CP Daily News Ticker: 6-8 March 2026

Published 00:01 on March 6, 2026 / Last updated at 00:01 on March 6, 2026 / Daily News Ticker

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Introducing the CP Daily News Ticker, a running list of all our news updated in real-time throughout the day. This is also the new home to our ‘Bite-sized updates from around the world’, which previously featured in our CP Daily newsletter.
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  • Sun 23:01
    Climate damages could drive EU public debt far above official projections by mid-century if governments fail to increase spending on climate mitigation and adaptation, according to a report by a UK-based economic think tank published on Monday.
  • Sat 23:05
    Gulf crisis, carbon cost - Pakistan is considering asking the IMF to suspend a carbon levy on furnace oil imposed under its Resilience and Sustainability Facility, as Gulf tensions threaten the country's energy supply and drive up crude import costs, Pakistan's Energy Update Magazine reported. Federal Minister for Petroleum Ali Pervaiz Malik said the prime minister had directed the finance ministry to engage the IMF on the matter, with the aim of keeping furnace oil for domestic use rather than exporting it. Crude prices at $100 per barrel could add $250 mln per month to Pakistan's external account burden, rising to $500 mln at $120/barrel, Malik said. Petrol import premiums have surged from $5 to $17 per barrel, pushing domestic prices up. The levy was introduced in 2025 as part of an IMF backed broader economic package.
  • Sat 16:16
    An oil major has urged officials to revise proposed amendments to the state's cap-and-invest programme and adopt a carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM) on fuel imports, warning the changes will otherwise cause irreversible harm to the industry.
  • Sat 06:38
    Researchers have proposed a market-based framework to help the chemicals industry decarbonise complex global supply chains, arguing that verified emissions reductions within value chains could become a scalable complement to existing carbon markets.
  • Sat 06:21
    Adding biochar to soil could significantly reduce the climate impact of farming in dryland regions compared with compost-based treatments, according to a new study that highlights implications for offsets and agricultural mitigation strategies.
  • Sat 06:01

    TGI+XGC - TGI Solar Power Group has signed a letter of intent to acquire Ontario-based XGC Corp for $1.8 mln, aiming to deploy national carbon registry infrastructure for governments participating in international carbon markets under Article 6.4 of the Paris Agreement. The deal would be executed through a new Wyoming subsidiary focused on offering “sovereign carbon infrastructure-as-a-Service”, enabling countries to issue, track, and manage carbon credits through a digital registry platform. XGC’s system combines satellite-based GeoAI verification, blockchain-based credit tracking, and enterprise financial governance tools designed to support transparent carbon credit issuance, prevent double counting, and manage revenue flows. TGI expects the platform to generate recurring revenues through registry licensing and transaction fees tied to national carbon credit activity. The companies plan to target initial deployments in Africa, Central Asia, and Latin America following a 90-day due diligence period, while XGC is also pursuing international patents covering its integrated registry and verification technologies.

  • Sat 05:35
    Canada-Japan CCUS - Canada has announced a new comprehensive strategic partnership with Japan aimed at expanding trade ties and energy security. The bilateral agreement said the pair would look to increase efforts to support Japanese automotive manufacturers in advancing their decarbonisation efforts in Canada, and increase cooperation on clean energy technologies, including nuclear technologies, hydrogen, energy-efficient industrial processes, as well as carbon capture, utilisation, and storage. Japan was the third stop on Prime Minister Mark Carney’s trade expansion tour amid uncertainty over the Canada-US relationship. He signed similar pledges with Australia earlier in the week.
  • Sat 05:35
    Grid monitor says no - PJM Interconnection's market monitor urged US federal regulators to reject a plan by data centre developer TeraWulf to buy a 216MW oil-fired power plant in Maryland from GenOn, warning the deal would remove needed generation from a constrained grid zone and shift costs to ratepayers, Utility Dive reported. TeraWulf said it plans to build two phases of roughly 500MW each of gas-fired generation at the site - totalling about 1GW - alongside 250MW of battery storage per phase, intending to operate as a net generator to the state. The opposition came on the same day President Donald Trump issued a "ratepayer pledge" signed by Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft, OpenAI, Oracle, and xAI committing the companies to acquire new generation to meet their data centre needs.
