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JinkoSolar reveals all-New 410W Cheetah Series at SNEC 2018, erecting new standard in ultra high performance modules
Risen Energy starts construction of Yarranlea Solar Farm in May
New motor neurone brace makes 'substantial difference'
Canada to nationalise pipeline project, in another possible challenge to country’s GHG goals
Whale rescue operation resumes at Bondi
Quebec fund hires developers Camco to manage, grow its US methane offset portfolio
Energy Aspects ups EUA price forecasts again, but points to rising correction risk
Program Manager, Nordic Development Fund – Helsinki
Intern, Programme Management, GGGI – Seoul
Junior Climate Risk and Adaptation Consultant, Atkins – Peterborough/Oxford/Epsom/London
Senior International Climate Change Adaptation Consultant, Atkins – Peterborough/Oxford/Epsom/London
International Specialists (x2), National Forest Monitoring Systems, FAO – Equatorial Guinea
Technical Specialist, Climate Change and GCF Programme Support, FAO – Equatorial Guinea
Emitters again took home bulk of German auctioned EUAs in April -report
Butterflywatch: here come the skippers in the May parade
Newly reintroduced chequered skippers are fluttering about Rockingham forest as other butterflies emerge in the sunlight
Butterfly lovers’ emotions tend to boom and bust like butterfly populations. Two weeks of sunshine in my part of the world and my heart’s lifted by plentiful orange tips, small whites and brimstones, while last summer’s peacocks gamely fly on. Alongside a decent abundance of common species there’s the exciting addition of 41 chequered skippers from the continent, now enjoying the warm glades of Rockingham forest, Northamptonshire.
The chequered skippers – males and females collected in Belgium – have been reintroduced as part of the Back from the Brink project, after the species became extinct in England following the hot summer of 1976. (A similar summer would be too dry for this species’ caterpillars, which need moisture to survive.)
Continue reading...Executive Assistant, Energy Innovation – San Francisco
Why blowing the 1.5C global warming goal will leave poor tropical nations sweating most of all
EU Market: EUAs extend 7-yr high as bull-run persists despite bigger supply ahead
Canada’s Nunavut could cut emissions by 4.5% with federal carbon price -report
Endangered hawksbill turtles tracked in marine park to be opened to fishing
Data confirms that reptiles use Coral Sea as a highway between their nesting beaches and feeding grounds
Critically endangered hawksbill turtles that nest on islands east of Papua New Guinea have been tracked moving across parts of the Coral Sea marine park where the Australian government wants to allow commercial fishing, conservationists have found.
Nine of the turtles were tagged at the privately owned Conflict Islands in early January, with seven swimming across the Coral Sea to the Great Barrier Reef to feed.
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