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Mackay council goes solar – and saves big – with city-wide rollout
NAB, CBA to provide $80m finance for Crowlands wind farm
Australia’s biggest wind farm project lands connection deal
How physics gender gap starts in the classroom
How physics gender gap starts in the classroom
Talga claims “significant breakthrough” in li-ion battery race
BMW takes EV sales total to 250,000 after bumper April
CP Daily: Wednesday May 16, 2018
Utah legal challenge over California cap-and-trade temporarily suspended
What happens to small towns whose water becomes big business for bottled brands?
ACT brings forward zero emissions target to 2045
Mysterious rise in emissions of ozone-damaging chemical
Mysterious rise in emissions of ozone-damaging chemical
Nordic nations float ITMO trade model with Peru
Washington DC to formally propose carbon tax legislation next month
New York proposes new CO2 standards for older coal plants
EU Market: Failed auction sees EUAs rocket above €15
Mysterious rise in banned ozone-destroying chemical shocks scientists
CFCs have been outlawed for years but researchers have detected new production somewhere in east Asia
A sharp and mysterious rise in emissions of a key ozone-destroying chemical has been detected by scientists, despite its production being banned around the world.
Unless the culprit is found and stopped, the recovery of the ozone layer, which protects life on Earth from damaging UV radiation, could be delayed by a decade. The source of the new emissions has been tracked to east Asia, but finding a more precise location requires further investigation.
Continue reading...Water shortages to be key environmental challenge of the century, Nasa warns
Freshwater supplies have already seriously declined in 19 global hotspots – from China to the Caspian Sea – due to overuse, groundbreaking study shows
Water shortages are likely to be the key environmental challenge of this century, scientists from Nasa have warned, as new data has revealed a drying-out of swaths of the globe between the tropics and the high latitudes, with 19 hotspots where water depletion has been dramatic.
Areas in northern and eastern India, the Middle East, California and Australia are among the hotspots where overuse of water resources has caused a serious decline in the availability of freshwater that is already causing problems. Without strong action by governments to preserve water the situation in these areas is likely to worsen.
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