CP Daily News Ticker: 25 February 2026

Published 00:01 on February 25, 2026 / Last updated at 00:01 on February 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 23:54
    Climate and energy transition risks and opportunities detailed in Woodside’s annual report provide a glimpse into the energy giant’s thinking on its future prospects in a net zero world.
  • Wed 23:24
    Hydrogen highway – A Sweden–California research partnership has launched a transatlantic knowledge platform to accelerate heavy-duty hydrogen truck deployment under the SENITH project. Future Mobility reports that the initiative links Chalmers University of Technology and the University of California, Davis to coordinate academia, industry, and public agencies on the conditions required to scale hydrogen-powered vehicles. It said the collaboration aiming to align policy, business models, and R&D across both jurisdictions, with an eye on long-term US-EU cooperation.
  • Wed 23:24
    Registry sync – The Civil Aviation Decarbonization Organization (CADO), a Montreal-based not-for-profit that operates the IATA-developed SAF Registry, has partnered with carbon platform 123Carbon and 4Air, which operates the Assure SAF Registry, to pilot interoperability between their sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) registries. The collaboration will focus on exchanging verified SAF attribute data to prevent double issuance and double counting of CO2 reduction claims. A statement by 123Carbon said that the pilot in the first half of 2026 will test alignment on core data fields, terminology, and standardised interfaces, overseen by a joint committee and open to additional registries that meet agreed integrity standards.
  • Wed 23:23
    CHEO carbon software - The Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO) is seeking a proponent to deliver carbon accounting software. The contract would run for three years with options to extend. The deadline for bids is Mar. 6.
  • Wed 23:23
    Scaling SAF – The International Sustainability and Carbon Certification (ISCC), a global sustainability certification body, has partnered with Austrian oil and gas firm OMV and European aircraft manufacturer Airbus to advance sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) deployment through book and claim chain-of-custody models, Biofuel News reports. ISCC said the collaboration will examine new roles within its credit transfer system, with OMV participating as a fuel producer and Airbus acting as a facilitator between airlines and corporate partners. The partners said the pilot aims to strengthen trust and cohesion across the aviation value chain as SAF markets scale.
  • Wed 23:22
    Beaver bio boost - Carbon Direct will collaborate with Louisiana bio-methanol and carbon capture developer C2X on its Beaver Lake project. Carbon Direct’s Supply Services business will serve as a project contributor, providing scientific expertise and carbon market knowledge to deliver the highest standards for durability, measurement, and verification, the company said.
  • Wed 23:22
    A-plus methane emissions - Tourmaline Oil, Canada’s largest natural gas producer, announced Wednesday it had received a 'Grade A' under MiQ’s methane emission standard. Tourmaline is the first company in the world to be certified by MiQ for integrated natural gas production and processing facilities, the company said. It’s also the first Canadian company to receive the certification. The MiQ standard has also been adopted by fossil fuel companies, including BP, ExxonMobil, Repsol, and EQT in the US. Canada has set a target to reduce its methane emissions by 72% by 2030, relative to a 2012 baseline.
  • Wed 23:18
    California issued almost 230,000 offset credits over the last two weeks, narrowing the gap slightly between current year-to-date (YtD) issuances and the previous year, according to data published on Wednesday.
  • Wed 23:05
    The carbon removal (CDR) sector is struggling to scale to meet global climate goals, as projects face financing hurdles and weak buyer signals, a new report said.
  • Wed 23:01
    Major oil and gas companies should be prohibited from positions of influence within the voluntary carbon market's standards-setting bodies, an NGO said in a report published Thursday.
  • Wed 22:13
    Nespresso carbon offtake – Coffee major Nespresso has made its first investment in carbon credits through a partnership with Swiss-based NatureRe Capital, the companies said Wednesday in an emailed press release. The deal centres on NatureRe’s 700-hectare assisted natural regeneration project in Antioquia, Colombia, and marks Nespresso’s first transaction directly linking carbon removal, biodiversity restoration, and social impact within one of its sourcing regions. NatureRe described the agreement as a catalytic, multi-year offtake that could serve as a model for corporates seeking to expand into integrated carbon credit purchases.
  • Wed 21:42
    A bipartisan, bicameral bill aimed at developing federal programmes for marine carbon removal (mCDR) in the US is back trying to swim past Congress.
