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Bringing power to the Daintree

ABC Environment - Wed, 2019-05-08 07:52
This week, the Coalition, followed quickly by Labor, promised $1 million to help develop a hydrogen powered micro-grid north of the Daintree River — but does the project stack up?
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California forestry offsets vastly overstate emission reductions, report finds

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2019-05-08 07:14
California’s forestry offset protocol inflates the amount of emission reductions that have occurred due to inaccurate assumptions built into the methodology, an academic report published Tuesday has shown in findings disputed as flawed by the state’s carbon market regulator and project developers.
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I've always wondered: are water crystals bad for the environment?

The Conversation - Wed, 2019-05-08 06:03
Water crystals help drought-proof plants. But these tiny polymers are leaving gardeners concerned. Michelle Ryan, Lecturer - Environmental Health and Management, Western Sydney University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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EU Market: EUAs climb above €26 to recover from post-compliance slump

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2019-05-08 05:37
EUAs rose by more than a euro on Tuesday as prices reversed post-compliance losses amid higher gas prices, with traders predicting renewed supply tightness on expectations that industrials will hoard more of their newly-obtained allocations.
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Pilot Dave Mackay on becoming the first Scot in space

BBC - Wed, 2019-05-08 03:29
In February Dave Mackay guided Virgin Galactic's space craft to almost 56 miles (90km) above earth.
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Raise taxes on firms that harm nature, OECD tells G7 countries

The Guardian - Wed, 2019-05-08 02:00

Report calls for change of priorities and culture to avert catastrophic biodiversity loss

Governments need to ramp up investment in nature restoration and raise the tax burden on companies that degrade wildlife, according to recommendations made to the G7 group of rich nations.

The proposals are part of a growing debate on how to radically change humanity’s relationship with nature in the wake of a new UN mega-report that showed an alarming decline in the Earth’s life-support systems.

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US climate objections sink Arctic Council accord in Finland

BBC - Wed, 2019-05-08 00:15
There is no joint declaration by Arctic nations as the US criticises climate change wording.
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Small tyrannosaur 'was cousin of T. rex'

BBC - Tue, 2019-05-07 22:50
A 92-million-year-old dinosaur provides evolutionary insights on the evolution of the tyrannosaurs.
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Live export: Secret footage shows young calves being beaten and kicked

The Guardian - Tue, 2019-05-07 21:52

Undercover footage by activists has exposed brutal treatment for one batch of young calves being trucked to the Netherlands to be sold as veal

Irish calves as young as two weeks old are being beaten, kicked and punched, according to secretly filmed footage.

Campaigners followed more than 5,000 calves on 23 livestock trucks from Ireland to the French control post at Tollevast, where animals are supposed to find rest and feed under EU laws.

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How fireflies inspired energy-efficient lights

BBC - Tue, 2019-05-07 19:57
Studying fireflies helped scientists increase light extraction in LEDs by more than 50%
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Cambridge University agrees to explore fossil fuel divestment plan

The Guardian - Tue, 2019-05-07 19:46

Ex-archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams welcomes plans for fully costed proposals

The former archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams has welcomed an “urgent change” by Cambridge University, after it agreed to provide fully costed plans setting out how it could divest multibillion-pound endowments from fossil fuel corporations.

The university’s management accepted a motion, known as a grace, which urged Cambridge to “set out fully the advantages and disadvantages, including the social and political ones”, of divestment from global coal, oil and gas companies.

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Beijing delays ETS compliance deadline amid registry update

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2019-05-07 19:00
The Beijing municipal government has pushed back the annual compliance deadline for its emissions trading scheme by a month after partly shutting down the allowance registry for an upgrade.
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UN environment warning: 10 key points and what Australia must do

The Guardian - Tue, 2019-05-07 18:59

From native species to Indigenous land management and water efficiency: Australia’s role in the extinction crisis

A devastating new UN report shows the planet is in serious danger from the accelerating decline of the Earth’s natural life-support systems. Here we look at 10 of the key points from the report – and their relevance for Australia.

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Grand Theft Europe: Pan-European investigation lifts lid on EU ETS tax fraud

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2019-05-07 18:46
German non-profit media organisation CORRECTIV has coordinated 35 newsrooms across Europe to open the lid on the €5 billion carousel fraud that shook the EU carbon market to its core nearly a decade ago, finding that tax authorities are still pursuing or have reached settlements with a number of major investment banks and brokers.
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British bluebells 'have advantage over Spanish bluebells'

BBC - Tue, 2019-05-07 17:08
There had been fears the plant could go extinct, after a Spanish variety escaped into the wild.
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Adani refuses to commit to size of 'scaled-down' Carmichael coalmine

The Guardian - Tue, 2019-05-07 16:19

Exclusive: Company pursues approvals based on original plans for 60m-tonne megamine

Adani has refused to commit to the size of its “scaled-down” Carmichael coal project and is still pursuing final approvals based on plans for a 60m-tonne megamine in central Queensland.

The Queensland government has confirmed that while Adani announced last year it intended to build a much smaller mine, the Indian company has filed no formal plans on that basis.

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Why Adani's finch plan was rejected, and what comes next

The Conversation - Tue, 2019-05-07 15:56
A small finch has stalled the multi-million-dollar Carmichael mine. Samantha Hepburn, Director of the Centre for Energy and Natural Resources Law, Deakin Law School, Deakin University April Reside, Researcher, Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science, The University of Queensland Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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RenewEconomy hits 40 million milestone, expands reporting team

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2019-05-07 15:22

RenewEconomy reaches a significant milestone, and announces the addition of Michael Mazengarb to the reporting team.

The post RenewEconomy hits 40 million milestone, expands reporting team appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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ESB releases design for retailer reliability obligation – will half a NEG cut it?

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2019-05-07 15:04

ESB releases proposed amendments to the National Electricity Rules for the implementation of the Retailer Reliability Obligation. Is half a NEG better than none at all?

The post ESB releases design for retailer reliability obligation – will half a NEG cut it? appeared first on RenewEconomy.

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The price of plenty: how beef changed America

The Guardian - Tue, 2019-05-07 15:00

Exploitation and predatory pricing drove the transformation of the US beef industry – and created the model for modern agribusiness. By Joshua Specht

The meatpacking mogul Jonathan Ogden Armour could not abide socialist agitators. It was 1906, and Upton Sinclair had just published The Jungle, an explosive novel revealing the grim underside of the American meatpacking industry. Sinclair’s book told the tale of an immigrant family’s toil in Chicago’s slaughterhouses, tracing the family’s physical, financial and emotional collapse. The Jungle was not Armour’s only concern. The year before, the journalist Charles Edward Russell’s book The Greatest Trust in the World had detailed the greed and exploitation of a packing industry that came to the American dining table “three times a day … and extorts its tribute”.

In response to these attacks, Armour, head of the enormous Chicago-based meatpacking firm Armour & Co, took to the Saturday Evening Post to defend himself and his industry. Where critics saw filth, corruption and exploitation, Armour saw cleanliness, fairness and efficiency. If it were not for “the professional agitators of the country”, he claimed, the nation would be free to enjoy an abundance of delicious and affordable meat.

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