CP Daily News Ticker: 25 March 2026

Published 00:01 on March 25, 2026 / Last updated at 00:01 on March 25, 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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  • Wed 23:01
    The EU's Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) has encouraged other countries to adopt carbon pricing measures since Brussels first raised the idea in 2019, according to a first analysis of the policy's direct effect on EU trade partners. 
  • Wed 23:01
    A non-profit on Thursday released a report outlining recommendations to unlock up to €2 billion in private investment over the next decade for peatland restoration in Europe, including scaling up water markets.
  • Wed 22:59
    A Sao Paulo-based project developer won on Wednesday an auction for Brazil's first concession for forest restoration focused on carbon credits as the primary source of revenue.
  • Wed 22:55
    California has issued nearly half a million offsets with direct environmental benefits (DEBs) to the state – the largest DEBs issuance year-to-date – from a single forestry project, according to data published on Wednesday.
  • Wed 22:42
    Hydro-Quebec RFI - Hydro-Quebec has issued a request for information (RFI) to assess options for the supply and transmission of electricity generated by offshore wind farms located off the coast of Nova Scotia. The RFI aims to gather information from energy industry developers on technological options, timelines and costs associated with offshore wind projects near the coast and electricity transmission solutions.  
  • Wed 22:42
    MoU won’t do - Alberta has officially agreed to reduce its methane emissions 75% below 2014 levels by 2035, in line with early targets set in the Canada-Alberta MoU. The target is five years later than a similar target by the federal government’s target. Analysis has found granting the extension could release 1.9 Mt of additional methane into the atmosphere, equivilant to 53 MtCo2 over 100 years. The rubberstamp would suggest that the two governments are moving towards the MoU deadline Apr. 1, which would see the oil-producing province update its carbon market with a minimum effective price of C$130 ($94), but Premier Danielle Smith said at CERAWeek she’s not expecting the pair to meet the negotiation deadline. Smith told the CBC she and Prime Minister Mark Carney don’t want to delay very long. Analysis has also found Alberta is underestimating its methane emissions data.
  • Wed 22:41
    Biocarbon bet – Minnesota biocarbon firm Aymium, and Japanese trading company Hanwa have signed a $500 mln memorandum of understanding to develop a large-scale biocarbon plant in the US, Biochar Today reports. The deal would deploy Aymium’s thermal conversion technology to produce biocarbon pellets positioned as drop-in replacements for coal in heavy industry. The partnership targets emissions-intensive sectors such as steelmaking and power generation, offering a route to decarbonisation without costly equipment changes. Production would use sustainably sourced biomass and is expected to cut emissions by hundreds of thousands of tonnes of CO2 annually while expanding US niocarbon manufacturing capacity.
  • Wed 22:40
    Green blend – Sumitomo Corporation do Brasil, the Brazilian arm of Japanese trading house Sumitomo Corporation, and Houston-based biotech firm Cemvita announced the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding to collaborate on integrated renewable natural gas (RNG) and bio-oil projects in Brazil last week. The partnership will assess combining Cemvita’s bio-oil technology with RNG production at an initial facility. The companies will also explore opportunities to scale the model across additional facilities, with the tie-up aimed at supporting supply of bio-oil for sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) as well as RNG. A joint steering committee will oversee the collaboration, with a commercial and technical roadmap targeting execution sometime this year.
  • Wed 22:27
    The ART Secretariat has accepted two documents from Ecuador under the TREES jurisdictional REDD+ (J-REDD+) standard, marking the first advancement in Ecuador’s ART TREES journey in five years.
  • Wed 22:26
    Louisiana lawmakers have introduced a swath of bills to regulate CO2 pipelines and storage, according to an environmental policy non-profit.
  • Wed 22:15
    The main technical partner for structuring and implementing Article 6 in Paraguay has opened a call for expressions of interest (EOI) for mitigation activities, aiming to build a pipeline of projects eligible for international carbon transactions.
  • Wed 22:14
    Carbon removal (CDR) should be reserved for the most difficult-to-eliminate emissions and allocated based on responsibility and capability, researchers said, arguing that misusing limited supply could undermine climate targets.
  • Wed 21:21
    US investors extended a third consecutive year of withdrawals from sustainable funds in 2025, a new analysis has showed.
