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Never Give Up. Never Surrender.

Legal Planet

My point is this: No matter how many battles we end up losing in the fight to stop carbon emissions, we can never afford to give up. The Paris Agreement’s goal is to keep global warming well below 2°C, preferably to 1.5° In terms of emissions cuts, the basic rule is simple: Every ton counts.

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Net Zero/Not Zero

Real Climate

With empirical data and more and better modeling, it has become clear that, to first approximation, the eventual anthropogenic warming from carbon dioxide is tied to the cumulative emissions. This figure is from the AR6 SPM: The relationship between cumulative carbon emissions and temperature (SPM AR6).

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A Year After the Shell Ruling: Big Victories and Next Steps for Climate Litigation

Union of Concerned Scientists

Today marks one year since the precedent-setting court ruling in the Netherlands, which ordered Shell to cut its activities’ carbon emissions by 45 percent compared to 2019 levels to align with the Paris climate agreement. In March, a first-of-its-kind case was announced against Shell’s board of directors.

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Innovators in 2023 Carbon Removal Landscape

Ivy Protocol

Author: Ieva Blazauskaite (Ivy Protocol, Marketing Lead) To meet the climate goals outlined by the Paris Agreement, a unified approach, combining both Nature-Based Solutions (NBS) and Engineered Carbon Removal Solutions is crucial. 6 Ways to Remove Carbon Pollution from the Atmosphere. Mulligan, J., Ellison, G.,

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Africa loses 34% of GDP at 1.5° warming, ‘grim’ new report concludes

A Greener Life

It calls on “rich, polluting countries,” including historic polluters as well “more recent carbon contributors” like the Middle Eastern Gulf states, India, and China, to “drastically cut their carbon emissions to prevent runaway climate change” and avert “exponentially higher levels of climate impacts affecting more people more quickly.”.

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Climate leadership is now in Asia

Edouard Stenger

Now, not only coal is spewing insane amounts of carbon dioxide – one kilogram per kilo-watt/hour on average – it is also now more expensive than wind, solar, and soon battery storage. China’s coal consumption declined over three consecutive years (2013 to 2016), and a continued slow decline is expected.

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Energy news as COP23 is taking place in Germany

Edouard Stenger

This is a game-changing move as peaker plants and even baseload ones will become more and more irrelevant, decreasing carbon emissions. So, if our answers to climate change and air pollution are growing, with even global coal consumption peaking, why is there still more and more carbon dioxide in our atmosphere?