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2015-16 Solar Towns Programme (Round 2) successful applicants announced

Department of the Environment - Mon, 2016-02-01 09:25
Announcement of the outcomes of the 2015-16 Solar Towns Programme (Round 2). 17 applications were successful under the round.
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2015-16 Solar Towns Programme (Round 2) successful applicants announced

Department of the Environment - Mon, 2016-02-01 09:25
Announcement of the outcomes of the 2015-16 Solar Towns Programme (Round 2). 17 applications were successful under the round.
Categories: Around The Web

Wetlands Australia: National Wetlands Update February 2016

Department of the Environment - Mon, 2016-02-01 08:08
Wetlands Australia: National Wetlands Update February 2016 issue now available.
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Shark eats shark in South Korean aquarium – video

The Guardian - Fri, 2016-01-29 21:03

A shark surprises visitors to a South Korean aquarium on Thursday by eating another smaller shark. The footage shows a large sand tiger shark slowly swallowing a smaller banded hound shark over the course of a day, leaving only the tip of the tail visible on Friday

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UK families blow twice as much money on food waste as they think, research shows

The Guardian - Fri, 2016-01-29 16:00

YouGov study for Sainsbury’s reveals high cost of Britain’s food waste, with the average family of four throwing away the equivalent of 11 meals – or nearly £60 – a month


British families squander twice as much money on food waste each month as they think they do, according to YouGov research commissioned by Sainsbury’s.

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Protecting National Historic Sites 2015-16 now open

Department of the Environment - Fri, 2016-01-29 14:07
The call for applications for funding through the Protecting National Historic Sites programme is now open. Applications close Thursday 25 February 2016
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Bed bugs have developed a resistance to the most widely used insecticide

The Guardian - Fri, 2016-01-29 00:02

If neonicotinoids no longer work against the elusive and resilient creatures, bed bugs will continue to thrive despite exterminators’ efforts

Bed bugs have developed a resistance to neonicotinoids, a group of the most widely used insecticides, according to a new study published in the Journal of Medical Entomology.

Products developed over the past few years to control bed bugs combine neonicotinoids, or neonics, with pyrethroids, another class of insecticide.

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Australian coalmines are one of riskiest investments in the world – report

The Guardian - Thu, 2016-01-28 10:02

Oxford University research also finds Australian, Chinese and US coal-fired power stations are the most vulnerable to environmental dangers

Australian thermal coalmines are some of the riskiest in the world for investors because of their exposure to environmental dangers, according to a report from Oxford University.

The report – which was supported by Norges Bank Investment Management, managers of Norway’s government pension fund, the world’s largest sovereign wealth fund – also found that Australian, Chinese and US coal-fired power stations were the most vulnerable to environmental risks.

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Quiz: how well do you know your UK garden birds?

The Guardian - Wed, 2016-01-27 16:00

Every year, the RSPB’s Big Garden Birdwatch asks members of the British public to spend an hour during the last weekend of January counting birds in parks and gardens to get a national snapshot of numbers. Ahead of this weekend’s event - which has grown to become the world’s largest garden wildlife survey - can you identify these common garden bird species?

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Credit card theft: why it pays to be careful

ABC Science - Wed, 2016-01-27 08:56
GREAT MOMENTS IN SCIENCE: Criminals don't need to steal your credit card to get your information. There are many other sneaky ways they nab your details, says Dr Karl.

Sea level rise from ocean warming underestimated, scientists say

The Guardian - Tue, 2016-01-26 12:18

Thermal expansion of the oceans as they warm is likely to be twice as large as previously thought, according to German researchers

The amount of sea level rise that comes from the oceans warming and expanding has been underestimated, and could be about twice as much as previously calculated, German researchers have said.

The findings in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a peer-reviewed US journal, suggest that increasingly severe storm surges could be anticipated as a result.

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Electric cars to use bus lanes in UK cities

The Guardian - Mon, 2016-01-25 21:43

Department for Transport gives £40m fund to eight towns and cities as part of a drive to boost the uptake of cleaner cars

UK cities are to allow electric car drivers to beat congestion by using bus lanes, as part of a government drive to encourage uptake of the cleaner vehicles.

Milton Keynes and Derby will copy similar measures in Norway and allow the cars to drive in miles of bus lanes, while owners in Hackney will be able to plug in at street lights. York drivers will be able to recharge their batteries at a solar-powered park-and-ride and electric car owners in Bristol and Milton Keynes will be allowed to park for free.

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Three dead whales wash up on Skegness beach – video

The Guardian - Mon, 2016-01-25 20:40

Four sperm whales die after getting stranded in shallow British waters over the weekend. Three of the whales are believed to have died in sea before washing up on Saturday on a beach in Skegness, on the Lincolnshire coast, according to British officials

Three dead sperm whales wash up on Skegness beach

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Three dead sperm whales wash up on Skegness beach

The Guardian - Mon, 2016-01-25 03:31

Scientists believe whales are from same pod as one that died on a Norfolk beach and are worried about surviving members

Three dead sperm whales have washed up on a beach near Skegness. Crowds flocked to see the creatures, believed to be from the same pod as one that died on Hunstanton beach in Norfolk, despite efforts to help it back into deeper water after it became stranded.

