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Ausgrid installs its first power pole-mounted batteries in NSW
Australia's biggest network company installs its first pole-mounted neighbourhood batteries in the Hunter Valley.
The post Ausgrid installs its first power pole-mounted batteries in NSW appeared first on RenewEconomy.
British lawmaker calls for carbon border “alignment” with EU in cross-Channel talks
Climate change: World's hottest day since records began
Revealed: UK plans to drop flagship £11.6bn climate pledge
Exclusive: Disclosure provokes fury as Rishi Sunak accused of betraying populations vulnerable to global heating
The government is drawing up plans to drop the UK’s flagship £11.6bn climate and nature funding pledge, the Guardian can reveal, with the prime minster accused of betraying populations most vulnerable to global heating.
The disclosure provoked fury from former ministers and representatives of vulnerable countries, who accused Rishi Sunak of making false promises.
Continue reading...INTERVIEW: VCMI Code could add extra less taxing achievement levels to encourage take up
Carbon emissions four times more costly than 10 years ago, researchers say
Water was a priority when buying our farm. We just never expected we’d have too much of it | Calla Wahlquist
My teenage years were spent under the twin threats of drought and bushfire. But on this high cold plateau it never dries out
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There is something about growing up in drought that makes having too much water unfathomable. That’s the excuse I’m using for being so unprepared, two winters in a row, for the stinking, ankle-deep mud that has taken over our property.
It should not be a surprise. It was so muddy when we first saw this place that we swung past Bunnings before the second viewing and bought $15 gumboots. We were slipping through the cattle yards and sinking into the back paddock. But central Victoria had just been hit by the worst storm in years, so we figured it was a particularly wet month.
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Continue reading...Climate grief is real – and I cannot keep watching images of our dying planet | David Shearman
Our leaders’ addiction to economic growth and its consumption of environmental resources has me paralysed with fear and solastalgia
Many of us have experienced grieving after the death of a family member or a long-time friend. We regard it as a form of suffering which we hope will be alleviated with time. Advice from love ones, doctors and therapists may help us to cope by offering the solution that time will heal.
In some, like Queen Victoria, the loss of a partner may cause lifelong grief with self-imposed withdrawal and solitude.
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Continue reading...Scientists see early universe in slow-motion for first time
Las Palmas pathologist finds €500,000 ‘floating gold’ in dead sperm whale
Team hope sale of block of rare ambergris, used by perfumers, will help victims of 2021 volcano
When a sperm whale washed up dead on a beach in the Canary Island of La Palma no one imagined a valuable treasure was hidden in its entrails.
Heavy seas and a rising tide made it difficult to carry out a postmortem, but Antonio Fernández Rodríguez, head of the institute of animal health and food security at the University of Las Palmas, was determined to find out why the whale had died.
Continue reading...Australia’s fossil fuel methane emissions are nearly twice as bad as industry reports
Methane emissions from Australia's fossil fuel industry are nearly twice as bad as reported, and polluters will have to double their planned emission cuts to make up for it.
The post Australia’s fossil fuel methane emissions are nearly twice as bad as industry reports appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Thames Water fined £3.3m for pumping sewage into rivers
Judge says firm tried to mislead regulator over incident involving millions of litres of undiluted waste polluting water near Gatwick
Thames Water has been fined £3.3m for a “reckless” incident in which millions of litres of undiluted sewage was pumped into rivers near Gatwick, killing 1,700 fish.
Politicians have said this is more proof that the beleaguered company, which was recently revealed to be facing financial collapse, should be reformed.
Continue reading...Euro Markets: Midday Update
EU fossil power generation slumps over 20% in H1 on low demand and renewables uptick
INTERVIEW: US forestry group proposes new concepts for redistributing carbon credit risk
Improving soil could keep world within 1.5C heating target, research suggests
Better farming techniques across the world could lead to storage of 31 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide a year, data shows
Marginal improvements to agricultural soils around the world would store enough carbon to keep the world within 1.5C of global heating, new research suggests.
Farming techniques that improve long-term fertility and yields can also help to store more carbon in soils but are often ignored in favour of intensive techniques using large amounts of artificial fertiliser, much of it wasted, that can increase greenhouse gas emissions.
Continue reading...South Korea to auction off 2.15 mln KAU-23s next week
British association launches ‘nature positive’ guidance for insurers
Climate-heating El Niño has arrived and threatens lives, declares UN
World Meteorological Organization warns of record temperatures and extreme heat in environmental ‘double whammy’
The arrival of a climate-heating El Niño event has been declared by the UN’s World Meteorological Organization (WMO), with officials warning that preparation for extreme weather events is vital to save lives and livelihoods.
The last major El Niño was in 2016, which remains the hottest year on record. The new El Niño comes on top of the increasing global heating driven by human-caused carbon emissions, an effect the WMO called a “double whammy”. This can supercharge extreme weather, and temperature records are already being broken on land and at sea across the globe.
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