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Topics tagged with 'Transport'

More in: Transport
Previous 1 ... 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 47 of 48 Next
Metro bus in Christchurch ... can cope "over time" with people fleeing higher petrol prices

Public transport won’t cope with major fuel-price driven switch from cars

27 May 2008

If 23% of motorists are true to their word and start making significant cuts in fuel use now petrol has hit $2 per litre, they may not find a seat on public transport.

Offshore windfarm, Thames estuary .. how many million new green jobs are coming?

Low-carbon economy – millions of new jobs?

27 May 2008

Ethical Corporation- Europe's leaders say a low-carbon economy will create millions of new jobs.

Bltizing the emissions standard with Brtiz and Maui campervans

THL goes for 1500-campervan fleet emission standard six times better than Europe's

27 May 2008

Tourism Holdings Limited (THL) 1500 campervans are helping to set new national emissions benchmarks with all of the company’s Maui & Britz fleet certified as passing tough exhaust emissions tests introduced six months ago.

Leadership forum chair Stephen Tindall

Forum heads to the select committee

26 May 2008

A high-powered group of business and community leaders who back an emissions trading scheme will appear before the finance and expenditure select committee today to answer questions from MPs.

H5N1 bird flu virus .. even a pandemic in the fuel use and emissions assumptions

Assumptions used to delay fossil fuel in ETS may prove unreliable

26 May 2008

Key data behind the Government’s major decision to defer including liquid fuels in the emissions trading scheme until 2011 rely on multiple assumptions which may prove unreliable.

Greenpeace: Good initiatives at risk under polluter subsidy plans

26 May 2008

Greenpeace welcomes today's Green Party announcement that all state houses will be properly insulated within five years but warns initiatives like this could be at risk if big polluters get their way.

Turnbull .. go for stronger vehicle emissions standards, not ETs on petrol

Australia debates leaving petrol out of ETS

23 May 2008

A major debate is underway in Australia on leaving petrol out of its emissions trading scheme.

Cullen quizzed on multi-billion ETS surplus from sale of credits

23 May 2008

The Government will make a net revenue gain from the emissions trading system of up to about $159 million a year between 2013 and 2018 - $795 million over five years - and "perhaps" $1b to $1.5 b a year out to 2030.

PM visits cutting edge Hyundai research and development centre.

23 May 2008

Prime Minister Helen Clark visited the Hyundai research and development centre in Namyang, South Korea, on Saturday, 16 May.

BP .. 44 of its 45 sites meet ISO 14001 environmental standard

BP: We've slashed emissions 24% below 2003 levels

23 May 2008

BP says it has cut its GHG emissions 24% below their 2003 level.

Business-as-usual Budget for climate change

22 May 2008

Today’s Budget will not be the big-bang for the environment that Australians experienced with their Budget last week, but will contain some steady-as-she-goes policy continuation.

Luxury travel gathering said to be NZ's biggest carbon neutral event

22 May 2008

The countdown is on to New Zealand’s biggest tourism event, which is also New Zealand’s biggest carbon neutral event – TRENZ 2008 – kicking off in Rotorua on Monday 26 May.

Freight industry ... coastal shipping revival sends all the right signals

Investment in coastal shipping welcomed

22 May 2008

The Customs Brokers and Freight Forwarders Federation (CBAFF) has welcomed Transport Minister Annette King’s announcement of $36 million funding to help revitalise coastal shipping in New Zealand.

Broadband ... helping cut back the 300 hours a year in rural driving

Rural internet use jumps 97% in April as fuel prices rise

22 May 2008

Rural people are increasingly turning to the internet in response to rising fuel costs, according to rural broadband provider Farmside.

Sea freight needed to contribute 7% GHG cut from transport sector

Major move to shift 30% of inter-regional freight to sea

21 May 2008

The Government has announced a $36 million investment to revitalise coastal shipping, to slash land transport fuel use and emissions.

Coastal trade will return to big ports like Auckland (pictured) and smaller ones

Pacifica: Funding boost will stimulate coastal links

21 May 2008

The Government's $36 million coastal shipping development programme couldsee new ships used and former coastal shipping routes re-opened.