Scientists are now concerned about any surviving members of the pod, thought to have comprised at least six whales.

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Piers Corbyn: the other rebel in the family

The Guardian - Sun, 2016-01-24 19:30

Like his brother, physicist and meteorologist Piers Corbyn is a man of revolutionary zeal. His own battle, however, is against all this ‘climate-change nonsense’…

When Jeremy Corbyn won the leadership of the Labour party in September he celebrated in a pub up the road from the Houses of Parliament with a thank you to supporters and a rousing rendition of the Red Flag. On the edge of the impromptu stage that day, beside Len McCluskey of Unite and John McDonnell the future shadow chancellor, was a singular figure singing with particular pride: Piers Corbyn, the new leader’s elder brother, who has, you could say, led a parallel career of stubborn principle to his younger sibling. I was in the euphoric crowd that day, and since then I’ve wondered a bit about the relationship between the brothers, what they have learned from each other. With some of this in mind I called Piers recently and asked if he might like to talk about some of that. He agreed, but typically on the basis that he would happily talk about any subject under the sun – apart from his relationship with Jeremy and the vexed question of how his leadership is going. He shares much of his brother’s mistrust of the press; recently, he suggests, the Independent published an account of an exchange that had taken place over a family Christmas dinner. That wasn’t on. What he will talk about, though, is the thing he has talked about for just about as long as he can remember: the weather.

On this very British basis we met last week in a cafe over the road from his office on Borough High Street in south London. You don’t have to speak to Piers for very long to realise that at least a couple of Corbyn family traits are indelible: the first is that intransigent rasp of a voice with faint traces of west country burr; the second is the sense that life, like politics, is best played as a long game.

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Twenty years after the protests, what is the legacy of the Newbury bypass?

The Guardian - Sun, 2016-01-24 10:05
It was the anti-road demonstration that gave birth to a generation of eco-warriors. Those who were there in 1996 tell how the standoff changed the physical and political landscape

Blink and you miss it. Just past the Tot Hill McDonald’s, 20ft above the northbound carriageway of the Newbury bypass in Berkshire, an old oak stands over hundreds of young saplings.

Named Middle Oak by people who lived up it for months in the bitter winter of 1996, it is the only physical reminder of the 35 protest camps built high in the trees on the route of the most controversial new road in recent British history.

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Plastic now pollutes every corner of Earth

The Guardian - Sun, 2016-01-24 10:05

From supermarket bags to CDs, man-made waste has contaminated the entire globe, and become a marker of a new geological epoch

Humans have made enough plastic since the second world war to coat the Earth entirely in clingfilm, an international study has revealed. This ability to plaster the planet in plastic is alarming, say scientists – for it confirms that human activities are now having a pernicious impact on our world.

The research, published in the journal Anthropocene, shows that no part of the planet is free of the scourge of plastic waste. Everywhere is polluted with the remains of water containers, supermarket bags, polystyrene lumps, compact discs, cigarette filter tips, nylons and other plastics. Some are in the form of microscopic grains, others in lumps. The impact is often highly damaging.

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Going underground: meet the man who lived as an animal

The Guardian - Sat, 2016-01-23 18:00

Naturalist Charles Foster wanted to reconnect with his inner beast – so he tried living as a badger, a deer and a fox

Charles Foster lifts a wriggling worm to his lips. “Cheers,” he says.

We clink worms.

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Japan's David vs Goliath battle to preserve Pacific bluefin tuna

The Guardian - Fri, 2016-01-22 20:20

A group of small-scale fishermen are waging an increasingly public struggle against industrial fleets using sonar and huge nets to scoop up massive catches of spawning tuna, reports Environment 360

One after another, the fishermen stream into a makeshift office at Katsumoto port, on the island of Iki in the Sea of Japan. Outside, their small white boats are docked as a storm rages; inside, they chain-smoke and banter with the ease of lifelong acquaintance. Their business, however, is serious: Pacific bluefin tuna are disappearing from the sea, and somehow they must stop the decline.
“Twenty years ago, we used to see the tuna swimming under our boats in schools that went on for two miles,” says Kazuto Doi, a sun-weathered man in his 40s who, like all the Iki fishermen, uses a pole and line to catch the prized source of sushi. “We never see that now.”

“I have three kids, but I can’t send them to university,” adds Koji Harada, who now supplements his catch with squid and other less lucrative fish. “We used to make a good living at this.”

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Burke, Wills, King and Yandruwandha National Heritage place included in the National Heritage List

Department of the Environment - Fri, 2016-01-22 11:54
The story of the Burke and wills Expedition – and the crucial role of the Yandruwandha Aboriginal people who assisted them – has been formally recognised by inclusion in the National Heritage List.
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