  • Wed 20:35
    Last week's Q1 California-Quebec current vintage carbon auction cleared at the 2026 price floor, while the advance auction settled at the same price but failed to sell out.
  • Wed 20:27
    Argentina ratings – Ratings agency Sylvera has partnered with the Argentina Stock Exchange (BACX) to integrate its project ratings directly onto the exchange’s platform, the company announced Wednesday on LinkedIn. Market participants can now view Sylvera Ratings alongside listed projects, access independent quality and delivery risk assessments, and request full due diligence without leaving the exchange. The first rated project live on BACX is a forestry initiative by Unitan.
  • Wed 20:23
    The US DOE has announced more than $170 million to scale geothermal energy technology, in a bid to boost the national sector which a recent report found saw no new large-scale installations last year.
  • Wed 19:34
    Voluntary carbon standard Climate Action Reserve (CAR) has issued what it said were the market’s first sustainable agriculture credits tagged with the Core Carbon Principles (CCP) label, it announced Wednesday.
  • Wed 19:23

    Lanza bonanza - LanzaJet has reached the first close of a planned $135 mln equity raise at a pre-money enterprise valuation of $650 mln, securing $47 mln so far. The round is co-led by International Airlines Group (IAG) and Shell, with additional participation from existing shareholders Groupe ADP, LanzaTech, and Mitsui. The new capital will support expansion of LanzaJet’s operations at its Freedom Pines Fuels alcohol-to-jet facility in the US state of Georgia, as well as development of its Project Speedbird sustainable aviation fuel biorefinery in north-east England, which has also received backing from the UK Department for Transport’s Advanced Fuels Fund. The company said that, at the end of 2025, it fully operated and produced ASTM-compliant fuels at the Freedom Pines plant, describing this as the first commercial-scale production of jet fuel derived from ethanol and the first scalable non-oil-based renewable solution compatible with existing aircraft. Alongside the funding round, LanzaJet has adjusted its ownership and governance structure to streamline decision-making and support future investment. It has also entered into multi-year tolling agreements at the Georgia facility. Under these arrangements, the company will use domestically produced, low-carbon waste-based ethanol and renewable natural gas to produce sustainable aviation fuel and renewable diesel. The tolling model is intended to secure feedstock supply and guarantee offtake, with the company presenting it as a means of reducing project risk and attracting lower-cost capital. (GreenAir)

  • Wed 17:55
    Working the land - Payments to English farmers for delivering environmental benefits will now be capped at £100,000 a year, the British environment secretary, Emma Reynolds, told the National Farmers' Union conference Wednesday. Currently, farmers receive payments for digging ponds, planting trees, and sowing windflower seeds, to ensure they are not out of pocket compared to using the land for intensive farming. (The Guardian)
  • Wed 17:29
    The pace of emissions reductions across the EU's energy-intensive industries has slowed over the last decade, while pollutants are costing the bloc more than €70 billion a year, an EU body said on Wednesday.
  • Wed 17:20
    EU carbon prices rallied to their highest of the week so far after the weekly Commitment of Traders report showed speculative traders cut their net long positions for a fifth week, reducing their bullish bets by nearly half from the record high set in mid-January.
  • Wed 17:09
    This is an SRS - The UK published its new sustainability reporting standards on Wednesday, officially endorsing the global corporate baseline set by the IFRS Sustainability Disclosure Standards, the Department of Business and Trade announced. The UK SRS 1 and SRS 2 set out a framework for corporate disclosures, including requirements on general sustainability- and climate-related risks and opportunities. Next, the department plans to look at where it could mandate standards, an official said last month.
  • Wed 17:09
    A carbon asset manager with ambitions to become the leading supplier of CORSIA-eligible credits has struck a marketing deal for a cookstove project in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
  • Wed 15:59
    Switzerland is being accused by a group of civil society groups of breaking its commitment to a global clean energy partnership by exporting credit insurance for gas-fired power plants.
  • Wed 15:41
    Space may be the next frontier for the UK’s decarbonisation drive after a report for the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero found small-scale space based solar power (SBSP) could become economically viable by 2040.
