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Halogen light bulbs could disappear from Australian stores within two years
Manufacturers will act early on September 2020 ban as LED already the preferred option
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Halogen lights will disappear from Australia within two years, as the industry and federal government pivot towards more efficient and environmentally-friendly LED lighting.
A ban on halogen bulbs, which use four times the energy of LED globes, was announced last month at a meeting of state and federal environment ministers.
Continue reading...Government advisers call for emissions fund to end investment in 'junk credits'
Revealed report finds tens of millions going into projects that don’t create new emissions reductions
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Independent experts advising the Turnbull government have called for changes to the Coalition’s Direct Action climate policy to prevent tens of millions of dollars of public money going to projects that would have gone ahead anyway.
The recommendation is in a review of the $2.55bn emissions reduction fund, the central plank of Direct Action, which pays landowners and companies to avoid emissions or sequester carbon dioxide in plants at the lowest cost. The fund is supposed to support projects that would reduce Australia’s carbon pollution below what it would otherwise have been.
Continue reading...Wild horses and a hemp parade: Sunday's best photos
The Guardian’s picture editors bring you a selection of photo highlights from around the world
Continue reading...We need to clean up our act on roadside pollution | Letters
We must cut through the smog of rhetoric if we are to have clean air. Through deft political sleight of hand, the environment secretary Michael Gove’s defence of what the government is doing to address air pollution (Letters, 24 May) diverts attention from the cause of dirty air in most of our cities: diesel-fuelled vehicles. This risks slowing down the action required to tackle air pollution at a moment when more and more people are becoming aware that it is a serious risk to health in places beyond London.
As city leaders, we are keen to work with ministers to tackle the wider challenges of air pollution, but this requires a government strategy that has cleaner transport at its heart. We need a national framework so that residents and businesses can make the shift as quickly as possible to less polluting ways of moving around.
Continue reading...England could have new national parks in Gove review
England may get more national parks after protected areas review
Fresh look at system prompted by rising population and decline in certain habitats, says Michael Gove
A new wave of national parks could be created after the environment secretary, Michael Gove, announced plans for a review of protected areas.
The review, which will also consider areas of outstanding natural beauty (AONBs), will look at how they can boost wildlife, improve visit access and support the people who live and work there.
Continue reading...Rare birds ‘at risk of poisoning from eating lead shot’
Several rare bird species, including a breed of red-headed duck listed as “vulnerable”, are under threat from lead poisoning linked to shooting, a new report says.
Numbers of common pochard, a duck species at risk of global extinction, have fallen substantially over the past 30 years, a decline partly attributed to the fact that they eat some of the 5,000 tonnes of lead pellets discarded in the countryside by people shooting game, according to the Lead Ammunition Group (LAG).
Continue reading...CWP brings in Partners for 1,300MW of wind, solar and batteries
How cruise ships bring agonising death to last Greek whales
In an office up a steep hill in a seaside suburb of Athens, a tiny blue light flickers from a computer terminal. Dr Alexandros Frantzis, Greece’s foremost oceanographer, points it out. The light, he says, tracks marine traffic “in real time”.
It is key to saving one of the world’s most endangered whale populations.
Continue reading...Gove urged to follow Europe with ban on single-use plastic
The EU is to ban plastic straws, stirrers, cutlery, cotton buds and balloon sticks in a bid to tackle the rising tide of plastic waste, a move that has prompted urgent calls for the environment secretary, Michael Gove, to guarantee that the UK will follow Brussels’ lead after Brexit.
The restrictions on “single-use” plastic will be launched on Monday by the European commission as part of its plan to ensure that 55% of all plastic is recycled by 2030. About 80-85% of all litter in the oceans is plastic, and half of that is made up of throw-away items such as plastic straws.
Continue reading...Alan Bean, moon-walking astronaut and artist, dies aged 86
CRISPR co-inventor Jennifer Doudna, and debating the ethics of gene editing
England could get new national parks as Gove launches review
Hawaii volcano: How many people do volcanoes kill?
Hawaii volcano: How many people do volcanoes actually kill?
Alan Bean, moon-walking astronaut and artist, dies aged 86
‘Going to get worse’: red fire ants detected in Queensland's Scenic Rim
Pests could cost the state in billions if the spread continues, Invasive Species Council warns
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One of the world’s worst invasive pests, red fire ants, have been detected outside a containment zone in Queensland’s Scenic Rim.
The ants, destroyers of crops and harbingers of doom for many common forms of outdoor recreation, are considered a potential $45b problem should they ever become widely established in Queensland.
Continue reading...Venturing to a breakaway iceberg
Tree-sitters put their lives in the balance to foil Appalachian pipeline
In the hills on the border of Virginia and West Virginia protesters – mainly women – are defying police and energy companies in non-violent environmental activism
Way out in the Appalachian hills, on the line between Virginia and West Virginia, after an hour-long backwoods hike up Peters Mountain, an orderly clutch of tents were surrounded by a plastic yellow ribbon that read, “police line do not cross”.
Past that, a woman sat on top of a 50ft pole.
Continue reading...Country diary: mystery of the walled 'rooms' deep in the wood
Mike’s Wood, River Kent, Cumbria: There are dozens of black gates along the valley, marking the route of the Thirlmere to Manchester aqueduct
Like little beacons among the hazel trees, stitchwort flowers lead me onwards towards the enclosure. There is always a moment, before passing through the black gate into this woodland “room”, of wondering about the motives for creating a separate space within the wood. The deeply mossed encircling wall strides over the crags and boulders of precipitous ground – a fine exemplar of the drystone-waller’s art. But why an enclosure here?
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