Solving the coal puzzle

Lessons from four years of coal phase-out policy in Europe

Playing With Fire

An assessment of company plans to burn biomass in EU coal power stations

The A-B-C of BCAs

An overview of the issues around introducing Border Carbon Adjustments in the EU

Coal mine methane leaks are worse for climate change than all shipping and aviation

New IEA World Energy Outlook shows coal mine methane leaks add up to a third to emissions from coal

Coal Free Kingdom

UK election manifestos should commit to take the UK fully coal-free, including in industry, finance, and domestic heating – ready for next year’s COP26 in Glasgow

The cash cow has stopped giving: Are Germany’s lignite plants now worthless?

Our new research finds German lignite gross profits collapsed 54% so far in 2019. With lignite now loss-making, the case for Gov. compensation has collapsed

Progress on carbon budgets – evidence submitted to the UK Environmental Audit Committee

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Progress on carbon budgets – evidence submitted to the UK Environmental Audit Committee

In this written evidence submitted to the EAC, Sandbag argues that the UK government has no basis to weaken the 4th carbon budget, and on the contrary should look to strengthen it. We highlight that EU ambition for the relevant period (2023-2027) has not yet been decided, and argue that UK ambition poses little danger of outstripping EU ambition in any case. We stress that the methodology used by the CCC to determine the UK trajectory embraces an unacceptably high risk of passing 2°C, and awards the UK an inequitably large proportion of the global carbon space. Finally we argue that where the UK carbon budgets are endangered by overly generous EU allocations, these can be protected simply by unilaterally cancelling EU allowances.

Skills

Posted on

July 3, 2013