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I rescued a stranded peregrine falcon. Here's how I did it | Debbie Lustig
The birds hatched on a ledge atop a Melbourne office block. When one of them needed to be saved, the job fell to me
In Melbourne we’re lucky to have birds of prey breeding in our city. But things can go wrong. On Christmas night a peregrine falcon was in trouble and needed to be saved. The job fell to me.
This bird wasn’t just any bird. It was one of three female peregrines that hatched in a nestbox on a ledge 150 metres off the ground, atop a Collins Street office block. Right through our second lockdown, from late August to mid-November, viewers of a livestreamed camera trained on the nest were captivated, as the parents raised them.
Continue reading...RGGI Q1 auction volume skyrockets with Virginia linkage
Trump administration pollution rule strikes final blow against environment
- EPA rule will require release of raw data from scientific studies
- Critics fear compromising personal details and health benefits
The Environmental Protection Agency has completed one of its last major rollbacks under the Trump administration, changing how it considers evidence of harm from pollutants in a way that opponents say could cripple future public-health regulation.
Continue reading...Virginia activates 27 compliance accounts as it joins RGGI
Electric cars rise to record 54% market share in Norway
Nordic country becomes first in the world where electric car sales outstrip those powered by other means
Norway became the first country in the world where the sale of electric cars has overtaken those powered by petrol, diesel and hybrid engines last year, with the German carmaker Volkswagen replacing Tesla as the top battery-vehicle producer, data shows.
Battery electric vehicles (BEVs) made up 54.3% of all new cars sold in the Nordic country in 2020, a global record, up from 42.4% in 2019 and from a mere 1% of the overall market a decade ago, the Norwegian Road Federation (OFV) said.
Continue reading...Record 500,000 people pledge to eat only vegan food in January
Veganuary taken up by rising number of people trying plant-based alternatives to meat
A record 500,000 people have signed up to the Veganuary challenge to eat only plant-based foods for a month. The milestone is double the number who pledged to go vegan for January in 2019.
A quarter of those taking up the challenge – 125,000 – are in the UK, and this year British supermarkets including Tesco have run television and radio adverts promoting Veganuary for the first time. Other supermarkets such as Aldi, Asda and Iceland have produced dedicated pages including information and recipes in 2021, again for the first time.
Continue reading...Lyme Regis Mary Anning statue designs released
China adopts ETS trading rules as carbon market gets closer to going live
There’s a simple way to green the economy – and it involves cash prizes for all | Henry D Jacoby
The ‘carbon dividend’ is so elegant that it seems too good to be true. Governments should make it a post-pandemic priority
Over the past year – when societies around the world have had to grapple with their greatest challenge in decades – climate change hasn’t been at the top of the agenda. But that doesn’t mean it’s gone away. Far from it – in fact, we just experienced the hottest September in 141 years, and extreme warmth recorded in the Arctic continues a disturbing trend. When the focus turns back to this ongoing existential threat, hopefully we’ll have learned some lessons from the pandemic about what can be achieved when imaginative thinking is brought to bear.
Our approach towards tackling the climate crisis is necessarily going to be multipronged. But one powerful tool is that of a carbon tax. So far, however, only a few nations have taken this route. Why?
Continue reading...UK urged to put Alok Sharma in full-time charge of Cop26 talks
Business secretary should focus on making Glasgow climate summit a success, say experts
Ministers are facing calls to make the business secretary, Alok Sharma, the full-time president of the Cop26 UN climate talks to be hosted in Glasgow in November.
Amber Rudd, who as energy and climate secretary led the UK delegation to the successful Paris climate talks in 2015, said: “Alok could do this and do it well. But it will take 100% of his time, energy and persuasion to make it a success.”
Continue reading...The lesson I learned at my local dump? There are beautiful times up ahead | Emma Beddington
What was once a toxic wasteland now explodes with flora and fauna. A walk there always gives me renewed faith in imagination, determination and humanity
Is it possible to be over walking? All this wholesome outdoor socialising may be healthier, but last week – while slithering over black-ice patches in the dark with a friend, soggy paper cups of mulled wine sloshing, unable even to clutch each other to stay upright – I realised I felt slightly jaded.
There is, however, one York walk that never palls: my daily trip to the dump. Not the actual dump, but the disused one, just behind it. Walk through the industrial estate, past Lidl, a builders’ merchant and the recycling centre, duck down a scrubby path by the council vehicle depot and you enter an unexpected wonderland: St Nick’s nature reserve.
Continue reading...Mexican fisherman 'dies after attack on Sea Shepherd conservationists'
CP Daily: Monday January 4, 2021
EU Market: EUAs set new record above €34 as cold snap bites
Curious Kids: how can we tell if an animal is happy without a wagging tail?
ART programme approves five Central and South American jurisdictional REDD concepts
Hundreds flock to Maryland park to view 'exceptional' rare bird
Birders headed to Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park to view brightly coloured painted bunting
Hundreds of people have flocked to the Washington DC area to catch a glimpse of a new, celebrated arrival who has offered some welcome relief following a bruising year. No, it’s not Joe Biden.
Excited birders have crammed into a Maryland park, braving rain and dismally low temperatures, to witness the painted bunting, a brightly coloured bird that usually reserves its elan for the warmer climes of Florida.
Continue reading...The nature of the narwhal: 'The one that is good at curving itself to the sky' | Helen Sullivan
The whole thing that is great about the teeth of the narwhal is that nothing makes sense
- The Nature of ... is a column dedicated to interesting animals, insects, plants and natural phenomena
There are some animals about which it is easy to forget the fact that they have teeth, so that every time they flash their grins, it is as though you are seeing a new animal. Dogs, cats of all kinds, sharks and crocodiles are not among these. Horses, rabbits, fish and geese live toothless in my mind.
Narwhals are among the actually toothless, if you discount their tusks. Inside their mouths, which are shaped in a permanently sweet smile, there are no teeth as we understand teeth to be.
But the males have a long, unicorn-like projection protruding – just off centre – from what might be described as their upper lip. I find them quite festive, like ornaments that should be hung on a Christmas tree. Maybe it’s their wintry, icicle-like tusk. I try to forget that this tusk is a tooth.