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Solar PV and wind on track to replace all coal, oil and gas within two decades
Global solar capacity grew faster than fossil fuels in 2017, says report
Green groups put EU’s ‘fat cat’ industrial firms in crosshairs
Cement firms must up game on climate action, urges investor watchdog
Curious Kids: Why don't dogs live as long as humans?
Why Australia imports so many veggie seeds (and do we really need to treat them with fungicides?)
One of Queensland's largest irrigators expected to be charged with fraud
Expected charges against Norman Farming likely to throw spotlight on poor federal and state administration of Murray-Darling funds
Fraud charges are expected to be laid against one of Queensland’s biggest cotton irrigators, John Norman, within a matter of weeks.
If the trial of the owner-operator of Norman Farming, and former “cotton farmer of the year goes ahead, it is likely to draw attention to the links between the irrigator’s family and that of the federal minister for agriculture and water resources, David Littleproud.
Continue reading...One man’s plan to let wolves roam free in the Highlands
The echoes of Scotland’s predator prince faded into silence three centuries ago. The wolf was once lord of these Sutherland slopes and the forest floors beneath and now a voice in the wilderness is calling him home.
Paul Lister acquired the Alladale estate, 50 miles north of Inverness, in 2003 and immediately set about creating a wilderness reserve according to his perception of what these wild and beautiful places ought to look like. He can’t imagine them without the packs of wolves that once roamed free here.
Continue reading...Abandoned collieries could hold key to heating UK homes
Scientists are finalising plans to exploit the vast reservoir of warm water that fills a labyrinth of disused mines and porous rock layers underneath Glasgow. They believe this subterranean store of naturally heated water could be used to warm homes in the city. If the system proves successful, such water could then be exploited in other cities and towns across Britain, they say.
The £9m project will initially involve drilling narrow boreholes filled with instruments to survey temperature, seismic activity, water flow, acidity and other variables to establish the state of the water in the rocks below the city. The aim will be to establish whether this warm water can be extracted for long periods to heat Glaswegian homes.
Continue reading...CP Daily: Friday April 6, 2018
Warming climate could see butterfly loved by Churchill return to UK
Former PM unsuccessfully tried to reintroduce black-veined white in 1940s, but conditions may now allow species to prosper
Continue reading...Country diary: it looks like a songbird, but the dipper is aquatic to its bones
Garsdale, Cumbria: In the water, the wings are both oars and hydrofoils, angled to harness the flow and surf the body down
A few days ago I was asked if I was a birder and apparently I pulled an indecisive face. Now I’m proving the point. The air quivers with curlew music, but I am walking head down. In my defence, drizzle is gusting up the valley, and I’m looking for water vole feeding signs, hoping for evidence to match some promising burrows a little way downstream. There are plenty of clumps of rush, the stems trimmed at 45 degree angles, but droppings are elusive – washed away or disintegrated by the rain, I suppose.
If I hadn’t been focusing down, I might not have seen the dipper, dead in the rushes. Worse, I might have trodden on it.
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