Einstein... cited as showing the way with a plant-based diet

Now its "go vege" and save the planet?

21 May 2008

A vegan group is now proclaiming a link between diet and climate change, and urging New Zealanders to "go vegie" and save the plant.

Coastal shipping revamp to play major role in emissions cuts

20 May 2008

The Government today will announce plans to more effectively link rail and coastal shipping and to make it easier for port companies to access government funding for infrastructure development.

John Key ... ETS presents him with major challenge to show real leadership

ETS will trim Kyoto bill $909 million, pushes Key further out on policy tightrope

16 May 2008

The emissions trading scheme will avoid a 15 to 50 million tonne rise in emissions between 2008 and 2012, Climate Change Issues Minister David Parker has told Parliament, in what appears to a ground preparing statement ahead of National leader John Key’s ETS policy announcement this Sunday.

NZ energy-miser motor could lead the world

16 May 2008

A revolutionary New Zealand-designed electric motor with the potential to save huge amounts of energy and carbon has won $1.75 million of government research funding.

Emissions trading scheme must proceed

16 May 2008

The Emissions Trading Scheme must proceed, as it is an essential system for New Zealand to adjust to a carbon-constrained future and live up to our clean green image, says Dr Jan Wright, Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment.

Airships' potential not just hot air, says entrepreneur

15 May 2008

Fancy cutting transport costs by half and saving the environment at the same time? Airships might be just the ticket.

Bob Brown

Greens leader slams Rudd’s budget boost for climate change

15 May 2008

The Rudd government's first budget, which earmarked $2.3 billion for climate change action, has not impressed Australian Greens.

Jeanette Fitzsimons

Angry Greens ask Government: Is it us or them?

14 May 2008

The Government is in the firing line from both National and the Greens over its performance on the emissions trading scheme.

Select committee probing fate of refrigeration gases in ETS

14 May 2008

The select committee considering the emissions trading bill is looking into “significant issues” including how to treat synthetic greenhouse gases.

Toyota Prius

Environment minister drives home the message in Canberra

14 May 2008

Australian members of parliament are being shuttled around Canberra during Budget week in hybrid vehicles under an initiative to trial environmentally friendly vehicles for the Commonwealth fleet.

Electric sports car going on to world market

14 May 2008

Ecology-minded performance junkies outside the US now will have the chance to buy the Telsa electric sports car that can zip from 0-100km/h in less than four seconds.

Andrew Little

Rio Tinto joins 'capital strike' game, says union leader

13 May 2008

Rio Tinto’s threat to close the Tiwai Point aluminium smelter is the latest move in a “capital strike” campaign by heavy greenhouse-gas emitters to get their own way over the emissions trading scheme, says EPMU national secretary Andrew Little.

Forest owners tell ETS body: Our burden is unfair

13 May 2008

The forestry industry’s displeasure at being the only sector left in the early stages of the emissions trading scheme reached Parliament yesterday.

Nick Main

Little point in NZ carbon trading currency, says business group

13 May 2008

A second major business group is suggesting that New Zealand should be using international carbon instruments instead of creating its own currency.

US planes emit less greenhouse gases, despite flying more

13 May 2008

The US aviation industry has cut its greenhouse gas emissions by 13 per cent since 2000, even as the amount of flying has reached record levels, government data shows.

Bunny McDiarmid

Most Kiwis believe big emitters running the climate change show

12 May 2008

Most New Zealanders think that big greenhouse-gas emitters are calling the shots on the country’s climate change policy, and a Labour-Green coalition is seen as the best combination to manage change, according to a new poll.

John Key ... considers delay leadership

Can National really make the tough calls on climate change?

12 May 2008

ANALYSIS – National may be showing it really doesn’t want to act on climate change.

Gordon Ramsay

Celebrity chef could cook up a storm for our food exporters

12 May 2008

Suggestions by celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay that British restaurants should be fined for having imported food on their menus are a sign of the misguided Northern Hemisphere perception of the environmental impact of the international food trade, and are potentially damaging to New Zealand, says Horticulture New Zealand chief executive Peter Silcock.

