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16 Utah Cities Choose to Opt-in to Groundbreaking Clean Energy Program to Bring 100% Clean Energy to Grid

Press Release on CleanTechnica

Salt Lake City — The 90-day ordinance adoption period for the Utah Renewable Communities (URC) program concluded on Tuesday, June 2 after the city of Midvale unanimously voted to adopt the program, bringing the total number of participating communities to 16. The first-of-its-kind program that has sparked national attention will bring affordable, ... [continued]

The post 16 Utah Cities Choose to Opt-in to Groundbreaking Clean Energy Program to Bring 100% Clean Energy to Grid appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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The Year Electrification Took Over The Philippine International Motor Show (Part 1)

Raymond Tribdino on CleanTechnica

Part 1: The New Establishment The Philippine automotive market has moved beyond asking whether electrification will arrive. At the tenth edition of the Philippine International Motor Show (PIMS), the question was no longer if alternative powertrains would become mainstream, but which technologies, brands, and business models would define the transition. ... [continued]

The post The Year Electrification Took Over The Philippine International Motor Show (Part 1) appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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The rightwing campaign to control how US judges view the climate crisis
The rightwing campaign to control how US judges view the climate crisis
The rightwing campaign to control how US judges view the climate crisis

The rightwing campaign to control how US judges view the climate crisis

Dharna Noor on Environment | The Guardian

US energy secretary Chris Wright featured in seminars to judges when he was a fracking executive

As cities and states sue big oil for billions in damages over allegations that it covered up the dangers of its products, rightwing organizations are attempting to discredit the wave of litigation. They claim the lawyers behind it are teaming up with an environmentally focused legal education non-profit to bias federal judges against oil companies.

But it is actually fossil fuel-backed organizations that are attempting to sway the judiciary in their favor, one of those law firms is countering. Evidence of this includes judicial seminars hosted by one such group featuring pro-industry speakers such as the current energy secretary, Chris Wright, in his former occupation as a fracking executive.

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This LA neighborhood is choked by smog. The solution: a network of sensors on offices, homes and bags
This LA neighborhood is choked by smog. The solution: a network of sensors on offices, homes and bags
This LA neighborhood is choked by smog. The solution: a network of sensors on offices, homes and bags

This LA neighborhood is choked by smog. The solution: a network of sensors on offices, homes and bags

Katharine Gammon in Los Angeles with photographs by Thalia Juarez on Environment | The Guardian

Pacoima is hemmed in by highways and heavy industry, and its residents are fighting pollution with hyperlocal air quality monitoring

Jose Luis Salas looks up at the ladder. “Are you ready?” he asks Shance Taylor, an environmental project manager who’s holding a white container, about the size of a shoebox, covered with wires and numbers.

Taylor nods and climbs up to reach the side of Salas’s tidy house in Pacoima, a neighborhood in Los Angeles’s north-east San Fernando valley. The curious box in their hands is known as Aeroqual sensor – part of a community air-quality monitoring program run by Pacoima Beautiful, a local environmental group.

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BYD: World’s Largest Automaker In 5 Years

Larry Evans on CleanTechnica

In the recent shareholder meeting, BYD Chairman Wang Chuanfu indicated that the company would become the largest automaker by volume in 5 years and would exceed 10 million units by the end of the decade. “Five years from now, BYD will be able to achieve true global leadership in terms ... [continued]

The post BYD: World’s Largest Automaker In 5 Years appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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Pollinators in peril: scientists reveal the hidden human health costs of the world’s disappearing bees
Pollinators in peril: scientists reveal the hidden human health costs of the world’s disappearing bees
Pollinators in peril: scientists reveal the hidden human health costs of the world’s disappearing bees

Pollinators in peril: scientists reveal the hidden human health costs of the world’s disappearing bees

Gloria Dickie on Environment | The Guardian

Crops and flowers rely on them for survival, but wild bees are declining – and crucial nutrients will go missing from our diets as a result

There are few ways in and out of Nepal’s Jumla district. The Karnali highway, considered one of the world’s most dangerous roads, provides the only land link, splicing through the Himalayas to connect Jumla’s terraced valleys to the rest of the country. As such, the 120,000 people that live there are almost entirely self-sufficient, with most of them eating and selling what they grow.

It’s a tenuous existence, plagued by food insecurity and malnutrition. In recent years, local beekeepers have bemoaned languishing hives and dwindling honey production, observing that roughly half of their bees seem to have vanished over the past decade. These concerns, however, ignore an even more insidious impact.

