RNG NEWS

Stay up to date with the latest stories, insights, and announcements.
Guest User Guest User

Ontario Posts Cap and Trade Regulation

Glen R. Murray, Minister of the Environment and Climate Change.  

Ontario is moving forward with a cap and trade program to limit greenhouse gas pollution, reward innovative companies, generate opportunities for investment in Ontario and create jobs while moving to a low-carbon economy.

Today, Ontario posted its draft cap and trade regulatory proposal on the Environmental and Regulatory registries for a 45-day public and stakeholder comment period. This comment period builds on years of consultation with industry and business on the design of a robust, accountable and transparent cap and trade program.

A cap and trade program is a proven way to reduce GHG emissions and fight climate change by giving polluters an incentive to cut emissions. It creates a price on carbon emissions by limiting the amount of greenhouse gas pollution that can come from the economy (the cap) and then allowing those covered by the cap to trade among themselves (the trade) in a flexible and cost-effective way. 

Read more...

Read More
Guest User Guest User

WA State Withdraws Draft Clean Air Rule After Public Input

By Camille St. Onge, Washington Department of Ecology. 

OLYMPIA – The Washington Department of Ecology plans to update the draft Clean Air Rule it proposed in January after engaging with stakeholders and gathering feedback. 

"We appreciate all the helpful and constructive feedback we have received from stakeholders," said Sarah Rees, Ecology's special assistant on climate change policy. "We're listening and being responsive to the ideas on how to best move the rule forward." 

Ecology proposed the draft rule in an effort to cap and reduce carbon pollution in Washington state. The rule would help slow climate change and limit the projected effects on coastal communities, agricultural industries, and drinking water supplies.

Read more...

Read More
Guest User Guest User

How Clean Energy Became A Code Word In Washington

By Samantha Page, Climate Progress.

If you are a Republican who cares about climate change, you’re probably pretty sick of the presidential election. 

Your last hope suspended his campaign weeks ago, so it makes sense to turn, now, to the Congressional races. 

That’s what Republican billionaire Jay Faison seems to have done, launching a new Super PAC this week to direct funds toward candidates who openly support clean energy. The ClearPath Action Fund will spend $5 million on Republican congressional elections, the Wall Street Journal reported. The PAC may get involved in the presidential election later.

Read more...

Read More
Guest User Guest User

What Does the Paris Climate Agreement Say about Waste?

By Eric Lombardi, Waste 360.

The world has been heatedly debating the significance of the Paris climate agreement since it was published in December. Some see it as a historic moment of global cooperation while others call it a landmark failure to hold countries truly accountable for their climate impacts and nothing more than empty words.  Whatever one thinks, it does appear to be true what the Guardian newspaper said in the U.K., “The whole world agreed, we need to stop delaying and start getting serious about preventing a climate crisis. We’ve turned the corner; climate denial is no longer being taken seriously.”

Waste (finally) mattered in Paris

Skim through the official Paris Agreement and you won’t find the word “waste” even mentioned. But if you had tuned into the side rooms, the street protests, formal meetings and the negotiations where the real work was being done to figure out how we’re going to actually meet the Paris goals and you would find the subjects of recycling, composting, minimizing waste and the concept of Zero Waste emerged as priority solutions for a carbon-free future.

Read more...

Read More
Guest User Guest User

Port Of Stockton Proposes Project To Harvest Hyacinth For Biogas

By Rich Ibarra, Capital Public Radio.

Water hyacinth has been the scourge of the Delta in recent years, but by this summer it could be providing the power to city lights. A pilot project is in the works to harvest it for biogas.

Water hyacinth clogs rivers and sloughs in the Delta trapping boats in the marina by mid-summer and fall.

Port of Stockton Environmental Manager Jeff Wingfield says the port is proposing a pilot project to harvest the hyacinth and convert it into methane to power a cogeneration plant.

Read more...

Read More
Guest User Guest User

US Waste to Energy Firm Blue Sphere Secures Nearly $2m

By Ben Messenger, Waste Management World.

Blue Sphere Corp. (OTCQB: BLSP) a waste to energy developer based in North Carolina, has closed on a private equity investment round with three of its current shareholders worth $1.925 million through the sale of common stock and warrants.

The company explained the Securities (Stocks and Warrents) were purchased at a price per share equal to the closing price for Blue Sphere's Common Stock as of February 12, 2016, or $0.055 per share.

Read more...

Read More
Guest User Guest User

Ontario promises to reveal cap-and-trade plan details within weeks

By The Canadian Press, via CBC News.

Ontario's Liberal government is promising all the details of its cap-and-trade plan to put a price on carbon and reduce greenhouse gas emissions will soon be public.

Environment and Climate Change Minister Glen Murray says the government is wrapping up consultations with manufacturers and large polluters on what he admits is a very complex design for the cap-and-trade initiative.

Murray says there will legislation and a regulation that will spell out details of the plan, which will impose pollution limits on companies but allow them to buy credits if they exceed their limit or sell their credits to other polluters if they're under.

Read more...

Read More
Guest User Guest User

Capturing renewable natural gas from manure

By PorkNetworkNews.

A Missouri project, believed to be one of the largest and most comprehensive livestock manure-to-energy projects of its type is currently underway. The project efficiently treats waste from approximately 2 million hogs.

Covers over swine lagoons capture and channel valuable gasses that are by-products of the wastewater treatment facilities on the farms. The collected gas is sent to equipment for scrubbing and cleaning, and then it is compressed into natural gas. The bio-solids (manure) are broken down to basic elements, making the nutrients easily available to plants in the form of fertilizer.

The benefit of this system is not limited to the creation of natural gas and fertilizer; it also reduces the carbon footprint of the facilities. In addition, the rainwater that falls upon the covers is collected, making it available for irrigation and other uses on the farms. Rainwater capture reduces trucking and overall labor costs of farm operations. 

Read more...

Read More
Guest User Guest User

McCarthy addresses RFS, role of biomass in CPP during hearing

By Erin Voegele, Biomass Magazine.

On Feb. 11, the House Committee on Agriculture held a hearing on U.S. EPA policies that impact the rural economy. The renewable fuel standard (RFS) and Clean Power Plan were among the programs discussed during the nearly three-hour event.

In her testimony, EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy said that the agency has taken steps to improve implementation of the RFS and continues to approve new agricultural feedstocks, increasing the number of pathways that biofuel producers may use to qualify their biofuel under the program. “We improved the quality, transparency, and efficiency of our petition review process for new biofuel pathways, clarified qualifying biofuels, and conducted lifecycle analyses on several new feedstocks,” she said. “The EPA remains committed to the RFS program and meeting Congress’s intent to responsibly grow renewable fuels over time.”

Responding to several questions posed during the hearing, McCarthy stressed that the EPA intends to keep on track with its future RFS rulemaking. While not specifically addressed by McCarthy during the hearing, the EPA’s Regulatory Development and Retrospective Review Tracker currently states the agency initiated rulemaking for the 2017 RFS standards and 2018 standards for biomass-based diesel in August, with a notice of proposed rulemaking expected to be published in the Federal Register in June.

Read more...

Read More
Guest User Guest User

Study Ties U.S. to Spike in Global Methane Emissions

By Bobby Magill, ClimateCentral.org.

There was a huge global spike in one of the most potent greenhouse gases driving climate change over the last decade, and the U.S. may be the biggest culprit, according a new Harvard University study.

The United States alone could be responsible for between 30 percent and 60 percent of the global growth in human-caused atmospheric methane emissions since 2002 because of a 30 percent spike in methane emissions across the country, the study says.

Read more...

Read More
Don’t miss an update—join our weekly newsletter below.