Beijing smog

China says Beijing Olympics 'basically' carbon neutral

12 May 2008

The Beijing Olympics will be "basically" carbon neutral thanks to a series of energy saving measures such as the use of solar power and an afforestation programme, a senior Chinese official says.

New poll: Kiwis like ETS delays but want heavy emitters to pay now

9 May 2008

New Zealanders approve of the Government’s billion-dollar decision to delay bringing transport into the emissions trading scheme – but think that heavy emitters should be facing the cost of their emissions now.

Simon Terry

Transport delay seen as threat to carbon currency

9 May 2008

The viability of the proposed New Zealand carbon currency, NZU, is threatened by the Government’s decision to delay bringing transport into the emissions trading scheme for another two years, says the Sustainability Council.

Climate change: Aussies aware but reluctant to act

9 May 2008

AUSTRALIANS see climate change as the nation's biggest problem but appear unwilling to change their lives to reduce their large environmental footprint, an international survey has found.

The walled city of Masdar

First zero-carbon city to rise out of the desert

9 May 2008

One of the world's largest oil producers has begun construction on the first zero-carbon city, powered entirely by renewable energy.

EXCLUSIVE: Top Fletcher officers played key role in ETS policy switch

8 May 2008

Highly reliable sources have told Carbon News that two senior Fletcher Building executives, Jonathan Ling and Hans Buwalda, were the key players in successfully lobbying Climate Change Minister David Parker for major changes to the emissions trading scheme, announced on Tuesday.

Capital developer creating ‘first true green building’

8 May 2008

Leading restoration developer Ian Cassells is highlighting New Zealand’s “phony” approach to green building by developing the country’s first office-as-a-village, which will eliminate car emissions by having people live, work and play in the same place.

Greenpeace: Don't subsidise polluting industries

8 May 2008

Don't subsidise polluting industries at the expense of ordinary New Zealanders and the planet.

Government confused over transport – Sustainable Energy Forum

8 May 2008

The Government doesn’t know which way to jump on transport, says Tim Jones, convenor of the Sustainable Energy Forum.

Roger Dickie ... few new forests will be planted

Government ETS moves will batter forestry Kyoto credit values

7 May 2008

Forest owners expect the value of their hard-won Kyoto carbon credits to plummet as a result of yesterday’s announced changes to the emissions trading scheme, with the likely result that few new forests will be planted.

Political considerations driving the wrong choices

Pandering, polluting, unprincipled – and popular

7 May 2008

ANALYSIS – The Government yesterday gave control over New Zealand’s transport fuel emissions to the offshore oil markets.

Nick Smith .. a raft of polices looking "shaky"

Change in policies and pace call after Kyoto bill breaks billion dollar barrier

6 May 2008

Government is being urged to more quickly adopt emission-cutting policies, like public transport and home insulation, to help avert part of the now billion dollar Kyoto climate change bill, while National is calling for "a new direction".

Water, water everywhere … but it’s running out

6 May 2008

Water one day will be a commodity traded as oil is today and already supply shortages are becoming a problem of global proportion.

Europe-US biodiesel row heats up

6 May 2008

European biodiesel manufacturers have filed an official complaint to the European Commission regarding "unfair" US biodiesel subsidies, substantiating expectations that biofuels could be at the heart of the next large-scale trade spat at the World Trade Organisation.

US airlines face $9 billion carbon bill by 2020

5 May 2008

Proposed US emission-trading legislation could leave its airlines with a crippling $9 billion annual bill in carbon costs in just over a decade.

Charlie Pedersen ... it's time

'Enemies' unite in plea for leadership on climate change

2 May 2008

Two lobbyists usually found on opposite sides came together last night in a call for national leadership, co-operation and unity on climate change for the sake of all New Zealanders.

Adaptation
More >
Richard Hills

Climate progress slowing, says Auckland councillor

Thu 5 Jun 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | The devastating cyclone that tore through Tāmaki Makaurau in 2023 left behind more than just broken infrastructure, sparking calls to focus on facts over ideology in the fight against climate change.

