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Self Sufficiency & Culture: Ross & Nick Harding

Ross Harding:

Founder and Executive Director of Finding Infinity.

Principal of Sustainability of BESTEC Melbourne.

After studying Mechanical Engineering and Finance at the University of Adelaide, Ross snuck off to Sweden thirsty for knowledge. Studying Sustainable Energy Engineering at the Royal Institute of Technology Stockholm, he has been focused on causing trouble in the renewable energy and self sufficiency space every since. Over the past 9 years, Ross has been living & working in Stockholm, Sydney, London, Mexico, Berlin & and recently returned to Melbourne, with a weird and wonderful portfolio of projects in his pocket, ranging from techy consulting projects with internationally renowned architects, to quirky communications campaigns with luxury designer brands & even a few solar powered parties. He has recently returned to Australia to be based in Fitzroy, Melbourne and is focused on self sufficient building design and master planning.

Nick Harding:

Principal of Ha

Nick graduated from the UniSA, with a Bachelor of Architecture in 2003, and registered in Victoria in 2007. He commenced work with acclaimed design practice, John Wardle Architects in 2004, focusing primarily on institutional and residential projects. In his time at JWA Nicholas worked on multiple award winning projects, including UniSA’s Hawke Centre and the Melbourne Grammar Nigel Peck Centre for Learning and Leadership. In 2009 he joined conceptual design practice Herbert & Mason, where he worked on intensive interior focused projects. Since founding Ha in 2011, Nick's focus for the practice has been to undertake community focused design projects, of varying scales.

Cast: AdelaideSBN and ESM

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Product List 2015 - 2016

Department of the Environment - Fri, 2015-06-26 15:40
The Minister for the Environment has published the annual list of classes of products the Minister is proposing to consider, during the next financial year, for some form of accreditation or regulation under the Product Stewardship Act 2011.
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Lamb with jellyfish gene 'may have been deliberately sent to abattoir'

The Guardian - Tue, 2015-06-23 21:04

Lamb genetically modified with jellyfish protein may have been sent from Paris lab to abattoir after dispute between researchers – and ended up on someone’s plate

A lamb born with a jellyfish gene was mistakenly sold for human consumption and probably ended up on someone’s plate, French authorities have said. A dispute between researchers at a highly respected national institute may have been the cause of the animal being deliberately sent to the abattoir last year. Police have now been called in and an inquiry launched into how the lamb could have been passed as fit for human consumption.

Le Parisien newspaper reported that the animal’s mother was a sheep called Emeraude whose DNA had been modified to include a jellyfish gene called Green Fluorescent Protein by researchers at the National Institute for Agronomic Research (INRA) in Paris. Her lamb, Rubis, was born with the gene in the spring of 2014. Although produced for research purposes, Rubis was allegedly deliberately mixed with several other lambs that had not been genetically modified and sent to an abattoir.

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The Earth stands on the brink of its sixth mass extinction and the fault is ours

The Guardian - Mon, 2015-06-22 00:20

The rate at which vertebrate species are dying far exceeds the norm

Life on Earth is in trouble. That much we know. But how bad have things become – and how fast are events moving? How soon, indeed, before the Earth’s biological treasures are trashed, in what will be the sixth great mass extinction event? This is what Gerardo Caballos of the National Autonomous University of Mexico and his colleagues have assessed, in a paper that came out on Friday.

These are extraordinarily difficult questions. There are many millions of species, many elusive and rare, and inhabiting remote and dangerous places. There are too few skilled biologists in the field to keep track of them all. Demonstrating beyond reasonable doubt that any single species is extinct is arduous and painstaking (think how long it took to show – to most people, at least – that Loch Ness probably does not harbour a large monster).

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Humans creating sixth great extinction of animal species, say scientists

The Guardian - Sat, 2015-06-20 04:00

Study reveals rate of extinction for species in the 20th century has been up to 100 times higher than would have been normal without human impact

The modern world is experiencing a “sixth great extinction” of animal species even when the lowest estimates of extinction rates are considered, scientists have warned.

The rate of extinction for species in the 20th century was up to 100 times higher than it would have been without man’s impact, they said.

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You're really spoiling us: has Ferrero been wrongly accused over Nutella?

The Guardian - Fri, 2015-06-19 20:28

Industry observers including Greenpeace have defended the confectionery firm on sourcing sustainable palm oil after a French minister urged citizens to stop buying its spread

It is not often that government ministers urge their citizens to boycott a specific product. But that is just what the French environment minister Ségolène Royal did with Nutella this week – claiming that the palm oil it is made from contributes to deforestation and does “considerable damage” to the environment.

Cue irritation from the Italian company Ferrero that makes the chocolatey spread and a backlash from Royal’s opposite number in Italy. Industry observers including Greenpeace and WWF also leapt to the defence of the company, pointing out that it has in fact led the industry in cleaning up its act and goes much further than most competitors on responsible sourcing of palm oil.

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Western Sydney Dry Rainforest and Moist Woodland on Shale

Department of the Environment - Fri, 2015-06-19 11:06
A guide is now available for this nationally listed critically endangered ecological community.
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US west coast toxic algae bloom might be largest ever, say scientists

The Guardian - Thu, 2015-06-18 03:05

Researchers on NOAA research vessel begin survey of massive toxic algae bloom recorded in region that has led to shutdown of shellfish harvests, reports the Seattle Times

A team of federal biologists set out from Oregon on Monday to survey what could be the largest toxic algae bloom ever recorded off the west coast.

The effects stretch from central California to British Columbia, and possibly as far north as Alaska. Dangerous levels of the natural toxin domoic acid have shut down recreational and commercial shellfish harvests in Washington, Oregon and California this spring, including the lucrative Dungeness crab fishery off Washington’s southern coast and the state’s popular razor-clam season.