  • Wed 20:39
    Carbon markets have been elevated to a core element of Paraguay’s long-term sustainable development strategy, with Paris Agreement Article 6 mechanisms at the forefront, the country's president and several senior government officials said at an event on Wednesday.
  • Wed 20:00
    The European Commission has pledged to maintain carbon pricing signals, scale up decarbonisation funding, and accelerate CO2 infrastructure as it seeks to keep Europe’s cement industry competitive while pushing it towards net zero, following a high-level policy dialogue in Brussels on Tuesday.
  • Wed 19:19
    Connecticut Democrats would see fossil fuel producers pay insurance premiums to fund climate action, as a new bill advances for review.
  • Wed 19:10
    The US EPA on Wednesday issued an emergency waiver to allow nationwide sales of higher-ethanol gasoline blends, citing “extreme and unusual fuel supply circumstances” linked to global disruptions and reduced refining capacity.
  • Wed 17:22
    Maryland’s highest court on Tuesday upheld the dismissal of climate liability lawsuits brought by three local governments, finding their claims against oil and gas companies are preempted by federal law and fail under state tort doctrines.
  • Wed 17:18
    European carbon prices ended Wednesday 0.7% lower, despite a robust rally after a mid-afternoon news headline had caused a brief €2.20 drop in prices, and as weekly positioning data showed investment funds had reduced their net length to the lowest since Aug. 2025.
  • Wed 17:05
    Climate partners - Senior officials from the EU and Japan agreed to deepen their bilateral cooperation during a High-Level Dialogue on Climate Change held in Brussels this week. Both sides agreed to work together towards achieving climate neutrality and tackling shared economic and geopolitical challenges, and acknowledged the importance of the clean energy transition during the current crisis in the Gulf. They also reaffirmed their commitment to uphold multilateralism and their unwavering commitment to the Paris Agreement goal of 1.5C. The officials also discussed implementing their upcoming NDCs, and agreed to join efforts to ensure a successful COP31 in Antalya this year. They also agreed to promote bilateral exchanges this year on industrial decarbonisation, climate adaptation, carbon pricing and carbon credits, carbon capture use and storage, sustainable finance, plus climate action at sub-national level.
  • Wed 16:28
    While supply under Article 6 remains limited, Norway sees a strong future for Paris Agreement market mechanisms and plans to keep up its engagement despite a recent vote to scrap the country's 2030 carbon neutrality goal, a political advisor to the government told Carbon Pulse.
  • Wed 16:17
    A European energy supplier and an integrated energy major closed the first-ever trade for certified methane emission reductions on a spot exchange, in a sign of a growing interest in tackling the greenhouse gas. 
  • Wed 16:04
    Three NGOs have called for the European Commission to not make any changes to the Market Stability Reserve (MSR), after President Ursula von der Leyen signalled last week that the EU executive was considering revising the mechanism to help soften European Carbon prices. 
  • Wed 15:57
    Postponed SAF levy - Singapore is delaying a sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) levy that airline customers were meant to start paying next month to Oct. 1 due to rising fuel costs driven by the war in the Middle East. The new levy will depend on the class of travel or flight length, and could reach as much as S$41.60 ($32.54) for passengers. Customers will pay an additional S$1 for trips to Southeast Asia, and S$10.40 for flights to the Americas, the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore said last November. The levy's aim is to raise funds to achieve Singapore’s ambition of having all flights depart the nation with 1% SAF in their tanks from 2026, rising to between 3% and 5% by 2030. (Bloomberg)
  • Wed 15:41
    The German government’s new climate protection programme contains 67 measures expected to save 27 million tonnes of CO2 by 2030 – even as fresh data show the gap to its end-of-decade target has widened to 30 Mt.
  • Wed 15:34
    Authority abridged - US EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin said the executive branch lacks clear legal authority and Congress lacks the political will to regulate most GHG emissions, signalling further rollbacks of federal climate rules, E&E News reported. Speaking in Houston, Zeldin argued recent Supreme Court rulings limit the EPA’s ability to use the Clean Air Act to target climate pollution, adding that only Congress could explicitly authorise such action. He said he would implement stricter standards if directed by lawmakers but would not expand authority beyond the statute. The comments come as the EPA has already repealed vehicle emissions rules and is preparing to roll back power plant regulations, key pillars of federal climate policy.
