Around The Web

Can Sea Shepherd survive its own success?

The Guardian - Fri, 2015-06-05 23:46

With a new $12m ship on the way and the Japanese whaling fleet on the retreat, the conservation organization is having a banner year – provided the Whale Wars stars can navigate a rising tide of multimillion-dollar lawsuits

In 2010, the world watched a $3m eco-action boat called the Ady Gil sink off Antarctica after being run through by a Japanese whaling ship. In many ways, it was a moment that defined the last five years for Sea Shepherd, the vigilante conservation group to which the trimaran belonged. With the sinking came renewed public support for their mission to do anything necessary to stop whaling.

The collision is likely to make headlines again this summer, as three separate multimillion-dollar lawsuits against Sea Shepherd Conservation Society (SSCS) come to a head.

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Why an opinion article on Delhi's air pollution upset many Indians | Janaki Lenin

The Guardian - Fri, 2015-06-05 19:16

A New York Times story of an eight-year-old’s struggle to draw a breath of air set off a storm of protest. Was it a case of shooting the messenger?

Gardiner Harris, the South Asia correspondent for The New York Times, wrote a critique of Delhi’s abysmal air quality before fleeing to the US. Since then his story has been re-published by major news websites and shared widely online.

Within nine months of the family moving to Delhi, Harris’ eight-year-old son Bram suffered respiratory distress, lost half his breathing ability, and had to take steroids regularly. Then the Harrises agonised if it was ethical to continue living in the city at the cost of their children’s health, especially when they had a choice. They could move elsewhere, while most of the city’s residents were grounded.

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Seven new species of Australian spider discovered including unique tarantula

The Guardian - Fri, 2015-06-05 18:11

A team of scientists, rangers and field assistants had great success in their quest to find new and endangered species in the huge Judbarra national park

Seven new species of spider, including a type of tarantula completely new to science, have been discovered in a Northern Territory national park.

The discoveries were made by a team participating in the Bush Blitz nature program which saw 16 scientists, Indigenous rangers and field assistants, searching the 1.3m hectare Judbarra park for new species.

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Emissions Reduction Fund: Exposure Draft Carbon Credits (Carbon Farming Initiative) Amendment Rule 2015

Department of the Environment - Fri, 2015-06-05 15:03
The Department is seeking comment on proposed amendments to the Carbon Credits (Carbon Farming Initiative) Amendment Rule 2015 to streamline provisions and update terminology. The consultation closes 19 June 2015.
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Emissions Reduction Fund: Exposure Draft Carbon Credits (Carbon Farming Initiative) Amendment Rule 2015

Department of the Environment - Fri, 2015-06-05 15:03
The Department is seeking comment on proposed amendments to the Carbon Credits (Carbon Farming Initiative) Amendment Rule 2015 to streamline provisions and update terminology. The consultation closes 19 June 2015.
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Barwon-Darling Unregulated River water source Tender Round Opens

Department of the Environment - Wed, 2015-06-03 15:18
The Australian Government has commenced a water purchase tender for the northern New South Wales catchment of Barwon-Darling, opening at 9am AEST on Thursday, 04 June 2015 and closing at 5pm AEST on Monday, 06 July 2015.
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Aggregation under the Emissions Reduction Fund - Consultation on guidance materials

Department of the Environment - Mon, 2015-06-01 11:28
The Department is seeking feedback from interested parties to inform the final versions of a set of aggregation guidance materials. The consultation closes on 19 June 2015.
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Draft decision on the state of conservation of the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area

Department of the Environment - Fri, 2015-05-29 21:36
On 29 May 2015 the World Heritage Centre published the World Heritage Committee’s draft decision with regard to the state of conservation of the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area.
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It's time to wean ourselves off the fairytale version of farming | George Monbiot

The Guardian - Fri, 2015-05-29 21:06

Children’s tales bear no resemblance to the cruelty of most modern farms, yet this image enables us to turn a blind eye to animal welfare and is exploited by the industry for profit – as Kerrygold’s recent Guardian advertorial shows

The way that meat, eggs and milk are produced is surrounded by one of our great silences, in which most people collaborate. We don’t want to know, because knowing would force anyone with a capacity for empathy to change their diet.

You break this silence at your peril. After I published an article on chicken farming last week, I had to re-read it to check that I hadn’t actually proposed the slaughter of the firstborn by terrorist devil worshippers – so outraged and vicious were some of the responses. And that was just the consumers.

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Release of Exposure Draft - NGER (Measurement) Amendment Determination 2015 (No 2)

Department of the Environment - Fri, 2015-05-29 11:00
Release of Exposure Draft National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting (Measurement) Amendment Determination 2015 (No 2) Comments close 12 June 2015.
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Release of Exposure Draft - NGER (Measurement) Amendment Determination 2015 (No 2)

Department of the Environment - Fri, 2015-05-29 11:00
Release of Exposure Draft National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting (Measurement) Amendment Determination 2015 (No 2) Comments close 12 June 2015.
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Fort McKay: the Canadian town that sold itself to tar sands

The Guardian - Thu, 2015-05-28 21:06

This tiny Alberta town is one of the world’s single biggest sources of carbon pollution. The community grew rich on oil, and was wrecked by oil. So local Cece Fitzpatrick decided to run for chief, promising to stand up to the industry that came there 50 years ago

Within a 25-­mile radius of Fort McKay, 21 projects with a capacity of up to 3.3m barrels a day have been approved or are in production. Another 20 with a combined capacity of about 1.6m barrels a day are in the planning stage, according to Fort McKay First Nation.

