Energy & the Environment News and Discussions

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Chile’s Renewable Energy Sector Surges with Photovoltaic Solar Leading the Way
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Kavitha -
The Chilean Association of Renewable Energy and Storage (Acera) has released its latest monthly report, revealing impressive strides in the country’s renewable energy sector. According to the report, electrical energy generation from Non-Conventional Renewable Energy (NCRE) sources soared to 38.2% in February 2024, marking a notable 7.9% increase compared to the previous month.

Leading the charge in renewable energy generation is photovoltaic solar, which accounted for 22.9% of total generation during February. However, this represented a decrease of 11.3% from the preceding month’s figures.
https://solarquarter.com/2024/03/26/chi ... g-the-way/




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Spills of raw sewage into England's rivers and seas are worst on record
Wednesday 27 March 2024 12:44, UK

Spills of raw sewage into England's rivers and seas reached their worst on record last year.

Discharges of untreated sewage by water companies doubled from 1.8 million hours in 2022 to a record 3.6 million in 2023, according to new Environment Agency data.

The number of individual spills also soared by 54% - from 301,000 incidents in 2022 to 464,000 in 2023.

Water companies partly blamed the huge jump on last year's wet weather - 2023 was England's sixth wettest on record - following the drought during 2022.

Because rain and sewage wash down the same pipes in the UK, sewers are fitted with so-called storm overflows, which act as safety valves during heavy rain, to stop sewage backing up into people's homes.
https://news.sky.com/story/spills-of-ra ... d-13102680
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Surge of new US-led oil and gas activity threatens to wreck Paris climate goals
Thu 28 Mar 2024 06.00 GMT

The world’s fossil-fuel producers are on track to nearly quadruple the amount of extracted oil and gas from newly approved projects by the end of this decade, with the US leading the way in a surge of activity that threatens to blow apart agreed climate goals, a new report has found.

There can be no new oil and gas infrastructure if the planet is to avoid careering past 1.5C (2.7F) of global heating, above pre-industrial times, the International Energy Agency (IEA) has previously stated. Breaching this warming threshold, agreed to by governments in the Paris climate agreement, will see ever worsening effects such as heatwaves, floods, drought and more, scientists have warned.

But since the IEA’s declaration in 2021, countries and major fossil fuel companies have forged ahead with a glut of new oil and gas activity. At least 20bn barrels of oil equivalent of new oil and gas has been discovered for future drilling since this point, according to the new report by Global Energy Monitor, a San Francisco-based NGO.

Last year, at least 20 oil and gas fields were readied and approved for extraction following discovery, sanctioning the removal of 8bn barrels of oil equivalent. By the end of this decade, the report found, the fossil-fuel industry aims to sanction nearly four times this amount – 31bn barrels of oil equivalent – across 64 additional new oil and gas fields.

The US, which has produced more crude oil than any country has ever done in history for the past six years in a row, led the way in new oil and gas projects in 2022 and 2023, the report found. Guyana was second, with countries in the Americas accounting for 40% of all new oil sanctioned in the past two years.
https://www.theguardian.com/environment ... els-report
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https://eciu.net/media/press-releases/2 ... er-2023-24

The original report by the ECIU. I hope this progress isn't undone by the government's fumbling
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https://phys.org/news/2024-03-anthropol ... tions.html

Anthropologists create computational model to predict likelihood of future animal extinctions
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US appeals court kills ban on plastic containers contaminated with PFAS

Sat 30 Mar 2024 11.00 GMT

A federal appeals court in the US has killed a ban on plastic containers contaminated with highly toxic PFAS “forever chemicals” found to leach at alarming levels into food, cosmetics, household cleaners, pesticides and other products across the economy.

Houston-based Inhance manufactures an estimated 200m containers annually with a process that creates, among other chemicals, PFOA, a toxic PFAS compound. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in December prohibited Inhance from using the manufacturing process.

But the conservative fifth circuit court of appeals court overturned the ban. The judges did not deny the containers’ health risks, but said the EPA could not regulate the buckets under the statute it used.

The rule requires companies to alert the EPA if a new industrial process creates hazardous chemicals. Inhance has produced the containers for decades and argued that its process is not new, so it is not subject to the regulations. The EPA argued that it only became aware that Inhance’s process created PFOA in 2020, so it could be regulated as a new use, but the court disagreed.

“The court did not dispute EPA’s underlying decision that this is a danger to human health, what they did was say it’s not a new use, which I think is wrong … but this case isn’t over by any stretch,” said Kyla Bennett, a former EPA official now with the Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (Peer) non-profit, which has intervened in legal proceedings.

PFAS are a class of about 15,000 compounds used to make products resistant to water, stains and heat. They are known as “forever chemicals” because they do not naturally break down, and they have been linked to cancer, high cholesterol, liver disease, kidney disease, fetal complications and other serious health problems.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/202 ... ners-court

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Boom in mining for renewable energy minerals threatens Africa’s great apes
Wed 3 Apr 2024 19.00 BST

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Up to a third of Africa’s great apes are threatened by a boom in mining projects for minerals required for the renewable energy transition, new research shows.

An estimated 180,000 gorillas, bonobos and chimpanzees are at risk due to an increase in demand for critical minerals such as copper, lithium, nickel and cobalt, a study has found. Many of those minerals are required for clean energy technologies such as wind turbines and electric cars. Researchers say the boom in demand is driving destruction of tropical rainforests which are critical habitats for Africa’s great apes.

“Africa is experiencing an unprecedented mining boom threatening wildlife populations and whole ecosystems,” researchers wrote in the paper, published in Science Advances. Africa is home to an estimated 30% of the world’s mineral resources, and substantial production increases in renewable energy are expected to drive up demand.

Mining harms apes through habitat loss, pollution and disease. It can also make habitats more accessible to hunters and farmers, as roads are carved into forest. More than two-thirds of primate species are already threatened with extinction.

“A shift away from fossil fuels is good for the climate but must be done in a way that does not jeopardise biodiversity,” said lead researcher Dr Jessica Junker from the non-profit conservation organisation Re:wild. “In its current iteration it may even be going against the very environmental goals we’re aiming for … It is crucial for everyone to adopt a mindset of reduced consumption.”
https://www.theguardian.com/environment ... t-apes-aoe
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