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Dec 3, 2024 |
thefifthestate.com.au | Kate Dooley
Carbon dioxide removal plans need to have realistic, sustainable CDR budgets that align with ecological limits, human rights and sustainable development. With Australia soon to update its nationally determined contributions (NDC) under the Paris Agreement, it’s time to confront a critical piece of the climate equation: carbon dioxide removal (CDR).
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Dec 3, 2024 |
thefifthestate.com.au | Kate Dooley
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Nov 29, 2024 |
ippmedia.com | Kate Dooley
NEGOTIATORS at the COP29 climate conference in Baku have struck a landmark agreement on rules governing the global trade of carbon credits, bringing to a close almost a decade of debate over the controversial scheme. The deal paves the way for a system in which countries or companies buy credits for removing or reducing greenhouse gas emissions elsewhere in the world, then count the reductions as part of their own climate efforts.
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Nov 25, 2024 |
theconversation.com | Kate Dooley
Negotiators at the COP29 climate conference in Baku have struck a landmark agreement on rules governing the global trade of carbon credits, bringing to a close almost a decade of debate over the controversial scheme. The deal paves the way for a system in which countries or companies buy credits for removing or avoiding greenhouse gas emissions elsewhere in the world, then count the reductions as part of their own climate efforts.
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Nov 14, 2024 |
phys.org | O.l. Perkins |Alexandra Deprez |Kate Dooley
Is it possible to heat the planet to dangerous levels and then cool it down later? Economic models charting the world's path to net zero emissions say yes.
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Nov 14, 2024 |
treefrogcreative.ca | Ol Perkins |Alexandra Deprez |Kate Dooley |Kevin Mason
Scientific models trust the land to soak up lots of CO2 – the reality is a lot more messy By Ol Perkins, Alexandra Deprez and Kate Dooley The Conversation November 13, 2024 Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy Is it possible to heat the planet to dangerous levels and then cool it down later?
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Nov 13, 2024 |
theconversation.com | Alexandra Deprez |Kate Dooley |O.l. Perkins
Is it possible to heat the planet to dangerous levels and then cool it down later? Economic models charting the world’s path to net zero emissions say yes. Theoretically, the cheapest way to global decarbonisation is to delay cutting emissions to reach net zero and assume it will be possible to remove huge volumes of CO₂ from the atmosphere later.
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Jul 2, 2024 |
goodgoodgood.co | Kate Dooley
Australia contains some of the world’s most biologically diverse and carbon-dense native forests. Eucalypts in wet temperate forests are the tallest flowering plants in the world and home to an array of unique tree-dwelling marsupials, rare birds, insects, mosses, fungi and lichen, many of which have not even been catalogued by scientists. Yet our country remains in the top ten list globally for tree cover loss, with almost half of the original forested areas in eastern Australia cleared.
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Jun 16, 2024 |
phys.org | Kate Dooley
Australia contains some of the world's most biologically diverse and carbon-dense native forests. Eucalypts in wet temperate forests are the tallest flowering plants in the world and home to an array of unique tree-dwelling marsupials, rare birds, insects, mosses, fungi and lichen, many of which have not even been catalogued by scientists. Yet our country remains in the top ten list globally for tree cover loss, with almost half of the original forested areas in eastern Australia cleared.
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Jun 13, 2024 |
theconversation.com | Kate Dooley
Australia contains some of the world’s most biologically diverse and carbon-dense native forests. Eucalypts in wet temperate forests are the tallest flowering plants in the world and home to an array of unique tree-dwelling marsupials, rare birds, insects, mosses, fungi and lichen, many of which have not even been catalogued by scientists. Yet our country remains in the top ten list globally for tree cover loss, with almost half of the original forested areas in eastern Australia cleared.