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EU Market: EUAs rocket back towards recent highs after bullish auction
Electric cars: a long way to go | Letters
Adam Vaughn’s experience of driving an electric vehicle (One Man and his Tesla, 27 July) demonstrates the real need we have for a truly national, visible network in this country if drivers are to confidently switch from petrol or diesel, which is a key recommendation of the UK’s first-ever National Infrastructure Assessment.
We also make a key recommendation that government should place a requirement on local councils to work with charge point providers to allocate 5% of their parking spaces to electric vehicles by 2020, and 20% by 2025, which may be converted to electric vehicle charge points.
Continue reading...Unsurvivable heatwaves could strike heart of China by end of century
The most populous region of the biggest polluter on Earth – China’s northern plain – will become uninhabitable in places if climate change is not curbed
The deadliest place on the planet for extreme future heatwaves will be the north China plain, one of the most densely populated regions in the world and the most important food-producing area in the huge nation.
New scientific research shows that humid heatwaves that kill even healthy people within hours will strike the area repeatedly towards the end of the century thanks to climate change, unless there are heavy cuts in carbon emissions.
Continue reading...Shark abducted in pram from Texas aquarium is returned
Miss Helen, a female grey horn shark, had been driven away from San Antonio aquarium in a pickup truck
A shark abducted from a petting tank at a Texas aquarium and smuggled out in a pram has been found and returned.
The female grey horn shark, known as Miss Helen, was grabbed from the open pool in San Antonio aquarium by two men and a woman, then wrapped in a wet blanket.
Continue reading...Australian govt advisors to scrutinise Safeguard Mechanism in new review
Shanghai sells less than a sixth of CO2 permits on offer in auction
SK Market: Korea ETS sees sporadic trade, softer prices as last batch of emitters chase compliance permits
Shark stolen from aquarium and taken away in a pram – video
Video footage shows a 40cm horn shark being taken from San Antonio aquarium in Texas, before being wrapped in a towel and placed in a pram. Police returned the shark to the aquarium after two of the three suspects confessed. A horn shark is worth about $2,000 (£1,520)
Continue reading...Soggy 2017 was fifth warmest year in UK record
Don't call it a wholphin: first sighting of rare whale-dolphin hybrid
Scientists have identified a creature that they believe to be a hybrid of a melon-headed whale and a rough-toothed dolphin
Scientists are touting the first sighting of a hybrid between a melon-headed whale and a rough-toothed dolphin in the ocean off Hawaii. But don’t call it a “wholphin,” they say.
The melon-headed whale is one of the various species that’s called a whale but is technically a dolphin.
Continue reading...Program Coordinator, Environmental Defense Fund – New York
Iran responds to Donald Trump's meeting offer
Should we burn rubbish for fuel?
Twiggy Forrest donates $100 million to ocean conservation
CP Daily: Monday July 30, 2018
CEFC welcomes opening of new fuel-from-waste plant to transform industrial and commercial waste
Carnegie inks $1.6m deal to boost CETO wave power technology
Allow nuclear waste disposal in national parks, say MPs
Safest site should be chosen regardless of location, committee says – but opponents call idea ‘outrageous’
Highly radioactive nuclear waste could be permanently buried under national parks and areas of outstanding natural beauty (AONBs), under government plans backed by a committee of MPs.
Deep geological burial is seen as the only permanent solution for nuclear waste that will remain radioactive for many thousands of years and is currently stored at surface sites across the UK. Ministers’ attempts to choose a site in Cumbria for the £12bn facility were foiled in 2013 when the county council rejected the proposal.
Continue reading...2017 UK's fifth warmest year on record, says Met Office
Average temperature in past decade is 0.8C hotter and ‘notably wetter’ than the 30 years leading up to 1990
Last year was the fifth warmest on record for the UK, showing a clear warming trend above the long-term average, despite a wet summer last year and cold winter.
The average temperature over the past decade, since 2008, was 0.8C above the 30 year average to 1990. Summers over that period have also been “notably wetter”, the Met Office said, in its fourth annual State of the UK Climate report on Tuesday.
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