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Coral shows encouraging response to relocation trial
Lovell lights: turning a telescope into an art installation
CP Daily: Friday July 20, 2018
Record batch of Colombian CERs cancelled by emitters against country’s carbon tax
Weatherwatch: heatwave brings death and civil unrest
The dry and hot summer of 1911 drove Londoners to paddle in the Serpentine while, in the north, mills closed for lack of power
The long hot summer of 1911 is credited with changing fashions, with women shedding whalebone corsets and brassieres becoming the rage. Edwardian aristocrats are said to have taken up nude tennis at their country estates, although at the ever more crowded seaside resorts men and women still used bathing machines towed into the sea. The sexes were kept segregated in case any flesh was exposed.
Continue reading...A Big Country 21 July 2018
The cost of Trump's Endangered Species Act proposal
Czechia cleared to issue first batch of 2018 free derogation EUAs to utilities
EU Market: EUAs close above €17 for new 7-year high and 6% weekly gain
Seagull rage: why humans and birds are at war in Britain
Name: Seagull rage.
Prevalence: High in coastal areas.
Continue reading...Climate campaigners lose high court battle over carbon target
Charity had argued the government was in breach of international obligations under the Paris agreement
Environmental campaigners have lost their high court challenge against the government over its policy for tackling climate change.
The charity Plan B Earth brought legal action against the government’s stance on the 2050 carbon target, set out under the Climate Change Act 2008.
Continue reading...UK court blocks path to full trial of citizen effort to deepen GHG goal
Philippines government looking into introducing a carbon tax
Ibis that was extinct in wild taught to migrate by following aircraft
Birds bred in captivity led on three-week migration south from Germany by human ‘foster parents’
Leaning out of an ultralight aircraft, Corinna Esterer turns toward a flock of peculiar black birds soaring just a few metres away. “Come, come ibis,” she yells through her megaphone. Drawn by Esterer’s voice, the birds dart to the aircraft, and follow it to a field overlooking Lake Constance in southern Germany. Once on the ground, the ibis flock to Esterer. To the birds, the young woman is their parent.
For more than 300 years, the northern bald ibis has been extinct in the wild in central Europe, with small populations surviving only in zoos. But recently, it has celebrated a slow but steady comeback thanks to human foster parents who have shown the birds how to migrate south by leading the way in ultralight aircraft.
Canada should favour carbon price over clean fuel standard -report
Arctic wild goose chase threatens chicks as temperatures rise
Share your pictures of the Big Butterfly Count
As the world’s biggest butterfly count gets underway we’d like to see pictures of what you’ve seen where you are
Butterflies can provide a fleeting moment of beauty as they flutter by in the garden, or even as you go about life in the city, but they are also a key indicator of the way our climate is changing.
Related: Sir David Attenborough urges British public to join butterfly count
Continue reading...The week in wildlife – in pictures
A newly discovered bandy bandy snake species, jumping sweetfish and baby tarantulas in Derbyshire are among this week’s pick of images from the natural world
Continue reading...Crop failure and bankruptcy threaten farmers as drought grips Europe
Abnormally hot temperatures continue to wreak devastation across northern and central parts of the continent
Farmers across northern and central Europe are facing crop failure and bankruptcy as one of the most intense regional droughts in recent memory strengthens its grip.
States of emergency have been declared in Latvia and Lithuania, while the sun continues to bake Swedish fields that have received only 12% of their normal rainfall.
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