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Queensland East Coast Spanish Mackerel Fishery - Agency application 2017

Department of the Environment - Mon, 2017-04-03 16:16
Application for assessment under the EPBC Act - call for public comments open 6 April 2017 to 26 May 2017
Categories: Around The Web

Thousands of birds flock to Australia's inland lakes after record rain

The Guardian - Mon, 2017-04-03 15:57

The influx includes a newly discovered breeding colony of the nomadic and somewhat mysterious banded stilt

Tens of thousands of coastal birds have flocked to the outback after record-breaking rains filled inland lakes to their highest levels in three decades.

The influx includes a newly discovered breeding colony of the nomadic and somewhat mysterious banded stilts, on one of the lakes’ islands in the remote eastern Pilbara region of Western Australia.

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Categories: Around The Web

Birds flock to Australian outback after torrential rains fill inland lakes – video

The Guardian - Mon, 2017-04-03 15:44

Parks and Wildlife and Indigenous land and ranger groups have observed huge numbers of birds, including the mysterious banded stilt, flocking to inland lakes to breed after record-breaking rain events in Australia’s desert regions

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Categories: Around The Web

Ineos leads industry lobbying effort to avoid paying green tax

The Guardian - Mon, 2017-04-03 15:30

Chemicals firm is using Brexit as a chance to seek further exemptions from climate policy costs

Anglo-Swiss chemicals firm Ineos is privately leading an industry lobbying attempt to avoid paying for the cost of decarbonising Britain’s economy.

Documents released under freedom of information rules reveal that Ineos is pushing the government to use Brexit as a chance to exempt the chemicals sector entirely from climate policy costs.

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Sumatran elephants: a fragile future – in pictures

The Guardian - Mon, 2017-04-03 15:20

These powerful, and at times graphic, images bear witness to the plight of critically endangered Sumatran elephants and the challenges they face. These include the conversion of forest habitat to oil palm plantations, degradation of forest habitat by illegal logging, conflicts with farmers through crop-raiding, and being illegally hunted for their ivory tusks. While the situation is dire, the camera’s lens also finds hope in the efforts of those working to safeguard the animal’s future

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Categories: Around The Web

Why the IEA still gets it wrong on fossil fuels

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2017-04-03 15:03
The IEA is using unrealistic assumptions about emissions and CCS to keep coal and oil in the picture.
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New technologies shrink wastewater’s carbon footprint

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2017-04-03 15:00
Wastewater treatment plants are energy hogs. But a number of new technologies are promising to change this.
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The 2015–16 National Pollutant Inventory Data is now available

Department of the Environment - Mon, 2017-04-03 14:53
For the first time since its inception, the NPI data is also available as a public dataset on data.gov.au. ...
Categories: Around The Web

Flickers of movement where no plane flies

The Guardian - Mon, 2017-04-03 14:30

Manchester airport A grounded traveller is distracted by the pied wagtails swarming over the terminal roof

The storm has mostly moved over, but its trailing coat still ruffles the air outside Terminal 1 of Manchester airport, and the backlog of cancelled and delayed flights testifies to its handiwork. With an unexpected three hours to kill, I leave the terminal by way of a first-floor access road, as the dregs of the day drain from the oppressively blank sky.

I am braced for boredom, but an incongruous flicker of movement stops me in my tracks. The sheer brazenness of the small, energetic bird as it hops around on the asphalt is startling but, before I can contemplate it further, another bird bouncing along a railing distracts my eye. Another, then another, and, before I know it, my eyes are attempting to join 200 or more restless black and white dots, each one a point of elusive energy that seems to flee my gaze just before I can settle on it.

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Know your NEM: We survived a few days without Hazelwood

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2017-04-03 14:18
It's hard to imagine that even a satire writer could write such a stupid script as the government's recent energy policy announcements.
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LG steps up to efficiency challenge with the new NeON solar panel

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2017-04-03 13:32
LG Electronics is further investing in Australia’s solar market through the introduction of the LG NeON® R solar panel.
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Battery storage already competitive with pumped hydro, says ARENA

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2017-04-03 11:22
ARENA says battery storage as cheap as pumped hydro - for smaller storage projects. But both will be needed in a high renewable grid.
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Sci-fi forest tracks carbon impact

BBC - Mon, 2017-04-03 11:07
Scientists dose trees with atmosphere of the future to see how much they can swallow.
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Scientists mobilise against 'fear of facts' in age of Trump

BBC - Mon, 2017-04-03 10:46
Scientists are learning even if you ignore politics, politics won't ignore you.
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Australian big solar PPAs heading to $75/MWh, says ARENA

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2017-04-03 10:24
Contracts for large scale solar farms in Australia heading to $70-75/MWh for projects starting construction in 2018.
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Bodangora wind farm to proceed to construction

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2017-04-03 09:48
Infigen Energy today announced that it would proceed to construction of the 113.2 MW Bodangora wind farm in NSW.
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Competition isn’t working in Australia’s energy retail markets

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2017-04-03 09:35
Australia’s residential electricity prices are amongst the highest in the world so it’s not hard to see why customers have been up in arms about high prices.
Categories: Around The Web

AEMO‘s Zibelman wants to rid energy market of “super peaks”

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2017-04-03 09:23
New AEMO boss Zibelman suggests paying consumers for solar and storage services to get rid of "super peaks" and lower costs.
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After 25 years of trying, why aren’t we environmentally sustainable yet?

