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CleanCo names new CEO to lead renewables “growth phase”
Queensland’s publicly owned CleanCo appoints former US utility boss as new CEO.
The post CleanCo names new CEO to lead renewables “growth phase” appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Australia is woefully unprepared for this climate reality of consecutive disasters | Greg Mullins
We lost a critical decade of preparation under the Coalition. As floods hit NSW again, we cannot afford to lose a minute more
Almost unbelievably, communities in New South Wales are once again having to flee the fourth major flooding event in the state in just 18 months.
It’s a bitter pill to swallow, but there’s no avoiding it: this is our new climate reality of consecutive, compounding disasters.
Continue reading...Climate change: 'Sand battery' could solve green energy's big problem
US Supreme Court ruling limits EPA but doesn’t quash it completely, say lawyers
Price cap could return on Tuesday as coal and gas drive prices higher again
Price cap likely to return to Queensland on Tuesday as market operator seeks emergency reserves in country's most coal dependent state.
The post Price cap could return on Tuesday as coal and gas drive prices higher again appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Sun Cable names financial advisors for world’s biggest solar and battery project
Sun Cable names financial advisors to raise more than $30 billion for what will be the world's biggest solar and battery project, and the first of many.
The post Sun Cable names financial advisors for world’s biggest solar and battery project appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Washington state carbon market prices to be substantially lower under linking -analysis
Switzerland schedules aviation permit auction for September
Deputy Director, UK Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) Delivery and Operations, BEIS – Birmingham/Cardiff/Darlington/Edinburgh/London/Salford
Campaigners in tropical forested nations take aim at illegal logging
Kenya strikes deal with AirCarbon to set up carbon exchange
Ukraine seeks green rebuild even as Russia’s war rages on
Winston Churchill’s ‘magnificently idiotic’ platypus quest – and more strange stories of Australian animals abroad
The colonisation of Australia coincided with a boom in European interest in exotic animals – so kangaroos, dingoes, wombats and more were shipped off, regardless of practicalities
In early 1943, the second world war raged across multiple theatres. Hitler’s army had just suffered a historic defeat at Stalingrad, but U-boats still prowled the Atlantic and Britain’s resources were stretched to the limit. So it must have come as a surprise to Australian prime minister, John Curtin, when a telegram arrived from Winston Churchill requesting six platypuses be sent to Britain forthwith, in a scheme conservationist Gerald Durrell described as “magnificently idiotic”.
Historians have tried to place this episode in a broader context of empire and international geopolitics, but it seems Churchill just really wanted a platypus. He had collected exotic animals throughout his life, including black swans, a white kangaroo, a budgie named Toby who attended ministerial meetings, and a lion named Rota, which he sensibly kept at London Zoo.
Continue reading...Vitol, Nigerian sovereign wealth fund unveil carbon project joint venture
EU lawmaker resolve against taxonomy may fall short -sources
Spain’s BBVA joins bankers’ carbon credit transaction platform
VCM Report: Nature credits extend multi-week slump amid lack of support
Netherlands to expand energy-curb orders to EU ETS-covered firms from 2023
Spain and Portugal suffering driest climate for 1,200 years, research shows
Effects of human-caused global heating are blocking vital winter rains, with severe implications for farming and tourism
Spain and Portugal are suffering their driest climate for at least 1,200 years, according to research, with severe implications for both food production and tourism.
Most rain on the Iberian peninsula falls in winter as wet, low-pressure systems blow in from the Atlantic. But a high-pressure system off the coast, called the Azores high, can block the wet weather fronts.
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