  • Wed 15:34
    Case convergence - The DC Circuit has consolidated a lead challenge brought by public health and environmental groups – including the American Public Health Association and Sierra Club – against the US EPA and its administrator Lee Zeldin with several related petitions filed by additional groups and individual plaintiffs. The consolidated cases include parallel suits brought by overlapping coalitions of environmental organisations as well as a separate petition from youth and individual plaintiffs, all challenging the EPA's repeal of the 2009 endangerment finding. Meanwhile, in a statement of issues filed on Monday, youth plaintiffs in a consolidated case argued the EPA’s repeal of the finding violates constitutional protections, including rights to life and liberty under the Fifth Amendment, as well as First Amendment religious freedoms, separation of powers, and federalism principles.
  • Wed 15:32
    Gas gamble - Maryland officials have pledged support for a proposal to convert a retired coal plant in Morgantown into a gas-fired facility to power data centres, drawing opposition from environmental groups and exposing tensions with Gov. Wes Moore (D), E&E News reported. The dispute emerged after developer TeraWulf disclosed a letter from state Environmental Secretary Serena McIlwain offering assistance with permitting and rights of way, including for a new gas pipeline. Environmental advocates argue the project would undermine climate goals, with the Chesapeake Climate Action Network threatening legal action and organising a rally in Annapolis, while state officials framed the move as part of efforts to facilitate energy infrastructure development.
  • Wed 15:24
    A low-carbon cement producer has partnered with a carbon data firm to assess its carbon intensity and model potential value against mechanisms including the EU's Emissions Trading System (EU ETS) and Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), the companies said Wednesday.
  • Wed 15:23
    Alien trees - Germany should actively introduce tree species from warmer and drier climates to strengthen its forests against rising temperatures, drought, and pests. This is according to a report from the Scientific Advisory Board for Forest Policy (WBW) presented to Germany's agriculture and forestry ministry, and comes as native species face sustained pressure. The advisory body identified around 10 to 15 candidate species, including Oriental beech, Turkey oak, and Atlas cedar, but stressed the approach must be carefully managed as importing seeds risks introducing disease and pests, and specialist native species also tend to fare worse in forests dominated by introduced trees. The board recommends a stepwise approach of introducing other species, as part of a broader response. Germany's forests only recently returned to being a net carbon sink in 2025 after years of droughts, storms, and bark beetle damage turned them into net CO2 emitters, according to the Federal Environment Agency (UBA). (Clean Energy Wire)
  • Wed 15:22
    Headline news - Brussels is preparing to introduce what the Financial Times reported as an “emergency brake” in the EU ETS to prevent carbon prices from rising too sharply, following pressure from industries struggling with high costs linked to the Iran war. Per the reporting on Wednesday afternoon, the European Commission is expected to announce the measure next week, with the article referring to a cancellation of an invalidation clause linked to the Market Stability Reserve that now looks set to be part of the proposal. Carbon Pulse reported this was expected to be the case earlier in the week. However, EUA prices dived on the FT headline, which referred to an EU "carbon price brake". The invalidation clause requires the MSR to permanently cancel surplus allowances once the volume in the reserve exceeds a threshold set at the previous year’s auction volume. Any volume in the MSR above that level is then cancelled. Reuters later also published a similar story including the invalidation clause.
  • Wed 14:29
    The European Commission on Wednesday launched a strategy to tackle wildfire risks, highlighting market-based mechanisms as a potential source of funding for prevention and restoration activities.
  • Wed 14:16
    Dutch direct air capture (DAC) developer Skytree will deploy its first commercial systems this year in Germany and the Netherlands, where the shrinking supply of fossil-based CO2 is creating “an existential supply crisis” for the horticulture sector, a senior company executive told Carbon Pulse.
  • Wed 14:14
    India’s cabinet on Wednesday approved an updated set of climate targets under the Paris Agreement, outlining a proposed pathway to 2035 that deepens emissions intensity cuts and expands clean energy capacity, even as the plan awaits formal submission to the UNFCCC.
  • Wed 14:05
    A large tranche of cookstove credits from a project in Rwanda are expected to become eligible under the UN's Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation (CORSIA) after being certified under Verra’s VM0050 methodology.
