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Ipswich coffee shop uses takeaway mugs to ditch plastic
Does the moon hold the key to the earth’s energy needs?
Tidal power is the only renewable source derived from the moon. Now an extraordinary array of devices promise to unlock this vital energy potential
Using giant kites, blades and paddles, and mimicking pogo sticks, blowholes and even the human heart, groups around the world are on the cusp of harnessing the colossal power of the oceans.
The challenge is huge - seas have been battering coasts and sweeping sailors to their doom for millennia - but so is the prize: huge amounts of clean, reliable and renewable electricity for an energy-hungry world.
Continue reading...50% of RET could be delivered by corporate-backed solar and wind projects
Country diary: last outpost of the silver-studded blue butterfly
Prees Heath, Shropshire: Because of callous exploitation by collectors, this location was long kept secret but conservation work has helped the butterflies. Now there are clouds of them
“Silver-studded,” said the man hunched over his phone, pointing at a patch of red fescue grass. “Clouds of ’em.” Without looking up, he waved his arm over the common of Prees Heath. A stiff breeze ruffled the grass and carried the drone from surrounding trunk roads as sunlight flashed through scudding clouds. The day was as blue and silver-studded as the butterflies. Plebejus argus, the silver-studded blue butterfly, has its last outpost in the English Midlands here.
Plebejus suggests commoner and argus is perhaps keeping watch, but like the dwellers of many heathland commons, life for the butterflies here hung by a thread. Because of callous exploitation by collectors in the past, this location was long kept secret but conservation work to restore the heathland has helped the butterflies, and now there are waymarkers pointing them out.
Continue reading...Queensland now matches NSW with nine solar farms connected to grid
Driverless buses to be tested at SA autonomous vehicle hub
Tesla’s new power play: An electric ute with battery powered tools
JinkoSolar supplies 275.4 MWdc of solar modules to green light contractors in South Australia
Slump in renewable energy certificate prices gathers pace
The day solar became UK’s biggest source of electricity
NSW solar feed-in tariff slashed by 44% for 2018/19
How a hidden fossil fuel subsidy is costing homeowners thousands
Discovering King Tutankhamun's tomb: Harry Burton's photographs
NEG may double carbon price to $35/tonne for industrial sectors
CP Daily: Tuesday July 3, 2018
Reality Check: Fishing after Brexit - sink or swim?
California committee advances RPS increase, 100% clean energy bill to floor vote
As power prices soar, we need a concerted effort to tackle energy poverty
Exomoons: on the hunt for distant worlds
Is this the end of the yellow all-in-one recycling bin?
Commingled bins cause contamination. Is it time to go for separate bins for glass and paper?
It was supposed to be the more efficient solution. Now as governments and local councils search for answers to Australia’s unfolding recycling crisis, the household yellow bin has emerged as both the prime culprit and a potential remedy.
The recycling industry has been in crisis mode since the beginning of the year. On 1 January, China stopped accepting 99% of Australia’s exported recycling due, in part, to their strict new rules on contamination.