Click on the coloured labels below to filter by region or topic
- Mon 01:50No power, no Uber - Charging has overtaken cost as the top barrier to EV adoption, according to a survey by Uber of 21,000 drivers across its international fleet. Uber said while tech advancements, new models, and partnerships have made EVs more affordable, charging infrastructure hasn’t kept up. Â
- BECCS begins – BioCirc has opened what it said is the world's largest biogas-based CCS plant at its Vesthimmerland facility in Denmark, marking the first project in the company's planned rollout of BECCS, according to Carbon Capture Journal. The company said it plans to install CCS at five of its eight biogas plants, with the facilities intended to capture and permanently store CO2 from biogas production while generating carbon credits. BioCirc added its approach could support sectors such as agriculture, shipping and heavy land transport.
- Mon 01:47Next steps – Swiss carbon finance company South Pole is in discussions with state-owned utility firm PLN Indonesia Power over a possible extension to a carbon trading agreement, the power company said on LinkedIn late last week. The talks could see an extension of PLN’s Emission Reduction Purchase Agreement with South Pole for its Gunung Salak Geothermal Power Plant. The duo are also looking at other ways to expand carbon crediting across PLN’s power portfolio, according to the LinkedIn post.
- Mon 01:47Solid storage – Shanghai Qiyao Technology Group said this week that the UN maritime agency IMO has given in-principle support to two proposals aimed at recognising onboard carbon mineralisation as a form of permanent CO2 storage. The company said the process converts CO2 captured from ships into stable minerals that can be used in construction materials, offering an alternative to geological storage. One proposal outlined the technical and environmental case for recognising mineralisation as permanent storage, while the second documented a demonstration project covering onboard CO2 capture, transport, and final mineralisation.
- Mon 01:46Clean air clampdown - Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) introduced legislation on Thursday that would prohibit the EPA from issuing Clean Air Act regulations deemed to exceed congressional intent, including rules restricting internal combustion engine vehicles, requiring power plants to switch fuels, reducing grid reliability, or mandating technologies considered economically or practically infeasible. The bill would also clarify that California Clean Air Act waivers, including those supporting EV mandates, fall within the definition of EPA regulations subject to the proposed limits.
- Mon 01:45Data centre dive - The US House Science, Space and Technology Committee advanced legislation Thursday that would allow the National Institute of Standards and Technology, in consultation with the DOE, to develop best practices and technical standards for measuring data centre energy and water use, including use tied to AI training, inference, and other compute-intensive processes. The committee approved H.R. 9372 in a 34-1 vote, with Rep. Daniel Webster (R) the only no vote. The bill would also support research into data gaps, forecasting risks, standardised metrics, data-sharing mechanisms, and coordination with federal, state, academic, industry, and international standards groups.
- Mon 01:44Loosening liability - State and local officials led by California Attorney General Rob Bonta urged congressional Democrats on Monday to reject Republican legislation that would shield oil and gas companies from climate lawsuits seeking compensation for the costs of climate change, E&E News reported. The Stop Climate Shakedowns Act, introduced by Sen. Ted Cruz and Rep. Harriet Hageman, would block more than a dozen state and local cases accusing fossil fuel companies of misleading the public about the risks of burning fossil fuels. In a letter, 21 attorneys general and local officials argued the bill would undermine their authority to use state laws to protect residents, comparing the climate cases to past litigation against opioid, tobacco, and social media companies.
- Mon 01:44Holding on - State regulators are still incorporating the US EPA’s 2024 carbon standards into permits for new gas plants, even as the Trump administration moves to repeal the rules, E&E News reported. Georgia, Ohio, and Pennsylvania included emissions limits or compliance steps tied to the rule’s first phase, while North Dakota acknowledged the standard applies but delayed setting a numerical limit, citing regulatory uncertainty. The permits show utilities remain exposed to uncertainty over whether the Biden-era rules will be repealed, upheld, or revived through future litigation.
- Mon 01:31A prominent Iwi leader has filed a case in New Zealand’s High Court challenging the government’s amendments to block tort-based climate litigation.



