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'Feel good' factor not CO2 boosts global forest expansion
More of the Great Australian Bight opened to oil and gas
Government releases new acreages for offshore exploration as protesters oppose drilling
The government has released a new acreage for offshore oil and gas exploration in the Great Australian Bight that green groups says should have been kept off limits after it was cancelled by BP.
The permit is one of two that BP cancelled after the company abandoned its plans for oil and gas drilling in the bight in 2016. Its remaining two permits were sold to the Norwegian oil and gas multinational Statoil.
Continue reading...Energy retailer “switching” driving prices up, not down, says regulator
Country diary: this cute creature is a cold killer
Aigas, Highlands: The pine marten brought a touch of night in its sharp black muzzle and in the big silent dark-stockinged feet
For more than 90 minutes we’d sat until cold air quieted the wood and the day thinned into the long shadows of the trees. By 10.30pm we were centred in an arc of artificial lamp glow. There was just the sound of a last robin across the loch, its spindly song an analogue for the vanishing day.
The silent theatricality of the moment was thus complete when the creature strolled into our vision without the merest hint of drama. Its step was sprightly, its acceptance of the lamp instantaneous. It brought a touch of night in its sharp black muzzle and in the big silent dark-stockinged feet – and every now and then it paused from eating to stare hard at its own route through the trees, reassuring itself of solitude – but otherwise we were all at ease with the mutual encounter. For 10 minutes there were no sounds but the crunch of nut and the click of camera.
Continue reading...Know your NEM: Firming output in South Australia
Australia’s biggest solar farm switches on in Port Augusta
To get conservative climate contrarians to really listen, try speaking their language
Queensland’s biggest solar farm connects to the grid
Why are whales so big?
Putting a stop to energy discounting that leaves consumers worse off
Corporations to lead charge into wind, solar and storage
Energy Regulator to put networks under the microscope
CP Daily: Monday May 14, 2018
Virginia’s Dominion Energy plans to throttle biomass power
Various Roles, Verra (VCS) – Washington DC
CO2 emissions from burgeoning ‘South-South’ trade may threaten climate goals -study
How do Queensland's land clearing laws impact farming profits?
EU Market: EUAs claw back losses after weak auction, as weekly sale supply triples
Nova Scotia joins WCI to tap technical expertise
Millennials are making frozen food hot again, but can they stop killing everything else?
Frozen food is the latest industry millennials have been credited with saving. But it’s too late for gum, soap and thongs
Frozen food is super hot right now. According to David Palmer, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets, sales volumes have grown for the first time in five years. And millennials are largely responsible for this, spending 9% more per shopping trip for frozen foods last year than other groups, according to Reuters.
So why are millennials, a supposedly foodie generation, buying so many frozen meals? Well, largely because it’s convenient. “The average millennial doesn’t have time to make a full meal with fresh meat and produce, a Euromonitor analyst explained. “More and more they’re seeing these products as viable options.”
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