CP Daily News Ticker: 28-30 November 2025

Published 00:01 on November 28, 2025 / Last updated at 00:01 on November 28, 2025 / Daily News Ticker

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The CP Daily News Ticker is a running list of all our news updated in real-time throughout the day. This is also the home to our ‘Bite-sized updates from around the world’, which previously featured in our CP Daily newsletter.
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  • Sun 23:49

    Drowning in paperwork - The EU has disbursed only a small share of the funding it has awarded under its Innovation Fund since 2021, with just 4.7% of €7.1 bln paid out due to heavy administrative requirements and slow project progress. According to European Commission data cited by the FT, companies spend an average of €85,000 per application and often subcontract work to consultants because of the paperwork involved. Some applicants report devoting up to 3,000 hours to submissions. Fewer than 20% of applications succeed, and only 6% of awarded projects are operational, with 15-20% experiencing delays. The bureaucratic burden is cited by industry groups and companies as a major obstacle, particularly for smaller firms developing early-stage technologies. Large projects in areas such as CCS and green hydrogen often secure grants but are slow to reach financial close or construction, contributing to the low payout rate. The Commission argues that first-of-a-kind projects naturally require more time and that the rigorous process helps improve project design. Market conditions further complicate deployment. Vianode, which received a €90 mln grant in 2023 for low-carbon synthetic graphite, abandoned its European plant in favour of Canada due to low-priced Chinese imports and better commercial incentives in North America. Critics say the programme is oversubscribed but not delivering capital at the speed required, creating a significant opportunity cost despite the expectation that around €40 bln from the EU ETS could feed into the fund by 2030. Industry observers argue that the current funding model is not well suited to Europe’s competitiveness challenges.

  • Sun 23:30
    An ocean alkalinity project’s first credit issuances have been hailed as an important step for marine carbon removal (mCDR), while they have also highlighted significant gaps in scientific evidence, environmental monitoring, and data transparency, according to new analysis
  • Sun 23:30
    Both emitters and investors largely pulled back across North American compliance carbon markets through the Oct. 8-14 period, US Commodity Trading Futures Commission (CFTC) data published this week showed, as the CFTC continues to catch up on publishing data since the government shutdown.
  • Sun 23:04
    It's a deal - Trading firm IMC has agreed to buy permanent carbon removal credits from Sirona Technologies’ DAC project in Kenya, known as Project Jacaranda. The companies have not disclosed the volume, delivery schedule, or price of the credits. Sirona uses modular, containerised DAC units manufactured in factories and deployed on-site to capture CO2 from ambient air. The captured CO2 is permanently stored underground through basalt mineralisation, in partnership with storage provider Cella. Sirona launched its Kenya pilot in early 2025 and unveiled its first commercial DAC container in mid-2025, with its first certified credits expected by Dec. 2025. The company highlights Kenya’s renewable energy resources and favourable geological conditions as key reasons for siting the project there.
  • Sun 22:57
    Researchers have demonstrated that satellite-based radar can accurately track peat subsidence in degraded tropical peatlands, offering a scalable and cost-effective tool to strengthen carbon accounting frameworks and support the development of peatland-based carbon credits.
  • Sun 22:49
    A UK airports group has launched a tender worth up to £1.3 million ($1.72 mln) to secure supplies of carbon reduction and removal credits as the UK’s largest airport operator accelerates its shift towards offsetting.
  • Sun 22:39
    A Swiss-headquartered digital MRV provider has launched a community crowdfunding campaign seeking to raise £750,000 ($992,600) to scale its nature-based carbon platform, offering retail investors the chance to buy equity in the business for the first time.
  • Sun 22:32
    California Carbon Allowance (CCA) prices declined into the US Thanksgiving holiday, while Washington Carbon Allowances (WCAs) continued to reach all-time highs on limited volumes.
  • Sun 22:30
    Next in line - Australia has launched the eighth tender of the Capacity Investment Scheme (CIS) for the National Electricity Market which will add 16 GWh of clean dispatchable energy storage, such as batteries, the government announced. The CIS is now accepting aggregating projects, between 5-30 MW, into the bidding process, reflecting the growing role of smaller businesses in Australia's renewable energy market, the government said. Bid submissions close on Feb. 6, 2026. The CIS is part of the government's efforts to reach 82% renewables by 2030, seen as crucial to achieving its emissions reduction target of 43% below 2005 levels by the same date.
