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Switching to electric cars is key to fixing America's 'critically insufficient' climate policies | Dana Nuccitelli
Nearly 60% of US carbon pollution comes from power and transportation, and power is already decarbonizing fast
In order to meet its share of the carbon pollution cuts needed to achieve the 2°C Paris international climate target, America’s policies are rated as “critically insufficient” by the Climate Action Tracker. The Trump Administration has taken every possible step to undo the Obama Administration’s climate policies, including announcing that America will be the only world country to withdraw from the Paris agreement, and trying to repeal the Clean Power Plan.
In 2020, the next American president will have to make up the lost ground and come up with a plan to rapidly accelerate the country’s transition away from fossil fuels. Currently, transportation and power generation each account for about 30% of US greenhouse gas emissions, so those sectors represent the prime targets for pollution cuts.
Day Zero: What happens when a global city runs out of water
Country diary 1918: winter wandering in Ayrshire
21 January 1918 Just before dawn the landscape was the chillest pale grey; it seemed pure white, with a dash of pure black
Wandering in Ayrshire just now is cold work, and one reads with a mixture of pride and envy of the warmer weather in the south. Pride because of one’s endurance of nipped fingers and senseless feet and burning windpipe for pleasure in the glorious brisk feeling, the dry squeak of the clean hard snow under one’s feet; for delight in watching the children sliding and sleighing, the exquisite lights of dawn and sunset on the snow.
Related: Walking in the winter woods: Country diary 100 years ago
Continue reading...Country diary: lowest land in Britain is unsettling in the gloom
Holme Fen, Cambridgeshire: The trunks tangle back from both sides of the track, like wiry hair, their bark papery. Packed dense, this makes the forest look grey and odd
Britain’s highest highpoint is Ben Nevis. The lowest highpoint, if you like, is in what was Huntingdonshire: Boring Field, an old county top, at 81m above sea level. But hereabouts too is a mountain’s true inverse: the lowest lowpoint. The road to Holme Fen protrudes, like a fat plank thrown over a bog. You could fall off it if you’re distracted. I am, first by the red kites: they’re everywhere here, black wraiths cruising on dog-leg wings. I count nine within a kilometre. Then two herons, side by side at the side of the road and unbothered by it, those stripe-masked faces like strange little highwaymen.
It’s early, and the morning is feebly painted in winter colours: black fields full of rain, brown water, grey sky. It should be light by now but it isn’t. I turn on to the fen track and suddenly there’s red: the lights of a railway crossing, then the train blurring noisily beyond it. Beyond that, in a thicket of woodland, is the lowest land in Great Britain.
Continue reading...Great Barrier Reef to get $60m rescue package from government
Malcolm Turnbull announces $36.6m will be spent on ‘supporting farmers stopping runoff’ to improve water quality
Malcolm Turnbull has announced a $60m rescue package for the Great Barrier Reef which includes research on developing “resilient” coral, and paying farmers to pollute less.
The package, to be spent over 18 months, will also include an increased number of reef officers and vessels targeting crown of thorns starfish outbreaks.
Continue reading...Boosting investment in the future of the Reef
Gupta plans EV plant in Australia, powered by solar and storage
Rooftop solar plays key role in reducing, deferring peak in heatwave
Know your NEM: Coal reliability issues will get worse
When generators jack up prices 100-fold, and regulators do nothing
Norton Rose Fulbright to add another corporate, energy and resources partner in Brisbane
Frydenberg Factcheck: Is S.A really burning 80,000l of diesel an hour to keep lights on?
Porter Davis partners with Bradford Energy to bring down soaring power prices
Coal country knows Trump can’t save it
Digging up fossils and chicken couture for featherless chooks
How blockchain is strengthening tuna traceability to combat illegal fishing
Search restarts for area willing to host highly radioactive UK waste
Right geology and local consent are key in consultation due to be launched this week
The government is expected this week to begin a nationwide search for a community willing to host an underground nuclear waste dump to store highly radioactive material for thousands of years.
Britain has been trying for years to secure a site with the right geology and local communities which would volunteer to host a £12bn geological disposal facility (GDF), as a long-term solution for the most dangerous waste from nuclear power stations.
Continue reading...Trump administration could be sued over pesticide threat to orca and salmon
- Fishing industry and environmentalists mull lawsuits
- EPA tried to delay report detailing chemicals’ harm to wildlife
Commercial fishermen and environmental groups could file lawsuits against the Trump administration, if it fails to follow a recommendation by one of its own agencies to protect salmon, sturgeon, orca and other endangered species in the Pacific north-west.
Related: Common pesticide can make migrating birds lose their way, research shows
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