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Topics tagged with 'Carbon News world'

More in: Carbon News world
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Do these bottles herald the end of plastic?

18 May 2020

Beer and soft drinks could soon be sipped from “all-plant” bottles under new plans to turn sustainably grown crops into plastic in partnership with major beverage makers.

Dr Ashley Bloomfield

Experts are back in fashion – so, get them talking

18 May 2020

British cabinet minister Michael Gove once sneered that “people have had enough of experts from organisations with acronyms saying that they know what is best and getting it consistently wrong.”

Alaska patiently awaits ice-melt tsunami

18 May 2020

A melting glacier in Alaska might trigger a landslide that would cause a major tsunami, scientists have warned.

At last, a fair deal for our atomic love affair

18 May 2020

However you view the argument, nuclear passions run strong. A new film gives us a breathless ride through our atomic love affair.

Could New York's youth convince the State to divest?

18 May 2020

One analyst says oil, gas and coal were the biggest pension contributors for 30 years, but now are the worst performing sector—and there are no signs of improvement.

Big Business backs a better economy

15 May 2020

Chief executives from more than 330 businesses, including Microsoft, Nike and Visa, are calling on US bipartisan federal lawmakers to build back a better economy from covid-19 by infusing resilient climate solutions.

Trump buying one million barrels of oil

15 May 2020

The Trump Administration is planning to buy one million barrels of oil from US companies after funding to make a larger purchase failed to pass Congress.

Don't forget the other curve - the climate one

15 May 2020

If any image has singularly captured the public’s attention during the coronavirus pandemic, it has been The Curve.

Biden taps Ocasio-Cortez and Kerry to fight climate

15 May 2020

Presidential hopeful Joe Biden has appointed Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the avatar of the Green New Deal, and former Secretary of State John Kerry, an architect of the Paris climate agreement, to his climate team.

Bangladesh to double fossil fuel imports

15 May 2020

Bangladesh is expected to double its imports of fossil fuels in the coming decade and will miss its 2020 clean-energy target.

Wind might pass coal sooner than we thought

14 May 2020

A milestone in the clean energy transition may arrive earlier than expected, with renewables overtaking coal as a leading source of electricity by the end of this year.

How Australia can build a green economy

14 May 2020

As the Australian government prepares plans for economic recovery, investors and green groups alike say this is a once-only opportunity to move towards zero emissions.

Pandemic will permanently change car industry

14 May 2020

Plunging sales could force car factories to close and lead to takeovers and mergers, but also bolster sales of electric vehicles.

Lessons from the rush on toilet paper

14 May 2020

The speed of official reaction to covid-19 has prompted some people to ask whether modern societies can act as fast to protect themselves, not only from another pandemic, but against a possible comparable global threat such as climate change.

Plastic waste now litters Antarctic shore

13 May 2020

British and German scientists have identified "sickening" levels of plastic waste in the Southern Ocean that washes around Antarctica.

World could lose half its sandy beaches

13 May 2020

Sea level rise fueled by man-made climate change threatens to consume half the world's sandy beaches by the end of the century, according to a new study.

Fossil fuel giants set for virus bailout bonanza

13 May 2020

Fossil fuel companies and coal-powered utilities in the US are set for a potential bonanza under federal government plans for a bond bailout, part of the rescue package for the coronavirus crisis.

Bad soil fungi will welcome warmer weather

13 May 2020

Rising temperatures will increase crop losses as warmer soils encourage the growth of pathogenic soil fungi, scientists say.

Bolsonaro sends in his soldiers

13 May 2020

Brazil has deployed thousands of soldiers to protect the Amazon rainforest as the government mounts a response to surging deforestation ahead of the high season for forest fires.

Ammonia is the energy future, say scientists

12 May 2020

Forget hydrogen – the energy future is ammonia, Australia researchers say.

Will the virus crisis trump the climate crisis?

12 May 2020

The battle over how to spend recovery funds — to quickly restore the old economy or invest in a greener one — will define the post-pandemic world.

