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net_zero
2025
As authorities declared 2024 the hottest on record, a key private sector climate alliance, the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero (GFANZ) abandoned a requirement that members be aligned to the Paris agreement. That was followed by a network of net zero asset managers suspending work, and deleting from its website its statement of commitments that members must adopt, after BlackRock, the biggest of them all, quit its ranks.
EN
‘Net zero hero’ myth unfairly shifts burden of solving climate crisis on to individuals, study finds
- Guardian staff reporter
Shifting responsibility to consumers minimises the role of energy industry and policymakers, University of Sydney research suggests
2024
Under current emission trajectories, temporarily overshooting the Paris global warming limit of 1.5 °C is a distinct possibility. Permanently exceeding this limit would substantially increase the probability of triggering climate tipping elements. Here, we investigate the tipping risks associated with several policy-relevant future emission scenarios, using a stylised Earth system model of four interconnected climate tipping elements.
Met ruim honderd biljoen dollar aan vermogen is de Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero op papier de machtigste financiële organisatie ter wereld. Het doel is om klimaatneutraal te worden tegen 2050. Maar tussen woord en daad gapen belangen in de fossiele industrie en conservatieve lobbygroepen.
2023
L'Institutional Investors Group on Climate Change (IIGCC) a publié une nouvelle version de son Net Zero Standard for Oil and Gas.
Without more legally binding and well-planned net-zero policies, the world is highly likely to miss key climate targets.
Humanity is not on track to avoid the deadliest effects of climate change, according to University at Buffalo researcher Holly Jean Buck. "Our plans are not adequate to meet the goal of limiting the Earth's temperature increase to no more than 1.5℃ by 2050," said Buck, Ph.D., assistant professor of environment and sustainability....
Carbon offsets can help achieve emissions goals, some experts argue, while others say they are actively dangerous
2022
Many countries' pledges to get to net zero greenhouse gas emissions rely partly on removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, using methods such as planting trees and restoring degraded ecosystems. But a report out today has revealed they are relying too heavily on these carbon drawdown schemes to fulfil these promises. The Land Gap Report, which was released today by the University of Melbourne and includes input from more than 20 international researchers, has calculated countries would collectively need 1.2 billion hectares of land to meet their Paris Agreement goals.
Carbon capture and storage schemes, a key plank of many governments’ net zero plans, “is not a climate solution”, the author of a major new report on the technology has said. Researchers for the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) found underperforming carbon capture projects considerably outnumbered successful ones by large margins.