  • Sat 05:34
    Cleanup clash – Environmental and Indigenous groups criticised a newly announced effort to clean up oil sands tailings ponds in Canada on Friday, calling it an inadequate response to the sector’s vast toxic liabilities. Environmental Defence, Alberta Wilderness Association, the Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment (CAPE), Indigenous Climate Action, and Keepers of the Water said the C$46 mln initiative paid for via Alberta’s Technology Innovation and Emissions Reduction (TIER) fund would do little to address roughly 1.7 trillion litres of contaminated tailings. The organisations argued companies already have legal obligations to reclaim tailings, warning the plan risks becoming “window-dressing” that enables industry expansion while leaving environmental and health impacts on downstream Indigenous communities unresolved.
  • Sat 05:33
    RECs and records - Environmental futures and options on Nodal Exchange hit a daily volume record of 31.8 mln contracts on Feb. 10, surpassing the previous record of 27.8 mln contracts set a year earlier, as open interest in environmental products rose 6% year-on-year to 443.4 mln contracts at the end of February. Carbon futures and options volume on the exchange more than doubled YoY to 16.8 mln in February, with OI up 14% to 60.3 mln. Renewable energy certificate (REC) OI grew 13% YoY to 365.3 mln. Natural gas futures also set a monthly record of 182 mln, up 105% from Feb. 2025.
  • Sat 03:11
    Oilsands blinks on carbon - Canadian Natural Resources deferred early engineering work on its C$8.25 bln ($6.1 bln) Jackpine oilsands mine expansion north of Fort McMurray, Alberta, on Thursday, citing uncertainty around federal carbon pricing and methane emissions rules, CBC reported. The Calgary-based company had planned to spend about C$150 mln this year on the project but said the regulatory environment had created an "economic burden for long-term growth investments." Alberta and Ottawa signed a memorandum of understanding late last year aiming to reach agreements on industrial carbon pricing and methane by Apr. 1. The Pembina Institute's oil and gas programme director said it was odd to pause a major investment over policy uncertainty expected to be resolved within a month.
  • Sat 01:10
    Colorado's attorney general and two environmental groups sued the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on Wednesday to reverse its rejection of the state's air quality plan, a move the litigants said illegally stripped a federally enforceable retirement deadline from a coal-fired power plant.
  • Sat 00:52
    Both producers and financial players in the California carbon market reduced net length over the Feb. 25-Mar. 3 period, largely through changes in their Auction Clearing Price (ACP) holdings, according to US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) data published Friday.
  • Sat 00:22
    A major Bolivian industrial group expects to bring the first pyrolysis line of a new biochar facility online in Q3, potentially becoming the country’s second supplier of carbon removal (CDR) credits, Carbon Pulse learned this week at the Bolivia Carbon Forum.
  • Sat 00:20
    The past month in climate litigation saw the US’ highest court take up a major lawsuit led by local governments against the oil industry, a landmark corporate climate case move into trial phase in Europe, and courts across multiple jurisdictions weigh greenwashing claims and statutory climate duties.
  • Fri 23:34
    A former leader of a major US environmental advocacy group has launched a new climate initiative aimed at scaling carbon dioxide removal (CDR) technologies while supporting efforts to hold fossil fuel companies accountable for climate damages.
  • Fri 23:30
    Canada and Alberta have agreed to avoid interfering with each other on their projects during environmental and regulatory requirements in a new agreement, marking a major milestone in negotiations as the pair progress towards overhauling the country’s largest carbon market.
  • Fri 22:56
    The Brazilian Ministry of Finance published on Friday the final results for the industry representatives selected to participate in a technical committee for the country’s emissions trading system (ETS) (Portuguese: SBCE).
  • Fri 20:39
    A former employee filed a class action lawsuit on Tuesday alleging that workers’ retirement savings were exposed to excessive climate-related financial risk through an investment option in a company-sponsored 401(k) plan.
  • Fri 17:24
    EU carbon prices returned a marginal daily and weekly gain on Friday with carbon traders marking time amid worsening sentiment as the conflict over Iran extended into a seventh day and energy markets looked to be increasingly threatened by a long-term suspension of exports from the region.
  • Fri 16:54
    Exchange-traded fund operator KraneShares is shutting one of its leading carbon funds and returning cash to investors, a company official confirmed this week.