  • Wed 15:15
    Cloudy outlook - A boom in 'green ammonia' produced using green hydrogen has stalled as political shifts dampen the sector's economics and buyers aren't keen to sign long-term contracts. Experts cite doubts about the longevity of US tax credits and proposed exemptions to the EU's carbon border levy on fertilisers as clouding the outlook. Fertiglobe, the fertiliser arm of Abu Dhabi's Adnoc, says the only way to compete with grey ammonia is with CO2 pricing or subsidies, and these have been falling away in Europe and the US. Fertiglobe has paused some of its larger blue ammonia projects (made using carbon capture and storage) because of lack of demand. Buyer demand signals have weakened for green ammonia and hydrogen, including in Asia, influenced by the political agenda that is less focused on climate issues. The EU's carbon border fee may help blue ammonia projects, according to Yara, but likely won't be big enough to justify green ammonia. (FT)
  • Wed 15:06
    The UK's turnover, both direct and indirect, from the low-carbon and renewable energy economy was an estimated £109.2 billion in 2024 - almost double that of 2015, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
  • Wed 14:59
    The European Commission put forward revised EU state aid rules to a public consultation on Wednesday, proposing to lift mandatory EU scrutiny for government support to a range of renewables and energy efficiency projects, like building renovations.
  • Wed 14:39
    Fourteen African governments have committed a combined $400 million to responsible forest management and restoration, in partnership with international non-profit the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC).
  • Wed 14:23
    Key Carbon hire – Canada-based Key Carbon has appointed Audinga Besuspare as president as it expands its senior leadership team during a period of growth in carbon markets, the company announced Tuesday. Besuspare joins from PSP Investments, where she was senior director and co-led the European direct private equity team, having previously worked at Permira. She will work alongside CEO Luke Leslie on strategy, operations, and business development, after also serving as executive in residence at InSoil, a Key Carbon portfolio company focused on soil carbon projects. The firm in 2026 plans on scaling investments across InSoil, Global Cookstoves, and Worldview International, with projects beginning to generate carbon credits amid tightening supply and rising regulation-linked demand, it said.
  • Wed 14:13
    Most Sub-Saharan African governments started 2026 by pushing ahead with long-awaited carbon and climate regulations, in a show of the growing policy momentum across the region, even as turbulence in voluntary markets exposed persistent risks around governance, integrity, and investor confidence.
  • Wed 14:07
    A European metals industry association has urged the EU to not further postpone its proposal for boosting the bloc's clean industry, after Monday saw the European Commission delay its announcement to early March because of disagreements over its geographic scope.
  • Wed 13:49
    EV funding gap - India’s electric vehicle (EV) sector attracted $25.6 bln in investments between 2020 and 2025, but this represents only 18% of the capital required to meet the country’s 2030 electrification targets, according to a report by the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA). The report estimated that $117.82 bln still needs to be mobilised over the next five years to scale manufacturing, charging infrastructure, and supporting ecosystems. IEEFA noted that high borrowing costs of 15-33% for commercial EV buyers are slowing adoption and called for integrated financing mechanisms, including credit guarantees and risk-sharing structures, to lower interest rates and unlock large-scale private capital.
  • Wed 13:42
    The EU risks jeopardising future investment in durable capture capture and storage (CCS) projects if it takes strong action to weaken the price of EU Emissions Trading System (ETS) allowances in the upcoming review of the carbon pricing scheme, an industry body said this week.
  • Wed 13:22
    Current carbon removal (CDR) accounting methods risk overstating the climate value of temporary carbon storage and misaligning mitigation efforts with long-term temperature goals, according to a study released last week.
  • Wed 13:02
    More opposition to CBAM's Article 27a - A senior European Commission official said at an event last week that an article in the proposed Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) extension, Article 27a, was supposed to be used as "an exceptional emergency break for situations that are truly extraordinary", such as a war or pandemic. Martin Becker, deputy head of the European Commission's CBAM unit, said a rise in carbon prices in the European Emissions Trading (ETS) market was not such an event, but rather "pretty much stated intention" of the ETS. These remarks seem to be at odds with European Commissioner for Trade Maros Sefcovic's move on Jan. 7 to propose that Article 27a could be used as a way to temporarily exempt fertilisers from the mechanism. Think tank Bruegel also warned against proceeding with the fertiliser exemption from CBAM in a report , arguing the exemption would achieve little price reduction for farmers, but harm EU fertilisers producers. It urged the EU to hold the line on CBAM.
  • Wed 12:55
    The German coalition government has agreed to scrap a renewable energy obligation and a ban on new gas and oil boilers in its revised heating law, instead proposing to introduce green gas phase-in quotas from 2028.