Extreme heat set to trap millions indoors by 2060

12 May 2020

Extreme heat and humidity are increasing across the globe, threatening millions of lives and economies in places where it could become fatal to work outdoors.

Belt and Road backers failing to protect nature

12 May 2020

The financial backers of China’s Belt and Road Initiative are being accused of failing to require safeguards to protect nature.

Plastic piles up as covid sidelines pollution fight

12 May 2020

Green groups worry about a plastic "onslaught" in Southeast Asia as home deliveries during lockdowns add to mountains of waste.

Shareholders call for Rio Tinto to make stand

11 May 2020

Shareholders in global miner Rio Tinto have rebuked the company over its climate stance, with 37 per cent voting at a meeting in Australia for a resolution that would require it to set binding emissions targets.

How will we fly, drive, commute and ride?

11 May 2020

Social distancing rules will kill cities, experts warn – and the future of mass transit hangs in the balance.

We must save economy and climate together

11 May 2020

There’s growing agreement by economists and scientists: Covid-19 needs the world to rescue both economy and climate together.

Covid sees bikes pushing cars out of cities

11 May 2020

Curfews paralysed traffic as the covid-19 pandemic hit many cities, but now the cities have started to promote the bicycle revolution and ban cars.

Don't count out batteries in the future

11 May 2020

The clean energy sector of the future will need both batteries and electrolysers, says a new International Energy Agency report.

Judge rules feral horses must go

11 May 2020

The Australian federal court has ruled that feral horses can be removed from the Victorian high country.

Why world cannot return to 'business as usual'

8 May 2020

Mayors from many of the world’s leading cities have warned there can be no return to “business as usual” in the aftermath of the coronavirus crisis if humanity is to escape catastrophic climate breakdown.

Infectious disease rates are skyrocketing

8 May 2020

A catastrophic loss in biodiversity, reckless destruction of wildland and warming temperatures have allowed disease to explode.

South Korea backs $2b bailout of coal company

8 May 2020

The South Korean government is backing a $2 billion bailout of the country’s biggest coal plant manufacturer, despite promises to end coal financing.

Virus hasn’t killed globalisation - it shows we need it

7 May 2020

Examining where the world went right or wrong in its covid-19 response might help to mitigate another global crisis, climate change.

Businesses see climate and virus recovery as one

7 May 2020

A leading Australian business group is calling for the two biggest economic challenges in memory – recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic and cutting greenhouse gas emissions – to be addressed together, saying it would boost growth and put the country on a firm long-term footing.

Struggling farm workers face worsening heat

7 May 2020

Life is already bad enough for underpaid and overworked crop pickers in the US, but as lethal heat levels rise they will render outdoor labour in the harvest season increasingly impossible.

We’ve all had a taste of disrupted food supplies

7 May 2020

When our reliance on supermarkets is seriously disrupted – for example, by spikes in demand due to flooding of distribution centres panic buying or the flooding of distribution centres – we are left with few alternatives.

In 50 years, some cities will be too hot to handle

6 May 2020

Unless steps are taken to check global warming, up to three billion people will find themselves in areas too warm for human comfort, a new study finds.

How Dutch were forced into emissions cuts

6 May 2020

Last month, the Dutch government announced a bold set of climate policies designed to reduce annual carbon emissions by nearly 10 megatons.

Inside gas cookers are making us sick

6 May 2020

Gas cookers are making people sick and exposing tens of millions to air pollution levels that would be illegal if they were outside.

Living in the Rainbow Tree with 30,000 plants

6 May 2020

Assuming the Rainbow Tree is actually built, the greenery-covered timber tower will rise to an impressive height of 115 m in Cebu, the Philippines.

Westpac to stop funding coal for power

5 May 2020

Westpac says it will stop funding mining projects for coal to be used for power generation by 2030, as part of a broader commitment to reach a net-zero emissions business model by 2050.