  • Wed 13:59
    Spanish aid for industrial decarbonisation – The European Commission on Wednesday announced the approval of a €50 million Spanish State aid scheme to accelerate the decarbonisation of industrial process heat. The aid will be granted via the EU Innovation Fund’s new “Auctions-as-a-Service” tool, using the 2025 Heat Auction. The scheme will support innovative electrified and renewable heat technologies, with aid awarded as a fixed premium per tonne of CO2 avoided through competitive bidding. Support can be granted until end-2026 and paid over five years, with incentives for flexible electricity use and strict linkage to verified decarbonised heat output.
  • Wed 13:52
    A new alliance of organisations across the cocoa sector on Tuesday called on the UK government to urgently implement long-delayed rules on deforestation-linked commodities and align them more closely with EU requirements.
  • Wed 12:52
    Georgia has unveiled a new climate strategy that positions the country to participate in international carbon markets under Article 6 of the Paris Agreement as it seeks to reduce emissions 50% by 2035, compared to 1990 levels.
  • Wed 12:15
    The UK is likely to become a net exporter of electricity thanks to its clean energy growth, and will need to rely more heavily on flexible interconnectors with Europe to help balance supply and demand, said a government report.
  • Wed 11:40
    A new African alliance – The Southern Africa Alliance on Carbon Markets and Climate Finance will be officially launched in Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe on Thursday in a major step in strengthening regional cooperation on carbon markets across the continent. The initiative aims to build robust, transparent, and effective frameworks to help countries in the region leverage opportunities under Article 6 of the Paris Agreement, enabling international carbon trading. The alliance will enhance coordination among African nations, support knowledge sharing, and promote best practices, while advancing environmental integrity and sustainable development.
  • Wed 11:28
    In 2025, EU emissions from cars flatlined, while increased output from aviation undermined a drop in shipping's climate impact, reported green transport campaigners in an annual stocktake in Brussels on Wednesday.
  • Wed 11:15
    Some 140,000 credits eligible for use under the UN's Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation (CORSIA) from a Cambodian water purifier project are due to be auctioned next month, the organisers of the event confirmed Wednesday.
  • Wed 11:11
    The aviation sector’s international offsetting programme, CORSIA, is unlikely to accept all credits issued under one of the Paris Agreement’s Article 6 mechanisms, market participants told Carbon Pulse on Wednesday.
  • Wed 10:52
    At a time of spiralling jet fuel prices, the appeal of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) is becoming stronger, with the fuel boasting energy security alongside lower emissions, experts say.
  • Wed 10:52
    Europe’s decisions on its Emissions Trading System (ETS) and its future use of international carbon credits will have knock-on effects on the development of carbon markets in Asia, analysts said.
  • Wed 10:21
    London-based global lender HSBC will only provide financing to carbon projects issuing credits certified by the Integrity Council for the Voluntary Carbon Market (ICVCM), a senior executive said on Wednesday.
  • Wed 10:18
    Net zero hotels – The Radisson Hotel Group has committed to have 100 locations reach net zero emissions by 2030, in line with the Science-Based Targets Initiative (SBTi), the company announced on Tuesday. The group’s Verified Net-Zero (VNZ) programme seeks to eliminate Scope 1 (direct) and 2 (energy-related) emissions through electrification, the use of renewable city heating and cooling networks, and the sourcing of 100% renewable energy. Meanwhile, the Radisson group aims to significantly reduce operational Scope 3 (indirect) emissions across food and beverage, waste, laundry, amenities and business travel. The 2026 rollout will begin in Norway, followed by Denmark, Sweden, the UK and South Africa.
  • Wed 10:05
    German minister goes off script – Germany’s economy and energy minister Katherina Reiche has called on the EU to loosen its 2050 climate neutrality goal, warning that “strict and rigid goals” risk driving away energy-intensive industries. Speaking at the CERAWeek oil and gas conference in Texas, Reiche urged the bloc to “get back” to accepting a gap of “maybe a 5 or 10% by 2050” instead of insisting on full net zero. She argued that Europe previously worked within an 85-95% emissions reduction “corridor” and should reintroduce such flexibility. Reiche argued that economic growth must come before green targets, adding that “if sustainability crashes your economy, you have to readjust”. (Politico)
  • Wed 10:01
    Turkish cement producers have warned that the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) risks acting as a de facto trade barrier unless Brussels recognises the country’s own emissions data collected under a monitoring, reporting and verification (MRV) system aligned with EU rules, industry association Turkcimento has said.
