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Bits of good climate related news among the bad...

'According to this official, India’s emissions intensity has sharply decreased as a result of policies that target emissions in the industrial, automotive, and energy sectors and promote non-fossil production'.

 
EU legislators agreed yesterday on a new directive that will jail the worst polluters for up to 10 years and fine companies up to 5% of their global turnover.

 
I think this belongs here. In the USA mainly, climate lawsuits are being brought against fossil fuel companies and state agencies. Instigated in many cases by youth activist groups, they argue for instance:

Last year delivered wins for the two dozen cases brought by states and municipalities against fossil fuel companies for allegedly deceiving the public about the dangers of global warming.


They've had some success, with more to come hopefully. Seems credible and good for them for taking a stand.
 
We are better off flying on holiday than cruising.
"Various studies by environmental organisations, comparing the carbon footprint of a week-long holiday on a European cruise with taking a flight and staying in a hotel, concluded that such cruises were up eight times as carbon intensive."
 
We are better off flying on holiday than cruising.
"Various studies by environmental organisations, comparing the carbon footprint of a week-long holiday on a European cruise with taking a flight and staying in a hotel, concluded that such cruises were up eight times as carbon intensive."
Not sure why it should leak methane. Considering the number of LNG tankers bobbing around the oceans then wouldn't they be a far bigger problem? :hmm:
 
Copied from a less suitable thread:

One of the few government actions I've agreed with. Who the fuck did the oil companies pay to pass this in the first place?


The treaty allows fossil fuel investors to sue states for lost profit expectations in an opaque corporate arbitration system set up to protect fossil fuel investors in the former Soviet economies in the 1990s.
The ECT is the world’s most litigated investment agreement and the UK’s continued presence within it has raised fears of “climate-wrecking lawsuits” if the government manages to pass its offshore petroleum licensing bill, which aims to jack up UK oil and gas extraction. About 40% of North Sea oil and gas licences are owned by foreign investors, according to research by the Common Wealth thinktank.
“However, the mechanism in the ECT which made it so deadly – the investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) provisions – lives on in a number of other treaties, including the pacific trade deal. With ISDS’s legitimacy crumbling, now is the time to scrap all this system.”
 
Wind powered ships invented!

“Enabling a vessel to be blown along by the wind, rather than rely solely on its engine, could hopefully eventually reduce a cargo ship's lifetime emissions by 30%.” 😐

We could call this new technology, “sail”.


  • The earliest record of a ship under sail appears on an Egyptian vase from about 3500 BC.
  • Vikings sailed to North America around 1000 years ago.
  • Advances in sailing technology from the 15th century onward enabled European explorers in Canada to make longer voyages into regions with extreme weather and climatic conditions.
  • Further improvements in sails and equipment allowed colonization of America, Australia and New Zealand, and world trade to flourish in the 18th and 19th century."

Bit rich someone taking credit for sail boats / ships.
 
no specific articles spring to mind, but I did hear about (re)using sails to aid ships (and thus reduce their fuel usage) and the possibility if (re)using horses for transport and agriculture. It seems that tech advances are done sometimes just because we can or because its the next push of the envelope. But maybe some of the old ways were good from environmental point of view (if not economy / financial reasons). I know some farmers (in Ireland) were very reluctant to cut down hedgerows / ditches between fields, as it destroys a micro climate / environment , but were pressured for financial reasons. There seems to be a return to replacing these hedgerows now (iirm there is a scheme / grant to plant them again?)
 

Britain’s reliance on coal-fired power set to end after 140 years​

Closure of final plant at the end of September marks a key step in decarbonising electricity by 2030

"Coal supplied 80 per cent of the UK’s electricity in 1990 — but only 1 per cent last year, when 34.7 per cent came from gas, 32.8 per cent from wind and solar, 11.6 per cent from bioenergy, and 13.8 per cent from nuclear.
"
 
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