Agriculture
More >

Controversy around NZ’s methane target hits international press

Tue 3 Jun 2025

By Liz Kivi | New Zealand’s approach to methane targets has hit international media, with climate scientists from multiple countries penning an open letter warning Prime Minister Christopher Luxon not to weaken methane targets.

Airlines
More >

Greenwashing is rife in Australia, but could its days be numbered?

28 May 2025

COMMENT: Have you ever ticked the box to “fly carbon neutral”, had something delivered via “carbon-neutral shipping” or chosen to pay a bit extra to buy “carbon-neutral gas” from your energy retailer?

Aviation
More >

Help sustainable aviation fuels take off or delay targets, airlines warn EU

20 May 2025

Earmarked funding, risk-reduction tools, and simplified imports top Airlines for Europe’s wish list for the EU’s upcoming Sustainable Transport Investment Plan.

Biodiversity
More >
The microplastics found on a Waikato beach

Microplastics found in sand on dozens of NZ beaches

Wed 4 Jun 2025

Scientists have extracted microplastics from the sand of 22 beaches from the Far North to Banks Peninsula.

Biofuels
More >

Sustainability claims questioned as renewable diesel surges

14 May 2025

Critics are sceptical about industry claims of renewable diesel life-cycle greenhouse gas emission cuts and warn renewable diesel carbon releases will surge if sourcing is scaled up, triggering tropical deforestation as producers convert forests to energy crops, such as oil palm and soy.

Carbon Credits
More >

Govt mulls status quo for ETS auction settings

29 May 2025

By Liz Kivi | The government has released its consultation on the Climate Change Commission’s latest advice on Emissions Trading Scheme auction settings and volumes, putting forward the option to ignore the commission’s advice to boost auction volumes from 2028-2030.

Carbon News world
More >

Food giants’ climate plans lack credibility, new report finds

Thu 5 Jun 2025

Food firms are inflating their climate targets with carbon removals and weak deforestation claims, according to a report from the NewClimate Institute and Carbon Market Watch.

Carbon prices
More >
Kapanui Gas Field

Carbon price too low to fund carbon capture

20 May 2025

The government’s climate target to 2030 is at risk, after revelations that a carbon capture project which the government was relying on to deliver one third of its carbon reductions, might not go ahead.

Coal
More >

Fight over coal mine heats up

30 May 2025

Forest & Bird is calling on the government to create a new scientific reserve covering the Denniston Plateau on the West Coast, which would stop a fast-tracked coal mine.

Comment
More >
Kevin Trenberth protesting against Trump in April 2017.

Trump’s actions are already having consequences for climate, especially for the IPCC - expert

11 Apr 2025

Leading climate scientist, Dr Kevin Trenberth, left the US and came home to New Zealand because of the rise of Donald Trump. In this comment piece, he writes that he is appalled in multiple ways by the so-called “war on science” unfolding through staff cuts and the president’s policy edicts.

Construction
More >

Common low-grade clay strengthens low-carbon concrete

Thu 5 Jun 2025

Media release | Engineers at RMIT University have converted low-grade clay into a high-performance cement supplement, opening a potential new market in sustainable construction materials.

COP
More >

Cuts to climate finance put exports in jeopardy: Lawyers

23 May 2025

By Liz Kivi | The government has halved international climate finance, a move aid organisations describe as “devastating,” and which lawyers say could put our Paris Agreement commitments and export market access at risk.

Emissions trading
More >
Energy Minister Simon Watts addressing the CEP conference in Auckland this week

Watts talks big on energy reform, but barriers persist

29 May 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | Energy and Climate Change minister Simon Watts says the government is doubling down on efforts to boost renewable energy generation, streamline regulation, and drive private sector investment as New Zealand faces mounting energy security and affordability challenges.

Energy
More >

Gas supply reducing faster than forecast

Thu 5 Jun 2025

By Liz Kivi | Gas reserves have reduced 27% as of 1 January 2025 compared to last year, according to data released today by the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment.