Trump-friendly fuel firms get millions in aid

5 May 2020

US fossil fuel companies have taken at least $50m in taxpayer money they probably won’t have to pay back, according to a review of coronavirus aid meant for struggling small businesses.

Coal industry uses enough water for 5 million people

5 May 2020

Coal mining and coal-fired power stations in New South Wales and Queensland use the same amount of water as 5.2 million people, or more than the entire population of Greater Sydney, says a new report.

Warren Buffett dumps US airline stocks

4 May 2020

Legendary American investor Warren Buffett has sold his firm’s entire holdings in the four major US airlines, warning that the world has changed for the aviation industry because of the coronavirus crisis.

Global energy markets in unpheaval

4 May 2020

The world’s energy markets are in upheaval, as experts report an historic fall in global fossil fuel demand.

Morrison offers $300m to boost hydrogen

4 May 2020

The Morrison government will change the investment mandate of the Clean Energy Finance Corporation, directing it to make up to $300m available for a new Advancing Hydrogen Fund as part of the national hydrogen strategy.

Shopping online better for planet, says Bezos

4 May 2020

Amazon chief Jeff Bezos says that shopping online is “inherently” more efficient, from a carbon emissions perspective, than going to the store.

Emissions drop is not all good news

1 May 2020

Experts have cautioned that a drop of nearly 8 per cent in greenhouse gas emissions should not be seen as good news for efforts to tackle climate change.

North America’s fracking boom flounders

1 May 2020

The shale industry made the US a major producer once again. But Covid-19 looks likely to ruin many prospectors.

Adaptation
More >

‘The effects are already here’: Northland communities face the realities of a changed climate

Fri 5 Dec 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | Te Taitokerau Northland is facing more intense storms, rising temperatures and shifting seasons – pressures that are reshaping communities, ecosystems, infrastructure and livelihoods across the region, according to a new case study from the Climate Change Commission.

Agriculture
More >

Media round-up

Fri 5 Dec 2025

In our round-up of climate coverage in local media: Labour’s chronic evasiveness as the Government reneges on climate change; newly released documents reveal the country's new methane target is associated with 'perilous' 2.7C of warming; and New Zealand's 'pitiful' decision on emissions targets comes with costs.

Airlines
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NZ’s government wants tourism to drive economic growth – but how will it deal with aviation emissions?

22 Oct 2025

By Robert McLachlan, Te Kunenga ki Pūrehuroa – Massey University | Following a brief dip during the COVID pandemic, aviation is back in a growth phase.

Aviation
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Air NZ inks deal for its first internationally verified carbon credits

9 Oct 2025

By Liz Kivi | Air New Zealand has committed to buying 8000 tonnes of carbon removals by 2030, in partnership with local native forest investment platform My Native Forest.

Biodiversity
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NSW government, energy company under fire after native bird habitat cleared for renewables project

Fri 5 Dec 2025

A New South Wales government-backed renewable energy project has been accused of environmental vandalism after dozens of threatened birds were found in native trees it had cleared.

Biofuels
More >

Govt launches strategy backing wood-based heat sector

23 Oct 2025

By Pattrick Smellie | Forestry biomass could replace as much as 40% of fossil fuel-generated process heat by 2050, but access to supply, regulatory settings and business cases for converting to wood-based heat sources are required, the Government says in a series of documents released yesterday.

Carbon Credits
More >
Climate Change Minister Simon Watts

Govt ‘scaremongering’ over co-operation – former climate ambassador

Fri 5 Dec 2025

By Liz Kivi | New Zealand’s former top climate diplomat, Kay Harrison, says the Government’s recent comments ruling out buying climate mitigation offshore amount to scaremongering, and the country is missing a chance to give our businesses a boost.

Carbon prices
More >

Carbon auction tipped to be a non-event

Tue 2 Dec 2025

By Liz Kivi | Tomorrow’s Emissions Trading Scheme auction is all but certain to fail, with participants blaming the government for destroying confidence as NZUs continue to change hands on the secondary market at a 40% discount on the $68 auction floor.

