Feed aggregator
Labour’s ‘rooftop revolution’ to deliver solar power to millions of UK homes
Ed Miliband sets new rules on solar panels and approves three giant solar farms as Labour seeks to end years of Tory inaction
Keir Starmer’s new Labour government today unveils plans for a “rooftop revolution” that will see millions more homes fitted with solar panels in order to bring down domestic energy bills and tackle the climate crisis.
The energy secretary, Ed Miliband, also took the hugely controversial decision this weekend to approve three massive solar farms in the east of England that had been blocked by Tory ministers.
Continue reading...Artist punches holes in UN climate report six hours a day for Dutch installation
Johannes-Harm Hovinga has to take painkillers to complete 20-day artistic protest at Museum Arnhem
Every day for the last two weeks, Johannes-Harm Hovinga has sat at a raised table in Museum Arnhem, using a two-hole page puncher to systematically perforate the 7,705-page sixth assessment report produced by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
He has printed it out on coloured paper and the result is a vibrant heap piling up at the artist’s feet.
Continue reading...After Hurricane Beryl’s destruction, climate scientists fear for what’s next
Experts say devastating hurricane so early in season is ‘big wake-up call’ – and predict even more powerful storms
The poignancy was unmistakable: prognosticators at Colorado State University amended their already miserable seasonal tropical cyclone forecast on Monday precisely as Hurricane Beryl was filling Houston’s streets with floodwater and knocking out power to more than 2m homes and businesses.
“A likely harbinger of a hyperactive season” was how CSU researchers characterized Beryl, which set numerous records on the way to its Texas landfall, including the earliest category 5 hurricane, strongest ever June storm, and most powerful to strike the southern Windward Islands.
Continue reading...London’s Science Museum forced to cut ties with oil giant – and faces pressure over other sponsors
Campaigners welcome ‘seismic shift’ and urge museum bosses to review links with other fossil fuel sponsors
The Science Museum has been forced to cut ties with oil giant Equinor over its sponsor’s environmental record, the Observer can reveal.
Equinor has sponsored the museum’s interactive “WonderLab” since 2016, but the relationship is now coming to close, a move that will be seen as a major victory for climate change campaigners.
Continue reading...Where are all the butterflies this summer? Their absence is telling us something important | Tony Juniper
This isn’t down to one wet, cold British spring but a disturbing longer-term decline in insects. Thankfully, we can help
Anyone with even a passing interest in the natural world will have noticed a dramatic phenomenon this year: a lack of insects. Perhaps most noticeable is the near-absence of butterflies. Species that are usually common, such as large and small whites, small tortoiseshells, gatekeepers, ringlets, peacocks and meadow browns, are in many places down to the point of having almost disappeared. This is certainly the case where I live, in Cambridge.
Bee populations seem to be down here, too, with flowery margins that would at this time of year normally be alive with pollinators now eerily quiet. Hoverflies are depleted, moths scarce and aphids have either appeared very late or not at all. Buddleia bushes, with their fragrant mauve flowers that are usually festooned with butterflies, moths and many other insects, sit naked of their normal visitors.
Continue reading...£1.2bn plan to turn sewage waste into drinking water branded a ‘white elephant’
Southern Water says it wants to protect rare chalk streams, but campaigners say it could pollute the Solent
A proposed £1.2bn scheme to recycle effluent from the sewage system and turn it in to drinking water has been criticised as a threat to the environment and a potential costly “white elephant”.
Southern Water wants to treat effluent – wastewater from the sewage system – at a plant at Havant in Hampshire and pipe it into a nearby spring-fed reservoir to boost water supplies during droughts. The scheme would ensure less water is extracted from two rare chalk streams: the Rivers Test and Itchen.
Continue reading...Climate crisis has impact on insects’ colours and sex lives, study finds
Scientists fear adaptations to global heating may leave some species struggling to mate successfully
An ambush bug with a darker-coloured body is better at snagging a sexual partner than its brighter counterpart when it is chilly. Darker males can warm up more easily in the early mornings, and therefore get busy while everybody else is still warming up.
This is one of the many examples of how temperature affects colouring in insects, and in turn can affect their ability to mate, according to a new review article published in the journal Ecology and Evolution.
Continue reading...FortisBC implements automatic RNG blend for British Columbia customers
Footage shows snail on the brink of extinction giving birth through its neck - video
The Campbell’s keeled glass-snail was officially extinct until March 2020, when a local citizen scientist found it on the remote Norfolk Island. 40 of the thumbnail-sized snails were taken to a dedicated and quarantined captive breeding facility in Taronga zoo. 40 baby snails were born in the last fortnight, after initially struggling to reproduce in captivity
Continue reading...Pennsylvania Senate passes CCS legislation, sending bill to governor’s desk
Emitters add biggest RGGI haul since February, CCA length cut across the board
PREVIEW: Von der Leyen’s EU Commission bid seen hanging on Greens’ backing
EU countries more than three-quarters through 2024 free EUA allocations –Commission data
LEAK: EU ministers to call for expanding pool of climate finance contributors, no number in sight
BRIEFING: EU energy and climate stories to watch in the weeks ahead
Wildlife rescue group Wires faces crunch vote amid volunteer discontent over funds raised after bushfires
Donations grew dramatically after Australia’s black summer but animal carers say they didn’t receive enough
Australia’s largest wildlife rescue organisation faces a landmark vote on Sunday, as members unhappy with the distribution of donations after the black summer bushfires attempt to change its constitution.
The income of the Wildlife Information, Rescue and Education Service (Wires), based in NSW, ballooned from $3m to more than $100m thanks to the success of its fundraising campaign after the catastrophic fires of 2019-20, which burned millions of hectares of land and reportedly killed or displaced 3 billion animals.
Continue reading...Carbon exchange confirms auction of Article 6 credits for next week following clarification of transfer technicalities
Colombian organisation kickstarts water credit pilot, eyes biodiversity market
National Trust celebrates birth of baby beaver one year after reintroduction
Four animals released in Wallington estate in Northumberland last year have transformed the landscape
The first beavers in Northumberland for more than 400 years have been stupendously busy. There are new dam systems, as well as canals and burrows, new wildlife-rich wetlands and, thrillingly, a baby beaver.
Whether it is male or female remains to be seen. “Beavers don’t have external genitalia,” said Heather Devey, an expert. “They are really hard to sex. It’s really only through their anal glands that you can tell.”
Continue reading...