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CP Daily: Friday December 18, 2020
Attenborough on Biden and forces of nature
MEPs mull phaseout of free carbon allowances under planned border levy
Climate change: Law used as stick to beat government
Cheap units from emerging nations dominate voluntary offset supply, survey shows
Director/Vice President of Sales, Bluesource – US
WCI traders slice CCA length ahead of the December expiry
WCI Feb. 2020 auction volume shrinks on smaller consignment
Canada releases draft Clean Fuel Standard regulations after narrowing scope
Climate change: 2021 will be cooler but still in top six warmest
The week in wildlife – in pictures
The best of the week’s wildlife pictures from around the world, including devil-eyed frogs, bats and pangolins
Continue reading...'Zero return': government savaged over taxpayer grants to open up new gas basin in Australia
Coalition funding for gas exploration in Northern Territory labelled a costly plan ‘for a climate catastrophe’
The Morrison government has been accused of embarking on an “expensive plan for a climate catastrophe” after it announced it would pay the gas industry up to $50m to speed up exploration in the Northern Territory.
The commitment, revealed on Thursday, also prompted warnings that taxpayers’ money could flow offshore to companies linked to tax havens and a Russian oligarch.
Continue reading...Newcastle councillors reject plans for opencast coal mine
Friends of the Earth calls for end to such excavation in England after unanimous decision on Dewley Hill site
A decision by planners to block a new opencast coal mine in north-east England should “bring down the curtain” on such sites, Friends of the Earth have said.
After a three-hour hearing on Friday, Newcastle city council’s planning committee unanimously rejected Banks Mining’s application to extract 800,000 tonnes of coal from a site at Dewley Hill near Throckley.
Continue reading...EU Market: EUAs retreat further from record high despite supply shortage
Wood burners triple harmful indoor air pollution, study finds
Exclusive: Burners should be sold with health warnings, say scientists who found tiny particles flooding into rooms
Wood burners triple the level of harmful pollution particles inside homes and should be sold with a health warning, says scientists, who also advise that they should not be used around elderly people or children.
The tiny particles flood into the room when the burner doors are opened for refuelling, a study found. Furthermore, people who load in wood twice or more in an evening are exposed to pollution spikes two to four times higher than those who refuel once or not at all.
Continue reading...OneWeb satellite company launches into new era
Christmas star: Planets set to align in the night sky
CN Markets: Pilot market data for week ending Dec. 18, 2020
Tianjin releases 2020 allocation plan for ETS
UK wildlife hospitals report ‘busiest year ever’ as lockdown turns focus to nature
Pandemic cuts funding and volunteer numbers but rising awareness means more people are rescuing injured animals
Wildlife hospitals across the UK are reporting their busiest year ever, with hedgehogs, pigeons, bats and birds of prey among a growing number of animals brought into centres for treatment.
The rise in admissions is part of a wider trend of increasing awareness of habitat loss and the threats to the natural world, but experts also point to the Covid-19 lockdown as a significant factor in this year’s increase. The number of people venturing out to nature spots has surged during the pandemic, with almost half of the population spending more time outside than before coronavirus. A third of people reported noticing nature and wildlife more.
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