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Researchers use AI, satellite images to enhance forest carbon mapping
Global chemical company completes fourth divestiture in sale of methanol business
Warm winters are waking snakes early. Here’s what that means for them and us
Carbon removal platform restructures, appoints CEO
Govt departments need to work better together for success in Article 6, says Ghana
Qatar-based carbon registry announces large issuance to South American renewables project
DATA DIVE: Half of voluntary carbon credits retired this year are at least five years old
Portugal reinstates carbon tax as it seeks EU-recommended emission cuts -media
VCM Report: Market stalls, ICVCM Board failed to meet at the end of August
UK spends £250 mln monthly on electricity imported from Europe -report
LEAK: Poland wants immediate access to free EU ETS allowances for district heating
Draghi report calls for more ‘coherent’ EU climate agenda, focus on energy prices
Japanese eels can escape predators’ stomach through their gills, finds study
Eels use tail-first technique to back up digestive tract of fish towards oesophagus before coming out of gills
It sounds like the plot of a horror movie – a predator swallows its prey only for the creature to burst out of its captor’s body. But it seems Japanese eels do just that.
Scientists in Japan have discovered that when swallowed by a dark sleeper fish, the eels can escape.
Continue reading...Tuesday’s rally for Australian farmers lists seven priorities – but the biggest two are nowhere to be seen | Gabrielle Chan
The last time the National Farmers’ Federation marched on Canberra politicians were carefully controlled. This time the agenda looks more useful for politicians than farmers
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In country circles, WhatsApp groups and emails have been pinging. As Tuesday dawns on the first rally endorsed by the National Farmers’ Federation since 1985, there has been a bit of chat about its merits.
The 1985 rally descended on the Hawke government. It numbered 40,000 to 45,000 people and was duplicated at some state parliaments. In Victoria, according to the journalist Martin Flanagan, 30,000 people protested, holding placards such as “farmer the new poor”, “Agricultural Income Deficiency Syndrome” and, my personal favourite, “wife home working”.
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