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Election Spotlight - What will the election result mean for our everyday lives?
Graphic design could be holding back action on climate change – here's how
Farhana Yamin: ‘It took 20 minutes to unglue me from Shell’s office. It was a bit painful’
The climate crisis lawyer talks about the Extinction Rebellion protests and why the government must take action on the environment
Farhana Yamin is an environmental lawyer who, over the past three decades, has worked on a number of international treaties, including the Paris climate agreement. She has represented small island nations threatened by the effects of global heating and recently took part in the Extinction Rebellion protests.
How did you become politically interested in the environment?
When I was about 20, 22 and qualifying as a lawyer. It was just before the Earth summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992. I was already working for the small island states in the climate negotiations. And the climate change convention was adopted and the biodiversity convention was adopted. So all of these agreements were supposed to have sorted out the problem. It was a time when I was very optimistic about what law could do.
Extinction Rebellion urges ad industry to use its power for good
Letter to senior figures urges them to use their power to influence public opinion on climate change
Environmental activists Extinction Rebellion have turned their fire on the advertising industry in a public letter, encouraging it to use its expertise in manipulating public opinion for good or risk mass public protests against it.
Speaking to the Guardian, one of the authors of the letter, which was written by Extinction Rebellion members with decades of experience of the advertising industry, said the group was not “singling out advertising, as we previously disrupted fashion week and are systematically challenging all industries who have the platform, influence and skills to tackle this epoch-defining crisis but are failing to do so in any meaningful way”.
Continue reading...130,000 trees to be planted in English cities and towns
More than 130,000 trees are to be planted in English towns and cities over the next two years as part of the nation’s battle against global heating.
The environment secretary, Michael Gove, will announce on Sunday that grants for the plantings will be made available through the Urban Tree Challenge Fund.
Continue reading...Surprise Coalition election win ends push for tougher Australian climate policy
Key challenges for the re-elected Coalition government: our experts respond
The heat is on over the climate crisis. Only radical measures will work
Experts agree that global heating of 4C by 2100 is a real possibility. The effects of such a rise will be extreme and require a drastic shift in the way we live
Drowned cities; stagnant seas; intolerable heatwaves; entire nations uninhabitable… and more than 11 billion humans. A four-degree-warmer world is the stuff of nightmares and yet that’s where we’re heading in just decades.
While governments mull various carbon targets aimed at keeping human-induced global heating within safe levels – including new ambitions to reach net-zero emissions by 2050 – it’s worth looking ahead pragmatically at what happens if we fail. After all, many scientists think it’s highly unlikely that we will stay below 2C (above pre-industrial levels) by the end of the century, let alone 1.5C. Most countries are not making anywhere near enough progress to meet these internationally agreed targets.
Continue reading...Election Night Update: Abbott booted out, climate and energy policy sits on a knife-edge
Election result hangs in the balance. The career of Tony Abbott has ended, while the Coalition cling to hopes of retaining power.
The post Election Night Update: Abbott booted out, climate and energy policy sits on a knife-edge appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Dark fibres and the frozen north
Slippery challenge: can the European eel be saved from oblivion?
Project hopes to identify best habitats for extraordinary creature more endangered than giant panda – and shed light on mysterious breeding location
“That one is definitely over five years old, it could be eight to 10 years old,” shouts Dr Peter Walker, as a writhing 50cm long eel is scooped out of the River Tone near Taunton in Somerset. “This year or next I would expect this one to be on its merry way.”
The European eel makes an extraordinary 6,000km (3,728-mile) journey to the Sargasso Sea in the north Atlantic to spawn, from where its larvae travel all the way back. Now scientists hope a new project may shed light on this still mysterious part of eels’ lifecycle, which could provide crucial help in protecting the species.
Continue reading...Nuclear and renewables or nuclear or renewables?
Compassionate conservation is 'seriously flawed'
CP Daily: Friday May 17, 2019
After long wait, Oregon committee sends on cap-and-trade legislation
What's it like to be bitten by a bedbug?
Director, Stakeholder Relations and Reporting, Manitoba Climate & Green Plan Implementation Office – Winnipeg
We all smell the smoke, we all feel the heat. This environmental catastrophe is global | Alexis Wright
Governments of the world need to act. It’s time to speak to our planet with kindness before it’s too late
All the raspy-voice myna birds have come here, to this old swamp, where the ghost swans now dance the yellow dust song cycles of drought. Around and around the dry swamp they go with their webbed feet stomping up the earth in a cloud of dust, and all the bits and pieces of the past unravelled from parched soil. The Swan Book, by Alexis Wright.
A dense haze of smoke crawled over Melbourne and embraced us for a day in its lonely pilgrimage, inviting us to contemplate its mourning rite, its long prayer.
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