  • Fri 16:47
    Briefing alert - The European Commission will hold an exclusive policy briefing for the Pact Community on the EU ETS on Mar. 19, which will be hosted by Mette Quinn, the Commission's deputy director for carbon markets and clean mobility. It will take place from 12:00 to 13:00 CET and participants can register here.
  • Fri 16:44
    Automotive pushback - The Mercedes-Benz CEO Ola Kallenius has said the EU's revised CO2 regulation for cars, which requires manufacturers to meet a 90% tailpipe emissions reduction target from 2035, risks destabilising the bloc's car market. He urged regulators to revisit the plan that he says could effectively impose a complete ban on combustion-engine vehicles by 2035, and suggested they should consider wider mechanisms to curb emissions, such as boosting synthetic fuel use. The revised CO2 regulation for cars was presented in December and eases the de facto phaseout of internal combustion engines that was previously in place. Manufacturers are allowed to offset the remaining 10% through credits tied to low-carbon fuels and green steel. (Automotive News Europe)
  • Fri 16:25
    Voluntary carbon registries may have to reveal the company or entity retiring credits to meet the Integrity Council for the Voluntary Market’s (ICVCM) threshold for Core Carbon Principles (CCP) eligibility, in a move under consideration to ratchet up transparency, a spokesperson for the organisation told Carbon Pulse Friday.
  • Fri 16:12
    Soaring oil prices – Crude oil prices could surge to $150 per barrel within two to three weeks if the critical Strait of Hormuz remains closed to tankers, Qatar’s Energy Minister Saad al-Kaabi told the Financial Times in an interview published on Friday. His comments came just hours before reports that Kuwait – one of OPEC’s founding members – had begun shutting production at some oilfields as storage capacity fills up with shipments blocked at the strait. Kuwait is also considering deeper production cuts, including at refineries, to align output with domestic demand. All major Middle Eastern oil and gas exporters are set to declare force majeure on exports within days if the key shipping lane remains effectively closed to tanker traffic, said al-Kaabi, who is also president and CEO of QatarEnergy. Qatar’s state energy firm earlier this week halted LNG production at its Ras Laffan hub, the world’s largest LNG complex. Front-month Brent crude futures were trading above $90 a barrel on Friday.
  • Fri 16:09
    Irish carbon tax under fire – The Irish Farmers Association (IFA) has called on Ireland's government to immediately suspend the country's carbon tax due to rising energy costs for farms, agricultural contractors, and the wider economy. Farm businesses and contractors are particularly vulnerable because there is no viable alternative to diesel to power farm machinery, it said. Diesel carries a carbon tax of about 17 cents per litre, while natural gas and LPG, which is heavily used in the poultry sector, is also subject to carbon charges. The EU's carbon border fee on nitrogen fertiliser should also be immediately suspended by the EU Commission, said IFA farm business chair Bill O'Keeffe, citing the negative impacts to the market due to disruption in the Strait of Hormuz. EU climate chief Wopke Hoekstra has this week ruled out suspending the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) for fertilisers.
  • Fri 16:06
    Ongoing uncertainty over the upcoming revision of the EU Emissions Trading System (ETS) has prompted analysts to lower their price forecast for carbon allowances (EUAs).
  • Fri 15:46
    More than 2 million carbon credits from a Brazilian Amazon forest project were retired by companies after the project had been suspended and placed under investigation by Verra, the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported Friday.
  • Fri 15:14
    First CBAM certificates – The European Commission has communicated that the first quarterly price of the certificates for the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) will be published on Apr. 7. Publication will take place both on the European Commission's CBAM webpage and in the CBAM registry. EU importers of CBAM goods will have to buy CBAM certificates from Feb. 2027 to cover embedded emissions of their 2026 imports of iron and steel, cement, fertilisers, aluminium, and electricity. The price will be calculated during the first calendar week of the following quarter, and will be based on the quarterly average of the EU ETS auction clearing price of allowances.
  • Fri 15:02
    Global warming acceleration – Global warming has accelerated since 2015, with an estimated warming rate of 0.35C since then, compared with just under 0.2C per decade on average from 1970 to 2015. This is according to a new study by the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), which found 2023 and 2024 to be the two warmest years since the start of instrumental records, even when correcting for the effects of El Niño and the solar maximum. In all datasets, the acceleration begins to become apparent in 2013 or 2014. The rate since 2015 is higher than in any previous decade since the start of instrumental records in 1880. If the last decade's warming rate continues, it would lead to long-term exceedance of the 1.5C Paris Agreement limit before 2030, said PIK.