Extinction
More >
Gas tanks at Te Whakaraupō Lyttelton Harbour

Govt budgets $200m for would-be gas investors

23 May 2025

By Liz Kivi | Energy Resources Aotearoa has welcomed the government's plan to co-invest $200 million in fossil gas expansion, while environmental and climate groups have reacted with horror.

Extreme weather
More >

Death toll from Nigeria flash floods rises to 151

Tue 3 Jun 2025

At least 151 people in central Nigeria are now known to have died following flash floods that destroyed homes and displaced thousands of residents earlier this week.

Fishing
More >
Minister for Oceans and Fisheries Shane Jones with EDS chief executive Gary Taylor

Oceans Commission must have teeth – minister

14 May 2025

If an Oceans Commission were to be established under the government it would need genuine powers to make change, says Minister for Oceans and Fisheries Shane Jones.

Forestry
More >
A Gisborne beach covered in wood debris after Cyclone Gabrielle.

Environmentalists see forestry changes as dangerous step for Tairāwhiti

Tue 3 Jun 2025

By Zita Campbell, Local Democracy Reporter | Tairāwhiti environmentalists have called changes for commercial forestry under proposed Resource Management Act reforms “a slap in the face” and a return to weaker forestry regulations.

Gas
More >

Vanuatu criticises Australia for extending gas project while making COP31 bid

Wed 4 Jun 2025

Vanuatu’s climate minister has expressed disappointment over Australia’s decision to extend one of the world’s biggest liquefied natural gas projects and said it raises questions over its bid to co-host the COP31 summit with Pacific nations.

Geothermal
More >
Nesjavellir Geothermal Power Station in Iceland

Hotter and deeper: how NZ’s plan to drill for ‘supercritical’ geothermal energy holds promise and risk

2 Apr 2025

By David Dempsey, University of Canterbury | New Zealand’s North Island features a number of geothermal systems, several of which are used to generate some 1,000 MegaWatts of electricity. But deeper down there may be even more potential.

Green finance
More >

Electrification challenge for politicians, regulators

27 May 2025

Rewiring Aotearoa is calling for stronger political leadership to bring its vision of a cheaper, cleaner and stronger energy system to life, with the launch of its policy manifesto today.

Greenhouse Effect
More >

Could ‘orange’ hydrogen be NZ’s key to net-zero?

30 May 2025

By Liz Kivi | New Zealand could be sitting on resources for a thriving multi-billion-dollar, low-carbon hydrogen economy, which might even be capable of creating a net reduction of carbon dioxide, according to scientists.

Greenwashing
More >

Energy Australia is in court accused of greenwashing. What is the case about and why is it significant?

16 May 2025

Climate group alleges energy giant misled 400,000 customers about ‘Go Neutral’ product, arguing that carbon credits don’t actually remove emissions.

Hydro power
More >

Methanex closure comes early this year

14 May 2025

The almost-now-annual closure of Methanex has come earlier this year, giving more confidence that the electricity system will get through the winter without a fuel shortfall.

Hydrogen
More >

What happened to the hydrogen economy?

Tue 3 Jun 2025

The hydrogen car that was supposed to carry us into a cleaner future is still not in the driveway. In fact, outside of a few test markets, it’s not in anyone’s driveway.

Insurance
More >

Climate change could drive surge in foreclosures and lender losses, new study finds

22 May 2025

Extreme weather linked to climate change could spell financial ruin for many American homeowners and lead to billions in losses for lenders, a new study finds.

Kyoto
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Will NZ walk away from the Paris Agreement?

20 Dec 2024

By Geoff Bertram | COMMENT: Unless the government can find very cheap offshore mitigation, the temptation to walk away from its Paris Agreement obligations may well be too strong to resist for a coalition government focused on fiscal austerity.

Litigation
More >
Members of the Parents for Climate group, and lawyer David Hertzberg, outside the federal court in Sydney. The advocacy group accused Energy Australia of greenwashing. The parties have now agreed to a settlement.

Energy Australia apologises to 400,000 customers and settles greenwashing legal action

22 May 2025

Energy retailer says carbon offsetting ‘not the most effective way’ to reduce emissions.

