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North America far off from ocean preservation targets, report finds
Mexico, Canada and US collaborate on report that concludes the three nations will have to dramatically ramp up efforts to reach 10% protection goal
North America is far from reaching national and international targets for protecting oceans, according to a first-of-its-kind report released on Wednesday.
The Dare to Be Deep report, created by a coalition of NGOs in the US, Canada and Mexico, finds that less than 1% of these countries’ oceans are protected like national parks – with only four years left to reach the 10% protection goal set in the multilateral Biodiversity Convention.
Continue reading...UK's 'oldest' hand-written document found
Leaving EU could end 'unfair' French fishing quotas, says minister
Brexit would allow Britain to renegotiate a more favourable share of catches, claims out campaigner George Eustice
Britain would have an opportunity to upend fishing quotas that give a “disproportionately large” share of catches to France if it votes to leaves the EU, according to George Eustice, the pro-Brexit minister for farms, food and fisheries.
In an interview with the Guardian, Eustice said that even if it left the EU, the UK would still respect catch limits set out to preserve stocks, some driven to near-extinction by decades of over-fishing.
Continue reading...Sunrises and Swedish blossoms: readers' May weather pictures
We asked you to share your most striking images of the weather in May from around the world. Here are some of our favourites
• You can add your June weather photographs here
Scientists debate experimenting with climate hacking to prevent catastrophe | Dana Nuccitelli
Funding for geoengineering computational experiments was mysteriously included in a Senate appropriations bill
On his late-night talk show, Jimmy Kimmel recently invited climate scientists to explain that they’re not just messing with us about global warming.
Continue reading...Elephants could vanish from one of Africa's key reserves within six years
Elephant populations in Tanzania’s Selous national park could collapse unless poaching and mining are urgently controlled, say WWF
Elephants could disappear from one of Africa’s most important wildlife reserves within six years unless industrial scale poaching is stopped and mining is brought under control, the WWF has said.
Selous national park, a world heritage site in southern Tanzania, has lost an average of almost 2,500 elephants a year since the 1970s. But it has now reached a crtitical stage with only about 15,000 left, according to the latest census.
Continue reading...University responds to missed aurora
Leaked figures show spike in palm oil use for biodiesel in Europe
Steep rise between 2010 and 2014 shows link between EU’s renewable energy mandate and deforestation in south-east Asia, say campaigners
Leaked trade industry figures show a five-fold increase in the use of palm oil for biodiesel in Europe between 2010 and 2014, providing new evidence of links between deforestation in southeast Asia and the EU’s renewable energy mandate.
The leaked figures, which the Guardian has seen, show that 45% of palm oil used in Europe in 2014 went to biodiesel, up from 8% in 2010.
Continue reading...Pandas to be taken off the endangered list
Australia simmers through hottest autumn on record
It’s the same old story: with 2016 on track to become the hottest year on record globally, and record-breaking heat already evident around the world, Australia has just experienced its hottest autumn on record.
Figures from the Bureau of Meteorology indicate Australia has experienced its hottest autumn on record. Bureau of MeteorologyThe Bureau of Meteorology has reported that for average temperatures across Australia, this has been the hottest March-May period ever recorded – beating the previous record, set in 2005, by more than 0.2℃.
Within this period, March was also the hottest on record, while April and May were each the second-warmest in a series extending back to 1910.
Temperatures were well above average across much of the country, especially in the east. Bureau of Meteorology Why so hot?El Niño events tend to cause warmer weather across the east and north of Australia and the major El Niño of 2015-16 undoubtedly contributed to the extreme temperatures experienced across these areas.
However, climate change also played a significant role in our warmest autumn. Previous work, led by ANU climatologist Sophie Lewis, indicates that the human influence on the climate has made a record-breakingly hot autumn roughly 20 times more likely.
In other words, without climate change we would be much less likely to experience autumns as warm as this one has been in Australia.
How we’ll remember autumn 2016In the past few months, Australia has seen many extreme hot weather events. Melbourne experienced its warmest March night on record, while Sydney had a run of 39 days with daytime highs above 26℃, as the summer heat continued long into March.
But it’s the coral bleaching event on the Great Barrier Reef that will likely linger in our memories the longest. Some 93% of the reef was found to be affected by bleaching and recent surveys have revealed that more than one-third of coral in the northern and central parts of the reef have died.
Without climate change, a bleaching event like this would be virtually impossible.
