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New map of ancient trees an opportunity for conservation
Australia is becoming a global hotbed for climate change lawsuits
New research shows Australia ranks as one of the most litigious on climate change, as the number of lawsuits launched globally continues to surge.
The post Australia is becoming a global hotbed for climate change lawsuits appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Court denies Constellation, green groups’ intervention in PA RGGI injunction
Hear me out – we could use the varroa mite to wipe out feral honey bees, and help Australia's environment
Australia can help ensure the biggest mine in PNG's history won't leave a toxic legacy
Miner Anglo American invests in African waste firm Sanergy, eyeing carbon credits
ANALYSIS: European electricity reform could boost affordability, avoid carbon costs
Indigo Ag to offer carbon credits at $40/t through new soil protocol
Coal may exit Australia’s grid a lot quicker than most people think
AEMO roadmap still assumes all brown coal generation gone by 2032, but future roadmaps may point to black coal generators closing around the same time.
The post Coal may exit Australia’s grid a lot quicker than most people think appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Wind and solar facing 20 per cent curtailment in high renewables grid
Wind and solar face curtailment rates of up to 20 per cent in a high renewables grid, because it may no longer be economic to store excess power.
The post Wind and solar facing 20 per cent curtailment in high renewables grid appeared first on RenewEconomy.
“Rapid and irreversible:” AEMO says energy crisis is accelerating switch to renewables
AEMO says the energy chaos is likely to accelerate the switch to renewables, but the scale of the transition is immense, and the need to act is urgent.
The post “Rapid and irreversible:” AEMO says energy crisis is accelerating switch to renewables appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Research lays out potential futures of Australia’s Safeguard Mechanism
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Children aren’t the future: where have all the young climate activists gone? | Eleanor Salter
To avoid ‘youth-washing’ politicians and corporations, young people now are more likely to coalesce around radical policies or campaigns
Between 2016 and 2020, children were the vital force at the centre of the climate movement. Youth strikers organised record-breaking mass mobilisations and protests between geography and double maths. In the US, young people from the Sunrise Movement occupied Nancy Pelosi’s office demanding climate action. Youth activists got extraordinary media attention, invitations to speak at climate summits, and to address the UN. Teenagers such as Vanessa Nakate and Greta Thunberg became household names; both of them appeared on the cover of Time magazine, the latter as person of the year in 2019.
This coincided with a moment in climate politics that was awash with ideas around children, the future, and intergenerational justice. Extinction Rebellion activists used the next generation as a proxy for the future: climate action in the present was a moral necessity for our children and grandchildren. Politicians also adopted this framing. At the same time, young people were taking matters into their own hands. For a time, it seemed that a climate movement was emerging in which children acted simultaneously as the spark, inspiration and energy. This wave seemed unstoppable.
Eleanor Salter writes about climate, culture and politics
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