Locals can hear, smell, feel and taste the evidence of extraction, even inside their homes. On bad days, it smells like cat piss, according to Cece Fitzpatrick.

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Release of Australia’s National Greenhouse Accounts 2013

Department of the Environment - Thu, 2015-05-28 10:00
The Department has released Australia’s National Greenhouse Accounts presenting national, state and territory and industry emissions estimates for 1990-2013. The publications are available on the Progress of the National Greenhouse Gas Inventory...
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Release of Australia’s National Greenhouse Accounts 2013

Department of the Environment - Thu, 2015-05-28 10:00
The Department has released Australia’s National Greenhouse Accounts presenting national, state and territory and industry emissions estimates for 1990-2013. The publications are available on the Progress of the National Greenhouse Gas Inventory...
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Two species listed as critically endangered under the EPBC Act

Department of the Environment - Mon, 2015-05-25 15:55
The Minister has approved the inclusion of two species, Calidris ferruginea (curlew sandpiper) and Numenius madagascariensis (eastern curlew), to the critically endangered category effective 26 May 2015.
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The devil’s birds reveal their tender side

The Guardian - Mon, 2015-05-25 14:30

Bristol This is an aerial holiday park: the swifts are here for the local cuisine and to find romance

The wall next to Clifton Down train station is alive with the sounds of spring; the blackbird’s bubbling song, bees buzzing and the chirping of tiny tits hiding in the ivy. But sitting outside a bar with a pint of cider I’m willing it to be summer already. I’m trying to block out the commuter traffic and gossiping students to listen for a sign that the next season is on its way.

The sky is an obliging cornflower shade and the sun shines honey-coloured through my glass but the breeze is bracing. It has driven the resident swifts up beyond my hearing. A pair circle high over the shopping centre, two thin black crescents in the perfect blue sky.

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New threatened species listings

Department of the Environment - Mon, 2015-05-25 09:12
The Minister has recently listed one species as threatened and approved a conservation advice for one listed species.
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Can we save the rhino from poachers with a 3D printer?

The Guardian - Sun, 2015-05-24 16:30
Bioengineering startup Pembient aims to reduce demand for black-market rhino products by 3D-printing artificial horn – but wildlife groups remain sceptical

In a meeting room in an industrial area of San Francisco, Matthew Markus unpacks the contents of a small carved wooden box that depicts a rhinoceros with an impressive horn. Inside it are vials containing powder and small, hard-looking chunks. There are also what looks like miniature horns. “I term it conservation 2.0,” says Markus.

Markus is the co-founder of Pembient, a startup that aims to thwart the illegal wildlife trade by recreating animal products in the lab. It is starting with rhino horn but has plans for more complex materials such as elephant tusk. The hope is to produce rhino horn so biologically similar to wild horn – but at about one tenth of black market costs – that buyers and illegal traders will switch, thereby curtailing relentlessly increasing poaching levels. The mysterious box contains Pembient’s collection of prototypes. “We are working towards a bio-identical product by reverse-engineering rhino horn down to the smallest degree,” says Markus, who claims his version can be better than the real thing. “Our goal is that the only way you can tell the difference is that there will be pollutants in the wild horn.”

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'Stable' Antarctic ice sheet may have started collapsing, scientists say

The Guardian - Fri, 2015-05-22 04:00

Southern Antarctic Peninsula ice sheet losing ice 8,500 times the mass of the Great Pyramid of Giza every year, satellite data shows

A vast slab of Antarctic ice that was previously stable may have started to collapse, according to new analysis of satellite data.

Research published in the journal Science on Thursday found the Southern Antarctic Peninsula (SAP) ice sheet is losing ice into the ocean at a rate of 56 gigatons each year – about 8,500 times the mass of the Great Pyramid of Giza. This adds around 0.16mm per year to the global sea level.

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A climate change poem for today: Doggerland by Jo Bell

The Guardian - Thu, 2015-05-21 18:34

UK poet laureate Carol Ann Duffy curates a series of 20 original poems by various authors on the theme of climate change

The land bridge connecting Great Britain to mainland Europe during the last Ice Age was gradually flooded by rising sea levels around 6,500 BC. It was discovered in 1931 when a Norfolk trawler dredged up an unexpected artefact.

Out from Cromer in an easy sea, Pilgrim Lockwood
cast his nets and fetched up a harpoon.
Twelve thousand years had blunted not one barb.
An antler sharpened to a spike, a bony bread knife
from a time of glassy uplands and no bread:
Greetings from Doggerland, it said.

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