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Singapore and Thailand Sign First Carbon Credit Deal in Southeast Asia

On August 19, 2025, Singapore and Thailand signed their first bilateral carbon credit transfer agreement under Article 6 of the Paris Agreement, making it Singapore’s first such deal with a Southeast Asian country. The agreement sets up a binding framework that allows Singapore to buy verified carbon credits from emission-reduction projects in Thailand, with proper […]

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Louisiana Approves Gas Plants to Power Meta’s $10B Data Center, Sparking Local Backlash

Louisiana regulators have approved Entergy’s plan to build three new natural gas power plants to meet the massive electricity demands of Meta’s upcoming $10 billion artificial intelligence data center. Two plants will be constructed in Richland Parish and one near Waterford, collectively expected to generate around 2.25–2.5 gigawatts—more than twice New Orleans’ current power needs.

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10: UK Tightens Export Rules to Stop Waste Tyres Fueling Hazardous Furnaces Abroad

The UK government has announced stricter regulations on the export of waste tyres following reports that millions were being shipped to unregulated facilities and makeshift furnaces in countries like India, posing serious health and environmental risks. An internal review by the Environment Agency revealed that many tyres were subjected to pyrolysis—a process that produces toxic

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9: UN Plastic Treaty Talks in Geneva Hit Deadlock: Global South Demands and Lessons for the World

The United Nations’ attempt to forge a global plastic pollution treaty ended in a stalemate in Geneva, highlighting the challenge of uniting 184 countries with divergent priorities. Delegates disagreed on whether the treaty should restrict plastic production or focus primarily on waste management and recycling. Countries such as the United States, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait

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8:Australia’s Solar Grazing Revolution: Sheep and Solar Panels Power Sustainable Farming

In Australia, farmers are pioneering a unique approach called solar grazing, where sheep are allowed to graze beneath solar panels, creating a win-win scenario for renewable energy production and agriculture. This dual-use strategy—also known as agrivoltaics—helps manage vegetation naturally, reducing the need for mechanical mowing and chemical herbicides. The solar panels provide shade, keeping sheep

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7: Butterflies and Birds Flourish This Summer 2025, Highlighting Nature’s Remarkable Resilience

This summer, the UK has witnessed a notable resurgence of wildlife, with butterfly and bird populations thriving across multiple regions. Species such as the purple emperor butterfly have reached record numbers in areas like Knepp Estate in West Sussex, while rare birds like the Montagu’s harrier have successfully bred in the wild for the first

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6: AI Uncovers Next-Generation Battery Materials, Offering a Sustainable Alternative to Lithium

Researchers at the New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT) have used artificial intelligence to identify a set of five new materials that could transform the future of energy storage by reducing or entirely replacing lithium in batteries. These materials, based on abundant and widely available elements such as magnesium, calcium, aluminum, and zinc, exhibit structures

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5: Standard Chartered Partners with Brazil’s Acre to Launch High-Impact Carbon Credit Program to Protect the Amazon

London, UK — August 7, 2025 — Standard Chartered has signed a landmark five-year partnership with the Brazilian state of Acre to sell up to 5 million high-quality carbon credits annually, beginning in 2026. The credits, issued under the internationally recognized REDD+ framework and registered with the ART TREES registry, aim to prevent deforestation across

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4: Indonesia’s Forest Crisis Deepens in 2025: Alarming Clearing Threatens Economy, Environment, and Climate Goals

Indonesia is facing an unprecedented wave of deforestation in 2025, with nearly half of the forest loss caused by speculative clearing—land stripped and left unused. Traditionally, pulp, paper, and palm oil industries have driven forest loss, but recent trends suggest a shift toward land hoarding and investment speculation, which makes monitoring and enforcement increasingly difficult.

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3: Norwegian Researchers Harness Microbes to Convert CO₂ Into Ultra-Pure Biomethane

Scientists in Norway have developed a microbial-based process that converts captured carbon dioxide into biomethane with 96% purity, offering a highly efficient alternative to traditional biogas production. The research team uses specially selected methanogenic microorganisms that feed on CO₂ and green hydrogen inside bioreactors under controlled pressure and temperature. The microbes convert the gases into

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