  • Sun 15:25
    Dry spell - England’s water system is facing intensifying disputes between government, regulators, and water companies as new analysis warns that industrial decarbonisation plans could outstrip available supplies and worsen the risk of drought. Research by Durham University, funded by retailer Wave, finds that planned carbon capture and hydrogen projects across five major industrial clusters could add up to 860 mln litres per day of demand by 2050. In some areas served by Anglian Water and United Utilities, deficits could begin as early as 2030, with potential shortfalls of 130 mln and 70 mln litres per day respectively by mid-century. Water companies dispute aspects of the findings. United Utilities says the deficit estimates overstate the risk because regional plans already account for hydrogen-related demand. Anglian Water accepts the upper-range figures but argues that Ofwat has constrained investment needed to secure long-term supplies, noting that business demand is often excluded from strategic planning. Water UK, representing the sector, says reservoir construction forecasts used to size new infrastructure do not incorporate the government’s economic and low-carbon ambitions, particularly hydrogen, and blames the Environment Agency for this omission. Wave argues that businesses lack statutory protection in water planning and that leaving large low-carbon projects to secure their own supplies threatens energy security. The government says 10 hydrogen projects are ready to proceed and must demonstrate sustainable water sourcing, adding that carbon capture schemes will be approved only if they meet strict environmental standards. It cites large-scale investment in leakage reduction, new reservoirs, and flood defences as part of wider reforms. The warnings come as the government and Environment Agency caution that England could face widespread drought next year without substantial winter rainfall, with an estimated national water deficit of 6 bln litres per day projected by 2055. (Guardian)
  • Sat 01:38
    End of the road - Carbon8 Systems, a UK-based cleantech company specialising in CCUS, has entered administration after failing to secure new investment. Founded in 2006 as a University of Greenwich spin-out, Carbon8 developed Accelerated Carbonation Technology, a patented process that captures CO2 and converts it into carbon-negative construction aggregates sold under the CircaBuild brand. Its modular CO₂ntainer system enabled on-site capture and treatment of industrial residues for sectors such as cement, steel, energy-from-waste, and biomass. The firm had been working with advisory firm Quantuma since Apr. 2025 as it struggled with cash flow while seeking funding, but efforts to raise capital were unsuccessful. Its Medway Campus site and Wraxhalls premises will close, and 11 employees were made redundant on Nov. 10.
  • Sat 00:26
    The Brazilian state of Para’s environmental asset company has signed a cooperation agreement with a major global consultancy to strengthen the state’s jurisdictional REDD+ programme and accelerate delivery under its emission reduction purchase agreement (ERPA) with the LEAF Coalition.
  • Fri 23:55
    Africa’s forests and woody savannas have shifted from acting as a net carbon sink to becoming a source of emissions over the past decade, according to high-resolution satellite data.
  • Fri 23:34
    Carney climate rupture – Steven Guilbeault, Canada's Minister of Nature and Parks Canada, has resigned from the Carney government. In a statement posted on X, Guilbeault said he strongly opposed the federal government's new pipeline deal with Alberta, including moves exempting the province from Clean Electricity Regulations, adding new fossil fuel subsidies for enhanced oil recovery, and pursuing a pipeline to the West Coast. Guilbeault, a former Greenpeace activist, served as Environment Minister under the former Trudeau government. He was shuffled in March when Prime Minister Mark Carney selected his new cabinet. Guilbeault said in his statement that several core climate measures he helped implement have recently been dismantled or targeted for rollback.
  • Fri 23:24
    Regulatory rollback – The US Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement (OSMRE), which works with states and tribes to restore and repurpose land affected by mining, announced Friday that it had rescinded 14 coal-sector rules following a federal review of legacy requirements. The changes will be published in the Federal Register and follow federal directives calling for the removal of outdated or duplicative rules. The agency said the update streamlines administrative processes, reduces costs, and maintains environmental stewardship while removing rules it described as obsolete. The Trump administration announced new mechanisms to boost the coal sector in September as the US DOE and EPA looks to allow the coal industry to play a larger role in meeting  demand.