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‘Every day it’s more barriers’: how the US is shutting out climate refugees
‘Every day it’s more barriers’: how the US is shutting out climate refugees
‘Every day it’s more barriers’: how the US is shutting out climate refugees

‘Every day it’s more barriers’: how the US is shutting out climate refugees

Oliver Milman on Environment | The Guardian

As the US shuts its doors to most refugees, there’s little hope of a new system to help those forced from home by climate impacts

Millions of people around the world are having their lives upended by floods, storms and heatwaves worsened by the climate crisis. Those forced to flee their home countries, however, are finding that the door to the US is more firmly shut than ever.

Neither US nor international law recognizes environmental hazards, such as climate-related displacement, as a valid cause to claim asylum or gain entry through other migration pathways, despite the mounting toll of disasters caused by an overheating planet.

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Deepest and most extensive whale graveyard discovered in Indian Ocean
Deepest and most extensive whale graveyard discovered in Indian Ocean
Deepest and most extensive whale graveyard discovered in Indian Ocean

Deepest and most extensive whale graveyard discovered in Indian Ocean

Nicola Davis Science correspondent on Environment | The Guardian

Some remains found in Diamantina fracture zone date back more than 5m years and reveal species and ecosystems unknown to science

The oldest, deepest and most extensive whale graveyard yet discovered has been found in the south-eastern Indian Ocean, with fossils dating back more than 5m years.

Whale falls – the term for dead whales that sink to the ocean floor – are not uncommon, but most have been found at depths of less than 4km (2.5 miles). By contrast, the newly discovered necropolis reaches depths of more than 7km, and extends hundreds of miles across the sea floor.

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Electric Airplane Powered By Solid-State Batteries Completes Test Flight

Jake Richardson on CleanTechnica

If you have been following battery energy storage developments for a while, you know the prospect of solid-state batteries is both real and seems to perpetually not arrive. Many of us might like to speculate what will happen when solid-state batteries are readily available to be used in electric vehicles ... [continued]

The post Electric Airplane Powered By Solid-State Batteries Completes Test Flight appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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Super-rich’s assets cause outsized amount of climate harm, study says
Super-rich’s assets cause outsized amount of climate harm, study says
Super-rich’s assets cause outsized amount of climate harm, study says

Super-rich’s assets cause outsized amount of climate harm, study says

Fiona Harvey in Bonn on Environment | The Guardian

Greenpeace calculates that wealthiest contribute nearly $1tn of damage a year with ownership-based emissions

Ultra-wealthy people zooming across the world on their private jets, lounging on yachts and conspicuous by their Instagrammable consumption are among the most easily identified individual culprits when it comes to the climate crisis – but new research argues that it is not just their heady lifestyles to blame, but also their bank accounts.

Through their ownership of companies and private financial and physical assets, from oil producers to property developments, the super-rich are responsible for an outsized slice of the greenhouse gases that are overheating the planet. The top 1% of people by wealth, through their shareholdings and investments, control about a quarter of global annual emissions in total.

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The Rivian R2 Is Here!

Zachary Shahan on CleanTechnica

It’s been a long wait, but Rivian’s more mass-market, midsize R2 SUV is now finding its way to customers. Rivian began “public customer deliveries” of the R2 yesterday. In terms of “private” deliveries to Rivian staff and insiders, those began in April. “Also beginning today, Rivian is extending invitations to ... [continued]

The post The Rivian R2 Is Here! appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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The Galápagos is a wildlife haven. But is that enough to protect the rare scalloped hammerhead shark?
The Galápagos is a wildlife haven. But is that enough to protect the rare scalloped hammerhead shark?
The Galápagos is a wildlife haven. But is that enough to protect the rare scalloped hammerhead shark?

The Galápagos is a wildlife haven. But is that enough to protect the rare scalloped hammerhead shark?

Helen Scales in the Galapagos Islands on Environment | The Guardian

The species is abundant within the protected archipelago but when they migrate outside the marine reserve to give birth they run the gauntlet of industrial fishing

The unmistakable fluted T-shape of a scalloped hammerhead shark slides by, followed by a diver holding his breath and a metal spear like an extra-long snooker cue. The spear hits the fish behind its dorsal fin and the 2-metre shark darts away, disgruntled but otherwise unharmed.

Carlos Robalino, a marine biologist from the Galápagos Islands, trained as a shark researcher in Mexico but is now back home and working as a junior researcher at the Charles Darwin Foundation. When we meet in March, he is one of the divers on the foundation’s research expedition to Darwin and Wolf, the most northerly islands in the Galápagos marine reserve.

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Toby Carvery to fund orchard replanting as settlement for felling ancient oak
Toby Carvery to fund orchard replanting as settlement for felling ancient oak
Toby Carvery to fund orchard replanting as settlement for felling ancient oak

Toby Carvery to fund orchard replanting as settlement for felling ancient oak

Matthew Weaver on Environment | The Guardian

Enfield council in north London took legal action against restaurant chain after outrage over damage to tree

The UK restaurant chain Toby Carvery has settled a legal dispute over taking a chainsaw to an ancient oak tree without permission, by agreeing to pay to restore a lost orchard.

The unauthorised partial felling of the 500-year-old oak next to a Toby Carvery car park in Whitewebbs Park, Enfield, north London, in April last year, prompted widespread public outrage and questions in parliament.

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Bycatch has ‘shocking’ toll on British marine life, first-ever analysis reveals
Bycatch has ‘shocking’ toll on British marine life, first-ever analysis reveals
Bycatch has ‘shocking’ toll on British marine life, first-ever analysis reveals

Bycatch has ‘shocking’ toll on British marine life, first-ever analysis reveals

Karen McVeigh on Environment | The Guardian

Conservationists say cherished creatures such as whales, dolphins and seabirds are being killed in large numbers by fishing tackle

Thousands of Britain’s most charismatic and protected marine wildlife, including whales, porpoises, dolphins, seals and seabirds are being killed as “collateral damage” by fishing vessels every year, according to the first-ever analysis of bycatch data.

The analysis, by the Wildlife and Countryside Link, a coalition of voluntary conservation groups, reveals the devastating toll bycatch, the accidental capture and killing of non-target species by fishing vessels, is having on marine species.

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The Year Electrification Took Over The Philippine International Motor Show (Part 2)

Raymond Tribdino on CleanTechnica

Part 2: The Legacy Response. See Part 1 here. If the Chinese manufacturers represented the disruption phase of the industry’s transformation, the second major story at PIMS 2026 was scalability. Electrification is no longer confined to passenger vehicles. Increasingly, manufacturers are targeting the fleets, logistics operators, and transport providers that ... [continued]

The post The Year Electrification Took Over The Philippine International Motor Show (Part 2) appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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BYD Refutes “Chinese Military Company” Blacklist

Larry Evans on CleanTechnica

In addition to NIO’s response, BYD issued a statement to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange (01211) yesterday (Google translation): This announcement is a voluntary announcement made by BYD Company Limited (the “Company”, together with its subsidiaries, the “Group”). Our company notes that the U.S. Department of Defense issued a “Notification ... [continued]

The post BYD Refutes “Chinese Military Company” Blacklist appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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Mexico Unveils Olinia Uno, A “Coche Del Pueblo” Starting At $8600

Steve Hanley on CleanTechnica

Mexico is preparing to begin producing the Olinia Uno later this year. It is a low speed EV designed for commercial applications.

The post Mexico Unveils Olinia Uno, A “Coche Del Pueblo” Starting At $8600 appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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NIO Refutes US Dept of Defense Claim That It’s Linked To The Chinese Military

Zachary Shahan on CleanTechnica

The US Department of Defense has declared that BYD, Nio, CATL, Baidu, and some other large Chinese manufacturers and technology companies are “Chinese military companies” — they have been put on the Department of Defense’s Section 1260H. NIO, an all-electric vehicle company that sells EVs in Europe and other countries ... [continued]

The post NIO Refutes US Dept of Defense Claim That It’s Linked To The Chinese Military appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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More than half of clean energy schemes needed for Labour’s 2030 target offered grid connection
More than half of clean energy schemes needed for Labour’s 2030 target offered grid connection
More than half of clean energy schemes needed for Labour’s 2030 target offered grid connection

More than half of clean energy schemes needed for Labour’s 2030 target offered grid connection

Jillian Ambrose on Environment | The Guardian

The 700 projects include wind and solar farms, battery storage, gas and hydro plans

More than half the renewable energy projects needed to meet the government’s clean power targets by 2030 are now able to plug into the electricity grid after years of delay, according to the system operator.

The National Energy System Operator (Neso) has offered more than 700 clean energy projects in Great Britain a grid connection date since the start of the year, after a two-year process to unblock a bottleneck that threatened to delay projects into the 2030s.

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Op-Ed: Back in Hai Phong and the Third Time’s Even More Electrifying

Raymond Tribdino on CleanTechnica

There is a distinct difference between watching an industrial birth from the clean gallery of a press junket and standing on the factory floor while the machinery runs at scale. Five years ago, I wrote a piece for CleanTechnica outlining six reasons why VinFast could become an electric vehicle superpower. ... [continued]

The post Op-Ed: Back in Hai Phong and the Third Time’s Even More Electrifying appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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