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09 Oct 2024, 10:29
91tv Team
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Global

In brief | 9 October '24

IEA:

With solar leading their rapid deployment, renewables are on course to meet almost half of global electricity demand by the end of this decade, a new IEA report says.

New Scientist:

Key climate indicators from greenhouse gas levels to ice loss have reached record levels this year in what researchers call a “critical and unpredictable new phase of the climate crisis.”

Politico:

The bloc's finance ministers approved the 27 countries' — funding for climate action — but did not reveal how much cash EU governments would be willing to put up.

Politico:

But the end of the supply contract through Ukraine at the end of this year could prove costly for Austria, Slovakia and Hungary.

FT:

Business leaders say Europe’s policymakers are ill prepared for just how expensive the shift is likely to be.

Bloomberg:

Europe’s ambitions to lead the world in green technologies like EV batteries risk fizzling out in the face of China’s dominance.

Bloomberg:

In transporting and storing the gas are hidden costs that new research finds will make it uncompetitive as a decarbonisation solution.

EES News:

GIGA Storage Belgium is gearing to build the largest battery energy storage system in continental Europe.

Open letter:

A coalition of cleantech innovators, investors, industry associations, researchers and civil society organisations calls for ETS revenues to be spent with priority on the development of a competitive clean industry and clean technologies.

BPIE:

This report intends to support European and national policymakers in preparing for whole life carbon (WLC) regulations in buildings.

EEA:

While the overall material footprint — or the amount of raw materials extracted from nature in and outside of the EU to deliver goods and services — remained stable over the past decade, more measures need to be taken to reduce resource consumption in the housing and food sectors, said EEA.

Danish Energy Agency

The new CCS Fund has DKK 28.7 billion (USD 4.2 billion) to secure capture and storage of CO₂ from as early as 2029, and to help Denmark along its path to climate neutrality.

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