  • Wed 09:57
    Airline fuel gamble – European carriers are delaying fresh jet fuel hedging, betting the Iran war-driven price spike will ease later this year even as spot costs soar to about $180 a barrel, the FT reports. Ryanair and Lufthansa have paused new contracts after already hedging roughly 80% of 2026 needs at pre-crisis levels, while EasyJet is sticking to its strategy but expects pricier “top-ups”. Executives hope to lock in far lower forward prices near $70-80 a barrel in coming years, but analysts warn the strategy leaves airlines exposed to further volatility and potential ticket price hikes. (Financial Times)
  • Wed 09:47
    An Australian Senate committee has called for stronger regulation of digital platforms, enhanced disclosure rules, and tighter oversight of corporate climate claims, warning that misinformation is undermining climate policy and public trust.
  • Wed 09:29
    Compliance markets potentially risk sidelining higher-tech and more expensive mitigation activities, developers warned, arguing that lower-cost supply could divert investment from complex, capital-intensive projects.
  • Wed 08:00
    The first fully digitised carbon credits have been issued under Gold Standard using just digital monitoring, reporting and verification (dMRV), and traceable on the Hedera Guardian public ledger.
  • Wed 06:07
    The Net Zero Commission has urged the New South Wales government to deploy new policy tools and accelerate emissions cuts across multiple sectors, warning that existing measures will not be sufficient to meet legislated climate targets under the state’s upcoming Net Zero Plan to 2035.
  • Wed 04:31
    Hot bots – AI-powered robots will be undertaking predictive maintenance at large-scale solar farms in Australia, following a successful trial by the country's national science agency CSIRO, it announced on Wednesday. The use of repurposed autonomous robots – initially designed for use in the mining sector – will reduce the risk to humans from the inspection of solar farms, which can span thousands of kilometres on hot, uneven ground, CSIRO said. The robots will automatically detect faults across PV panels, physical damage, hotspots, loose nuts and bolts, and any wiring that needs to be repaired. CSIRO added that this will help create skilled regional jobs by shifting focus from repetitive manual walking tasks to more precise technical work in solar farm maintenance, robotics support, and data analysis.
  • Wed 01:03
    Offshore (tail) winds - The largest US offshore wind farm began generating electricity on Monday, E&E News reported. Dominion Energy brought online the first of 176 turbines, making it one of the largest offshore wind projects under construction in the United States. The agreement came on the heels of a settlement between the US Interior Department and TotalEnergies, with the developer agreeing to give up its offshore wind leases off the coast of New York and North Carolina for some $928 mln.
  • Wed 00:50
    Grants cleared - The US EPA inspector general said the Biden administration established appropriate controls when awarding $1.5 bln in environmental justice grants through the Inflation Reduction Act, E&E News reported on Tuesday. The Trump administration is trying to terminate the Community Change Grant programme, which the independent federal watchdog determined had a rigorous selection process that adhered to agency regulations. The programme included some 80 grants ranging from $9 mln to $21 mln approved in 2024, focused on pollution reduction, resilience, and other municipal and local efforts.
  • Wed 00:25
    Gas ban backdown - The Trump administration has dropped a federal lawsuit against the Northern California cities of Morgan Hill and Petaluma after both municipalities moved to roll back local restrictions on gas appliances that had drawn legal challenges, E&E News reported. The US Department of Justice on Monday dismissed its January complaint against the two cities, which it had accused of violating federal appliance energy standards by maintaining ordinances that could effectively block natural gas hookups in new buildings. The decision follows actions by the Morgan Hill City Council to repeal its rule and the Petaluma City Council to amend its ordinance to encourage, rather than require, electrification in new construction, while both cities had argued the measures were not enforced following a 2023 court ruling.
  • Wed 00:22
    Geological carbon storage (GCS) features in most major fossil fuel-producing countries’ climate plans, but references often fail to reflect domestic policy and investment activity, a think tank's new briefing has found.

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