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EnerNOC enters frequency control market in Australia
Seven million Australians now represented by climate action councils
Food waste: Clearer label plan in bid to cut
Large iceberg breaks off from Grey glacier in southern Chile
Officials at Chile’s Torres del Paine National Park, home to the glacier, said such ruptures were rare and had not occurred since the early 1990s
A large iceberg broke off the Grey glacier in southern Chile, authorities said on Tuesday, adding that the cause of the rupture was unclear.
Chile’s Conaf forestry service shared photos on social media of the enormous block of blue-white ice, which measured 350m (1,148ft) long by 380m (1,247ft) wide, as it floated free in waters of a glacial lagoon near the southern tip of the South American continent.
Continue reading...Invitation to comment on listing assessment for Philotheca sporadica (Kogan waxflower)
S.A. provides funds for four “next wave” energy storage projects
Breakthrough in coral restoration, say researchers
Nationals push for new coal generator in NSW is a preposterous idea
Little left in RET kitty, but rooftop solar set for record year
Footage of Earth from the International Space Station
Busting more myths about South Australia’s wind and solar
Three beavers released into the wild
How little brown birds get overlooked in the protection pecking order
Ever heard of the King Island brown thornbill? What about the orange-bellied parrot? Can you guess which is more endangered?
In January 2016, a keen birdwatcher named Dion Hobcroft walked into the Pegarah state forest on Tasmania’s King Island with a recorded birdcall and took the first blurry photographs of the King Island brown thornbill.
The brown thornbill, Acanthiza pusilla archibaldi, is a subspecies of the Tasmanian thornbill, distinguished from its cousins on the big island by a slightly longer beak.
Continue reading...Weatherwatch: climate change means lots of birdsong, even in November
Unlike other birds, robins have always sung throughout the season, but now other species are joining them due to their warming environment
The Victorian humorist and poet Thomas Hood took a dim view of the penultimate month of the year: “No fruits, no flowers, no leaves, no birds! – November!”
If he meant no bird song, then, when he was writing, during the cooler climatic interlude known as the Little Ice Age, he would have been spot-on.
Continue reading...River departed 'before Indus civilisation emergence'
How to solve the problem of space junk
A fresh start for climate change mitigation in New Zealand
Explainer: why we shouldn't be so quick to trust energy modelling
Great Barrier Reef: scientists identify potential life support system
Researchers say ‘source reefs’ could produce larvae and help repair damage by bleaching and starfish
A group of “source” reefs have been identified that could form the basis of a life support system for the Great Barrier Reef, helping repair damage by bleaching, starfish and other disturbances.
Researchers from the University of Queensland, CSIRO, Australian Institute of Marine Science and the University of Sheffield searched the Great Barrier Reef for ideal areas that could potentially produce larvae and support the recovery of other damaged reefs.
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