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Heavy rainfall floods Istanbul Metro – video
Heavy rain in Turkey’s biggest city have caused substantial flooding on its roads and Metro network. Commuters attempting to get to work captured the scenes as rainwater invaded the city’s underground transport system, submerging rail tracks and rushing down flights of stairs. Rainfall is expected to decrease in the next 18 hours
Continue reading...Scottish osprey chicks moved to Spain
Mighty T. rex 'walked rather than sprinted'
California votes to extend cap-and-trade climate law to 2030
Cabinet support for new Home Affairs department
M&S slashes plastic use in food packaging to cut waste
More than 140 products including crisps and popcorn put in smaller, redesigned packets with reduced air pocket, but same amount of food
A major UK supermarket has slashed the amount of packaging used for its popular snacks such as crisps and popcorn by reducing the pocket of air at the top of the bag.
As a result of so-called ‘Project Thin Air’, more than 140 of Marks & Spencer’s best-selling products have been redesigned and repackaged in smaller, less bulky packets containing the same amount of food as before.
Continue reading...Polluted air 'poisoning thousands' across north of England, warns report
Air pollution is ‘the tobacco of the 21st century’ says report, which calls on government to introduce radical measures to improve air quality
Dangerous levels of air pollution in towns and cities across the north of England are threatening the health of hundreds of thousands of people and stifling economic growth, according to a new report.
The analysis by the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) North describes air pollution as “the tobacco of the 21st century” and says that while there has been a growing concern about the problem in London, many residents in regional towns and cities are unaware of the threat to their health.
Continue reading...NSW launches home battery guide, as race to “plug hole” threatens industry
Peer-to-peer electric vehicle charging network launched in Sydney
Meet the thistle propagator-in-chief
Blackwater, Norfolk Pollinated flowers means more plants next year – and more thistles means more bees
After explaining to a visitor the lengths to which I go to encourage marsh and spear thistles on my fen, I was amused to hear her describe the troubles she takes to keep them from her garden. I know they’re prickly customers, but why do people dislike them?
What I cherish most is the sheer architectural grandeur of the summer plant. Each fully open flowerhead has a kind of declarative beauty – a blend of spine-fringed awkwardness and inner sensuous velvet. No wonder nations have hitched their wagons to the thistle’s star-like bloom. Even in autumn, when they are desiccated and devoid of seed floss, and possibly enwrapped in old spider’s web, they retain an aura of dignity.
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