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Five species face immediate concern of extinction, scientific committee warns Labor
Further 41 species on course to be declared critically endangered, complicating Albanese government’s zero extinctions target
Five species, including Tasmania’s Maugean skate, could jeopardise the Albanese government’s zero extinctions target, according to a scientific committee that provides advice on endangered species.
A further 41 species are on course to be declared critically endangered, sparking alarm from environment groups at the pace at which plants and animals are reaching the most urgent status on the threatened list.
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Continue reading...Non-native grass species blamed for ferocity of Hawaii wildfires
Failure to heed warnings over unchecked growth meant blaze was ‘a disaster waiting to happen’, say scientists and academics
Scientists and academics say they have been warning for several years that invasive grasses covering a quarter of the Hawaii islands are a major fire risk.
Untamed grassland helped fuel the spread and intensity of last week’s deadly fires on the island of Maui, according to experts. The fires, which broke out last Tuesday, have killed at least 106 people and destroyed the island’s historic town of Lahaina.
Continue reading...State government order sparks concerns India’s new forestry act will bring deforestation, despite U-turn
Euro Markets: Midday Update
UK backs AI for industrial decarbonisation with funding for innovation and R&D
Oil, gas, coal companies’ production, carbon output not in line with Paris targets -study
ANALYSIS: One year in, the US IRA climate law has triggered a global green industry race
Extreme water stress faced by countries home to quarter of world population
Twenty-five countries are using 80% of their water supplies each year, research shows
Twenty-five countries that are home to a quarter of the world’s population are facing extreme water stress, according to research.
Data from the World Resources Institute suggests these countries are regularly using 80% of their water supplies each year.
Continue reading...NZ parliament debating industrial allocation, ETS late payment penalty legislation
Giant old trees are still being logged in Tasmanian forests. We must find ways of better protecting them
Oil giant joins startup to drive down green hydrogen costs
Energy Insiders Podcast: Wind, solar and social licence
Behavioural scientist John Pickering on the challenges of getting social licence for wind, solar, battery and transmission projects. Plus: What’s big coal up to?
The post Energy Insiders Podcast: Wind, solar and social licence appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Fears of further delays on renewable zones as EnergyCo under review by NSW
Renewable energy industry fears role of EnergyCo under review as NSW assesses a key report on the health of its energy market.
The post Fears of further delays on renewable zones as EnergyCo under review by NSW appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Chelion Australia’s all-in-one battery cabinet for renewable energy deployment
Chelion Australia are excited to announce that the integrated components of the Matrix CAIO All-In- One Battery Cabinet have been granted Clean Energy Council (CEC) approval for sale in Australia.
The post Chelion Australia’s all-in-one battery cabinet for renewable energy deployment appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Montana kids win historic climate lawsuit – here’s why it could set a powerful precedent
The lawsuit is the first in US to rely on a state’s constitutional right to a clean and healthful environment to challenge policies that fuel climate change. It won’t be the last.
The post Montana kids win historic climate lawsuit – here’s why it could set a powerful precedent appeared first on RenewEconomy.
All carrot, no stick: What Australia can learn from US approach to renewables
On the one-year anniversary of the US IRA, we look at the top five impacts, and how Australia can follow suit.
The post All carrot, no stick: What Australia can learn from US approach to renewables appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Turbine catches fire at one of UK’s oldest offshore wind farms
A single 2MW wind turbine at the Scroby Sands Wind Farm off the coast of Norfolk caught fire on Tuesday, but has since self-extinguished.
The post Turbine catches fire at one of UK’s oldest offshore wind farms appeared first on RenewEconomy.
BayWa and Atmos cut deal on solar farm, join forces for big wind projects
BayWa and Atmos Renewables cut a deal on a major solar farm and announce new partnership that will be a "formidable force" for wind farm projects in Australia.
The post BayWa and Atmos cut deal on solar farm, join forces for big wind projects appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Russia is committing grave acts of ecocide in Ukraine – and the results will harm the whole world | Andriy Yermak and Margot Wallström
By the war’s end, it will be too late to prevent the worst consequences of these terrible crimes. Global leaders must act now
- Andriy Yermak is head of the Office of the President of Ukraine; Margot Wallström is a former foreign minister of Sweden
Robert Oppenheimer, the American physicist who led the team that developed the world’s first nuclear weapons, quoted from ancient Hindu scriptures to illustrate his conflicting feelings about the forces his science unleashed: “Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds,” he said. In his later years, Oppenheimer longed for a future “without nation states armed for war, and above all, a world without war”.
Yet there’s another kind of loss that Oppenheimer recognised only too clearly in his readings of the Bhagavad Gita, the ancient text he turned to after the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. Humans now possess the power to destroy the world they live in.
The people of Ukraine have grown cruelly familiar with war and death, inflicted on them by a nation state with vastly superior resources: they will never forget the human loss they have suffered in fighting to save their homeland. But Ukraine is also facing a destruction of habitat and nature on a scale that will reverberate far beyond its borders. While it is almost impossible to measure, the breadth and depth of this damage must be understood.
Russia has taken deliberate aim at Ukraine’s environment: its rivers, forests and fields. Many of Ukraine’s natural reserves – its animal and sea life, water and impressive biodiversity – have been terribly damaged or polluted. Toxins leak from its damaged industries and infrastructure. Global food security is at risk. The world cannot afford to ignore this growing environmental threat.
The overwhelming threat to Ukraine’s environment was highlighted in June, with the extraordinary collapse of the huge Nova Kakhovka dam, which held back one of the biggest water reservoirs in Europe. This was no coincidental collapse: the dam was under Russian control when an explosion inside an internal passageway blew its concrete heart to pieces. This unleashed a catastrophic flood that wrecked over 40 towns and villages and one of the world’s most valuable agricultural regions. Tonnes of oil were spilled into the Dnipro River. An uncountable number of landmines were strewn into the river and the Black Sea, leading to toxic leakage.