In brief | 10 October '24
Nature:
Global and regional climate change and associated risks after a temporary overshoot of global warming limits are different from a world that avoids it.
Reuters:
Germany's economy is expected to contract by 0.2 percent in 2024, the economy ministry said, which is likely to make it for the second year running the only member of the Group of Seven major industrial democracies to post shrinking output.
Politico:
The aftermath of the European election and the looming German vote have stopped the bloc from getting much work done.
EEA:
The EU transport sector’s transition towards sustainability is made difficult by the increasing transport demand and sluggish growth in sustainable transport modes for moving both people and freight.
Atlantic Council:
The new European Commission faces three key issues at the heart of the clean energy transition, writes Michał Kurtyka.
IEEFA:
Most of Europe’s planned carbon capture and storage (CCS) applications are too expensive to work on a commercial basis and are nowhere near ready to be rolled out, says IEEFA.
Bloomberg:
- Sweden had backed loans tied to scuttled plant expansion
- Northvolt put unit managing buildout into bankruptcy this week
BBC:
The report by NGO WWF found habitat degradation and loss was the biggest threat to wildlife, followed by overexploitation, invasive species, disease, climate change and pollution.