Market advice
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Carbon News launches price index

24 Jun 2024

Today’s issue is the first to feature Carbon News’ own carbon price index for secondary market spot prices for NZUs on New Zealand’s compliance market.

Mining
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Govt's RMA overhaul sparks fears for nature and climate

30 May 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | The Government has opened public consultation on the biggest overhaul of environmental planning rules in New Zealand’s history, with critics warning it puts nature and climate at risk in favour of fast-tracked development and industry expansion.

NZ ETS
More >

Waste Levy risks becoming ‘slush fund’ under proposed changes – Commissioner

Thu 5 Jun 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | Proposed changes to New Zealand's waste legislation risk undermining public trust in the waste levy scheme, according to Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment Simon Upton.

Oceans
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From sovereignty to sustainability: United Nations Ocean Conference

Thu 5 Jun 2025

While ocean governance was once designed to protect the marine interests of states, nowadays it must also address the numerous climate and environmental challenges facing the oceans.

Paris Agreement
More >
Lorraine Whitmarsh

Tech alone won’t save us, warns climate expert

Wed 4 Jun 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | Technology alone won't be enough to reach net zero emissions, environmental psychologist Lorraine Whitmarsh told the Carbon and Energy Professionals conference in Auckland last week.

Planetary boundaries
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New research reveals NZ’s natural resource footprint

29 May 2025

Media release | New research from the office of the Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment reveals that about 107 million tonnes of natural resources were required to produce the goods and services consumed by New Zealanders in 2019 – approximately 21 tonnes per person on average.

Plastics
More >

NZ's first chance in 20 years to catch up on waste

30 May 2025

Media release | The government has announced proposals for updating the Waste Minimisation Act and the Litter Act. For the first time in nearly 20 years, Kiwis have a chance to catch up with other countries to reduce our waste and litter.

Protest
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Dismissals 'massive win' for climate movement

13 May 2025

The outstanding charges against 25 climate activists who disrupted traffic in Wellington have been dropped, a move the group calls a win for the climate movement.

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
More >
Protestors at the US Capitol on Presidents Day, February 2025.

US: Clean energy project cancellations top $14 Billion so far in 2025

Wed 4 Jun 2025

Businesses have pulled the plug on big projects amid Trump’s retreat on climate action. But plenty remain in the pipeline, awaiting a Congressional decision on tax credits.

Science
More >

A fungus that can ‘eat you from the inside out’ could spread as the world heats up

27 May 2025

Infection-causing fungi responsible for millions of deaths a year will spread significantly to new regions as the planet heats up, new research predicts — and the world is not prepared.

Tax
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Green budget 'ludicrous la-la land' – govt

15 May 2025

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said the budget was "clown show economics" and an "absolute circus".

The House
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United Nations carbon market rules agreed but concerns remain

25 Nov 2024

New carbon market rules agreed at the fractious UN climate summit will be a relief to New Zealand and Singapore, who were leading the negotiations, but concerns about greenwashing and disadvantaging nature-based solutions remain.

United Nations
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Europe’s next climate target may already have been agreed in Berlin

28 May 2025

Germany’s new coalition has adopted a climate stance shaped by talks with the EU’s top climate official, signalling where the bloc may land on a likely upcoming 2040 emissions target.

Water
More >
Dan Hikuroa

Water crisis on the horizon?

26 May 2025

Media release | Sewage contaminating Auckland oyster farms highlights the “dire state” of water infrastructure in Aotearoa, says University of Auckland Associate Professor Daniel Hikuroa.

Wildfires
More >

Tropical forest loss hit new heights in 2024; fire a major driver in Latin America

23 May 2025

Tropical forest loss skyrocketed in 2024, with vast swaths of primary forest consumed by fire, according to new satellite data.

Wind energy
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For the first time, China invests more in wind and solar than coal overseas

29 May 2025

China’s Belt and Road Initiative, long derided for its heavy carbon footprint, was dominated by wind and solar power projects for the first time from 2022 to 2023, according to a new analysis. But coal plants financed in earlier years are still coming online.

More in: Transport
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