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‘Irreplaceable habitat’: planning bill raises fears for England’s chalk streams

The Guardian - Fri, 2025-05-02 21:00

Environmentalists worry that the post-Brexit legislation will allow the destruction of rare and fragile ecosystems

Walk along the gin-clear River Itchen in Hampshire and you might see otters, salmon, kingfishers and clouds of mayflies, all supported by the unique ecosystem of the chalk stream.

The UK has no tropical rainforests or tigers; its wildlife is arguably more modest in appearance. But its chalk streams are some of the rarest habitats in the world – there are only 200, and England boasts 85% of them. If you look properly, they are as biodiverse and beautiful as any rainforest.

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Study backs Australian state plans for green hydrogen shipments to Germany

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-05-02 20:34
The West Australian government said Friday a study it had undertaken with two European partners added more evidential heft to its long running plans to turn a port several hundred kilometres north of capital Perth into a green hydrogen and ammonia export super hub.
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Biodiversity credits need higher prices to support global targets, study finds

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-05-02 20:19
Biodiversity credits could contribute to achieving global biodiversity targets, provided that prices are increased through improved credit accounting methods, according to a study released this week.
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Microsoft study finds greener data centre cooling can cut emissions by up to 21%

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-05-02 19:50
Switching from traditional air cooling to liquid-based systems can slash carbon emissions by as much as 21% across a data centre’s lifecycle, a study by tech giant Microsoft has found.
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Asian carrier to add the cost of carbon to flight prices to pay for CORSIA-eligible credits, tech capital spend

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-05-02 19:45
A major Asian airline is set to begin adding carbon pricing to flights this year to meet the cost of sourcing necessary offset credits to meet its mandated decarbonisation goals.
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First verified carbon removals issued for wastewater alkalinity enhancement

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-05-02 19:30
Verified carbon removal credits from wastewater alkalinity enhancement (WAE) have been issued this week by a removals registry, marking the first delivery under the developer's multi-million dollar agreement with a removals buyer club.
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Glut of early fruit and veg hits UK as climate change closes ‘hungry gap’

The Guardian - Fri, 2025-05-02 19:20

Warm weather means strawberries, aubergines and tomatoes have come weeks earlier than expected

A glut of early strawberries, aubergines and tomatoes has hit Britain with the dry, warm weather eliminating the usual “hungry gap”, growers say.

It has been a sunny, very dry spring, with the warmest start to May on record and temperatures predicted to reach up to 30C at the earliest point on record, forecasters have said.

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BRIEFING: Who picks up the EU ETS bill? CO2 utilisation supply chain confronted with key carbon accounting issue

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-05-02 19:11
When CO2 is captured and put back in the industrial value chain – whether to grow tomatoes or to burn as a fuel – the awkward question inevitably comes up: who should pick up the bill for the related CO2 under the EU’s Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS)?
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Weather tracker: State of emergency as high winds and floods hit New Zealand

The Guardian - Fri, 2025-05-02 18:29

Met Service issues red warning amid deepening low pressure as Europe sees above average temperatures

Strong winds and flooding spread across New Zealand last week, with a state of emergency declared in Christchurch, as the country was battered by a destructive area of low pressure this week. A red warning, the highest warning level, was issued by the MetService (the national meteorological service). The area of low pressure quickly deepened in the Tasman Sea off the west coast of New Zealand and then travelled eastwards across the country, with the centre of the low pressure moving across the northern island and creating very strong winds, particularly through the Cook Strait, the body of water that separates the two islands. This was because the wind direction was a south-easterly to southerly which caused the winds to strengthen as they were funnelled between the island.

The capital of New Zealand, Wellington, recorded some of the strongest winds, with gusts exceeding 90mph. Flooding was also an issue, especially for the southern island as the winds brought in moist air from the sea, which rapidly rose over the Southern Alps mountain range producing heavy rain. More than 100mm of rain fell in under 12 hours across some eastern areas and the local government called a state of emergency in Christchurch, the largest city in the southern island, as rivers burst their banks and roads closed. Across mountainous areas snow warnings were also issued, with some parts seeing over 50cm of snow in just 24 hours. Large swell was produced by the area of low pressure, with waves of almost 6 metres through the Cook strait.

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I went to an ancient rainforest with 90 artists and lived! Despite my endless cynicism I had a lovely time | First Dog on the Moon

The Guardian - Fri, 2025-05-02 16:46

I saw the world’s tallest moss and camped beneath a 500-year-old myrtle tree

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NZ govt confirms enforcement date of farm-to-forestry conversion restrictions

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2025-05-02 16:41
The New Zealand government has confirmed its farm-to-forestry conversion ban will take effect as of December last year, as an agriculture lobby group has attempted to narrow exemptions to the restrictions.
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Week in wildlife: a leopard cat, a vulture puppet and a hare playing hide and seek

The Guardian - Fri, 2025-05-02 16:00

The best of this week’s wildlife photographs from around the world

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‘A win-win for farmers’: how flooding fields in north-west England could boost crops

The Guardian - Fri, 2025-05-02 15:00

A ‘wetter farming’ project explores rehydrating peatland to help grow crops in boggier conditions while cutting CO2 emissions

“I really don’t like the word ‘paludiculture’ – most people have no idea what it means,” Sarah Johnson says. “I prefer the term ‘wetter farming’.”

The word might be baffling, but the concept is simple: paludiculture is the use of wet peatlands for agriculture, a practice that goes back centuries in the UK, including growing reeds for thatching roofs.

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A climate election? The Coalition wants to take Australia backwards, while Labor is standing still | Clear Air

The Guardian - Fri, 2025-05-02 14:12

Depending on where things end up after Saturday, the biggest climate push may come from the crossbench

If further confirmation was needed that the Peter Dutton-led Coalition would take Australia aggressively backwards on dealing with the climate crisis, his final election costings released on Thursday tell the story in black and white.

The Liberal and National parties plan to gut programs designed to cut emissions and help create green industries to give the country an industrial future as demand for fossil fuels falls. They also plan to ignore advice that Australian nature is in poor and deteriorating health and strip back already limited funding for environment programs.

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