  • Fri 23:13
    Edinburgh-based carbon credit certifier Plan Vivo is consulting on a set of guidelines for its first coastal blue carbon methodology, proposing a flexible framework that allows multiple interventions to be combined, and opening the door for expansion into other blue carbon ecosystems in the future.
  • Fri 21:41
    Canada’s industrial emitters, CCS developers, and insurers said on Friday that fragmented provincial carbon markets and depressed credit prices are blocking final investment decisions for multi-billion-dollar carbon capture projects, despite industry consensus that the technology and financing tools are ready.
  • Fri 18:29
    Peru is preparing to significantly expand its national carbon registry (RENAMI), with the environment ministry expecting to recognise the full suite of methodologies of two international standards by mid-2026, while advancing in the approval process of projects aiming to generate credits for bilateral agreements and secure one more bilateral agreement.
  • Fri 17:33
    EU allowances on Friday recorded their biggest weekly gain in two months, and the largest monthly increase since January, after prices surged to a new nine-month peak amid strong buying both early and late in the session that broke above technical resistances, while gas prices slumped to another 18-month low.
  • Fri 17:09
    Penalty! - The UK ETS Authority published on Friday the determination of the 2026 carbon price for use in civil penalties. The announcement stipulates how regulators calculate a number of civil penalties for non-compliance with the UK Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS).
  • Fri 16:41
    The Republic of Ireland’s draft principles for developing a national carbon farming framework are aligned to the EU’s Carbon Removal and Carbon Farming (CRCF) regulation, but consider additional measures to value biodiversity, Carbon Pulse heard.
  • Fri 16:23
    Talks on the Green Claims Directive (GCD) hit a deadlock on Friday, as the Danish EU Council Presidency announced it had failed to find a majority among member states to move the file forward.
  • Fri 15:24
    EU-Turkiye cooperation – The EU and Turkiye have pledged to deepen cooperation on industrial decarbonisation, the European Commission has said. The move was announced on Thursday after the third EU-Turkiye High-Level Dialogue on science, research, technology and innovation was held in Brussels. At the meeting, the two sides discussed aligning Turkiye’s green industrial transformation with its net-zero 2053 goal, including support for the Turkiye Industrial Decarbonisation Investment Platform launched with the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) and the World Bank Group.
  • Fri 15:24
    Russia's influence in Europe – Far-right and pro-Russian political groups across Europe have helped preserve Kremlin fossil-fuel revenues and obstruct efforts to phase out Russian gas, according to a report published Thursday by Ukrainian NGO Razom We Stand. In Austria, the report cited gas dependence and FPO-led political pressure linked to OMV’s ties with Gazprom. In Cyprus, it pointed to longstanding facilitation of Russian offshore energy structures. In Romania, it described hybrid influence operations affecting Black Sea gas developments and energy narratives. In Malta, it highlighted the country’s role in enabling Russian LNG and oil shipping, with over 10,000 vessels now registered under its flag. In Turkey, it noted that while Russian gas imports have declined to 37% of supply as of mid-2025, Moscow retains influence over regional gas flows.
  • Fri 14:52
    On Friday the German Bundestag approved the 2026 federal budget, which paves the way for €476 mln to be allocated for carbon removal (CDR) between 2026 and 2033, including €156 mln to be spent next year.
  • Fri 14:42
    German Chancellor Friedrich Merz will press the European Union to relax its landmark 2035 ban on cars running on petrol and diesel after his coalition agreed a joint position late on Thursday.
  • Fri 14:38
    With the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) set to move from a transitional reporting phase into full operation from 2026, business groups have warned in a letter to the European Commission that key technical guidance is still missing, leaving companies unable to prepare for the new rules.
  • Fri 14:08
    Pros and cons - Carbon Brief has obtained a leaked copy of an 84-country “informal list” that was said to identify those blocking a fossil-fuel phaseout roadmap at COP30, though the media outlet noted that its analysis casts serious doubt on the reliability of the document. The list shows multiple contradictions: 14 states appear on both the “support” and “oppose” sides, and the entire bloc of the world’s least-developed countries (LDCs) is listed among opponents, even though some of them had publicly backed the idea. One notable country on the list - Turkiye -  called its inclusion “wrong”, Carbon Brief said. The leak suggests that the informal list, drawn up by the presidency of the summit, was filled out based on negotiating-bloc membership rather than actual positions, according to the climate news website.
