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California shark attack: teen lobster diver injured

The Guardian - Sun, 2018-09-30 05:29
  • 13-year-old bitten on first day of spiny lobster season
  • Encinitas lifeguard says injuries traumatic but not fatal

A teenager was seriously injured in a shark attack off a beach in southern California on Saturday.

Related: The Cape Cod shark attack is a terrible reminder of our fragility – and that of the sea | Philip Hoare

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Brussels won’t push to raise EU’s overall 2030 GHG goal -media

Carbon Pulse - Sun, 2018-09-30 05:07
The European Commission will not push to raise the EU’s 2030 emission reduction goal next month, German press agency DPA reported, dropping the drive amid reluctance from Germany and others.
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Number of California CITSS accounts grows 2% in Q3

Carbon Pulse - Sun, 2018-09-30 02:38
Seventeen entities opened Compliance Instrument Tracking Service System (CITSS) accounts during the third quarter, bringing the total number to 673, according to Air Resources Board (ARB) data.
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Echidna indigestion and other eating tails

ABC Environment - Sat, 2018-09-29 13:05
It’s a bat eat mouse, lizard eat possum, wallaby eat bird world out there. Animals are always eating weird stuff.
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Secret life of rare antelope revealed

BBC - Sat, 2018-09-29 09:00
An antelope caught on camera in Uganda for the first time sheds light on an unexplored rainforest.
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CP Daily: Friday September 28, 2018

Carbon Pulse - Sat, 2018-09-29 08:43
A daily summary of our news plus bite-sized updates from around the world.
Categories: Around The Web

Could fracking set off the next financial crisis?

ABC Environment - Sat, 2018-09-29 08:05
"The industry has a very bad history of money going into it and never coming out", so why does Wall Street keep feeding the fracking firms?
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Butterflywatch: bug hunters – tread softly, for you tread on our home

The Guardian - Sat, 2018-09-29 06:30

It’s been a good summer for black hairstreaks, but the feet of too many enthusiasts can cause damage to the wildlife they come to see

The damage caused when hundreds of twitchers trample a fragile nature reserve to bag a photograph of a rare bird is relatively well-known. Butterfly watchers are considered a more genteel breed. Wading through a wildflower meadow in pursuit of butterflies is a supreme summertime pleasure. When one person does it, the flowers spring back within hours. Unfortunately, numerous people, no matter how well-intentioned, congregating in one spot can cause problems.

Related: Black hairstreaks found miles from their heartland

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California shifts fuel economy regulations to minimise federal rollback

Carbon Pulse - Sat, 2018-09-29 05:44
California's Air Resources Board (ARB) approved changes on Friday to maintain higher fuel economy standards in the 2021-2026 period in response to the Trump administration’s recent proposal to keep the federal standard static at the 2020 level.
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US federal court upholds New York nuclear crediting programme

Carbon Pulse - Sat, 2018-09-29 05:09
A US court ruled Thursday that New York’s zero emissions credit (ZEC) programme to subsidise nuclear energy does not impede on federal authority, marking the second time this month that a federal court has upheld the state-led initiatives.
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Virginia defers decision on cap-and-trade regulations for another month

Carbon Pulse - Sat, 2018-09-29 05:07
The Virginia Air Pollution Control Board (APCB) postponed a decision until late October on proposed cap-and-trade regulations that would set a more stringent 2020 emissions limit, officials said Friday.
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EU Market: EUAs climb back above €21 but notch 4% weekly loss

Carbon Pulse - Sat, 2018-09-29 03:41
EU carbon prices gained for the second straight day on Friday, climbing above €21 after another strong auction helped recover more lost ground from big drops earlier in the week.
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UK's children denied basic human right to clean air, says Unicef

The Guardian - Sat, 2018-09-29 01:46

Young people face a long term ‘health crisis’ unless the government acts to clean up pollution, says children’s charity

Children in the UK are being denied their basic human right to breathe clean air and facing a long term “health crisis” because of the toxic fumes they breathe on their way to and from school, according to leading children’s charity Unicef.

The organisation, which campaigns on children’s rights and wellbeing around the world, described the situation in the UK as “horrific” and has announced it is to make protecting youngsters from air pollution its priority across the country in the months ahead.

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Beluga fever is tinged with sorrow for whale-watchers on Thames

The Guardian - Sat, 2018-09-29 01:37

The thrill of a once-in-a-lifetime sighting mingles with a fear that this story may not end well

Grant Hazlehurst, a civil servant from Bromley, Kent has seen many whales. “Fin, sperm, Cuvier’s beaked, True’s beaked, sei, long-fin pilot …” most of them from his regular jaunts on a car ferry in the Bay of Biscay. “But I never thought I would see a beluga, not in the Thames,” he said. “So, I’m hoping.”

So were the two dozen or so others who, on Friday morning, gathered on a windy shore near Gravesend, scanning foam-flecked waves in anticipation that, for a fourth day, the beluga whale that has somehow got lost in the Thames, would show itself.

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Germany should replace wasteful clean energy subsisides with carbon pricing -auditor

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2018-09-28 23:34
Germany should impose market mechanisms such as more stringent carbon pricing to drive its clean energy transition, instead of its current complex support mechanisms, the country's federal audit office said Friday.
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The week in wildlife – in pictures

The Guardian - Fri, 2018-09-28 23:00

A flock of house martins, red foxes and a Bengal tigress are among this week’s pick of images from the natural world

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SENG Vic-Tas AGM 2018

Newsletters VIC - Fri, 2018-09-28 22:45
Single-Column Responsive Email Template Vic-Tas Chapter AGM 2018 REMINDER, 2018 AGM. A reminder for our AGM this coming Tuesday, 2nd October at Engineers Australia Bourke Street offices, commencing at 5.30 pm. Following the AGM, we will have a presentation from Dr John Iser, Chair, Doctors for the Environment, Victoria. Further information on CPD events in 2019 and other plans for SENG will be provided at the meeting. SENG members are invited to consider nominating for a role on the SENG committee. Those who form the new committee will take over from January 1, 2019. You may nominate at the meeting on October 2. Proxy nominations are acceptable. Looking forward to seeing you. Keith Altmann Chair SENG (Vic-Tas) Past SENG Events Want to look back at past SENG events? Presentations from most of our events are available on our website LinkedIn SENG is on LinkedIn. Visit the group here Other useful links Alternative Technology Association Environment Victoria The Conversation Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute. Melbourne Energy Institute Climate Council Beyond Zero Emissions Future Melbourne Network If you can't view this email click here to view online Click here to unsubscribe from this newsletter S
Categories: Newsletters VIC

Four buyers account for half of all German carbon sales this year -report

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2018-09-28 22:42
Four companies have picked up 50% of the 128.6 million German carbon allowances auctioned in the first eight months of 2018, a new report shows.
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UK government urged not to bury nuclear waste under national parks

The Guardian - Fri, 2018-09-28 22:18

Conservation groups speak out as fears grow of Lake District being eyed as possible site

The National Trust and 18 other conservation groups have urged ministers to rule out burying nuclear waste below national parks as fears grow that the Lake District is being eyed as a potential site.

In January, the government restarted its attempt to find a community willing to host such a facility after a previous search collapsed five years ago. Ministers have refused to exclude national parks from the process.

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