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UK built half of Europe's offshore wind power in 2017
Capacity is growing fast and turbines getting bigger – some almost as large as the Shard
Britain accounted for more than half of the new offshore wind power capacity built in Europe last year, as the sector broke installation records across the continent.
Continue reading...Meet the latest organisation to achieve carbon neutral certification
New batteries for Hawaiian wind farm: Younicos upgrades 10 MW energy storage system
Horizon Power partnering with leading academic institution to trial distributed energy systems in regional Western Australia
Rooftop solar most reliable source of new generation on NEM, says report
Turnbull’s power play: Snowy 2.0 vs battery storage
A Snow(y) job: He who pays the piper calls the tune
New Nissan LEAF EV confirmed for Australia delivery
Australian wave energy hopeful wins grant to test technology at UK hub
Renewable Energy Market Report: A cat among the pigeons
The long and winding road to tariff reform
Dinosaurs ‘too successful for their own good’
Elon Musk's huge Falcon Heavy rocket set for launch
Pesticide bans might give us a buzz, but they won't necessarily save the bees
'Everything is made into a political issue': rethinking Australia's environmental laws
Public should be given a greater say on development plans, experts say
Environmental lawyers and academics have called for a comprehensive rethink on how Australia’s natural landscapes are protected, warning that short-term politics is infecting decision-making and suggesting that the public be given a greater say on development plans.
The Australian Panel of Experts on Environmental Law has launched a blueprint for a new generation of environment laws and the creation of independent agencies with the power and authority to ensure they are enforced. The panel of 14 senior legal figures says this is motivated by the need to systematically address ecological challenges including falling biodiversity, the degradation of productive rural land, the intensification of coastal and city development and the threat of climate change.
Continue reading...Asda joins wave of supermarkets pledging to cut plastic waste
Series of measures includes reducing plastic in its own-brand packaging by 10% – but does not go as far as cutting it out altogether
Asda has become the latest supermarket to join the war against plastic by pledging to reduce it “wherever” it can, including slashing the amount in its own-brand packaging by 10% in the next 12 months.
In a series of measures, Asda promised to scrap 5p carrier bags in all stores by the end of the year, switch 2.4m plastic straws used in its cafes to paper and introduce reusable drinks cups in its shops and cafes by the end of 2019.
Continue reading...'Extraordinary' fossil sheds light on origins of spiders
What the saviour of London’s pigeons taught me about the problem with plastic
Decades ago, the late writer and critic Naomi Lewis spent hours on the streets rescuing birds tangled in nylon thread. She should have been a warning sign of the horrors to come
Not knowing what to do with myself and my bad temper in my 30s, I went to a creative writing class at City Lit, a London-based adult-education college. The teacher looked odd – about 70, she was always dressed in black, her hair was grey and a little wild and she seemed to have dusted her face in flour, some of which speckled her black clothes.
But there was something magical about Naomi Lewis. She was full of enthusiasm, thrilled by the efforts of her class. She would sit at the end of our square of tables, always cheery, and call out excitedly: “So good! So much of interest!”
Continue reading...Leading ivory trade investigator killed in Kenya
Esmond Martin, whose groundbreaking investigations contributed to the fight against elephant poaching, died after being stabbed at his home in Nairobi
A world-renowned ivory investigator whose detailed reports contributed to the fight against elephant poaching and the illegal wildlife trade has been killed at his home in Kenya, police said on Monday.
Esmond Martin, 75, died after being stabbed at his house in the Nairobi suburb of Langata on Sunday afternoon.
Continue reading...Big business, not taxpayers, should pay to clean up plastic waste | Geraint Davies
Plastic is destroying our oceans, yet big corporations are still being given money to produce cheap plastic. It’s time for polluters to pay for the damage they cause
A six-year-old boy, Harrison Forsyth, provided us with a much needed wake-up call last week. He called on the boss of Aldi to protect our oceans:
“Dear boss of Aldi, I have watched this programme called Blue Planet 2 and I have seen that the plastic in the sea is making the animals sick and die.
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