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Electric cars as part of the surveillance state | Letters

The Guardian - Mon, 2016-12-05 05:06

In response to Dr Robin Shipp’s letter about the unfair requirements for charging electric cars (3 December), I’d like to point out one more: that you can’t pay cash for a charge. Whether you pay with a smartphone (that tracks you whenever it is operating), or with a proposed swipecard (that would track you whenever you use it), it does you wrong by tracking your movements. You can fill your car with gasoline anonymously, paying cash; electric cars should offer the same.

Related: Business secretary says electric vehicles at heart of industrial strategy

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Climate countdown: is Australia on track to avoid catastrophe?

The Guardian - Mon, 2016-12-05 05:00

Guardian Australia has partnered with NDEVR Environmental to produce a quarterly report calculating progress towards keeping global warming below 2C

Australia is blowing its carbon budget, projections reveal

by Nick Evershed and Michael Slezak

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Australia is blowing its carbon budget, projections reveal

The Guardian - Mon, 2016-12-05 05:00

Exclusive: In less than four years the country has ‘spent’ almost 20% of its greenhouse gas allowance to 2050, analysis shows

Climate countdown: is Australia on track to avoid catastrophe?

Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions are rising despite global reduction efforts, according to detailed projections made by the consultants NDEVR Environmental.

Australia’s emissions jumped by 2.56m tonnes in the three months to September, putting them 1.55m tonnes off-track compared with commitments made in Paris, and 4.06m tonnes over levels demanded by scientifically based targets set by the government’s Climate Change Authority. Emissions for the year to September are above those for the year to September 2015.

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New app proves a nourishing idea for wasted food | Killian Fox

The Guardian - Sun, 2016-12-04 16:00

The distribution of surplus food in Ireland is being transformed by FoodCloud. Killian Fox meets the duo behind the venture

“Within one community, there can be a business that’s throwing away perfectly good food and just around the corner there’s a charity that’s struggling to feed people in need,” says Iseult Ward of FoodCloud, a remarkable social enterprise which she co-founded with Aoibheann O’Brien in 2012. “We wanted to connect the two.”

Ward, who is 26, was studying business and economics at Trinity College, Dublin, where O’Brien, 31, was completing a masters in environmental science. Neither were particularly tech-savvy – they bonded over “a love for food and a distaste for waste” – but that didn’t deter them from using technology to address the problem. “We developed an app that would help businesses notify charities when they had surplus food available,” says Ward.

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The crunch of frost, starlings at dusk, a solitary robin: winter is a time of true wonder

The Guardian - Sun, 2016-12-04 10:01

The official start of winter was heralded by days of sharp sunshine. Country Life’s editor at large celebrates the season’s natural beauty

Windscreens frozen, ground like iron, a vichyssoise of fog in the valleys – we’ve had the first intimations of a proper winter, and my friend’s blood is coursing. “Isn’t it the most exciting time of year?” he mumbled, from the depths of many layers of warm clothing. “I love the sharpness of the air, the crunch of frost underfoot.”

I’m with him. A lucky chum who has a house in the Caribbean told me about the temperature variance on Nevis; it will be 30C at Christmas, just as it was 30C in July. A superficially seductive prospect, I admit, but who wouldn’t rather have the drama of the changing year? Icicles hanging from the eaves, mulled wine simmering on the stove. As the 18th-century nature poet James Thomson put it, “Welcome kindred glooms!”

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How to make spaghetti bolognaise

ABC Environment - Sun, 2016-12-04 09:30
Social researcher and author Rebecca Huntley uses the recipe for this very popular and accessible dish to highlight the varied threats to our future food supply from global climate change.
Categories: Around The Web

How to make spaghetti bolognese

ABC Environment - Sun, 2016-12-04 09:30
Social researcher and author Rebecca Huntley uses the recipe for this very popular and accessible dish to highlight the varied threats to our future food supply from global climate change.
Categories: Around The Web

Climate scientists condemn article claiming global temperatures are falling

The Guardian - Sun, 2016-12-04 00:48

A Republican-led panel promoted a misleading tabloid story alleging earth may not be warming, relying on data that leaves out important points of context

Climate scientists have denounced the House committee on science, space and technology after the Republican-held panel promoted a misleading story expressing skepticism that the earth is dangerously warming.

On Thursday afternoon, the committee tweeted a Breitbart article alleging: “Global Temperatures Plunge. Icy Silence from Climate Alarmists”. The story linked to a British tabloid, the Daily Mail, which claimed that global land temperatures were plummeting, and that humans were not responsible for years of steadily increasing heat.

