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Krill companies stop Antarctic fishing

BBC - Tue, 2018-07-10 08:26
The overwhelming majority of krill companies are to stop fishing in vast areas of the Antarctic Peninsula.
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Governance Programme Director, IDDRI – Paris

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2018-07-10 07:48
The role of the Governance Programme Director is to design, organize and implement a renewed strategy for IDDRI’s « Governance » programme, relying on IDDRI’s added value and differentiation, its impact as well as anticipation capacity, and its complementarity with other players, identifying IDDRI’s priority activities in the institutionalised sustainable development agenda.
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Intern, Landscape Standard, Verra – Washington DC

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2018-07-10 07:43
Verra seeks an Intern to support research and administration for the Landscape Standard. The ideal candidate will have strong written and verbal communication skills, qualitative research experience and interest in sustainability.
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Krill fishing firms back Antarctic ocean sanctuary

The Guardian - Tue, 2018-07-10 07:00

Creation of the world’s largest marine reserve comes a step closer as major companies add support

The creation of the world’s biggest ocean sanctuary, protecting a huge tract of remote seas around Antarctica, has come a step closer after major fishing companies came out in favour of the plan.

A global campaign – spearheaded by Greenpeace and backed by 1.7 million people – had put massive pressure on the krill fishing industry and retailers amid fears it was endangering one of the world’s last great wildernesses, undermining the global fight against climate change.

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Illegal land clearing in NSW may be accelerating, complaints data suggests

The Guardian - Tue, 2018-07-10 04:00

Exclusive: Data obtained by the Guardian suggests land clearing may be accelerating under Biodiversity Conservation Act

Complaints about suspected illegal land clearing to a government hotline have increased sharply under the New South Wales government’s new Biodiversity Conservation Act, suggesting the rate of land clearing may be accelerating.

Data obtained by the Guardian under freedom of information laws after an eight month battle with the Department of Environment shows that reports of suspected illegal land clearing have increased by nearly 30% in the months since August last year when the new laws came into force.

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EU Market: EUAs streak to new 1-mth high above €16 as power prices keep rising

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2018-07-10 03:00
EU carbon prices climbed above €16 for the first time in a month on Monday as power prices continued their heatwave-induced climb.
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China CORSIA withdrawal reports inaccurate, official tells media

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2018-07-10 02:49
Reports that China has withdrawn from the voluntary first phases of the UN’s CORSIA aviation offsetting scheme are inaccurate, according to a representative of China’s delegation to ICAO.
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INTERVIEW: More conversation necessary between Ontario government, people over fate of cap-and-trade, climate policy

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2018-07-10 01:59
New Ontario Premier Doug Ford should hold consultations on his plan for unwinding the province’s cap-and-trade programme and how that will affect Ontario's emissions reduction targets, according to the leader of the province’s environmental watchdog.
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Banks court buyers for 49% stake in UK nuclear power stations

The Guardian - Tue, 2018-07-10 01:43

EDF Energy thought to have piggybacked on plans by Centrica to sell off some of nuclear power stake

Three international banks have begun courting buyers for a 49% stake in Britain’s eight nuclear power stations, starting the process of a major shakeup of the sector’s ownership.

UK-listed Centrica said in February it was looking to sell its 20% stake in the nuclear plants, which UBS and Goldman Sachs are understood to be handling.

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Cliff jumping: Lucky escape for boys after Llanberis rock fall

BBC - Tue, 2018-07-10 00:11
A boy who jumped off a cliff into water in Llanberis escaped injury when rocks fell in after him.
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Nigel Farage criticised over photo with protected shark

BBC - Mon, 2018-07-09 23:39
"Depressed over Brexit. Went fishing," he posts alongside a photo of himself holding the protected species.
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Mystery of illegal ozone-depleting emissions solved, say environmental investigators

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2018-07-09 23:15
Environmental sleuths have tracked down what they believe is the location of a large illegal source of ozone-destroying emissions.
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Stunning coral forests discovered around Sicily's deep sea volcanoes – in pictures

The Guardian - Mon, 2018-07-09 22:26

Scientists find a spectacular forest of bamboo coral, rare carnivorous sponges, and species never before seen in the region

