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ARENA is down – but not out
One in 10 UK wildlife species faces extinction, major report shows
State of Nature reveals the destructive impact of intensive farming, urbanisation and climate change on plants, animals and habitats
More than one in 10 of the UK’s wildlife species are threatened with extinction and the numbers of the nation’s most endangered creatures have plummeted by two-thirds since 1970, according to a major report.
The abundance of all wildlife has also fallen, with one in six animals, birds, fish and plants having been lost, the State of Nature report found.
Continue reading...2016 State of Nature report: wildlife winners and losers - in pictures
The UK is among the most nature-depleted countries in the world, according to a major report from more than 50 conservation groups. More than one in 10 species is threatened with extinction - but some are making a comeback
Continue reading...Japan's Sakurajima volcano due for major eruption within 30 years, say scientists
Myth of gas; has South Australia capitulated to fossil fuels?
A tide is turning for the swallows
Wenlock Edge What determines that moment when they can stay no longer, when, come hell or high water, it’s time to go?
Like clothes pegs on a washing line the swallows are still, perching on the electricity cables. For once, since they arrived in spring, they have to stop, even in daylight. What they are pegging on the line between them is an invisible sheet, a map of their endless journey, north and south.
They pause. Seconds ago they were skimming at breakneck speed inches above the grass, the slightest error likely to be their last. Yet the excitement seems to embolden them, to give them heart.
Continue reading...NSW community solar “bulk buy” aims to put 1MW on local homes, business
WA farm taps vanadium flow battery storage, solar – an Australian first
Military experts say climate change poses 'significant risk' to security
A coalition of 25 prominent members of US national security community warn that higher temperatures and rising seas will inundate bases and fuel conflict
A coalition of 25 military and national security experts, including former advisers to Ronald Reagan and George W Bush, has warned that climate change poses a “significant risk to US national security and international security” that requires more attention from the US federal government.
The prominent members of the US national security community warned that warming temperatures and rising seas will increasingly inundate military bases and fuel international conflict and mass migration, leading to “significant and direct risks to US military readiness, operations and strategy”.
Continue reading...Nature is being renamed ‘natural capital’ – but is it really the planet that will profit?
Ingeteam achieves UL1741 compliance for the new 1500 Vdc Central Inverter Product line
72 Hours in Alice Springs
Alice Springs is the capital of Australia’s Red Centre, and the perfect base for exploring the vast, rich expanse at the heart of this country. The town sits at the foot of a long mountain range, along the edge of the - usually dry - Todd River. Keep an eye on it if there’s rain - as the tale goes, you’re a local once you’ve seen it flow three times. Self-driving is the best way to visit this region
6am
Continue reading...72 hours in Darwin
Australia’s northernmost capital city is closer to Singapore than Sydney, and a visit to Darwin is a heady mix of Southeast Asia and quintessential Australia. Steamy tropical weather, fascinating military and colonial history, and the friendly, multicultural community make this a holiday far from home
9am
Continue reading...Vattenfall’s bid cuts offshore wind cost ‘faster than expected’
Turnbull marks 1st anniversary with act of clean energy vandalism
Beautiful and mathematical: Football as a numbers game
National eNews - Transition strategies for energy, AGM, and Carbon neutral information sessions
Nature loss linked to farming intensity
Debunking Malcolm Roberts: the case against a climate science denier
The One Nation senator dismisses the conventional scientific view of climate change. Here are the holes in his most commonly deployed arguments
The election of Malcolm Roberts as a One Nation senator has put Australia’s media in a difficult spot.
In his first speech to Parliament on Tuesday, Roberts made many false claims about climate change. He said that climate change was a “scam” and implied that it was some sort of conspiracy between all the major international research agencies. “ ... there is no data proving human use of hydro-carbon fuels affects climate,” he said.
Continue reading...Nasa scans Great Barrier Reef to find answers to coral's poor health
Impetus for the new survey came from analysis that could not find clear link between reef health and human impacts
Scientists working on a Nasa-led project are scanning large swathes of the Great Barrier Reef as part of the biggest assessment of the world’s coral reefs ever undertaken.
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