Feed aggregator
Rising ocean waters from global warming could cost trillions of dollars | John Abraham
We’ll need to mitigate and adapt to global warming to avoid massive costs from sea level rise
Ocean waters are rising because of global warming. They are rising for two reasons. First, and perhaps most obvious, ice is melting. There is a tremendous amount of ice locked away in Greenland, Antarctica, and in glaciers. As the world warms, that ice melts and the liquid water flows to the oceans.
The other reason why water is rising is that warmer water is less dense – it expands. This expansion causes the surface of the water to rise.
Continue reading...Sixty NZ businesses to take climate action, cut emissions
Federal Politics: ACCC, Timor-Leste and robocalls
Government responds to ACCC report amid speculation over energy policy
Australia’s regulators still can’t imagine a clean energy future
Three revolutions and the future of cars: An interview with Dr. Dan Sperling
If we cherry-pick data, use discredited projections, and ignore CO2 … then EVs are bad!
Country diary: soft sounds of sparrow seduction
Sandy, Bedfordshire: The house sparrows are busy caring for their young, but can still find time to mate dozens of times a day
Lolling in the shade under a hazel bush, I had become the inadvertent eavesdropper on a private conversation. Out of the canopy came a whispered “brrr” whirr of wings and then the soft sounds of sparrow seduction, a love song of tenderness that was scarcely imaginable from a bird known for its strident chirps.
Gentle, soothing, piteous peeps drifted down, an intimate dialogue that was both charming and disarming. I caught a glimpse through the sparrows’ bower and saw the female, mouth agape, wings a-flutter. The male rode her for a second or two only. House sparrows may mate up to 40 times a day, but it’s always a quickie.
Continue reading...Is Rod Sims having a lend of us ?
Electric Mini in works as BMW signs China EV factory deal
Redflow ships “biggest” battery order for Fiji digital TV roll-out
Two new big solar farms to begin construction in NSW “in coming weeks”
Tasmania’s Granville Harbour wind farm reaches financial close
Killing rats could save coral reefs
Survey: Half of young people want electric cars
Using roads to make power and toilet paper
CP Daily: Wednesday July 11, 2018
Canada’s Northwest Territories to implement C$20 carbon tax in July 2019
Quebec issues first offsets for 2018 as compliance demand squeezes WCI market
UK accused of 'green Brexit hypocrisy' over regulation of suspected carcinogen
Exclusive: UK attempted to weaken new EU regulations of a lucrative whitening chemical, Ti02, found in cosmetics and sunscreens
Michael Gove has been accused of “green Brexit hypocrisy” for trying to weaken regulation of a suspected carcinogen found in sun creams, paints and toothpastes, in a proposal seen by the Guardian.
The European commission had proposed mandatory labelling and a cosmetics ban for titanium dioxide (TiO2) – a whitening chemical – after the European Chemicals Agency (Echa) declared it a “suspected carcinogen” last year.
Continue reading...