Coal
More >

Hello, foreign oligarchs and corporations! Please come and sue the UK for billions

Wed 3 Dec 2025

COMMENT: The case of a planned Cumbrian coalmine shows how governments around the world are being threatened by litigation in shadowy offshore courts.

Comment
More >
Rob Campbell

Investors must support positive climate-tech

28 Nov 2025

OPINION: We need better leadership than the current ‘climate opportunism’ that is rife in the Beehive, and we need to back a marketplace that will make it happen, writes Rob Campbell.

Construction
More >
Waimauku flooding during Cyclone Gabrielle

$235 billion worth of NZ buildings exposed to flooding

30 Oct 2025

More than 750,000 New Zealanders live in locations exposed to one-in-100-year floods, according to a nationwide study which shows escalating flood risk.

COP
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Analysis: Why COP30’s ‘tripling adaptation finance’ target is less ambitious than it seems

Fri 5 Dec 2025

One of the headline outcomes to emerge from COP30 was a new target to “at least triple” finance for climate adaptation in developing countries by 2035.

Emissions trading
More >
Finance Minister Nicola Willis

Climate comments ‘outrageous’ – former top climate negotiator

Wed 3 Dec 2025

By Liz Kivi | New Zealand’s former climate ambassador, Kay Harrison, says Finance Minister Nicola Willis’ recent statements that the Government had ruled out buying offshore climate mitigation are “outrageous”.

Energy
More >

Market rewards firming over renewables in gentailer split

Wed 3 Dec 2025

A clearer valuation divide is emerging across the gentailer sector, with the market increasingly rewarding companies positioned for flexibility and firming rather than renewable build-out.

Extinction
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Conservation Minister Tama Potaka

DOC trims costs and winds down jobs for nature

10 Nov 2025

The Department of Conservation (DOC) is entering a new phase of tighter budgets and structural change as it winds down the pandemic-era Jobs for Nature programme and reshapes its operations to absorb long-term cost pressures.

Extreme weather
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Uncertainty eroding confidence in forestry sector

Fri 5 Dec 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | Warnings are mounting that tree planting is set to plunge to “very close to zero”, as new Ministry for Primary Industries data shows ETS registration applications falling sharply as confidence in forestry declines.

Fishing
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NZ marine heatwaves could double in intensity under high-emissions pathway

16 Oct 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | New projections show marine heatwaves will grow more intense around the North Island and more frequent around the South Island as the climate warms – raising risks for fisheries, aquaculture, coastal ecosystems and tourism.

Forestry
More >

Tairāwhiti unveils $359m plan to cut storm damage and stabilise erosion-prone land

Thu 4 Dec 2025

Gisborne District Council has released a 30-year transition plan to protect Tairāwhiti from escalating climate-driven erosion and storm damage, outlining a $359 million proposal for Crown co-investment to stabilise 100,000 hectares of vulnerable land and slash the region’s long-term clean-up costs.

Gas
More >

Open letter urges govt to abandon plans to subsidise LNG terminal

Thu 4 Dec 2025

Climate and renewable energy advocates have joined forces calling on the Government to ditch its plan to subsidise an LNG import terminal.

Geothermal
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RMA to speed up fossil fuel consents

18 Aug 2025

By Liz Kivi | An energy lobby group has welcomed a last-minute amendment to the RMA that puts fossil fuels on the same footing as renewables, however a sustainable energy expert says the move “beggars belief.”

Green finance
More >

Westpac rolls out interest-free finance for climate-proofing homes as weather risks rise

Wed 3 Dec 2025

Westpac NZ has unveiled a new interest-free lending package aimed at helping households strengthen their properties against flooding and extreme weather, as climate risks intensify across the country.

Greenhouse Effect
More >
Climate Change Minister Simon Watts onstage at the COP climate summit in Brazil this week

Govt’s rejection of CCC’s advice on climate targets undermines independent watchdog’s role, says opposition

21 Nov 2025

By Liz Kivi | The Government’s latest dismissal of Climate Change Commission advice shows they have their heads in the sand about the reality of meeting climate targets, according to the Labour Party, while the Greens say Government decisions were an embarrassment on the world stage at COP30 this week.