  • Fri 14:04
    Plans to overhaul Germany’s Building Energy Act must align with the EU’s ETS2 carbon pricing scheme while simplifying rules and bolstering social protections for households, according to a new study by a Berlin-based think tank.
  • Fri 13:36
    Gold Standard has approved a digital monitoring pilot for clean cooking projects, the developer behind the initiative announced Friday.
  • Fri 13:35
    Permits in China's national emissions market over the past week retreated to RMB 60 ($8.47), despite a recent regulatory update, with analysts expecting carbon prices to hover around the same level towards year-end.
  • Fri 12:53
    Flying high - Total demand for air travel globally, measured in revenue passenger kilometres (RPK), was up 6.6% in Oct. 2025 compared to the previous October, said the International Air Transport Association (IATA) in a release Friday. International demand rose 8.5% compared to Oct. 2024, while domestic demand increased 3.4% compared to Oct. 2024. Regionally, Africa saw the biggest increase in RPK at 8.8%, followed by Asia Pacific at 8.1%, and then Europe at 6.7%. Both Asia Pacific and the Middle East saw double-digit international RFP growth.
  • Fri 12:38
    The UK risks spending billions of public funds on unproven carbon removal technologies that will unlikely deliver at scale in the next decade, and should instead prioritise renewables and electrification, according to an energy think tank.
  • Fri 12:26
    The Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) should drop the requirement that removal credits must have Article 6 authorisation under the Paris Agreement in the new Corporate Net-Zero Standard to count for neutralisation, market participants have urged.
  • Fri 12:26
    A Chinese institute has last week launched two new voluntary standards for carbon removals and biodiversity during COP30 in Belem, according to local media reports.
  • Fri 12:03
    Upended balance - Africa's forests have turned from a carbon sink into a carbon source - with tropical moist broadleaf forests in the DRC, Madagascar, and parts of west Africa worst affected, according to a study published Friday. From 2010-17, African forests lost about 106 bln kg of biomass per year, equal to the weight of about 106 mln cars, found researchers at the National Centre for Earth Observation at the Universities of Leicester, Sheffield, and Edinburgh. The loss of carbon stored in trees and vegetation is being driven by land clearance for food production, infrastructure projects, and mining - highlighting the urgent need to stop forest loss. This now means that all of Earth's main rainforest regions - the South American Amazon, south-east Asia, and Africa are now themselves part of the climate problem.
  • Fri 11:54
    The European Commission has acknowledged that COP30 fell short of expectations, particularly on the phaseout of fossil fuels, but still, the EU executive said no deal would have been worse for international climate diplomacy, adding that the bloc will now work to “improve the design” of future climate summits.
  • Fri 11:22

    Save the dates - The EU and Switzerland this week confirmed the 2026 operating schedule for transfers of emissions allowances between their linked carbon markets, with weekday transfers set to continue throughout the year except on a small number of pre-announced dates. Authorities said any amendments to the 2026 calendar will be communicated at least five working days in advance, while short-notice updates may still occur if the registry link is temporarily closed for security or other unforeseen reasons. Cancelled transfer days will not be rebooked unless specifically stated. Market participants can initiate cross-registry transactions at any time, with transfers executed on the next working day once the mandatory delay period has elapsed – 26 hours in the EU registry, and 24 hours in the Swiss registry. The EU and Swiss Emissions Trading Systems have been formally linked since Jan. 2020, allowing each side’s allowances to be used for compliance in the other system and enabling physical movement of units between the two registries. Daily weekday transfers have been in place since 2024, with annual calendars published in advance and updates for 2027 due before the end of 2026.

  • Fri 10:56
    South Korea's carbon market reforms should ensure electricity price pass-through and include a clear market stabilisation system, according to a report released by the International Energy Agency (IEA) this week.
  • Fri 09:59
    Morocco and Switzerland have authorised a solar rooftop mitigation activity under Article 6.2 of the Paris Agreement, the two countries announced in a joint statement this week.