The extreme heat over Australia this autumn and the associated damage to the reef are also having an effect on the election campaign. As public concern over the future of the reef grows, the parties are being asked to defend their climate change policies.
Both major parties have made election commitments to the reef, with the Coalition announcing an extra A$6 million to tackle crown-of-thorns starfish (adding to a further A$171 million committed under the 2016 budget), and Labor an extra A$377 million over five years (A$500 million in total). While both Labor and the Coalition aim to improve water quality in the reef through their policies, the coral bleaching and death this year is linked with warm seas.
Whether we’ll be able to save parts of the reef largely depends on whether we reduce our greenhouse gas emissions and manage to prevent the rising trend in temperatures from continuing.
Andrew King receives funding from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science.
Australian MP admits shooting and eating an elephant – video
Shooters, Fishers and Farmers party MP Robert Borsak admits to shooting and eating an elephant while on a hunting trip in Zimbabwe. In a late-night sitting of New South Wales parliament on Tuesday, he defends his choice ‘to hunt and gather my own meat because it is my right to do so – it’s a clean, organic and sustainable way to live’
- Australian state MP admits eating elephant he shot in Zimbabwe
- Australia Greens leader views coral bleaching while snorkelling – video
Make building standards top priority for tackling climate change, says IEA chief
Energy inefficient and substandard construction in developing countries locking the world into high greenhouse gas emissions for decades, warns Fatih Birol
Buildings currently being constructed at an increasing rate in developing countries are locking the world into high greenhouse gas emissions for decades to come, the world’s leading authority on energy has warned.
Fatih Birol, executive director of the International Energy Agency, told the Guardian that the world’s number one priority in tackling climate change must be to ensure those buildings meet higher standards of efficiency and safety.
Continue reading...VIDEO: Peake: Spacewalk my finest moment
Atkins Ciwem environmental photographer of the year 2016 shortlist – in pictures
From Tibetan monks playing basket ball with ice thawing high up in the Himalayas, to the pollution that hides behind the Taj Mahal, here’s our pick from 60 exceptional environmental photographs, by photographers and filmmakers from 70 countries, that will go on show at the Royal Geographical Society in London from 29 June to 21 August. The winners will be announced on 28 June
- Photographs provided by the Chartered Institution of Water and Environmental Management
Coral bleaching in the Maldives – in pictures
Captured by the XL Catlin Seaview Survey, these images show the extent of coral bleaching in the Indian Ocean archipelago of the Maldives. Scientists say this and similar devastation elsewhere in the world, including Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, are visible evidence of the impact of global warming
• Coral bleaching spreads to Maldives, devastating spectacular reefs
Continue reading...Coral bleaching spreads to Maldives, devastating spectacular reefs
Exclusive: Images from the Indian Ocean archipelago reveal the extent of the longest global coral bleaching event in history
• Coral bleaching in the Maldives – in pictures
The longest global coral bleaching event in history is now devastating reefs in the crystal clear waters of the Maldives, with images released exclusively to the Guardian powerfully illustrating the extent of the damage there.
Photographed by the XL Catlin Seaview Survey, the images captured the event in May as it moved beyond the now devastated Great Barrier Reef and into waters further west.
Continue reading...Warkworth Sands Woodland of the Hunter Valley listed in the critically endangered category
Protecting Antarctica's environment for 25 years
Angela Merkel strikes deal with German states to put brakes on green energy
Pact addresses concerns that burgeoning output from renewables is putting strain on electricity grid and pushing up prices
The German chancellor, Angela Merkel, has hammered out a deal with state premiers on the latest reform to Germany’s renewable energy law aimed at curbing the costs and controlling the speed of the roll-out of green power sources.
After a meeting with the leaders of Germany’s 16 states that stretched into the early hours of Wednesday, the government agreed to cap the expansion of onshore wind power at 2.8 gigawatts in capacity per year.
Continue reading...Shooting The Lady in the Van
Returning to Alan Bennett’s old street to shoot The Lady in the Van threw up surprises for residents and crew
When a decrepit van, filled with a homeless old lady’s flotsam and jetsam, appeared with a film crew on Gloucester Crescent, 25 years after a similar vehicle had last been seen there, it proved a popular addition to the street for two people in particular.
“Camden Town is party central and when the crew turned up on one Monday morning they found a couple who’d been having a good time in the van,” says director Nicholas Hytner. “They’d apparently been there all weekend.
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