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Western Australian Temperate Demersal Gillnet and Demersal Longline Fisheries

Department of the Environment - Wed, 2015-06-17 18:31
Application on ecological sustainability - comments open from 22 June 2015 until 22 July 2015
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Eastern Cougar extinct, no longer needs protection, says US conservation agency

The Guardian - Wed, 2015-06-17 12:44

The US Fish and Wildlife service has called for the eastern cougar to be removed from endangered species list after four-year review confirms their extinction

Eastern cougars that once roamed North America from Canada to South Carolina are extinct and no longer warrant federal Endangered Species Act protections, US wildlife managers have said.

The proposal to remove so-called eastern cougars from the list of endangered and threatened species comes nearly 80 years after the last of those mountain lions was believed to have been trapped and killed in New England, according to the US Fish and Wildlife Service.

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Polar bears eat dolphins as Arctic warms

The Guardian - Fri, 2015-06-12 22:30

Global warming is driving more species further north, scientists say, as polar bears are spotted devouring dolphins for the first time

Norwegian scientists have seen polar bears eating dolphins in the Arctic for the first time ever and blame global warming for the bears expanding their diet.

Polar bears feed mainly on seals but Jon Aars at the Norwegian Polar Institute has photographed dolphins being devoured by a bear and published his findings in the latest edition of Polar Research this month.

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Sustainable Cities through Intentional Communities

Sustainable Cities through Intentional Communities
5th June 2015, Adelaide City Library, Adelaide, South Australia

Host: Ed Wilby- Cofounder, Intentional Communities Australia Alliance
Panellist:
Brett Aylen - Architect, TS4 Architecture
Ken Long - Sustainability Consultant, dsquared Consulting & Chair, Adelaide Sustainable Building Network
Joise McLean - Principle Coach, The Partnership
Phil Donaldson - Founder, SustainSA

This session is also available as a podcast:
soundcloud.com/adelaidesbn/sustainable-cities-through-intentional-communities

Cast: AdelaideSBN and ESM

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Science in Australia's environmental policy

Department of the Environment - Fri, 2015-06-12 17:26
Presentation to the Australian Academy of Science by Dr Gordon de Brouwer, Friday 12 June 2015.
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Review of the Fuel Quality Standards Act 2000

Department of the Environment - Fri, 2015-06-12 16:31
The second review of the Fuel Quality Standard Act 2000 is now underway. Public comments close 24 July 2015.
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Giant great white shark circles diving cage near Guadeloupe – video

The Guardian - Thu, 2015-06-11 23:34
A video posted to social media by Mauricio Hoyos Padilla shows a large great white shark circling a shark-proof diving cage off the coast of Guadalupe. The great white shark can reach 6.4 metres (21ft) in length and 3,324kg (7,328lb) in weight, although the maximum size is subject to debate. The largest great white reliably measured was a six-metre (19.7ft) individual reportedly seen near Western Australia in 1987 Continue reading...
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My generation does give a damn about climate change, says 14-year-old activist

The Guardian - Thu, 2015-06-11 19:33

Xiuhtezcatl Roske-Martinez has been campaigning since he was six. He explains why young people are not afraid to take on the fossil fuel industry

Xiuhtezcatl Roske-Martinez is 14, but has a confidence beyond his years. He carries on his back an organisation that his mother Tamara founded almost 10 years before his birth, created to inspire young people to defend the environment.

Roske-Martinez is its spokesperson, its youth director, and a self-defined eco hip hop artist, activist and change-agent. He raps. He lectures children younger and older than him at schools around the United States. He rallies before state politicians. And he has addressed world leaders in the United Nations.

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Robin wins vote for UK's national bird

The Guardian - Thu, 2015-06-11 07:26

More than 224,000 people cast their ballot in the National Bird Vote with robin taking 34%, followed by barn owl and blackbird, at 12% and 11%

It’s territorial, chippy and punches above its weight – and that’s why Britons have voted for the robin to be the country’s national bird, according to the organiser of a nationwide poll.

More than 224,000 people cast their ballot in the National Bird Vote, organised by “urban birder” David Lindo, which finished on the day of the general election.

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Sea Shepherd agrees $2.55m payment to Japanese whalers for injunction breach

The Guardian - Wed, 2015-06-10 21:19

Radical environmental group does not accept it is in contempt, but agrees payout after getting involved in confrontations with whalers in 2013

A radical environmental group has agreed to pay $2.55m (£1.6m) to Japanese whalers for breaching a US court injunction to stay clear of their vessels in the Antarctic Ocean.

The United States-based Sea Shepherd Conservation Society and former senior officials of the group last week agreed to pay the sum to resolve civil contempt charges against them in the US ninth circuit court of appeals.

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Yellow-breasted buntings 'being eaten to extinction by China'

The Guardian - Tue, 2015-06-09 18:33

Birds once abundant in Europe and Asia could share the same fate as passenger pigeon as they are killed in millions for food

A bird that was once one of the most abundant in Europe and Asia is being hunted to near extinction because of Chinese eating habits, according to a study published on Tuesday.

The population of the yellow-breasted bunting (Emberiza aureola) has plunged by 90% since 1980, all but disappearing from eastern Europe, Japan and large parts of Russia, said the study, published in the Conservation Biology journal.

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Dynamic EcoLibrium registrations open. Can SA go 100% renewable?

Newsletters S.A. - Tue, 2015-06-09 13:00
Dynamic EcoLibrium registrations open. Can SA go 100% renewable?
Categories: Newsletters S.A.

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