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Over 20% of Australian horses race with their tongues tied to their lower jaw

The Conversation - Mon, 2018-07-09 21:29
Tongue-ties are used in Australian horse racing but are banned in most other horse sports. Samantha Franklin, Associate Professor in Veterinary Physiology, University of Adelaide Paul McGreevy, Professor of Animal Behaviour and Animal Welfare Science, University of Sydney Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

New Zealand’s Z Energy seals voluntary carbon deal at above-market price

Carbon Pulse - Mon, 2018-07-09 20:13
New Zealand fuel supplier Z Energy has bought nearly 60,000 voluntary carbon credits at prices higher than in the nation’s mandatory ETS to offset its operational emissions.
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There are genuine climate alarmists, but they're not in the same league as deniers | Dana Nuccitelli

The Guardian - Mon, 2018-07-09 20:00

Deniers have conservative media outlets and control the Republican Party; climate alarmists are largely ignored

Those who debunk climate change misinformation often face a dilemma. We’re flooded with such a constant deluge of climate myths, where should we focus our efforts? Climate misinformation is propagated via congressional climate hearings, conservative media outlets, denial blogs, and even from some genuine climate alarmists.

Specifically, there has recently been a debate as to whether Skeptical Science – a website with a database of climate myths and scientific debunkings, to which I’m a primary contributor – would be more useful and effective if it called out misinformation from ‘alarmists,’ and if it eliminated or revised its Climate Misinformers page.

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One in three fish caught never makes it to the plate – UN report

The Guardian - Mon, 2018-07-09 17:00

Global fish production is at record levels thanks to fish farming, says the UN FAO, but much is wasted and many species are worryingly overfished

One in three fish caught around the world never makes it to the plate, either being thrown back overboard or rotting before it can be eaten, according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization.

Its biannual report on the state of the world’s fisheries, released on Monday, also shows that total fish production has reached a record high thanks to more fish farming, particularly in China, with over half the fish eaten in the world now coming from aquaculture.

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Country diary 1918: summer life in Surrey

The Guardian - Mon, 2018-07-09 15:00

13 July 1918 Teasel is coming into bloom, the enchanters nightshade is plentiful, while foliage is full enough

Surrey
Frogs made a quite audible croaking in the evening and a few hours earlier, while the sun was strong, toads came from the edge of the great pond, leapt about, and lay on the short, sere grass. Swifts and swallows flew very low, circling round the cattle assembled in the shade of oaks, skimming just above a few wagtails which were about the hoofs. A peacock in the distance hardly ceased screaming. Then, as the light faded, clouds rolled in from the west, folding everything, but suddenly disappeared as if lifted into the sky to let the stars shine. But a long, grey streak followed, and spread, and in the morning there was rain. Thrushes sang for an hour, but after that we had no song.

Teasel is coming into bloom; there was purple to-day above the big leaf-cups, which held water almost enough to drink from. The enchanters nightshade is plentiful, and a stray gentian blooms on the heath. But a wild cherry which was great in flower has little or no fruit, and acorns, abundant last season, are scarce this. Foliage is full enough; you hear the doves call, but cannot distinguish them. Bees are busy among the scented blossom of the limes, now beginning to drop and to dust over a surface which shines with oil dripping from sycamore leaves.

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Know your NEM: Waiting for the ISP

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2018-07-09 14:43
Still waiting on ISP and ACCC report. Meanwhile, wind and solar PV smooth out seasonal volatility.
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Country diary: wilding calls to the turtle dove

The Guardian - Mon, 2018-07-09 14:30

Knepp, West Sussex: A 3,500-acre estate has been transformed from intensively farmed land to a rich natural environment, luring back a bird we are close to losing

It’s 4.30am and the sky is already light above Knepp, the Sussex estate whose 3,500 acres have been transformed from intensively farmed agricultural land to one of the richest natural environments in the country. I’m with Penny Green, the estate’s resident ecologist, and here to see turtle doves, birds whose mellifluous purring once played a starring role in the soundscape of British summers, but whose numbers have fallen by 93% since 1994.

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