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The world is addicted to coal; it s time for the plan

UN Secretary-General António Guterres has, once again, exhorted world leaders to end our deadly addiction to coal. Speaking at a Powering Past Coal Alliance event, the secretary-general urged all nations to:  Cancel all coal projects in the pipeline. The top Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) nations, in particular, are encouraged to take the lead on this priority; End international financing of coal and provide greater support to developing nations to help them transition to zero-carbon energy sources; and Develop a plan to start working on the just transition. Guterres further stated that “phasing out coal from the electricity sector is the single most important step to get in line with the 1.5-degree goal.”

Promoting an end to commercial livestock farming and fishing

Promoting an end to commercial livestock farming and fishing Impossible Foods is working on milk and fish substitutes as its founder pledges to put an end to the animal agriculture industry By Patrick Greenfield / The Guardian Patrick Brown is on a mission: to eradicate the meat and fish industries by 2035. The chief executive of Impossible Foods, a California-based company that makes genetically engineered plant-based meat, is deadly serious. No more commercial livestock farming or fishing. No more steak, fish and chips or roast dinners, at least not as you know them. In their place, his company’s scientists and food technicians will create plant-based substitutes for every animal product used today in every region of the world, he promises.

Discovery of cryptic species shows Earth is even more biologically diverse

Discovery of ‘cryptic species’ shows Earth is even more biologically diverse A method called DNA barcoding has revealed that some animals and plants believed to be a single species are actually separate By Patrick Greenfield / The Guardian A growing number of “cryptic species” hiding in plain sight have been unmasked in the past year, driven in part by the rise of DNA barcoding, a technique that can identify and differentiate between animal and plant species using their genetic divergence. The discovery of new species of aloe, African leaf-nosed bats and chameleons that appear similar to the human eye, but are in fact many and separate, have thrilled and worried conservationists.

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