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The community group turning farmland back into rainforest
Japan to restart commercial whaling after three decades
Demolish your front fence. It would be an act of radical kindness
Dolphin researchers say NZ's proposed protection plan is flawed and misleading
Police search for 9ft escaped python in Cambridge
Police called to north of city after reticulated python spotted at large
A nearly three-metre long python is on the loose in Cambridge, with police asking the public to notify them of any sighting.
Cambridgeshire officers were called to Lovell Road in the north of the city in the early hours of Sunday, after receiving reports that a sizeable snake had been spotted in the area.
Continue reading...Toxic coal waste found to be a 'ticking time bomb' across Australia
Environmental Justice Australia report finds problems at ash dumps in every mainland state
Soon after Sue Wynn moved up the road from the Vales Point coal power station, on the banks of Lake Macquarie in New South Wales’s Hunter Valley, she started to worry about what the plant was releasing into the environment.
Not the carbon dioxide emissions from its smokestacks – it was 1978, and that disquiet came later – but the coal ash mixed with water and piped into a giant unlined dam site nearby.
Continue reading...Glastonbury: Sir David Attenborough hails plastic ban
End onshore windfarm ban, Tories urge
Pressure is mounting within the Conservative party to end its block on new onshore windfarms after evidence that Tory supporters overwhelmingly back their return.
Both Boris Johnson and Jeremy Hunt, who are battling to become the party’s new leader, are facing internal calls to give the green light to new onshore wind projects that could slash the price of energy. Latest research suggests Tory voters are far more concerned about fracking than they are about onshore windfarms.
Continue reading...Oregon Senate votes to send ETS bill to committee
Sounds of Africa from desert to savannah
Rise of ethical milk: 'Mums ask when cows and their calves are separated' | Tom Levitt
As vegan activism boosts awareness of animal welfare issues, more dairy farms let calves stay with their mothers. But is this really any better for the cows?
A field of cows with suckling calves may sound like a normal rural scene. In fact, the view at David Finlay’s farm on the Dumfries and Galloway coast is a sight you’d be unlikely to see on any other dairy farm in the UK.
Almost all calves are separated from cows within hours or days of birth on dairy farms. This allows farmers to sell the milk that the calves would otherwise drink.
Continue reading...'Are a cow's farts the worst for the planet?' Children's climate questions answered
What are young people most worried about? We put their queries to the experts
Ewoenam Tetteh and Faith Otasowie, both 15, Westcliff-on-Sea, Essex
Continue reading...Plan to sell 50m meals made from electricity, water and air
Solar Foods hopes wheat flour-like product will hit target in supermarkets within two years
A Finnish company that makes food from electricity, water and air has said it plans to have 50m meals’ worth of its product sold in supermarkets within two years.
Solar Foods is also working with the European Space Agency to supply astronauts on a mission to Mars after devising a method it says creates a protein-heavy product that looks and tastes like wheat flour at a cost of €5 (£4.50) per kilo.
Continue reading...Heatwave cooks mussels in their shells on California shore
Temperatures lead to what appears to be largest local die-off in 15 years, raising fears for broader ecosystem
In all her years working at Bodega Bay, the marine reserve research coordinator Jackie Sones had never seen anything like it: scores of dead mussels on the rocks, their shells gaping and scorched, their meats thoroughly cooked.
A record-breaking June heatwave apparently caused the largest die-off of mussels in at least 15 years at Bodega Head, a small headland on the northern California bay. And Sones received reports from other researchers of similar mass mussel deaths at various beaches across roughly 140 miles of coastline.
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