Feed aggregator
After weathering June bearish test, 2018 EU carbon price rally to continue in H2 -analysts
Starwatch: Hercules visible in summer trip through south-west
Find orange Arcturus and blue-white Vega in the night sky and they will point the way
Track the constellation Hercules as it wheels highs across the summer sky. Although not bright, it has a distinctive shape and can be easily picked out with a little effort.
Continue reading...Sorry, baristas: instant coffee has the smallest carbon footprint (but don't overfill the kettle)
I’m terrified of flying insects – could a twerking bee cure me?
The campaign to save our bees is something we can all get behind, so I decided to face my fears at an urban apiary
You know what really makes a summer? Being besieged by flying insectoid life forms with venomous stingers. As a child, I discovered a wasps’ nest in the shed while trying to retrieve a lawnmower and it didn’t end well. Now a grown man, I’m terrified of anything airborne. The list of things that have triggered freak-outs includes flies, butterflies, poplar fluff and falling leaves, as well as the hair on my own neck. So, I am uncomfortable to be at Black Bee Honey, an apiary in Woodford, east London. I’m here to face my fears by putting my face next to things I’m afraid of: insects with wings and stings.
The company’s co-founder, Chris Barnes, is swinging a smoker around like a Russian Orthodox priest, attempting to pacify the bees, or me. He explains that bees sting only to defend their hive, that stinging a human will kill them, that these bees have been bred to be docile. The thing is, he is wearing a full protective suit, as is everyone else around. “That sounds great,” I say. “But can I wear what you’re wearing? And you mentioned gloves. Where are they?”
Continue reading...Urban wildlife
Many ostensibly rural creatures are thriving in our towns and cities, while adapting to survive
Last week, researchers revealed that bumblebees fare better in urban rather than agricultural environments. City colonies produced more males and reached a larger size, had more food stores and survived longer. They concluded that urban environments provide longer-lived, more varied flowers than intensively farmed agricultural areas.
Continue reading...Think you know how to recycle? Take the quiz
What goes in the blue bin, what goes in the yellow bin, and what do you do with pizza boxes?
Recycling should be straightforward: paper goes in the blue bin; plastics, glass and metal in the yellow bin; dead plants in the green bin and everything else in the red bin – right?
Except it’s not always quite that easy. What do you do with mixed packaging? How do you deal with neighbours doing the wrong thing? And what to do with pizza boxes?
Continue reading...The dirty little secret behind 'clean energy' wood pellets
US communities near pellet mills complain of fumes while experts say burning wood is a ‘disaster’ for climate change
It is touted as a smart way for Europe to reach its renewable energy goals. But try telling Lisa Sanchez thousands of miles away in America that burning wood chips is a form of clean energy.
The bucolic charm of her rural home in the Piney Woods forest region of east Texas is undercut by the big German Pellets manufacturing plant just beyond the bottom of her garden. The German-owned plant is capable of producing 578,000 tons of wood pellets a year, which are destined to cross the Atlantic to satisfy a vibrant market for the product there.
Continue reading...First confirmed sighting of a great white shark off Majorca in 40 years
Country diary: fretting at the bird ledges devoid of guillemots
Castlemartin, Pembroke: I thought about the brutal annihilation of its larger cousin the great auk. But I was worrying needlessly
Ten feet below the top of Mowing Word is a hollowed-out bedding-plane that stretches the whole length of this magnificent limestone cliff. Decades of nesting auks have whitewashed the rock, making their breeding site obvious even from a distance. Though it’s one of the best locations for sea-cliff ascents in Britain, voluntary bans negotiated years ago between naturalists and climbers have generally been scrupulously observed during the razorbill and guillemot breeding seasons. The critical period is during incubation, which generally takes place in June, is short, and concludes with the fledgling guillemot, accompanied by its father, flailing off the ledge to bounce and belly-flop its way to the water below.
Continue reading...Huge personality in a tiny package
Reality Check
CP Daily: Friday June 29, 2018
Colombian Senate passes climate law to deploy ETS, but rollout uncertain
A Big Country 30 June 2018
EU Market: EUAs end week below €15 as record auction supply awaits
Mayday: Weak ambition, Chinese backtracking threaten future of CORSIA global aviation offset scheme
Ex-media boss named as Ontario’s new environment minister
First great white shark in decades spotted near Spain's Balearic Islands
Five-metre shark seen in area’s first confirmed sighting since fisherman caught one in 1976
A great white shark has been spotted near Spain’s Balearic Islands for the first time in at least 30 years.
Conservation workers saw the five-metre predator as it swam across Cabrera archipelago national park on Thursday morning.
Continue reading...Iceland likely to purchase carbon credits to meet 2020 goal -minister
Intermittent approach to renewable energy | Letters
Intermittency – in one word, the main problem facing many (not all) forms of renewable energy; in the UK, principally wind and solar, and now tidal (Hinkley Point C got the go-ahead despite its cost. So why not Swansea Bay? 27 June). So far, electricity from these renewable sources has been in modest amounts, and intermittency has been dealt with (I simplify, but only slightly) by backing-off gas-fired combined cycle (CCGT) plant which, together with nuclear, forms the backbone of the UK electricity generating system. When the wind is not blowing or the sun is not shining, CCGT plant is there to take the strain.
But this simple strategy fails if wind, solar, and now tidal presume to take over this backbone role. Smart metering (affecting consumers’ usage patterns) and international power exchanges can help, but the main action has to come from energy storage and regeneration plant, involving a new infrastructure to supplement hugely the existing pumped storage capability. This is bound to have serious cost implications, and until this is openly acknowledged, direct comparison of projected MWh costs from any intermittent renewable source with corresponding MWh costs from non-intermittent new nuclear generation is fundamentally invalid, and likely to be badly misleading.
Jim Waterton
Glasgow