Greenwashing
More >

TotalEnergies loses in Paris court, marking a turning point for fossil fuel truth-in-advertising

5 Nov 2025

TotalEnergies was found to have misled consumers about its role in the energy transition.

Hydro power
More >

Tribunal warns govt geothermal strategy risks Treaty breach

Tue 2 Dec 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | The government's geothermal development strategy risks breaching the Treaty of Waitangi, according to a report from the Waitangi Tribunal released last week.

Hydrogen
More >
Hiringa chief executive Andrew Clennett

Hiringa eyes green methanol plant near Whanganui

29 Jul 2025

By Pattrick Smellie | Green hydrogen pioneer Hiringa Energy is deep in planning to develop an “eight-to-nine figure” methanol plant near Whanganui, using a combination of biomass and hydrogen produced using renewable energy.

Insurance
More >

Insurers welcome govt decision to keep NHC levy unchanged

21 Nov 2025

Media release |The Insurance Council of New Zealand | Te Kāhui Inihua o Aotearoa (ICNZ) has welcomed the Government’s decision to leave the Natural Hazards Commission levy unchanged, amid ongoing concerns around the cost-of-living.

Kyoto
More >
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon with US President Donald Trump in South Korea last week.

Why I’m not outraged at the Govt’s latest climate backsliding

7 Nov 2025

COMMENT: The Government’s latest climate rollbacks underline New Zealand’s long history of a lack of genuine desire to cut emissions, writes Geoff Bertram.

Litigation
More >

Amy Westervelt: It’s time we stopped treating corporations as people

Thu 4 Dec 2025

COMMENT: Treating corporations as people and granting them First Amendment rights has warped US politics and harmed the climate. We need to overturn Citizens United.

Low carbon
More >
Climate Change Minister Simon Watts (right) with the Prime Minister of Niue, Dalton Tagelagi.

NZ fails to back ‘roadmap’ to phase out fossil fuels at COP

24 Nov 2025

By Liz Kivi | Eighty-six countries including Australia, the UK, Germany, and Ireland backed a proposal at COP30 for national plans on how to quit oil, gas and coal – but New Zealand wasn’t one of them.

Mining
More >

Media round-up

28 Nov 2025

In our round-up of climate coverage in local media: How the oil and gas industry helped rewrite New Zealand’s drilling rules, confusion reigns as the climate minister appears unaware of his own announcement, and the fierce battle over mining on Denniston Plateau.

NZ ETS
More >

Govt's emissions ‘buffer’ an illusion with all NZ's carbon budgets off track

28 Nov 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | Dr Christina Hood, head of consultancy Compass Climate, says the Government’s claim that New Zealand has a comfortable emissions “buffer” to absorb higher agricultural pollution is misleading, with projections showing emissions budgets are actually set to be missed in real terms.

NZ Market Report
More >

NZ's latest climate target 'weak' – Climate Action Tracker

24 Jun 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | New Zealand's new international climate target to 2035 is weak, and could even allow for higher emissions than the 2030 target, according to a global scientific project that tracks government climate action.

Oceans
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Heatwaves, downpours and droughts – Auckland on track for more extreme weather

1 Dec 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | New projections show Auckland will face more heatwaves, heavier downpours, worsening droughts and growing coastal threats as climate extremes intensify, according to a new report from Earth Sciences New Zealand.

Paris Agreement
More >

Govt rejects advice on international aviation and shipping emissions

Thu 4 Dec 2025

By Liz Kivi | The Government has rejected all the Climate Change Commission’s recommendations to strengthen emissions targets.

Planetary boundaries
More >

Carbon Finance Program upscales efforts to close climate investment gap in climate vulnerable nations

22 Oct 2025

Media release | The Climate Vulnerable Forum and its V20 Finance Ministers (CVF-V20) will work with the Voluntary Carbon Markets Integrity Initiative (VCMI) to upscale the Carbon Finance Program in reach and impact, supporting more climate-vulnerable countries to host high-integrity carbon projects that yield tangible climate, nature, and sustainable development benefits.