  • Fri 09:51
    A Japanese startup dedicated to low-carbon pig farming solutions and carbon credit projects has raised JPY 1.4 billion ($8.9 mln) in its latest financing round to support business expansion, it announced Friday.
  • Fri 09:45
    Blue carbon – Japanese energy company Eneos and the Hokkaido Research Organisation (DRI) have begun large-scale seaweed surveys and aquaculture tests in waters around Hokkaido, Japan, with the aim of verifying the creation of large-scale blue carbon. The project focuses on studying native kelp species, identifying optimal growing conditions, and measuring carbon absorption and fixation. With DRI’s marine research expertise and Eneos’ experience in blue carbon credit initiatives, the partners aim to develop large-scale cultivation methods that could support future J-Blue Credit generation while strengthening local fisheries and advancing Japan’s carbon-neutral goals.
  • Fri 08:15
    Indonesia’s Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) to the Paris Agreement is looking past the mitigation benefits of its coastal and marine ecosystems, a report highlighted this week, saying the potential of blue carbon remains “largely untapped”.
  • Fri 08:00
    The UK government is following moves made by the private sector and introducing annual climate-related reporting requirements for the departments of state and other public bodies.
  • Fri 08:00
    High Australian Carbon Credit Unit (ACCU) inventories has led to a bank cutting its carbon target price, while remaining bearish on the New Zealand market due to weak sentiment.
  • Fri 07:49
    An Australian-based carbon project developer has sold 400,000 carbon credits in a pre-auction sale from its soil carbon project in South Africa, it told Carbon Pulse.
  • Fri 06:05
    To be burned - The government of Austalian state New South Wales on Friday approved a pilot methane-abatement project at Illawarra Coal’s Appin mine, where a regenerative thermal oxidiser, essentially a high-heat chamber that sucks in the mine’s ventilation air, will be installed to burn methane. The technology is expected to cut emissions by about 36,000 tonnes a year without affecting the mine’s coal output. In 2024, Australia’s coking coal mines emitted about 867,000 tonnes of methane, or 71.5 MtCO2e using IEA's 20-year global warming potential.
  • Fri 05:50
    Cooking something up - Australian companies Viva Energy and Origin Energy have signed an MoU to develop a proof of concept for the creation of bio-LPG production at the former's Geelong refinery, they announced. The collaboration, if successful, could see Viva manufacture bio-LPG using domestically-sourced used cooking oil and other feedstock, with Origin looking to onsell the gas to its customers, according to a statement. The two companies hope to establish a viable business case for the bio-LPG supply change which could set the stage for a long-term supply arrangement. Exploring market development, establishing transparent pricing models, and joint advocacy for the carbon accounting frameworks needed to support the commercialisation of bio-LPG, will all fall within the project's scope, they said.
  • Fri 05:39
    Nature credit – The Asian Development Bank has approved a $77 mln loan to support a green-development project in the Indian state of Meghalaya, that combines ecotourism, climate-smart agriculture, and forest conservation to bolster biodiversity and sustainable livelihoods, it announced. Under the plan, 25,000 ha of community forests will be restored through performance-based payments for ecosystem services, while farmers will receive support to rehabilitate degraded lands and adopt sustainable practices. The project also includes a $1 mln technical-assistance grant to build institutional capacity, strengthen market linkages, and implement financing, including the use of carbon and biodiversity credits to reward conservation and restoration efforts, the multilateral development bank said.
  • Fri 04:05
    Carbon kiosk - Indonesia wrapped up its COP30 pavilion in Belem with 2.75 mln untils in carbon purchase or investment interest, Indonesia Business Post reported, citing Ary Sudijanto of the environment ministry. The two-week showcase featured 44 carbon credit projects across energy, forestry, and waste. During the showcase, Indonesia also signed a deal with Norway for 12 mln ITMOs from renewable energy. Still, details about buyer identity, carbon credit prices, and total transaction value, are yet to be published. The Southeast Asian country also plans to launch an international roadshow to showcase its forestry credits to potential investors and buyers before the end of the year.
  • Fri 01:56
    The gap between Australian Safeguard facilities' baselines and actual emissions has climbed by some 50% in the reformed scheme’s second compliance cycle, according to preliminary findings published by the Clean Energy Regulator.

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