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đą Baked Alaska?
Happy Tuesday. (Almost) Nobody wants to drill for oil and gas in the Alaskan Arctic, but plans for a new project are going ahead as a âgood-news, bad newsâ sandwich is served up to soften the blow.
In todayâs edition:
âĄď¸ Alaska oil and gas restrictions
đ Change to agri subsidies
đł A rainforest rescue
âĄď¸ Energy (1-minute read)
Joe Biden administration to restrict Alaska oil and gas drilling ⌠what to make of it?
A look back: Drilling in the pristine Alaskan Arctic is an emotive subject. The Biden administrationâs approval of ConocoPhillipsâ Willow project in the National Petroleum Reserve (NPR) in March led to outrage amongst environmentalists (Full story here)
Whatâs new: This week, the Biden administration said it would limit development on 13mn acres of NPR land and ban it outright on another 10mn acres. (a move signalled it would make when it greenlit Conocoâs Willow project in a sort of good news-bad news sandwich)
Much adoâ about ⌠Willow notwithstanding (a project that has been decades in the making), It seems the announcement may be a little style over substance. Because ultimately â whatever the restrictions â no one really wants to drill in the Arctic.
What do you mean? Many of the leases for the development of the NPR are held by the Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority after a scant display of corporate interest during the lease sale (there were three bidders). Whatever the regionâs untapped hydrocarbon riches, exploration in the Arctic is too expensive, too controversial and too much of a headache for large Oil and Gas companies to be interested in pursuing. (full story here).
âĄď¸Energy Deals:
- Ascend Elements Raised $542 Million to Accelerate Production of U.S.-engineered Lithium-Ion Battery Materials led by Decarbonization Partners, a partnership between BlackRock and Temasek.
- Ambient Photonics Raised $30M in Series A Funding a pioneer in low-light energy harvesting technology for connected devices.
- After closing its $10 million Series A in December 2022, Ostrom has raised an additional $8 million for their technology which aims to reduce the friction of full-home electrification.
- Startup Lumen Energy has closed a Series A round of $11 million to expand its new clean energy financing product for commercial building owners.
- French climate startup Caeli Energie has raised âŹ10m in equity and debt â its second funding round â to increase the production of its low-carbon air conditioners.
đ AgriTech (1-minute read)
Investors urge G20 to harvest change in agricultural subsidies
Headline: For the first time, 32 investors managing $7.3 trillion in assets have called on the G20 (a group of countries comprising the worldâs largest advanced and emerging economies) to align agricultural subsidies with climate and nature goals by the decade's end.
Details: In 2021, a UN report highlighted that approximately 87% of the $540 billion in annual subsidies to agricultural producers had measures that posed a risk to nature and human health. The investors urged G20 leaders to lead by example and ensure climate change and biodiversity commitments â agreed upon in the Paris Agreement and Montreal Biodiversity Agreement â are met by linking financial support for the agricultural sector with environmental obligations.
Addressing the issue: Recommendations include shifting financial incentives towards adopting regenerative agriculture practices, reducing subsidies for high-emission products like dairy and red meat, and increasing funding to support affected workers during the transition. (Full story here).
đAgri Deals:
- Meati, a Boulder, CO-based alternative meat developer, raised $50M to scale mycelium-based meat production.
- Food-recycling startup Mill Industries has raised about $70 million toward a $100 million target for a Series C round for its bins that automatically track food waste
- altM, a Bangalore, India-based biomaterials platform from agricultural residue, raised $4M to scale technology from a laboratory bench to commercial production.
đł Nature (1-minute read)
A rainforest rescue for the Amazonâs indigenous guardians
Headline: Brazilâs President, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, has officially recognised 2 indigenous territories granting them legal protection as reservations. This recognition prohibits mining activities on the land and requires specific authorisation for commercial farming and logging.
Details: The recognition also ensures non-Indigenous people are banned from engaging in economic activity in the designated areas, which helps Indigenous people defend their communities against illegal loggers, gold miners and cattle ranchers. Environmentalists believe Indigenous groups are the best guardians of the rainforest, and deforestation data shows that the forests on their reservations are the best conserved.
Race against time: However, the protection of further indigenous territories faces a race against time, with the Brazilian Congress pushing legislation to restrict the recognition of Indigenous land claims â a move backed by the countryâs powerful farm lobby. (Full story here).
đł Nature Deals:
- Kind Designs, a Miami-based company, raised $5M to expand its production of eco-friendly, 3D-printed seawalls to protect coastal communities from rising sea levels.
đ Little Bytes
Quote: âThis enables investment in deforestation-free commodities for agricultural food supply⌠Africa is not like Indonesia or Brazil, where weâve seen a lot of unsustainable practices that theyâre now trying to correct.â Kavita Sinha, director of the Green Climate Fundâs private sector facility.
Stat: 13,700 public schools in the US that didnât need cooling in 1970 will either have or need it by 2025 â The Center for Climate Integrity
Watch: 3 startups using AI to solve global challenges
đ In other newsâŚ
India announced the launch of a global biofuel alliance at a G20 summit in New Delhi to boost the use of cleaner fuels. The alliance, with the United States and Brazil as its founding members, would help accelerate global efforts to meet net zero emissions targets by facilitating trade in biofuels derived from plant and animal waste sources. (Full story here).
Climate and sport: World Rugby has brought in special measures to mitigate a French heat wave, including a two-minute break midway through each half. (Full story here).
UN publishes the first official overview of collective progress towards climate targets since the Paris Agreement, as it again warns the world is on track to exceed the 1.5C temperature goal - eight years since countries around the world signed the Paris Agreement. (Full story here).
The fifth round of the UK government's Contracts for Difference scheme attracts minimal interest from offshore wind developers as the industry continues to wrestle with soaring inflation. (Full story here).
The worldâs biggest global climate fund has approved a $189 million commitment to support adopting regenerative agriculture practices across 11 African countries that donât cause deforestation. (Full story here).
Two geothermal sites in southwest England are proceeding toward financial close after receiving government contracts in a renewables auction. Three geothermal projects were successful in the auction for the first time, a big step forward for a technology deemed too expensive for decades. (Full story here).
đŁ Gone Phishing
Three of these stories are true, one we've made up. Guess which:
Great Wall of China damaged by workers looking for shortcut
Cathedral restoration halted after ancient treasure unearthed
Rescuers move 5,000lb concrete slab to save kitten
Man arrested for trying to cross Atlantic in a giant hamster wheel
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