Renters in Victoria soon won't have to deal with dodgy heaters and insulation. Now other states must get energy-efficient
TCI jurisdictions evaluating impact of COVID-19, but remain committed to carbon market
SSE plans to triple renewable energy production by 2030
Firm says investment in low-carbon infrastructure will help UK emerge from Covid impact
SSE has set out plans to triple its renewable energy generation by 2030 as it prepares to build the world’s largest offshore windfarm off the north-east coast of England.
The energy firm told investors that it was days away from a final investment decision on the 3.2GW Dogger Bank offshore windfarm, which could generate enough clean electricity to power 4.5m homes by 2026.
Continue reading...The green plan looks good, but the government must live up to its promises | Rebecca Newsom
A huge amount of effort and planning will be required to fulfil Boris Johnson’s 10 pledges to tackle the climate emergency
• Rebecca Newsom is head of politics at Greenpeace UK
After many weeks of speculation, the prime minister has finally announced his “10-point plan” for a green industrial revolution. This is essential because the UK has a massive gap between its current actions to tackle the climate emergency compared with what is needed to meet its legally binding climate commitments. A recent analysis by Green Alliance showed that the UK is on course to reduce its emissions by less than a fifth of what’s required for its next round of climate targets.
Related: Is £12bn enough to get UK on track for net zero carbon emissions?
Continue reading...Covid-19 mink variants discovered in humans in seven countries
Denmark has already launched a nationwide cull of its farmed mink herd after concerns for vaccine efficacy
Seven countries are now reporting mink-related Sars-CoV-2 mutations in humans, according to new scientific analysis.
The mutations are identified as Covid-19 mink variants as they have repeatedly been found in mink and now in humans as well.
Uncertainty around the implications of the discovery of a Covid-19 mink variant in humans led Denmark, the world’s largest mink fur producer, to launch a nationwide cull earlier this month.
The cull was sparked by research from Denmark’s public health body, the Statens Serum Institut (SSI), which showed that a mink variant called C5 was harder for antibodies to neutralise and posed a potential threat to vaccine efficacy.
'Some nibbling may have occurred': sea otter pictured trying to eat a horn shark
- Photographers captured unusual event off California coast
- Sea otter non-profit reports that ‘they prey was not consumed’
A sea otter off the coast of California caused a splash when it was photographed apparently trying to eat a shark – though it appears it did not manage to complete its meal.
Related: Furry engineers: sea otters in California's estuaries surprise scientists
Continue reading...Green targets: Do governments meet them?
COMMENT: Has EU carbon rounded the corner?
PM's climate vision: 10 steps forward, 10 steps back?
EU Market: EUAs soar to two-month high on auction delay news
What does Boris Johnson's Green plan mean for Scotland?
South Georgia whaling: Antarctic art marks a dark past
Switzerland signs second carbon offset deal with Ghana
ARENA backs mini wind turbines to power off-grid communications
Australian designed mini wind turbines set to deliver power to off-grid telecommunications systems, receives ARENA backing.
The post ARENA backs mini wind turbines to power off-grid communications appeared first on RenewEconomy.
How electric cars are charged and how far they go: your questions answered
Laugh if you want, but the 'McPlant' burger is a step to a greener world | Adrienne Matei
McDonald’s sells 75 burgers every second. Its embrace of plant-based meat alternatives could make a real difference
When McDonald’s announced its plan to launch a plant-based burger earlier this month, Twitter users were quick to mock the product’s unimaginative name: the … McPlant.
But no matter what you think of the fast food chain’s marketing department, the McPlant actually represents a meaningful milestone for plant-based protein products. This is a real step toward a greener world. While other chains, such as Burger King and Dunkin’ Donuts, have already launched plant-based meat items, the impact of the planet’s most popular fast food chain – which sells a dizzying 75 burgers every second – could be decisive in allowing plant-based meat alternatives to catch on in the mainstream.
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