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Welsh home installs UK's first Tesla Powerwall storage battery

The Guardian - Fri, 2016-02-05 19:52

Battery could revolutionise UK energy market by enabling people to store excess energy generated from rooftop solar panels

The setting is decidedly modest: a utility room in a red-brick house at the end of a cul-de-sac in Wales. But if the hype turns out to be right, this may be the starting point for an energy revolution in the UK.

Householder Mark Kerr has become the first British owner of a Tesla Powerwall, a cutting-edge bit of kit that the makers say will provide a “missing link” in solar energy.

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Engage early - indigenous engagement guidelines

Department of the Environment - Fri, 2016-02-05 16:37
Engage early – guidance for proponents on best practice Indigenous engagement for environmental assessments under the EPBC Act 1999 aims to improve how proponents engage and consult Indigenous people during the environmental assessment process...
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The latest science is in: environmental water is benefiting native birds, fish and vegetation

Department of the Environment - Fri, 2016-02-05 11:48
The Commonwealth Environmental Water Holder today released a series of scientific reports analysing the impacts of environmental water during 2014-15, as part of a $30 million investment in monitoring and evaluation projects across the Murray...
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'Arachnophobic family' finds giant huntsman spider in Woolworths salad mix

The Guardian - Fri, 2016-02-05 10:18

Sydney woman posts video on Facebook of spider crawling through her Italian-style packaged salad greens bought at Woolworths

As meat production depletes the world’s resources and compounds the changing climate, eating insects and other creepy crawlies might well be in all our futures. But one Australian woman came closer than the rest of us when she brought home a sizeable spider in her bag of salad greens.

Zoe Perry posted the video of the huntsman shifting around within the “Italian style salad” bag – with the on-screen caption “Jesus” – to Woolworths’ Facebook page on Thursday night.

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DNA sheds light on European upheaval during the Ice Age

ABC Science - Fri, 2016-02-05 08:31
HUMAN MIGRATION: The population of Stone Age Europe underwent a radical transformation toward the end of the last Ice Age, according to a study of ancient DNA.

Ancient wildebeest-like animal had a dinosaur nose

ABC Science - Fri, 2016-02-05 08:24
FUNNY NOSES: An ancient herbivore related to the wildebeest had a bizarre nose that was similar to a dinosaur that lived tens of millions of years earlier, researchers have found.

Why my cycling clothing company uses models without helmets

The Guardian - Thu, 2016-02-04 17:00

The debate about helmet use is too often toxic, puts off new riders and obscures more important issues, argues the founder of Vulpine

Let me begin with a story.

Last night I walked into a pub and spotted a guy with two empty pint glasses in front of him. He had a lovely fresh third pint poised at his trembling lips. Fantastic, just what I was looking for.

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Aboriginal burning had 'little impact' on land erosion

ABC Science - Thu, 2016-02-04 16:47
LAND MANAGEMENT: The use of fire by Aborigines to modify their environment had little if any impact on the natural erosion processes that shaped parts of south-eastern Australia, a new study has found.

Crocodile turns up for a swim on Queensland beach near Cairns – video

The Guardian - Thu, 2016-02-04 11:39

Luke Downes captured this footage of ‘Snapper Jr’ casually floating towards swimmers at Kewarra beach near Cairns. While filming, Downes offered the crocodile a friendly greeting, but Snapper Jr didn’t stick around for long. Never fear, a wildlife expert has claimed that there are worse things in the water to worry about in that part of the world, like box jellyfish, which are capable of killing a person in under five minutes

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AGL pulls out of coal seam gas across Australia, leaving farmers ‘ecstatic’

The Guardian - Thu, 2016-02-04 10:41

Energy company cites low oil prices for decision to cease exploration and wind down or sell its gas fields, with CSG opponents calling the move a well-earned victory

AGL is pulling out of coal seam gas in Australia, ceasing its exploration and winding down or selling its operational gas fields.

Plummeting oil and gas prices were cited by AGL as one of the main reasons for the decision in its announcement to the ASX on Thursday morning, as well as lower than expected production volumes from one of its fields in NSW.

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Secret lives of Great Barrier Reef's bull sharks revealed

ABC Science - Thu, 2016-02-04 08:40
TRAVEL SECRETS: Bull sharks not only spend a lot of time on coral reefs, they can swim surprisingly long distances down Australia's east coast in summer to give birth, radio tracking of sharks on the Great Barrier Reef shows.

