Around The Web
This is what climate change looks like in Australia – in pictures
As predictions about the climate crisis increasingly become observations, Australians are witnessing first hand the impacts of more frequent and severe weather events. These images supplied by the Climate Council show the devastating effects on the continent’s ecosystems and unique wildlife. Australia’s ecosystems are already under grave stress from land-clearing, over-harvesting and invasive feral animals and plants; climate change is adding to the litany of woes and proving to be the last straw for some systems and species
Continue reading...Smart energy meter rollout deadline pushed back to 2024
Government decision follows critics saying 2020 deadline had no chance of being met
The government has pushed back the deadline for its £13bn smart energy meter rollout by four years to 2024 after critics said the project had “no realistic prospect” of meeting its deadline.
The government has bowed to pressure to extend the deadline after a damning report from the National Audit Office said households might be forced to pay £500m more than expected after a string of delays affecting the software underpinning the network.
Continue reading...Some farming will always need subsidy | Letter
It is impossible to disagree with the Food and Land Use Coalition report’s findings ($1m a minute global farm subsidies ‘are destroying the world’, 16 September). Yet it would be wrong to dispense with all agricultural support programmes, particularly in the UK. Big changes are needed, but there will always be targeted support to certain sectors and farm types.
First, we do need to support the small-scale, family-based business structure. This is the only way of sustainable farming in the uplands and less productive land areas. All land use requires management, even woodland. This is not poor resource use; it is supporting public benefit from business centres that would otherwise not be financially viable.
Continue reading...California’s ARB still seeking EJ, labour representatives for offset task force
David Attenborough to front UK study on biodiversity loss
Broadcaster will act as ambassador for government review into global costs and risks of habitat loss
Sir David Attenborough has agreed to become the public face of a landmark government study into biodiversity loss and its impact on the economy.
The broadcaster and naturalist will act as an ambassador to promote the review around the world as the government attempts to demonstrate its determination to fight the climate emergency.
Continue reading...Carbon Policy Advisor, Shell – London
Corporate Development Analyst, CDP Europe – Berlin
Legs be having you! How to create a spider-friendly garden
There’s an explosion of the eight-legged creatures in Britain’s gardens due to the warm weather. Here’s why you should welcome them into your outdoor spaces
Where have all these huge spiders in our back gardens come from? It is a question asked a lot at the moment, given the apparent population explosion in recent weeks, and the webs lacing our outdoor spaces. But actually, they’ve been here since early spring. They hatched last autumn, as tiny 1mm spiderlings, from eggs deposited under a silken protective igloo last autumn. At this time of year, they are reaching adult maturity – finally big enough to be noticed.
This year’s warm summer has been kind to spiders, giving them plenty of invertebrate food (mostly flies, but also bees, wasps, butterflies and beetles), and a temperature that speeds up their growth.
Continue reading...About the age of extinction – a Guardian series
Our reporting draws attention to the catastrophic loss of species across the planet and looks at ways to tackle the crisis
This project focuses on biodiversity: the variety of all life on our planet. It highlights the crisis represented by huge losses of animal, insect, bird and plant life around the world, as well as innovations to tackle these losses.
This series is supported, in part, through grants to theguardian.org by the BAND Foundation, a private family foundation established in 1999 to oversee charitable interests through strategic grant making, primarily in nature conservation, epilepsy and climate change, and by the Wyss Foundation, a private foundation founded in 1998 by Hansjörg Wyss that is “dedicated to supporting innovative, lasting solutions that improve lives, empower communities, and strengthen connections to the land”.
Continue reading...EU Midday Market Brief
Why the UN climate action summit matters
With Trump expected to skip the global meeting, the question will be: can the rest of the world save itself from climate breakdown if the most powerful nation is pulling in the opposite direction?
This story originally appeared in the Nation. It is republished here as part of the Guardian’s partnership with Covering Climate Now, a global collaboration of more than 250 news outlets to strengthen coverage of the climate story.
As world leaders converge on New York City for the United Nations climate action Summit on 23 September, they enter what may be the most consequential week in climate politics since Donald Trump’s surprise election as president of the United States in 2016. Trump, of course, announced soon after taking office that he was withdrawing the US from the Paris Agreement, the landmark treaty signed at the last big UN climate summit in 2015. António Guterres, the UN secretary general, convened this week’s summit precisely because the US and most other countries remain far from honoring their Paris pledges to reduce heat-trapping emissions enough to prevent catastrophic climate disruption.
Continue reading...2019 ozone hole could be smallest in three decades
SK Market: KAUs hit fresh record highs though volumes dwindle
Project Manager Climate Diplomacy Team, Climate Analytics – Berlin
'Like a sunburn on your lungs': how does the climate crisis impact health?
Children, pregnant people and the elderly are the most at risk from extreme weather and heat – but the impact is already felt across every specialty of medicine
The climate crisis is making people sicker – worsening illnesses ranging from seasonal allergies to heart and lung disease.
Children, pregnant people and the elderly are the most at risk from extreme weather and rising heat. But the impact of the climate crisis – for patients, doctors and researchers – is already being felt across every specialty of medicine, with worse feared to come.
Continue reading...Indonesia haze: Why do forests keep burning?
Want to know the speed and cost of the energy transition? You can model it here
ITP Renewables open-source capacity expansion model of the National Electricity Market – openCEM – is now available, free of charge.
The post Want to know the speed and cost of the energy transition? You can model it here appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Nationals MPs snub launch of farming group's climate change report
Australia’s agricultural production will fall and food insecurity will rise without a climate strategy, report warns
Nationals MPs have snubbed a farmers’ group launching a major climate change report that warns the Australian agricultural sector faces “significant threats to viability” without a new national climate strategy.
The report, launched by the Farmers for Climate Action group at Parliament House on Monday, warns that agricultural production will fall, farm profits will decline and food insecurity will increase if the government does not come up with a cohesive national strategy on climate change and agriculture.
Continue reading...Saudi oil attack highlights Australia’s vulnerability – and failure to embrace EVs
Australia’s dependence on imported oil – and federal government’s ongoing failure to minimise this through renewable and EV policies – in spotlight, after bombing of Saudi oil plant.
The post Saudi oil attack highlights Australia’s vulnerability – and failure to embrace EVs appeared first on RenewEconomy.
ACCC repeats call to scrap solar rebate as Taylor re-heats “big stick” policy
ACCC again argues for the early abolition of a solar rebate, while Angus Taylor re-heats 'big stick' energy legislation.
The post ACCC repeats call to scrap solar rebate as Taylor re-heats “big stick” policy appeared first on RenewEconomy.