  • Wed 11:51
    How and where green hydrogen is made will have a big impact on averting local water shortages in some parts of Europe, according to a new study.
  • Wed 11:48
    ERW challenges - Large-scale rollout of enhanced rock weathering (ERW) appears limited by substantial challenges, from initial set-up to final carbon removal (CDR), according to a study published in Nature. It raised questions about the availability of suitable feedstock when considering their potential for CDR, and said that dedicated mining for suitable feedstock seems unavoidable when applying ERW at scale. Also, "ERW can positively and negatively affect soil structure, hydrology, and overall carbon and nutrient cycles", so applying it well calls for "site-specific assessment of effective CDR and mitigation of potential negative impacts". Verifying CDR is a challenge because "the fate of weathering products along the land–ocean continuum in rivers remains poorly constrained". Whilst the socio-economic impacts are also uncertain, regarding financing and risk responsibility. All these factors need considering to ensure that ERW is effective, fair, and sustainable.
  • Wed 11:47
    Spain’s largest power company plans to push for longer operation of the country’s nuclear fleet, even as its production from the technology slipped 5% year-on-year.
  • Wed 11:40
    Russia's invasion of Ukraine has pushed greenhouse gas emissions up by over 300 million tonnes of CO2e since 2022, driven by warfare, fire, and reconstruction – while the world's five biggest oil companies recorded record profits, according to two studies marking the fourth anniversary of the war. 
  • Wed 11:20
    Smoother sailing - Heidelberg Materials expects its key construction markets, including Europe and North America, to stabilise further this year, with operating profit expected to rise by up to 10.3%. The world's second-largest cement maker expects a result from current operations (RCO) of €3.4 bln - €3.75 bln in 2026, compared with €3.4 bln in 2025. Polled analysts by the company expect RCO of €3.7 bln. CEO Dominik von Achten has said he foresees a slightly better market for building materials this year, with growth driven mainly by increased infrastructure and defense spending. The company said its return on invested capital (ROIC) rose to 10.4% in 2025, up from 9.9% the previous year, and was also expected to be above 10% in 2026. (Reuters)
  • Wed 11:15
    Carbon removals registry Isometric has updated its bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (Bio-CCS) protocol to include energy-from-waste (EfW) facilities, it announced Wednesday.
  • Wed 10:51
    Existing EU policies have failed to halt the decline in forest carbon stocks, Danish think tank Concito has warned, urging policymakers to consider a compliance-based carbon pricing regime built around the EU’s Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS), with strict monitoring rules.
  • Wed 10:40
    Policy proposals for the mandatory phase of Japan's emissions market have drawn mixed responses from domestic industry groups and environmental organisations, amid ambiguity around banking regulations and the use of international credits.
  • Wed 10:24
    Growing in Sizewell - Electricity from the UK's new Sizewell C nuclear reactor will cost about double the normal price, the Telegraph reported on Wednesday, citing a new government report. Estimates suggest the nuclear power will cost £120/MWh in today's prices, compared with a wholesale price of £60-70. The difference between wholesale prices and Sizewell C's 'strike price' will be covered by consumer energy bills. The reactor is now under construction, with an expected capacity of 3.2 GW, and startup in around 13 years.  
  • Wed 09:54
    Tempered optimism - Reliance on AI growth and policy to bolster European clean-energy producers is unreliable as European power demand growth remains lacklustre and carbon policy debate could impact valuations and earnings. The prospect of ETS reform has already reduced carbon prices by 20% off their recent highs, and were the EU to scrap carbon cost pass-through to power prices, long-term earnings for renewable developers and pure-play generators could fall by over 30%, according to BoA. Meanwhile, electricity use remains constrained partly due to efficiency gains and slowing EV adoption. (Reuters)
  • Wed 09:43
    The Council of EU member states formally approved a package on Tuesday to ease sustainability reporting and due diligence rules for large companies, scrapping mandatory climate transition plans in the name of competitiveness.
