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Lack of smallholder support a risk for sustainable palm oil -report
EU demand for EVs could drive loss of 118k ha of forests by 2050, study warns
Climeworks secures carbon removal deal with Japanese shipping major
Japanese trading house joins alliance to leverage transition credits mechanism
Investor caution grows in carbon markets, but institutions push on amid political risk
How maximum security prison inmates and officers worked together to create a farm behind bars
Will the Coalition ditch its nuclear power policy?
The post Will the Coalition ditch its nuclear power policy? appeared first on RenewEconomy.
NEM Review: Networks push for fewer fences and more access to batteries and generation
The post NEM Review: Networks push for fewer fences and more access to batteries and generation appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Taking down wind turbines can be an explosive issue, but Australia is helping to spearhead solutions
The post Taking down wind turbines can be an explosive issue, but Australia is helping to spearhead solutions appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Kane Thornton calls time on 10 years of “intense leadership” as Clean Energy Council chief
The post Kane Thornton calls time on 10 years of “intense leadership” as Clean Energy Council chief appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Oil and gas industry ignoring easy methane abatement, finds IEA
Abandoned infrastructure one of the biggest polluters in the world – report
Emissions from abandoned coalmines, oil and gas wells globally are larger than any single country except China, the US and Russia
Abandoned coalmines and oil and gas wells are now one of the biggest sources of the powerful greenhouse gas methane, new data shows, and little effort is being made to clean them up.
The methane emissions from abandoned fossil fuel infrastructure now exceed those from Iran, and if considered as a country would be the fourth biggest source in the world, behind China, the US and Russia.
Continue reading...UK government admits almost no evidence nature protections block development
Whitehall analysis provides no data or research to support the government argument that environmental legislation holds up building
There is very little evidence that protections for nature are a blocker to development, the government has admitted in its own impact assessment of the controversial new planning and infrastructure bill.
The analysis by Whitehall officials provides no data or research to back up the government’s central argument that it is environmental legislation that holds up building.
Continue reading...