Articles

  • 1 day ago | japantimes.co.jp | James Kerry |Lisa Levin

    Puro.earth, a self-appointed “carbon-removal certifier,” is seeking to establish a new accredited means of carbon sequestration: dumping bundled biomass (wood or crop waste) into the ocean. At least two companies are already selling carbon credits based on plans to dump biomass in the Black Sea. But “ocean storage of biomass” (OSB) lacks scientific verification and highlights the risks of commercializing unproven climate interventions.

  • 2 weeks ago | delo.si | James Kerry |Lisa Levin

    V ndaljevanju preberite:Podjetje Puro.earth, samooklicani »certifikator za odstranjevanje ogljika«, si prizadeva za uvedbo novega akreditiranega načina sekvestracije (upravljanja) ogljika – odlaganja vezane biomase (lesnih ali rastlinskih odpadkov) v ocean. Vsaj dve podjetji že prodajata emisijske kupone na podlagi načrtov za odlaganje biomase v Črno morje. Vendar »shranjevanje biomase v oceane« v obliki plošč OSB (uporabljajo se v gradbeništvu, op.

  • 1 month ago | arabnews.com | James Kerry |Lisa Levin

    Dumping biomass in the ocean is not a climate solution Short Urlhttps://arab.news/9ew9x Puro.earth, a self-appointed “carbon removal certifier,” is seeking to establish a new accredited means of carbon sequestration: dumping bundled biomass (wood or crop waste) into the ocean. At least two companies are already selling carbon credits based on plans to dump biomass in the Black Sea.

  • 1 month ago | countercurrents.org | Robert Hunziker |James Kerry |Lisa Levin |Bhargav Oza

    The Trump administration’s EPA has put the home insurance industry, home mortgage industry, real estate industry, and individual homeownership on notice that the rules are changing against their best interests. Already, before these negative changes to EPA policy, radical climate change has forced insurance companies to eliminate home coverage in regions of America.

  • 1 month ago | countercurrents.org | James Kerry |Lisa Levin

    WÄDENSWIL/SAN DIEGO – Puro.earth, a self-appointed “carbon-removal certifier,” is seeking to establish a new accredited means of carbon sequestration: dumping bundled biomass (wood or crop waste) into the ocean. At least two companies are already selling carbon credits based on plans to dump biomass in the Black Sea. But “ocean storage of biomass” (OSB) lacks scientific verification and highlights the risks of commercializing unproven climate interventions.

Contact details

Socials & Sites

Try JournoFinder For Free

Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.

Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →