Australia carbon tax

Everything tagged with: Australia carbon tax

May 24, 2013: U.S. House votes to force approval of Keystone pipeline; Cheap shale gas bubble ‘will burst within 2-4 years’: Expert; Utility CEOs Slam EU Energy Policy

BY Rachel Koning Beals » May 24, 2013 AT 2:00 am

In this edition, coverage of continued Keystone wrangling in House Passes Keystone Bill as White House Vows. Plus, Utilities Tap Cheaper Compliance Option With UN Carbon Banking, reports Bloomberg. And, Cheap shale gas bubble ‘will burst within 2-4 years’, says an industry follower quoted on EurActiv.com.

Editor’s Note: We will not publish Monday, May 27 and Tuesday, May 28 in observance of the U.S. Memorial Day holiday.

May 23, 2013: Airlines May Delay Emissions Measure for Extra Year: ICAO; California carbon permits sell for record high price; EU Panel Penalties to Hurt Solar Firms From China to U.K.

BY Rachel Koning Beals » May 23, 2013 AT 2:00 am

In this edition, coverage of California’s latest carbon auction and Thomson Reuters Point Carbon analysis on that sale in the Carbon section. Elsewhere, EU Urges Energy Market as U.S. Shale Gas Widens Price Gap, Bloomberg reports.

May 14, 2013: Airline industry leans toward global carbon offset scheme; Green goes mainstream in the hunt for yield; Clock is ticking, slowly, on rules for coal-fired power plants

BY Rachel Koning Beals » May 14, 2013 AT 2:00 am

In this edition, all eyes on the global airline industry and its role in the future of carbon markets. Elsewhere in carbon coverage, Project aims to track big city carbon footprints, reports the AP, while Huffington Post blogs Oh Frack, B.C.’s Carbon Footprint Likely Greater Than Reported.

Correction: A comment in the March 13 E/E incorrectly linked RIN contracts to ISE, the International Securities Exchange. RIN contracts are traded on ICE, the IntercontintentalExchange.

May 9, 2013: New emissions plan could energise global climate talks, says US envoy; The Emerging Interlocking Climate Solution; How GE and a leading utility are changing the smart-grid game

BY Rachel Koning Beals » May 9, 2013 AT 2:00 am

In this edition, more buzz out of the U.S. suggesting that the best Kyoto rewrite will come with ditching a multilateral agreement in favor of country plans. Australia is bristling over European market impact on its carbon tax and market policies. And, from The New York Times, A Call for Quid Pro Quo on Keystone Pipeline Approval.

May 2, 2013: IntercontinentalExchange Sees Global Pricing Fueling Trade in Gas Futures; Shell Bets Big on Natural Gas; The U.S. Has Much, Much More Gas and Oil Than We Thought

BY Rachel Koning Beals » May 1, 2013 AT 2:46 pm

In this edition, The Economist weighs in on the ETS in this month’s magazine. Yale is out with a new report on the how the population links extreme weather and climate change. From the water space, the New York Times reports on
Safe Storage of Water? Go Underground.

April 30, 2013: Bonn climate talks kick off with stark warning over dangerous carbon threshold; Carbon bubble makes Australia’s coal industry ripe for financial implosion; Bank of America and Citigroup Biggest Lenders to Coal

BY Rachel Koning Beals » April 30, 2013 AT 2:00 am

In this edition, dispatches from the U.N.’s Bonn conference from Ecosystem Marketplace and Business Green. Australia’s complex carbon-coal relationship is covered by Business Green in the Leads section and others throughout the Coal section. And from the political space, Ford lobbying on Keystone pipeline, reports The Hill’s E2 Wire.

April 29, 2013: Carbon Markets Drive China, India Climate Efforts, Center Says; More US cities join push to sell off fossil fuel investments; Chinese Solar Firm Sells Stake to Raise Cash

BY Rachel Koning Beals » April 29, 2013 AT 2:40 am

In this issue, Reuters and Bloomberg cover the decline in European power trading. The Hill reports Ex-climate czar Browner predicts Obama will regulate existing power plants.The Atlantic’s May issue asks: What If We Never Run Out of Oil? The Financial Times says More US cities join push to sell off fossil fuel investments.

April 26, 2013: EEX, Powernext to combine gas trading from May 29; U.K.’s Davies Seeks Carbon Vote in EU Assembly Before End-July; How Google is changing the renewables game for Apple, Facebook

BY Rachel Koning Beals » April 26, 2013 AT 2:53 am

In this edition, a look at carbon policy inaction impact on utilities use of coal and power prices. A New York Times political feature says Obama’s second term is off to a slow start for the environment. And, U.S. House Plans Hearings on Federal Ethanol Mandate This Year.

April 25, 2013: Record Carbon Plunge Means Pain for Europe’s Utilities; EU faces energy policy vacuum after 2020; U.S. Weighs Legislation to Cut Clean Energy Capital Costs

BY Rachel Koning Beals » April 25, 2013 AT 2:00 am

In this edition, dispatches from the EU policy talks in Dublin, including Reuters’ EU faces energy policy vacuum after 2020. BNEF has a feature exploring Peak Fossil Fuels’ Is Closer Than You Think. And from Bloomberg, U.S. Weighs Legislation to Cut Clean Energy Capital Costs.

April 22, 2013: Europe’s Carbon Market Eyes Assurances on Fix From Ministers; China and India talk up plans for national climate action; Study: Fracked gas far more climate-friendly than coal

BY Rachel Koning Beals » April 22, 2013 AT 2:27 am

In this edition, coverage and attention turn to Dublin talks this week, covered here: Europe’s Carbon Market Eyes Assurances on Fix From Ministers. And, the World Bank weighs in in a PBS interview: World Bank President: Climate Change Is Urgent ‘Today’ Problem.

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