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Deal on Murray Darling Basin Plan could make history for Indigenous water rights
Cocaine breathalyser 'one step closer'
Revealed: Network Rail's new £800m scheme to remove all 'leaf fall' trees
Exclusive: five-year ‘enhanced clearance’ programme targets trees along 20,000 miles of track to avoid delays, according to an internal document
Network Rail is to target all “leaf fall” trees for removal alongside its tracks in a new £800m five-year programme of “enhanced clearance”, according to an internal document seen by the Guardian.
The policy document for 2019-24 emerged as the environment secretary, Michael Gove, summoned the chief executive of Network Rail for talks over their approach to environmental management following revelations about tree felling across the country by the Guardian.
Continue reading...EU Market: EUAs re-ascend €14 as energy prices rally on US’ Iran deal exit
Lonely asteroid tells solar system story
Brexit to 'force Airbus sat-nav work on Galileo out of UK'
US think-tank launches China green finance centre to push pollution, carbon cuts
Japan’s Softbank, TEPCO back blockchain clean energy trading platform
Global warming is melting Antarctic ice from below | John Abraham
Warming oceans melting Antarctic ice shelves could accelerate sea level rise
We all know intuitively that in a warmer world there will be less ice. And, since the North and South Pole regions contain lots of ice, anyone who wants to see evidence of climate change can look there.
But beyond this simplistic view, things can get pretty complex. First, it’s important to recognize that the Arctic and the Antarctic are very different places. In the Arctic, almost all the ice is floating on water – there is very little land. So, we talk about ‘sea ice’ in the north, formed from frozen sea water. On the other hand, Antarctica is a massive land mass that is covered by ice formed from snowfall (called an ‘ice sheet’). There is some floating ice around the perimeter of the land, but the vast majority of Antarctic ice is on land.
Continue reading...NZ Market: NZUs slip as buyers sit back
Australia boosts offset earning potential for savanna burning projects
EU Climate Policy Intern, European Climate Foundation – Brussels
Zibelman on changing energy market: “Get used to it”
Rat-free: South Georgia's huge rodent eradication project – in pictures
Millions of seabirds saved after remote island is officially declared rodent-free for the first time since humans arrived there more than 200 years ago
Continue reading...Secret UK push to weaken EU climate laws 'completely mad'
Plan to change timeline for energy use reduction puts Paris targets at risk, say MEPS
A secret UK push to weaken key EU climate laws before Brexit risks scotching the bloc’s Paris commitments, MEPs say.
The EU has committed to a 20% cut in its energy use by 2020 to be achieved by two directives, covering energy efficiency and buildings.
Continue reading...SolarReserve may add 70MW solar farm to Port Augusta solar tower
Australia’s big business energy fantasy: Let’s frack like it’s America
Country diary: forget-me-nots have a heart of gold
Wenlock Edge, Shropshire: These delicate flowers are the colour of the far blue yonder, blue remembered hills, into the blue, the beyond, a spiritual eternity
“Is love so prone to change and rot/ We are fain to rear forget-me-not/ By measure in a garden plot?” asked Christina Rossetti (A Bed of Forget-Me-Nots, 1856). The flowers of forget-me-not, Myosotis, may have been reared by measure in a garden plot here, before it was abandoned a hundred years ago and a wood of change, rot and indeed love took over.
Water, creeping, pale, tufted, Jersey, wood, alpine, field, changing and early … forget-me-nots are species of Myosotis belonging to the borage family, famous for their blue flowers; the delicate pale blue of forget-me-not is unique. Some flowers on this plant growing along the path are a brilliant white, too.
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