  • Fri 14:53
    Sea level jump – Actual sea levels in coastal areas are up to 24-27 cm higher than previously thought, meaning the impacts of sea level rise have been underestimated, according to a new study published in the journal Nature this week. Researchers from Wageningen University in the Netherlands analysed 385 scientific studies and found that 90% of them  assume the sea is at exactly the same height as the land, when in actual fact it often rises above that due to wind and waves, for example. Predominantly in the Global South, measured mean sea level can be more than 1 m above the assumed level, with the largest differences in the Indo-Pacific. This means climate change-induced sea level rise could affect 31-37% more land and 48-68% more people (increasing estimates to 77-132 mln) than previously thought.  (Nature study)
  • Fri 14:22
    Middle East angst – A lengthy war in the Middle East may drive up demand for carbon credits in the compliance market, if utilities switch to coal as a result of LNG disruptions, according to BloombergNEF. Taiwan is already considering boosting production at coal-fired plants, while Italy is keeping its plants in reserve as a precaution. The ultimate impact on compliance markets will depend on how long the energy disruption lasts and whether regulators step in to adjust compliance caps, said AirCarbon Exchange. Meanwhile, the voluntary market could see a drop in buying activity as corporate discretionary spending gets constrained due to higher operating costs from an energy crisis - firms may reconsider buying timelines, emissions forecasts, and hedging strategies as a result, according to AirCarbon. (Bloomberg News)
  • Fri 14:00
    The Tropical Forest Forever Facility (TFFF) should build on the governance systems developed for jurisdictional REDD+ (J-REDD+), as the two mechanisms share objectives and draw on complementary sources of finance, a board member of standard body ART told Carbon Pulse.
  • Fri 13:59
    Togo’s National Assembly has approved, at first reading, a bill revising the country’s environmental framework law and introducing a carbon tax as part of broader efforts to strengthen climate governance and align with global environmental standards, local media has reported.
  • Fri 13:41
    There will be more wildfires, storms, and bark beetle infestations across European forests throughout the 21st century under all temperature change scenarios modelled by a large team of scientists.
  • Fri 13:40
    Few policies have done more to combat climate change than the EU Emissions Trading System (ETS), Michael Bloomberg, founder of the news outlet said in an opinion piece Friday, urging member states to reform but back the cap-and-trade carbon scheme.
  • Fri 12:43
    Power storage in Romania – The European Commission has cleared a €150 million Romanian state aid scheme to support at least 2,174 MWh of new battery electricity storage, financed via the EU Modernisation Fund and approved under the Clean Industrial Deal State Aid Framework (CISAF). The measure will provide investment grants for standalone battery storage systems, awarded through competitive tenders, to ease integration of variable renewables into Romania’s power system and support the EU’s net zero transition, the Commission said in a statement announcing its decision.
  • Fri 12:42
    Colombia's fossil fuel phase-out conference – The First International Conference for the Phase-Out of Fossil Fuels – to be hosted by Colombia and co-organised by the Netherlands in April – now has a rough agenda, Colombian Environment Minister Irene Velez Torres said on a webinar Thursday. A meeting of academics will be held from Apr. 24-26 ahead of a high-level summit on Apr. 28-29 with participants from 40-80 countries, including civil society and academic delegates. The conference itself will unfold in four stages: collection of written submissions focused on concrete solutions; online dialogue on the basis of these contributions; decentralised, self-directed dialogues organised by local communities and other actors; and the high-level segment, which will have capacity limits. For the final stage, accreditation will be based on three criteria meant to ensure balance: regional representation, sectoral representation, and relevant work on the conference's main themes. The conference is designed to contribute to Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva's call to develop a global roadmap for phasing out fossil fuels, announced at COP30 in Belem last November. Colombia will host national elections in May.
  • Fri 12:38
    Weakening the EU carbon market “would be a mistake”, according to economists at a Paris-based climate think tank who have called instead for reinforcing the system to secure the long-term competitiveness of European industry.
  • Fri 12:27
    Allowance prices in China's national emissions market remained above the RMB 80 ($11.60) level after the week-long Lunar New Year holidays, amid sustained momentum in the policy-driven market.