Video shows only known wild jaguar in US at home in Arizona mountains

The Guardian - Thu, 2016-02-04 07:31

The big cat, known as ‘El Jefe’, has been living in 25 miles south of downtown Tucson – half a century after the last verified US jaguar was killed by a hunter

The only known wild jaguar in the United States is seen roaming around a creek and other parts of a mountain range just south of Tucson, Arizona in the first publicly released video of the big cat.

Related: Eastern Cougar extinct, no longer needs protection, says US conservation agency

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Brexit would return Britain to being 'dirty man of Europe'

The Guardian - Wed, 2016-02-03 16:00

Leading group of environmentalists warns that leaving the European Union would mean a return to filthy beaches, foul air and weak conservation laws

Britain risks becoming the “dirty man of Europe” again with filthy beaches, foul air and weak conservation laws if it leaves the European Union, a group of leading environmentalists warned on Wednesday.

The steering committee of the new E4E (Environmentalists for Europe) group includes former ministers, a former EU commissioner and a former head of the Environment Agency. It will work with green groups to persuade people that leaving the EU could set back the UK’s nature protection and prevention of pollution many years. The UK’s referendum on EU membership may come as soon as June.

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Hot weather causes zebra finch eggs to hatch earlier than normal

ABC Science - Wed, 2016-02-03 10:42
HOT HOUSE: Very hot weather causes Australian zebra finch eggs to hatch earlier than normal, according to the first study to show how warming temperatures could affect the survival of chicks.

Are you a morning person? It may be in your genes

ABC Science - Wed, 2016-02-03 08:34
GENE SWEEP: Whether we prefer to get up at the crack of dawn or work late into the night may be influenced by genes connected to the circadian rhythm, a new study suggests.

Japanese firm to open world’s first robot-run farm

The Guardian - Tue, 2016-02-02 18:15

Spread says it will open the fully automated farm with robots handling almost every step of the process

A Japanese company is to open the world’s first “robot farm”, as agriculture joins other sectors of the economy in attempting to fill labour shortages created by the country’s rapidly ageing population.

Spread, a vegetable producer, said industrial robots would carry out all but one of the tasks needed to grow the tens of thousands of lettuces it produces each day at its vast indoor farm in Kameoka, Kyoto prefecture, starting from mid-2017.

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The dark side of credit card theft

ABC Science - Tue, 2016-02-02 15:58
GREAT MOMENTS IN SCIENCE: Cybercriminals have set up highly developed businesses in the shady world of the 'dark net'. Dr Karl explains how they make money from stolen credit cards.

World Wetlands Day – Banrock Station wetland to benefit from a well earned drink

Department of the Environment - Tue, 2016-02-02 11:18
Commonwealth Environmental Water Holder first watering event to Banrock Station
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Reef 2050 Policy Guideline for Decision Makers - Open for public consultation

Department of the Environment - Tue, 2016-02-02 09:06
Draft Reef 2050 Policy Guideline for Decision Makers released for public comment. Submissions close Friday 26 February 2016.
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Lions rediscovered in Ethiopian national park

The Guardian - Tue, 2016-02-02 01:16

Local reports were confirmed when a population of previously unknown lions was caught on camera trap in the remote Alatash national park

Conservationists have announced the “amazing discovery” of a previously unknown lion population in a remote north-western region of Ethiopia, confirming local reports with camera trap photographs for the first time.
Lions were spotted in the Alatash national park on Ethiopia’s border with Sudan, lion conservation group Born Free said.
“The confirmation that lions persist in this area is exciting news,” Born Free Foundation said in a statement. “With lion numbers in steep decline across most of the African continent, the discovery of previously unconfirmed populations is hugely important.” Hans Bauer, a lion conservationist from Oxford University who led the tracking expedition in Ethiopia, said there could be up to 200 lions in the area. “Considering the relative ease with which lion signs were observed, it is likely that they are resident throughout Alatash and Dinder [in Sudan],” he said. “On a total surface area of about 10,000 square kilometres, this would mean a population of 100-200 lions for the entire ecosystem, of which 27-54 would be in Alatash,” he said.

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