The Conversation - Mon, 2017-04-03 05:29
After decades of sustainability initiatives, key environmental indicators keep getting worse. The Capital Wind Farm, REUTERS/Jason Reed/File Photo

In 1992, more than 170 countries came together at the Rio Earth Summit and agreed to pursue sustainable development, protect biological diversity, prevent dangerous interference with climate systems, and conserve forests. But, 25 years later, the natural systems on which humanity relies continue to be degraded.

So why hasn’t the world become much more environmentally sustainable despite decades of international agreements, national policies, state laws and local plans? This is the question that a team of researchers and I have tried to answer in a recent article.

We reviewed 94 studies of how sustainability policies had failed across every continent. These included case studies from both developed and developing countries, and ranged in scope from international to local initiatives.

Consider the following key environmental indicators. Since 1970:

  • Humanity’s ecological footprint has exceeded the Earth’s capacity and has risen to the point where 1.6 planets would be needed to provide resources sustainably.

  • The biodiversity index has fallen by more than 50% as the populations of other species continue to decline.

  • Greenhouse gas emissions that drive climate change have almost doubled while the impacts of climate change are becoming increasingly apparent.

  • The world has lost more than 48% of tropical and sub-tropical forests.

The rate at which these indicators deteriorated was largely unchanged over the two decades either side of the Rio summit. Furthermore, humanity is fast approaching several environmental tipping points. If crossed, these could lead to irreversible changes.

If we allow average global temperatures to rise 2℃ above pre-industrial levels, for example, feedback mechanisms will kick in that lead to runaway climate change. We’re already halfway to this limit and could pass it in the next few decades.

What’s going wrong?

So what’s going wrong with sustainability initiatives? We found that three types of failure kept recurring: economic, political and communication.

The economic failures stem from the basic problem that environmentally damaging activities are financially rewarded. A forest is usually worth more money after it’s cut down – which is a particular problem for countries transitioning to a market-based economy.

Political failures happen when governments can’t or won’t implement effective policies. This is often because large extractive industries, like mining, are dominant players in an economy and see themselves as having the most to lose. This occurs in developed and developing countries, but the latter can face extra difficulties enforcing policies once they’re put in place.

Communication failures centre on poor consultation or community involvement in the policy process. Opposition then flourishes, sometimes based on a misunderstanding of the severity of the issue. It can also be fed by mistrust when communities see their concerns being overlooked.

Again, this happens around the world. A good example would be community resistance to changing water allocation systems in rural areas of Australia. In this situation, farmers were so opposed to the government buying back some of their water permits that copies of the policy were burned in the street.

These types of failure are mutually reinforcing. Poor communication of the benefits of sustainable development creates the belief that it always costs jobs and money. Businesses and communities then pressure politicians to avoid or water down environmentally friendly legislation.

Ultimately, this represents a failure to convince people that sustainable development can supply “win-win” scenarios. As a result, decision-makers are stuck in the jobs-versus-environment mindset.

What can we do?

The point of our paper was to discover why policies that promote sustainability have failed in order to improve future efforts. The challenge is immense and there’s a great deal at stake. Based on my previous research into the way economic, social and environmental goals can co-exist, I would go beyond our most recent paper to make the following proposals.

First, governments need to provide financial incentives to switch to eco-efficient production. Politicians need to have the courage to go well beyond current standards. Well-targeted interventions can create both carrot and stick, rewarding eco-friendly behaviour and imposing a cost on unsustainable activities.

Second, governments need to provide a viable transition pathway for industries that are doing the most damage. New environmental tax breaks and grants, for example, could allow businesses to remain profitable while changing their business model.

Finally, leaders from all sectors need to be convinced of both the seriousness of the declining state of the environment and that sustainable development is possible. Promoting positive case studies of successful green businesses would be a start.

There will of course be resistance to these changes. The policy battles will be hard fought, particularly in the current international political climate. We live in a world where the US president is rolling back climate policies while the Australian prime minister attacks renewable energy.

The Conversation

Michael Howes has received funding from the National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility, the Commonwealth government, the Queensland government, and Griffith University.

Categories: Around The Web

Xenophon says deal should see solar thermal before next election

RenewEconomy - Sun, 2017-04-02 19:45
Senator Nick Xenophon expects the deal he struck to pass the federal Coalition’s tax cuts on Friday should guarantee that Australia’s first large scale solar thermal plant begins construction before the next election. Xenophon got the Coalition government to deliver on its pre-election promise of facilitating solar thermal by agreeing to “fast-track” the tender process […]
Categories: Around The Web

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