  • Fri 11:54
    Carbon insurance to manage political risk, and a dual-layered registry approach to support carbon accounting, are two valuable tools for the UN’s CORSIA international aviation offsetting market – but there are big caveats, according to experts.
  • Fri 10:20
    Getting closer - A feasibility study is being commissioned under a UNDP-led project to assess the creation of a national carbon registry in Mongolia, aimed at enabling the country to participate in international carbon markets under Article 6 of the Paris Agreement, according to a request for proposal published Friday. The study will examine institutional governance, legal frameworks, and technical requirements, and propose a digital registry system interoperable with international platforms such as Verra, Gold Standard, and the UNFCCC reporting infrastructure. It will also recommend safeguards to prevent double counting and ensure alignment with Mongolia’s nationally determined contribution targets. The six-month assignment will produce a technical design, cost estimates, and an implementation roadmap, including a prototype registry to be tested with government agencies, financial institutions, and private sector stakeholders.
  • Fri 09:07
    Growing scrutiny over the credibility of international carbon credits is raising the bar for rice carbon projects, with compliance buyers demanding increasingly sophisticated monitoring systems to verify emission reductions.
  • Fri 09:02
    A reform of the Market Stability Reserve (MSR), which helps to balance the supply of allowances in the EU carbon market, could be swiftly adopted by the end of the year, according to German lawmaker Peter Liese, who led the European Parliament’s last overhaul of the bloc’s Emissions Trading System (ETS).
  • Fri 07:35
    Asia is accelerating electrification initiatives, with the next major frontier likely to lie in industrial and building sectors, particularly in heating, according to a recent report.
  • Fri 06:42
    Blue carbon atlas - Scientists in India’s Tamil Nadu are planning a high-resolution mapping of coastal blue carbon ecosystems – including mangroves, seagrass meadows, and tidal marshlands – using drones, AI, and cloud computing to better quantify the carbon stored in these habitats. The project, led by the M S Swaminathan Research Foundation in collaboration with the state forest department and supported by Microsoft, aims to generate pixel-level carbon data and produce a Blue Carbon Atlas for the state. Army-grade drones equipped with multispectral sensors and LiDAR will capture detailed imagery to measure vegetation and biomass, enabling scientists to assign carbon values to each mapped pixel and estimate both above-ground and below-ground carbon stocks, the Times of India reported.
  • Fri 04:36
    Redirecting revenues from the European Union’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) to producers of specific industrial product categories rather than allocating them by country could both reduce global emissions and offset some of the policy’s welfare losses for trading partners, researchers argue.
  • Fri 04:03
    Canada’s critical minerals sector has the potential to transform into a removal vehicle, but must ensure that supply chains remain ethical, a group of experts warned on Thursday.
  • Fri 03:59
    Renewed - Indonesia’s Ministry of Forestry has renewed a strategic partnership with the International Centre for Research in Agroforestry (ICRAF) to expand agroforestry as part of sustainable forest and landscape management, the government said in a press release. The agreement, signed in Jakarta, will focus on areas including agroforestry model development, watershed restoration, innovative financing, and digital knowledge systems. Integrating trees with agricultural crops can boost vegetation cover, improve soil fertility, and increase national carbon stocks. ICRAF said the collaboration could strengthen management of around 8 mln ha of community-managed forest land and potentially expand to 12 mln ha.
  • Fri 03:58
    Sabah forests - Malaysia is looking to expand its carbon market by leveraging Sabah’s vast forest reserves, a federal minister said, highlighting the state’s role as a source of credits, New Straits Times reported. Natural Resources and Environmental Sustainability Minister Arthur Kurup said Sabah hosts one of Malaysia’s recognised carbon projects, the 83,000 ha Kuamut Rainforest initiative, which has generated more than 80,000 credits traded on the Bursa Carbon Exchange. He added that the federal government is finalising a National Carbon Market Policy and a National Climate Change Bill to strengthen the country’s climate governance and support its 2050 carbon neutrality target.
  • Fri 03:58
    Countries could seize a "golden opportunity" by establishing a government-backed strategic reserve to guarantee long-term demand for CO2 removal credits and unlock financing for large-scale projects in the "massive industry of the future".
  • Fri 03:34
    Governments in Canada, the UK, and the US are pursuing markedly different policy approaches to scaling CO2 removal (CDR), with diverging frameworks for financing projects and long-term revenue certainty emerging as the sector seeks to move from pilot activity to commercial deployment.
