Feed aggregator
A rule change on transmission losses for wind and solar farms could save billions for consumers
The post A rule change on transmission losses for wind and solar farms could save billions for consumers appeared first on RenewEconomy.
How a long-lost fish species was brought back to Bendigo
UK developer wins approval for third solar and battery project in Australia this year
UK-based company secures planning approval for its third solar and battery project this year.
The post UK developer wins approval for third solar and battery project in Australia this year appeared first on RenewEconomy.
27 new wild swimming sites for England - but are they clean?
27 new wild swimming sites for England - but are they clean?
Australian fossil fuel producer subsidies jump 31 pct to $14.5 billion
The post Australian fossil fuel producer subsidies jump 31 pct to $14.5 billion appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Land grabs for carbon offsetting projects, mostly in Africa, Latin America, threaten global food production -study
More desalination is coming to Australia’s driest states – but super-salty outflows could trash ecosystems and fisheries
Is the Coalition planning to overtake Labor and tax rich inner-city EV drivers? | Paul Karp
The commonwealth had state electrical vehicle taxes struck down in court. Now reform is stuck in the slow lane
Tax reform is hard. It creates winners and losers.
But there are some taxes that seek to correct unfairness and share the load more evenly.
Continue reading...Hope for rare mountain chicken frog thanks to London-born froglets
The man who took on the coal industry to save a forest - and won
Eco-brutalism: when angular concrete meets the wonder of nature – in pictures
On her @brutalistplants Instagram page, Olivia Broome collects photographs that combine the angular shapes of raw concrete with the greenery of the natural world. “I really enjoy the aesthetic of eco-brutalism and tropical modernism,” she says. “I love mezzanines and ziggurats, and when you pair them with plants it softens them up. Brutalism can be this quite harsh, austere architecture style, but with nature involved, it balances it all out.” Now collected in a book, the images bring together buildings from across the globe, from Hong Kong to Sri Lanka, London to Mexico. “It’s a pleasant movement that people can get behind, especially in smaller spaces and modern cities – it’s nice to fill them with plants and nature.”
• Brutalist Plants (Hoxton Mini Press, £20) will be published on Thursday
CF TURKIYE: Steep forward curve for Turkish ETS as permit prices seen tracking EUAs by mid-2030s
Ministers consider making UK’s carbon targets easier to meet
Fears Climate Change Committee’s advice not to allow carryover from last carbon budget will be ignored
Ministers are considering plans to weaken the UK’s carbon-cutting plans by allowing the unused portion of the last carbon budget to be carried over to the next period.
This would go against the strong recommendation of the government’s statutory climate advisers, the Climate Change Committee.
Continue reading...Brutal heatwaves and submerged cities: what a 3C world would look like
Climate scientists have told the Guardian they expect catastrophic levels of global heating. Here’s what that would mean for the planet
- World is on edge of climate abyss, UN warns
- Climate scientists expect global heating to blast past 1.5C target
Global heating is likely to soar past internationally agreed limits, according to a Guardian survey of hundreds of leading climate experts, bringing catastrophic heatwaves, floods and storms.
Only 6% of the respondents thought the 1.5C limit could be achieved, and this would require extraordinarily fast, radical action to halt and reverse the world’s rising emissions from fossil fuel burning.
Continue reading...Island fights back grey squirrel invasion
INTERVIEW: DAC developer launches pilot facility, plans to scale new chemical approach
Virginia lawmakers poised to reach budget deal that excludes rejoining RGGI -media
Compliance players build length across North American carbon markets, speculators book V24 profits
‘Only hope we’ve got’: the audacious plan to genetically engineer Australia’s endangered northern quoll
In a revolutionary approach, scientists are hoping that modifying the marsupial’s genes to resist cane toads’ toxin will save it from extinction
In a laboratory in the University of Melbourne earlier this year, PhD student Pierre Ibri was running an experiment that could prove to be a critical step in an audacious plan to save Australia’s endangered northern quoll.
In plastic trays were groups of tissue cells of another Australian marsupial – the common and mouse-like fat-tailed dunnart – that he was subjecting to the toxin of the cane toad, an invasive amphibian that has cut a swathe through populations of native animals in Australia’s north.
Continue reading...