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David Attenborough attacks plan for Borneo bridge

The Guardian - Fri, 2017-03-03 00:12

Endangered pygmy elephants and orangutans threatened by scheme for Kinabatangan Wildlife Sanctuary

David Attenborough and Steve Backshall have joined conservationists and charities asking the Borneo government to reconsider a bridge that threatens one of the last sanctuaries of the rare pygmy elephant.

There are now just 1,500 of the world’s smallest pachyderm, according to WWF, and about 300 of them make their home in the 26,000-hectare Kinabatangan Wildlife Sanctuary, in the state of Sabah in Malaysian Borneo. But construction teams have begun preparatory work for a bridge that will cross the Kinabatangan river which weaves through the region. The area is also home to critically endangered orangutans, proboscis monkeys, clouded leopards, gibbons, sun bears, pangolins and thousands of other jungle species, and hosts a thriving eco-tourism industry where travellers can view wildlife from boats on the river or while hiking into the forests.

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Fly-tipping clean-up costs £50m as cases in England rise for third year in a row

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-03-02 23:11

Campaigners say cuts to waste collection services have increased the problem of illegal dumping

Fly-tipping is on the rise again, with the number of incidents up for the third year in a row, official figures show.

Councils across England reported 936,090 cases of fly-tipping in 2015/2016, up 4% on the previous year, the data from the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) reveals.

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Indonesia pledges US$1 billion a year to curb ocean waste

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-03-02 19:07

Only China dumps more plastic in the ocean than Indonesia. But by 2025, the world’s largest archipelago aims to reduce marine waste by 70%

Indonesia has pledged up to US$1 billion a year to dramatically reduce the amount of plastic and other waste products polluting its waters. The announcement was made by Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan, Indonesia’s Coordinating Minister for Maritime Affairs at last week’s 2017 World Oceans Summit in Nusa Dua, Bali.

Pandjaitan told delegates at the conference that Indonesia would achieve a 70% reduction in marine waste within eight years. He proposed developing new industries that use biodegradable materials such as cassava and seaweed to produce plastic alternatives. Other measures could include a nationwide tax on plastic bags as well as a sustained public education campaign.

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Plastic pollution blights Bay of Bengal – in pictures

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-03-02 19:00

In India, 6,000 tonnes of plastic waste lies uncollected every day. Some of this washes up in Tamil Nadu state, where it pollutes and contaminates the food and water of communities living along the Bay of Bengal

All photographs by Jacques de Lannoy

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Huge Large Hadron Collider experiment gets 'heart transplant'

BBC - Thu, 2017-03-02 18:10
One of the Large Hadron Collider's huge detectors has been given what officials describe as a "heart transplant".
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16 Psyche: A world like no other

ABC Science - Thu, 2017-03-02 17:53
Between Mars and Jupiter is an asteroid that's like nothing else in the solar system. And the odds of it even existing are tiny.
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Climate scientists say likelihood of extreme summers surging due to global warming

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-03-02 17:21

Report’s authors say Sydney unprepared for knock-on effects of a significant increase in average summer temperatures

New South Wales, which has just experienced its hottest summer on record, is 50 times more likely to experience another similarly hot summer and 10 times more likely to experience extremely hot days under climate change, according to a group of Australian climate scientists.

The mean temperature in Sydney was 2.8C above average in December, January, and February, according to the Bureau of Meteorology, and the three-day heatwave from 9 February to 11 was the hottest on record from Sydney to Brisbane, breaking records set in 1939.

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Hotbeds of diversity at the bottom of the garden

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-03-02 15:30

Flies, worms, slugs, woodlice, centipedes, moulds – the compost bin throbs with life

Several times each week I take vegetable peelings from the kitchen to the three compost recycling bins at the bottom of the garden. Even in winter, they are hotbeds of biodiversity.

Today, as I lift the lid of the newest bin, I am greeted by a blizzard of minute moth-flies (Clogmia albipunctata) that have bred in the film of water covering decaying garden weeds and autumn leaves.

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Climate change's signature was writ large on Australia's crazy summer of 2017

The Conversation - Thu, 2017-03-02 15:01

Australia’s summer is officially over, and it’s certainly been a weird one. The centre and east of the continent have had severe heat with many temperature records falling, particularly in New South Wales and Queensland.

For much of the country, the heat peaked on the weekend of February 11-12, when many places hit the high 40s. That heatwave, which mainly affected NSW, was quickly attributed to climate change. But can we say whether the whole summer bore the fingerprint of human-induced climate change?

Overall, Australia experienced its 12th-hottest summer on record. NSW had its hottest recorded summer.

The NSW record average summer temperatures can indeed be linked directly to climate change. We have reached this conclusion using two separate methods of analysis.

First, using coupled model simulations from a paper led by climatologist Sophie Lewis, we see that the extreme heat over the season is at least 50 times more likely in the current climate compared to a modelled world without human influences.

We also carried out an analysis based on current and past observations (similar to previous analyses used for record heat in the Arctic in 2016 and central England in 2014), comparing the likelihood of this record in today’s climate with the likelihood of it happening in the climate of 1910 (the beginning of reliable weather observations).

Again, we found at least a 50-fold increase in the likelihood of this hot summer due to the influence of human factors on the climate.

It is clear that human-induced climate change is greatly increasing the likelihood of record hot summers in NSW and Australia as a whole.

When we look at record summer heat, as represented by average maximum temperatures, we again find a clear human fingerprint on the NSW record.

The Sydney and Canberra heat

So what about when we dig down to the local scale and look at those severe heatwaves? Can we still see the hand of climate change in those events?

