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When coral dies, tiny invertebrates boom. This could dramatically change the food web on the Great Barrier Reef
A bee: before it dies, its mouth opens and closes, kissing the ground | Helen Sullivan
Its favourite thing to do is to crawl inside a flower, where petals turn light pink, yellow or red
A small girl is eating ice cream. She is at a lake, “Zoo Lake”, in the middle of a city. People who live nearby hear the Zoo’s lions roaring at night. (A world and a century away, in Innisfree, Yeats lives “alone in the bee-loud glade”.)
The principal activities at this lake are learning to ride bikes, riding bikes, and walking. Ice-cream sellers pedal their cooler boxes round and round the water. Bees hover over the rubbish bins full of ice-cream wrappers.
Continue reading...The Guardian view on the way we eat: do as Dimbleby says | Editorial
It is disappointing but not surprising that the PM appears uninterested in plans to make people healthier
The businessman Henry Dimbleby, who co-founded the Leon restaurant chain and led a review of school food, has taken the opportunity given to him two years ago by the then environment secretary, Michael Gove, and run with it. The national food strategy published on Thursday is a genuinely bold attempt to solve a hard problem: how to stop ruining our nation’s health with junk food at the same time as cutting greenhouse gas emissions from food production. Taking one of its first quotations from the biologist Edward O Wilson, the report leaps with both feet into complex questions about human societies, agriculture and ecosystems pushed to the brink of disaster.
The strategy draws on some citizens’ assembly-type research and interviews with people in all parts of the food system, as well as existing knowledge. It digests insights from the team behind the landmark Limits to Growth report from half a century ago, and recent work on the value of nature, commissioned by the Treasury, from the economist Partha Dasgupta.
Continue reading...Scientists dismiss Warren Entsch’s claim warm water from northern hemisphere is damaging reef
Coalition’s Great Barrier Reef envoy also said Australia was a ‘victim of our own success’ when it came to coral bleaching
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Coral and ocean scientists have described statements on coral bleaching from the government’s reef envoy, Warren Entsch, as “far-fetched” and “ill-informed” on the day he accompanied more than a dozen ambassadors on a snorkelling trip to the Great Barrier Reef.
Entsch told the ABC on Thursday warm water originating in the northern hemisphere and flowing across the Pacific to the reef was a chief cause of mass coral bleaching.
Continue reading...‘Not engaging isn’t the answer’: Australia under pressure as US follows EU lead on carbon tariffs
Experts and opposition MPs say Australia should work with Europe on new imports scheme instead of criticising
Australia is facing growing pressure over its climate policies as the US edges closer to following the European Union in imposing new charges on imports of emissions-intensive products.
The trade minister, Dan Tehan, has criticised the EU’s new carbon tariffs, saying they are revenue raising and will undermine free trade. But Labor declared the Morrison government had its “head in the sand” and was “completely isolated” on the world stage as more countries consider such tariffs.
Continue reading...Blue Origin: Teenager to fly into space with Jeff Bezos
Delta Air Lines won’t “spend good cash” chasing RIN prices -CEO
‘Fit for 55’ timeline for EU carbon market reform concerns experts
UPDATE – Poland, Germany anticipating later start to 2021 free EUA allocations
European Markets Midday Brief
Spain calls for price intervention on EU carbon market, questions new system for transport and buildings
Harvard represents reason and science. So why hasn’t it divested from fossil fuels yet? | Kim Heacox
At $42bn, the Harvard endowment exceeds the combined monetary value of many small countries. But it stubbornly refuses to speed up divestment
On display in every corner of the Harvard University campus, carved in stone, students find a shield with three books and the inscribed school motto: “Veritas.” Latin for truth.
Ah yes, truth.
Continue reading...Australia Market Roundup: Govt protests EU CBAM move, while offset issuances fall back to average levels
UPDATE – China confirms national ETS launch on July 16
Explainer: How offshore floating wind farms work
Floating offshore wind farms are becoming a commercial technology, but there are still technical challenges that need to be solved.
The post Explainer: How offshore floating wind farms work appeared first on RenewEconomy.
National Food Strategy: Tax sugar and salt and prescribe veg, report says
Climate change: 'No more excuses' at COP26 climate summit - poor nations
The UK won’t meet its ambitious climate goals by making spending cuts | Larry Elliott
Boris Johnson may talk a good game on the climate crisis, but ordinary people need financial support to make changes
There are many reasons why the government’s decision to cut the aid budget is dumb. High among them is the failure to see the link between poverty and climate change. If you want to convince people of the need to save the planet, it is a good idea to make sure first that they are not going hungry, have access to running water and can put their children through school.
The link between social justice and the green agenda applies domestically as well. Millions of people in Britain count the pennies each week because they are struggling to get by. Exhorting them to change their lifestyles or pay more to heat their homes is not enough. If the government is to meet its ambitious targets people who are less well-off are going to need plenty of help, but as things stand they are not getting it.
Continue reading...Former Rio Tinto exec joins ARENA board, CEO Miller gets three more years
ARENA CEO Darren Miller reappointed for another three years, as Taylor names former Rio Tinto executive to the board.
The post Former Rio Tinto exec joins ARENA board, CEO Miller gets three more years appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Pitt labels AEMO’s 100pct renewables prediction “absolute nonsense”
AEMO's plan to make the grid ready for 100 pct renewables by 2025 has not gone down well with the federal Coalition government.
The post Pitt labels AEMO’s 100pct renewables prediction “absolute nonsense” appeared first on RenewEconomy.