  • Fri 03:06
    Cloud creating - Sydney company Cloud Carrier is proposing to build a 700 MW gas-fired power station to support three data centres near the rural town of Moss Vale, ABC News reported. The project's lead engineer Greg Jackson said the plant would transition to use renewable fuels when they become available and treat its emissions and reduce the plant's pollutants to well-below the NSW EPA's limits for the area. Ty Christopher, director of Energy Futures at the University of Wollongong, told the broadcaster directly burning gas to generate electricity to power new data centres would slow down Australia's journey to net zero emissions. A recent report from consulting firm Baringa predicted data centres would use 11% of the country's energy by 2035 and could drive up emissions nationwide by 14% in the same timeframe.
  • Fri 02:27
    Golden state, dim program - California has built at most 34 community solar projects since 2015, falling well behind at least 10 other US states that have developed programmes allowing renters and low-income residents to subscribe to shared solar arrays for discounts on electricity bills, The Los Angeles Times reported. Eight states have more than 100 megawatts of community solar installed, led by New York with 2,789MW, while California has less than 100MW. The state's California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) has yet to launch an effective programme after a 2024 decision to pay community solar developers at a lower rate than rooftop solar, and after failing to spend most of US$250 mln in federal Solar for All grant funding before the Trump administration moved to claw it back. The CPUC said it still plans to release a programme within months.
  • Fri 02:19
    Alberta is considering labels to distinguish carbon removal (CDR) from reduction credits in its Technology Innovation and Emissions Reduction (TIER) regulation, while also tightening benchmark accounting rules for low- and zero-emitting oil and gas facilities starting in 2026.
  • Fri 02:06
    Oregon CFP meeting - Oregon's Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) will hold a Rulemaking Advisory Committee meeting on Mar. 18 for its Clean Fuels Program (CFP), it announced on Wednesday. The committee will provide DEQ with input for an upcoming rulemaking on the programme, including topics such as a proposed tightened carbon intensity standard, potential amendments to improvement alignment with neighbouring states' similar programmes, electrification provisions, and more. DEQ will provide an opportunity for public comment, and interested parties can register here.
  • Fri 01:44
    A decade-long field trial in Germany has found that regenerative organic farming practices can increase soil carbon stocks, but mainly in surface soils and with limited evidence of long-term carbon storage at depth – raising questions about how related offsets methodologies account for permanence and monitoring.
  • Fri 01:26
    California Carbon Allowance (CCA) futures hit multi-month lows before recovering to end the week flat, as most traders said they saw little reason prices would elevate soon much above current levels hovering over the price floor.
  • Fri 01:25
    US balcony solar - Lawmakers in 27 states and Washington, DC, have announced legislation to enable plug-in solar panels, according to Corporate KnightsThe outlet wrote an 800-watt unit that costs $1,099 could save a New York household $279 on average per year amid affordability concerns and climbing energy costs. Millions of households in Europe have already installed plug-in solar. 
  • Fri 01:20
    Power payments - California government watchdog is urging lawmakers to adopt new rules for AI data centres, warning their rapid growth could raise electricity bills if companies do not cover the grid infrastructure they require. In a report released Tuesday, the independent Little Hoover Commission recommended creating a special electricity rate category for very large power users and requiring them to prepay for grid upgrades and related costs. The report comes as Pacific Gas & Electric told regulators proposed data-centre projects could add about 10 GW of electricity demand over the next decade – roughly four times the generating capacity of the Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant. Lawmakers including Cottie Petrie-Norris (D) said they are preparing legislation to ensure data centres pay their share of grid costs and protect households from rate increases. (CalMatters)
  • Fri 01:15
    Update needed - The Carbon Capture Coalition announced on Thursday that they urged the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) to update their safety guidelines for CO2 pipelines. The coalition wants the federal regulatory body, under the US Department of Transportation, to modernise safety regulations and address concerns from the 2020 pipeline failure in Mississippi, to provide confidence in the expansion of the sector. The leak in Satartia, Mississippi caused 45 people to be taken to the hospital and 200 to be evacuated, following a rupture caused by a landslide during heavy rain conditions. The incident has been referenced in other regulatory considerations for CO2 pipelines, such as the multi-state Summit Carbon Solutions pipeline. State regulators have previously noted that PHMSA’s planned updates to its CO2 pipeline safety regulations are unknown.