As climate varies more on local scales than it does across an entire state like NSW, it can be harder to pick out the effect of climate change from the noise of the weather. On the other hand, it is the local temperature that people feel and is perhaps most meaningful.

In Canberra, we saw extreme heat with temperatures hitting 36℃ on February 9 and then topping 40℃ for the following two days. For that heatwave, we looked at the role of climate change, again by using the Weather@home model and by comparing past and present weather observations.

Both of these methods show that climate change has increased the likelihood of this kind of bout of extreme heat. The Weather@home results point to at least a 50% increase in the likelihood of this kind of heatwave.

For Sydney, which also had extreme temperatures, especially in the western suburbs, the effect of climate change on this heatwave is less clear. The observations show that it is likely that climate change increased the probability of such a heatwave occurring. The model shows the same, but the high year-to-year variability makes identifying the human influence more difficult at this location.

A sign of things to come?

We are seeing more frequent and intense heatwaves across Australia as the climate warms. While the characteristics of these weather events vary a great deal from year to year, the recent heat over eastern Australia has been exceptional. These trends are projected to continue in the coming decades, meaning that the climate change signal in these events will strengthen as conditions diverge further from historical averages.

Traditionally, Sydney’s central business district has had about three days a year above 35℃, averaged over the period 1981-2010. Over the decades from 2021 to 2040 we expect that number to average four a year instead.

To put this summer into context, we have seen a record 11 days hitting the 35℃ mark in Sydney.

It is a similar story for Canberra, where days above 35℃ tend to be more common (seven per year on average for 1981-2010) and are projected to increase to 12 per year for 2021-40. This summer, Canberra had 18 days above 35℃.

All of these results point to problems in the future as climate change causes heatwaves like this summer’s to become more common. This has many implications, not least for our health as many of us struggle to cope with the effects of excessive heat.

Some of our more unusual records

While the east battled record-breaking heat, the west battled extreme weather of a very different sort. Widespread heavy rains on February 9-11 caused flooding in parts of Western Australia. And on February 9 Perth experienced its coldest February day on record, peaking at just 17.4℃.

Back east, and just over a week after the extreme heat in Canberra, the capital’s airport experienced its coldest February morning on record (albeit after a weather station move in 2008). Temperatures dipped below 3℃ on the morning of February 21.

The past few months have given us more than our fair share of newsworthy weather. But the standout event has been the persistent and extreme heat in parts of eastern Australia – and that’s something we’re set to see plenty more of in the years to come.

Data were provided by the Bureau of Meteorology through its collaboration with the ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science. This article was co-authored by Heidi Cullen, chief scientist with Climate Central.

The Conversation

Andrew King receives funding from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science.

David Karoly receives funding from the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science and an ARC Linkage grant. He is a member of the Climate Change Authority and the Wentworth Group of Concerned Scientists.

Geert Jan van Oldenborgh receives funding from the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI) and the Climate and Development Knowledge Network (CDKN).

Matthew Hale receives funding from the Australian Research Council.

Sarah Perkins-Kirkpatrick receives funding from the Australian Research Council.

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CEFC plans to repeat solar success in battery storage

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2017-03-02 13:54
Jillian Broadbent says backing large-scale energy storage a key focus for CEFC in 2017 in a high renewable grid. No mention of clean coal.
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$5bn used to safeguard Murray-Darling from drought largely in vain, says study

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-03-02 13:07

ANU’s centre for water economics says ‘no discernible impact in reduced water use on a per-hectare basis’

More than $5bn used for reforms to safeguard the Murray-Darling river system from drought has been largely in vain, new research has found.

About $3bn of taxpayers’ funds used for improving farm irrigation had been a boon to private individuals but led to no cut in water use from the start of the last drought crisis, according to the Australian National University study.

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Malcolm Turnbull’s Trumpian disregard for energy facts

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2017-03-02 12:48
Malcolm Turnbull's bizarre energy policy campaign against renewables – and in favour of coal – has reached Trumpian levels of false claims, fake news, paranoia and misleading comments. Is there any hope it will change course?
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AGL welcomes approval of wind farm EIS

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2017-03-02 12:19
AGL today welcomed the approval of its EIS by the Office of the Coordinator-General (OCG) for the proposed Coopers Gap Wind Farm in southern Queensland.
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Graph of the Day: Electricity prices rises not driven by renewables

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2017-03-02 12:13
CEC chart illustrates the fact that Australian states with less new renewable energy (and more coal) have seen higher electricity price increases.
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How long will your solar panels last, and how well will they perform?

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2017-03-02 12:02
Millions of low-quality solar panels have been installed on Australian roofs, mostly because mums and dads lacked the expertise to differentiate panel quality.
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The end of electric vehicle range anxiety

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2017-03-02 11:28
Drivers, power utilities and socially-conscious businesses are making it easier to own an electric car.
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NAB taps offshore green bond market for 1.1GW of solar, wind

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2017-03-02 11:05
National Australia Bank extends renewables investment reach to EU, US and UK markets, with €500 million offshore green bond.
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France’s solar PV capacity tops 7.13 GW

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2017-03-02 11:03
France had reached a cumulative installed PV capacity of 7,134 MW as of the end of December 2016.
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Former Santos CEO joins Redflow board

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2017-03-02 11:02
Australian energy storage specialist Redflow Limited has recruited former Santos Managing Director and CEO David Knox to its board of directors.
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Scientists are poised to start a new movement

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2017-03-02 11:02
The current wave of scientific discontent has the makings of a budding movement. But whether it moves the political dial remains to be seen.
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