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Country diary: new snow lay on wings of fungi
Wenlock Edge, Shropshire: The one-step-forward-two-steps-back dance between winter and spring had time yet but many of the animals and plants had not
Overnight snow left anonymous gifts. Frost and a chill wind through the trees hardened what remained of the snowfall as the weather moved on, to leave a scattering of unopened envelopes. Snow on fungi: there was something very symbolic about these two kinds of ephemeral structures. The Armilaria fungi living in the rotten stump of a tree may have been what killed it. The fruiting bodies of russet flesh that bloomed from fibrous mycelium, forming a circuit between tree cells and a kind of organic afterlife in the soil, were now holding a frozen package of snow.
After days of sogginess with bright moments, the return of snow felt revenant. It was too clear and pure, even in its fleetingness. In Among the Summer Snows, Christopher Nicholson talked about the literary obsession with the whiteness of snow and quoted Shakespeare when Juliet declares that Romeo “wilt lie upon the wings of night/ Whiter than new snow on a raven’s back”. Love transcends death, or something.
Continue reading...If a regulator needs to go, it should be AEMC, not AEMO
Equis gets finance for 127MW solar farm in South Australia
Battery storage leaves fossil fuels and regulators in state of inertia
11 takeaways from the draft UN report on a 1.5C global warming limit
Carnegie’s EMC wins tender to build solar farm in NSW “coal city”
Queensland accepts court block on New Acland coalmine expansion
The state government refuses to provide an environmental licence to allow New Hope to expand mining to the Darling Downs
The Queensland government has accepted a landmark land and environment court ruling from last year and refused to provide an environmental licence to the New Acland coalmine extension.
Following the longest case in the court’s history, a judge last year recommended against New Hope’s plans to expand the mine into prime agricultural land on Queensland’s Darling Downs, primarily over concerns about impacts on groundwater supplies, but also on air quality and noise.
Continue reading...Is Perth really running out of water? Well, yes and no
Risen Energy buys 120MW solar project near Toowoomba
Solar plus storage beats out “cheap” gas to serve evening peaks
$476,000 grant to fast-track Australia;s first straw- fuelled power plant
Tesla spells out why markets are failing battery storage, big and small
Valentine's Day chocolates may not be the greenest way to show your love
New report links the growing global demand for cocoa to deforestation in Asia and Africa
A box of chocolates may not be the most environmentally friendly way to show your love this Valentine’s Day, a report published today claims.
The cocoa in chocolate products is probably driving deforestation across the globe, according to new research by the environmental campaigning organisation Mighty Earth.
Continue reading...Birdwatch: 'That is not a yellow wagtail'
If there was a prize for most unsuitable British bird name, grey wagtail would win hands down
My heart sinks as I hear for the umpteenth time “I’ve just seen a yellow wagtail” and I explain that, although the bird was indeed a wagtail, and did sport a flash of lemon-yellow beneath the tail, it was in fact a grey wagtail.
I reflect, not for the first time, that if there was a prize for most unsuitable British bird name, the grey wagtail would win hands down.
Continue reading...BBC to ban single-use plastics by 2020 after Blue Planet II
BBC aims to be free of single-use plastics across all operations by 2020
Decision follows the corporation’s landmark series Blue Planet II, which highlighted plastic pollution in the oceans
The BBC will ban single-use plastics from its operations by 2020, in the wake of its landmark series Blue Planet II which highlighted plastic pollution in the oceans.
Plastic cups and cutlery will be removed across BBC sites by the end of 2018, ending the use of around 2m plastic cups used by visitors and staff each year, the corporation said.
Continue reading...Genes remain active after death
'Incongruous': species funding in the most unlikely places
The government is providing $237m to projects it says will benefit threatened species – yet there is little chance the species actually occur at those sites
The Polly Woodside, a three-masted historic cargo ship built in 1885, is a prominent feature of Melbourne’s south wharf. It’s a site for tour groups, birthday parties, and an event known as pirate day held on the first Sunday of every month.
According to the federal government, the vessel has also been the location for some of its $255m worth of work protecting threatened species since the appointment of Australia’s first threatened species commissioner in 2014.
Continue reading...The life below the Brisbane River
Express delivery: use drones not trucks to cut carbon emissions, experts say
Research shows drones can deliver certain items faster and with less environmental impact than trucks – but there are drawbacks
Drones invoke varying perceptions, from fun gadget to fly in the park to deadly military weapons. In the future, they may even be viewed as a handy tool in the battle to fight climate change.
Greenhouse gas emissions from the transport of goods could be cut if drones replace trucks in some instances, researchers have found, providing an environmental edge to the push by companies such as Amazon and Google to expand drone deliveries.
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