  • Fri 01:05
    Digital debut - Verra released a digital version of its building weatherisation methodology, VM0008 Weatherization of Single Family and Multi-Family Buildings, v1.2, on the Verra Project Hub as part of its multi-year digitalisation initiative, the standard body announced Thursday. The update allows project developers to access the methodology through the Digital Project Submission Tool and is intended to streamline validation, registration, and credit issuance for projects that reduce energy use through residential weatherisation and efficiency upgrades. Verra said the addition brings the number of digitalised methodologies across its programmes to 24.
  • Fri 01:00
    Reporting scoop - Caterpillar’s CCS collaboration is evaluating a site in Wyoming for developing a natural gas system integrated with battery storage and carbon capture, a spokesperson for the company told Carbon Pulse on Thursday. Wyoming has primacy over Class VI CO2 injection permits as well as a carbon management framework. The agreement is focused on deploying a behind-the-meter natural gas-fired facility of approximately 500 MW paired with carbon capture. Caterpillar said location details remain confidential as development advances. The project is expected to launch in 2026. Wyoming regulators granted a CCS siting permit in the fourth quarter of 2025 to the Dry Piney Helium and Sequestration Project, which is planned on private land in Sublette County.
  • Fri 00:54
    Getting to the truth - Some companies deny they signed up to an industry petition asking the EU to "bring energy and carbon costs down", which was presented to EU leaders last month in Antwerp and led to some politicians making remarks that weakened the EU carbon price. The letter said it was sent on behalf of signatories of the Antwerp Declaration, which was backed by nearly 1,350 signatories in 2024 including over 900 industry companies, but some of those companies now say they didn't support the missive. Even the organisers told Politico they don't know the actual number of backers for this year's petition - reflecting rising instances of letters demanding policy changes in Europe in the name of companies loosely associated with the organisers to boost their influence.
  • Fri 00:53
    Funding unlocked - Australian biomethane project developer Delorean Corporation announced it has received a A$1.1 mln ($772,000) milestone payment from the Australian Renewable Energy Agency under a A$6.08 mln grant agreement supporting development of its SA1 Salisbury bioenergy facility in South Australia. The payment funds infrastructure upgrades that enable the plant to convert biogas into mains-grade biomethane for supply to industrial users via the Adelaide gas network under a long-term offtake agreement with Origin Energy. The company also reported construction progress at the site, including installation of anaerobic digestion tanks, delivery of key equipment, and ongoing grid connection works as it moves toward first renewable gas production.
  • Fri 00:49
    Biochar collaboration - Pakistan’s University of Agriculture Faisalabad and carmaker Pak Suzuki have last week signed a memorandum of understanding to collaborate on research, development, and commercialisation of biochar technologies aimed at converting agricultural waste into value-added products. The partnership will explore applications including soil fertility improvement, water retention, and carbon sequestration, while supporting climate-smart agriculture and waste-to-energy solutions. The two sides said they are already cooperating on biogas, biofuel, and biofertiliser consultancy projects, with the addition of biochar technology intended to advance a circular bio-economy approach and expand biochar-based fertiliser deployment for farmers.
  • Fri 00:48
    Biogas to jet fuel - Houston-based Syzygy Plasmonics has signed a memorandum of understanding with Brazilian developer Geo bio gas&carbon to explore commercial-scale SAF production using biogas from sugarcane residues, the companies announced Tuesday. The collaboration aims to deploy projects capable of producing up to 100,000 tonnes of SAF per year initially, with a longer-term vision of building a portfolio of facilities exceeding 525k tonnes annually across Brazil. The initiative forms part of Syzygy’s broader NovaSAF expansion strategy, which seeks to convert biogas into low-carbon fuels using its light-driven reactor technology. The firm has recently signed similar feedstock agreements in several regions, including the US, Mexico, and the Dominican Republic, targeting a combined pipeline intended to support up to 1 mln tonnes of annual SAF output globally by 2035.
  • Fri 00:28
    A Bolivia-based biochar developer is ramping up production capacity as it targets delivering 320,000 carbon dioxide removal (CDR) credits in 2026 and up to 1 million annually by 2028, while also exploring an expansion into new biomass streams and geographies, its CEO told Carbon Pulse.

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