Plastics
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Govt green lights rural recycling scheme

Thu 4 Dec 2025

The Government has approved new regulations to bring rural waste schemes under one unified framework.

Policy development
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NZ's ‘missed opportunity’ on aviation and shipping emissions

Fri 5 Dec 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | The Government’s refusal to include international aviation and shipping in New Zealand’s 2050 climate target has been met with disappointment from climate experts, who say the decision undermines accountability for a transport-reliant nation, and misses a critical opportunity to strengthen New Zealand’s climate leadership.

Protest
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Shipping movements disrupted as climate change protesters block coal ships

Tue 2 Dec 2025

NSW police have arrested 141 people who attempted to block the shipping channel in Newcastle Harbour during Rising Tide protests, which began on Thursday.

Rare earth minerals
More >
New Zealand Minerals Council chief executive Josie Vidal

Straterra has a new name: the New Zealand Minerals Council

16 Apr 2025

Media release | Straterra has been renamed as New Zealand Minerals Council, says chief executive Josie Vidal.

Renewable energy
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Rare win for renewable energy: Trump administration funds geothermal network expansion

Fri 5 Dec 2025

A first-in-the-nation heating and cooling network in Massachusetts is set to double in size.

Science
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NZ and US deepen Antarctic science partnership

Thu 4 Dec 2025

Media release: New Zealand Government | New joint research initiatives focused on climate and ecosystem change expand on the long-standing collaboration between New Zealand and the United States on Antarctic science and logistics, says Science, Innovation and Technology Minister Dr Shane Reti.

Tax
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Solar households to get little-noticed tax break

23 Sep 2025

A provision in the government’s latest tax bill would exempt households from paying tax on income they earn by selling excess electricity back to the grid.

Technology
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Pollution from coal plants was dropping. Then came Trump and AI.

1 Dec 2025

Data centres’ hunger for electricity is prompting some states to keep their coal-burning power plants from closing – while DC relaxes air pollution limits.

The House
More >
Resources Minister Shane Jones

Last minute change to oil and gas legislation over cleanup costs

31 Jul 2025

By Liz Kivi | The government is expected to repeal the oil and gas ban today, with a last-minute amendment handing discretionary power to two ministers over the controversial issue of decommissioning.

Transport
More >

Spain announces $1.5 billion package to boost electric vehicle market

Fri 5 Dec 2025

Spain's plan includes 400 million euros in direct subsidies in 2026 for consumers to buy EVs.

United Nations
More >
Treasury Secretary Iain Rennie

Treasury to offer first stab at climate liabilities pre-election

Thu 4 Dec 2025

By Pattrick Smellie | The Treasury will make a first attempt at accounting for Crown liabilities arising from New Zealand’s international climate change commitments in next year’s pre-election economic and fiscal update.

Waste
More >

Kaicycle celebrates ten years of collective climate action in Pōneke

14 Nov 2025

Media release: Kaicycle | Since 2015, Kaicycle has grown from a humble pilot project growing kai and collecting compost on bicycles into the thriving urban farm and composting hub that Wellingtonians know and love.

Water
More >

Study provides a step-change in understanding NZ’s groundwater

28 Nov 2025

Media release | Earth Sciences New Zealand has developed a world-first National Groundwater Age Map and a powerful suite of tools to support the sustainable management of our hidden groundwater resources, from national through to local scales.

Wildfires
More >

Amid the ashes

26 Nov 2025

This year the LA wildfire came for my hometown. What happened next is a warning for us all.

Wind energy
More >

NZ’s energy system at a crossroads – report

21 Nov 2025

A new report says New Zealand’s rapid shift toward a 95% renewable electricity system is at a critical turning point, urging faster consenting, stronger firming solutions and better grid planning.

More in: Carbon News world
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