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Tackling air pollution in China

ABC Environment - Sat, 2016-12-03 11:38
Air pollution is a serious problem in many Chinese cites and throughout the countryside. Now the government is taking action with new environmental laws and a crackdown on the most polluting factories. In Beijing coal fired power stations are being replaced by gas.
Categories: Around The Web

Whale exhibition coming to London’s Natural History Museum

ABC Environment - Sat, 2016-12-03 11:19
London’s Natural History Museum is preparing for a major display on whales which is scheduled to open in June 2017.
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How the corals of the Great Barrier Reef affect Queensland’s climate

ABC Environment - Sat, 2016-12-03 11:12
Stressed and dying coral release varying amounts of gas which influence the formation of clouds. Scientists are investigating the prospects for Queensland’s weather as parts of the Great Barrier Reef die following bleaching by hot ocean waters.
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How to hand mine rare Tasmanian Sapphires

ABC Environment - Sat, 2016-12-03 09:30
Dressed like an abalone diver in a rainforest ravine, the search for Tasmanian sapphire involves a lolly-scoop, a crow bar and physical endurance beyond the norm. This is a repeat episode from the Off Track archives.
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New blow for Hinkley Point contractor EDF after French safety checks

The Guardian - Sat, 2016-12-03 05:37

Safety issues force many reactors offline prompting warnings of power cuts across France, higher energy prices and a rise in emissions

The company building the UK’s first new nuclear power station for decades is facing questions over the health of its fleet of French nuclear plants after an investigation which has left the country with the lowest level of nuclear power for 10 years and the prospect of power cuts during a cold snap.

Thirteen of Électricité de France’s (EDF) 58 atomic plants are offline, some due to planned maintenance, but most for safety checks ordered by the regulator over anomalies discovered in reactor parts.

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A Big Country December 3, 2016

ABC Environment - Sat, 2016-12-03 05:20
Abandoned working dogs and puppies find new homes; solar power runs composting machines; and Matt Wilson is living the dream, opening his own micro brewery in Albany in WA.
Categories: Around The Web

Alligator snapping turtle's great escape

BBC - Sat, 2016-12-03 04:42
A huge alligator snapping turtle got stuck in a blocked drain pipe in Houston, Texas.
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How electric car drivers are being overcharged | Letters

The Guardian - Sat, 2016-12-03 04:41

As a relatively new owner of a Nissan Leaf, I support entirely the need for adequate provision of charge points (Letters, 29 November). The ecotricity charging points at motorway services are great, even if they are now not free. But you can now only pay using a mobile phone app – not much use for my wife whose phone is too old to run the app, and not much use for anyone if their phone is lost or broken. What is wrong with a swipe card, as offered by Charge your Car at other charging points? But the biggest absurdity, as employed by all charging points, is that you pay by charging session, not by the amount of electricity you use. In a petrol or diesel car in an area with few fuel stations, you will top up whenever you have the opportunity even if it means putting in only, say, a quarter of a tank. Electric car users may need to follow that routine, but will have to pay the same however much electricity they need.
Dr Robin Shipp
Bristol

• Join the debate – email guardian.letters@theguardian.com

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Nuclear fusion, combatting air pollution and Attenborough – green news roundup

The Guardian - Sat, 2016-12-03 01:55

The week’s top environment news stories and green events. If you are not already receiving this roundup, sign up here to get the briefing delivered to your inbox

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Hunter Mitchell raised thousands of dollars to save Osita the rhino.

BBC - Sat, 2016-12-03 00:24
Hunter Mitchell raised thousands of dollars to save Osita the rhino.
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Boris Johnson makes 'save African elephant' plea

The Guardian - Sat, 2016-12-03 00:21

Foreign secretary, who backs ban on ivory trade, breaks off London speech to make plea for ‘magnificent’ vulnerable animal

Boris Johnson has interrupted a sweeping speech on the UK’s geopolitical future to make a passionate plea to save the African elephant, saying they are on the brink of extinction as they “get turned into umbrella stands and billiard balls”.

In the midst of a speech at Chatham House to ambassadors and foreign policy advisers, the UK foreign secretary said he was “obsessed with the tragic fate of the African elephant”.

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The week in wildlife – in pictures

The Guardian - Sat, 2016-12-03 00:00

A baby slow loris, a ‘walking shark’ and caribou in Alaska are among this week’s pick of images from the natural world

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