Feed aggregator
Wild deer set to wreak havoc in UK woodlands as venison demand plunges
Unmanaged animals from Britain’s largest herds for 1,000 years are no longer needed with restaurants in lockdown
Unmanaged wild deer herds could soon pose a threat to woodlands and important wildlife habitats in Britain because the commercial market for venison has collapsed during the pandemic.
Many in the game industry as well as conservationists fear too few deer are being culled to keep the estimated two-million-strong wild herd, the largest for 1,000 years, at a sustainable size.
Continue reading...Coronavirus: Virus provides leaps in scientific understanding
How South African police are tackling pangolin smugglers
Pesticide believed to kill bees is authorised for use in England
Farmers ‘relieved’ as country joins 10 others in allowing emergency use of chemical banned in EU
A pesticide believed to kill bees has been authorised for use in England despite an European Union-wide ban two years ago, the government has announced.
Following lobbying from the National Farmers’ Union (NFU) and British Sugar, a product containing neonicotinoid thiamethoxam was sanctioned for emergency use on sugar beet seeds this year because of the threat posed by a virus.
Continue reading...Capitol attackers have long threatened violence in rural American west
Three Percenters and the Oath Keepers have threatened federal employees and institutions that steward public lands
When the full story of the 6 January storming of the US Capitol building is told, historians will have to make sense of what might seem an odd footnote. The two most prominent rightwing militia groups that participated in the mob onslaught on Congress – the Three Percenters, based in Idaho, and the Oath Keepers, based in Nevada – cut their teeth in obscure corners of the American west, where for close to a decade they have threatened violence against federal employees and institutions that steward the nation’s public lands.
Related: 'It was just a free-for-all': my day photographing the Capitol attack
Continue reading...Cross-party bloc of MPs back action on sewage discharge into rivers
Private member’s bill seeks to ensure water firms do more to clean up their act on untreated waste
More than 100 MPs from across different parties are supporting a parliamentary bid to stop water companies discharging untreated sewage into rivers.
Philip Dunne, the Conservative chair of the environmental audit committee, is seeking in a private member’s bill to place a duty on water companies to ensure untreated sewage is not discharged into rivers and inland waterways.
Continue reading...Nasa's Curiosity rover: 3,000 days on Mars
CP Daily: Friday January 8, 2021
Smaller snowpack could impact California hydroelectricity generation, as December power usage falls
California emitters, speculators kept CCA holdings firm in first few 2021 trading sessions
EU Market: EUAs break new ground above €35 as cold lifts energy prices
'Glum future for the platypus': why the elusive mammal is disappearing under our noses
Scientists say the risk of local extinctions is rising due to damaged waterways, land clearing and climate change
It is dusk beside a creek and we are instructed to look for a trail of bubbles, under which could be one of the world’s weirdest mammals.
When you’re desperate to see a platypus in the fading light, everything looks like one.
Continue reading...Chasing the elusive platypus in Brisbane's suburban waterways – video
Guardian environment reporter Graham Readfearn heads out in search of the elusive platypus. Researchers tracking the DNA of the egg-laying mammals believe platypuses have likely gone from Kedron Brook and four other greater Brisbane waterways: the Bremer River, Scrubby Creek, Slacks Creek and Enoggera Creek. They believe the threats to the animals' habitat are so severe that the Australian government should list the platypus as a vulnerable species
Norway plans threefold hike of national carbon tax by 2030
COP26: Alok Sharma leaves business job to focus on climate role
UK government reshuffles climate ministers with an eye on COP26 summit
22 disasters, 262 dead, $95bn in damages: US saw record year for climate-driven catastrophes
Report shows US was battered by punishing extreme weather on both the east and west coasts in 2020
The US was battered by a record number of weather and climate-driven disasters in 2020 as extensive wildfires scorched the west, hurricanes in quick succession pummeled the east and extreme heat swept across the heart of the country, a new federal government report has shown.
A total of 22 major disasters, defined as each causing at least $1bn in damage, swept the US last year, six more than the previous record, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa).
Continue reading...Alok Sharma to work full-time on Cop26 climate conference preparation
Decision to move business secretary follows pressure from environment experts due to scale of role
Boris Johnson has moved his business secretary, Alok Sharma, to work full-time on preparations for the Cop26 climate conference in Glasgow this November, a change urged by environmental experts given the scale of the role.
For the past 11 months, Sharma has combined being Cop26 president with his job as business secretary. He will now undertake the Cop role full-time, with Kwasi Kwarteng taking the business brief.
Continue reading...