  • Wed 09:36
    Softer strategy - The Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) has omitted mention of net zero by 2040 in its latest sustainability strategy, stating that it will “accelerate action on the road to reducing GHG emissions by 50% within UEFA and across UEFA events, and advocate action across European football”. The 2021 version of the strategy stated the union would halve its GHG emissions by 2030 and had set out a carbon reduction plan affecting employee travel, waste management, purchased goods and services, and other areas. The new strategy confirms this carbon reduction plan remains in place, but the language has weakened by removing the end point for next zero, which weakens the direction and collective signal, according to one football and climate commentator. (edie.net)
  • Wed 08:51
    Talking the talk - President of European Parliament Roberta Metsola, published Tuesday in British centre-right newspaper The Daily Telegraph, framed the political push for closer UK–EU cooperation as common sense, with climate and trade policy - especially carbon pricing - a central practical area. "Linking carbon markets gives firms clearer rules before they commit to a new factory or upgrade a plant. These decisions show up in pay packets and prices," she wrote. Metsola, a Maltese politician who has served as president of the European Parliament since 2022, urged closer cooperation between the two European jurisdictions ahead of a visit to London this week. The UK and EU are discussing, among other topics, how to link their ETSs, with both sides hoping to strike a deal around a May summit.
  • Wed 05:07
    Renewable boost – New Zealand gentailer Mercury has a NZ$1 bln ($598 mln) pipeline of renewable energy projects in the works, it told investors Tuesday. This includes NZ$220 mln for an expansion of the Nga Tamariki Geothermal Station, with the new 46 MW unit coming online in January. Mercury is aiming to add 3.5 TWh of generation capacity by 2030, leveraging its strength in wind and geothermal, it said. The power sector is covered by the NZ ETS.
  • Wed 04:56
    An Australian feed additive company, targeting emissions reductions from livestock, posted a 236% surge in revenue in the first half of the 2026 financial year, it said on Wednesday.
  • Wed 03:53
    Power search – The New Zealand government is looking at the possibility of long-term power purchase agreements across the public sector, in a bid to encourage investment new energy projects, the Beehive announced on Wednesday. This follows a Request for Information last year, and the government is now starting discussions, including with independent generators. All technologies are considered, including biomass, wind, geothermal, solar, biogas, and hydrogen, plus battery storage, said energy minister Simon Watts. He added that solar will play an immediate and practical role, and has asked officials to prepare a feasibility study on establishing a procurement model to accelerate the rollout of commercially available solar across all of government.
  • Wed 03:18
    Capital expenditure on decarbonisation activities by an Australian mining company jumped over 200% in the first half of the 2026 financial year, according to its results on Wednesday.
  • Wed 02:55
    Funding support - The Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA) is providing up to A$3.25 mln ($2.1 mln) in funding to MGA Thermal for up to five front-end engineering design (FEED) studies to accelerate the commercialisation of its proprietary thermal energy storage (TES) technology, the agency said in a statement Wednesday. MGA Thermal’s patented technology can store energy as latent heat, enabling efficient long-duration thermal storage. ARENA said the project aims to accelerate project investment readiness and wider TES adoption across Australia’s industrial sector.  
  • Wed 01:55
    Australia’s emissions fell 1.9% year-on-year in the September quarter according to national data released Wednesday, driven partially by a fall in transport emissions for the first time.
  • Wed 00:50
    A prominent multilateral bank is developing a strategy to scale up carbon markets in Central America, support eight member countries in building the necessary infrastructure for Article 6, and structure a market for highly sought-after biodiversity credits.
  • Wed 00:20
    Awe-inspired Montreal solar - UK solar company Awendio Solaris would look to build its planned $1 bln-solar plant in Montreal, according to The Energy Mix. The outlet reported Avendio believes Quebec offers an extraordinary renewables R&D talent and abundant natural resources for solar cell and panel production. Awendio has touted the photovoltaic (PV) manufacturing facility as the largest solar silicon PV hub in the US and Canada. The company first announced the 5,000 MW plant in Dec. 2025.
  • Wed 00:19
    Power plans - Italian energy company Enel announced Monday it will spend about €53 bln ($62.6 bln) through 2028 - €1o bln more than originally planned - in investments in Europe and the US, Bloomberg reported. Most of the money will go to renewables, while the remainder will be invested in the grid. The business plan is aimed at accelerating both greenfield and brownfield renewable projects, including an expansion of the wind portfolio and growth in battery storage.
  • Wed 00:16
    A Canadian Big Six bank has purchased a first tranche of carbon removal (CDR) credits in Nova Scotia as it looks to build the nascent CDR market.
  • Wed 00:01
    Scotland can still reach net zero emissions by 2045 if ministers act quickly, but the risks of missing proposed carbon budgets between 2031 and 2040 are “significant” and “time is tight”, the Climate Change Committee (CCC) has warned.

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