AEMO says two South Australian regions could add 2GW of renewables without any transmission upgrades, and suggests Roxby Downs could emerge as major solar energy region.
By resurrecting a proposal to allow trophy hunters to shoot 250 hippos annually, Zambia stirs controversy.
The hippo — really? That’s the common response when tour guides in Africa tantalize travelers with this question: “What’s the most dangerous animal on the continent?” Lion? Rhino? Elephant? No, no, no. Eventually, the tour guide delivers the answer with a twinkle in their eye: the hippo, yes, that water-loving, one-tonne mammalian oddity. Despite their hefty and somnolent appearance, hippos are fast and aggressive — a dangerous mix — and may kill several hundred people a year (of course the most dangerous animal in Africa is not really the hippo at all, it’s the mosquito — but no one likes a know-it-all).
Despite being one of the most unusual animals on the planet — their closest relatives are whales and dolphins — hippos don’t get a lot of love. They tend to be overshadowed by the continent’s other remarkable mega-mammals. Who can compete with elephants and giraffe and lion? Perhaps, that’s why it’s not exactly surprising that the announcement of a hippo cull in Zambia didn’t exactly make global news.
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Rooftop solar on Australian homes and businesses could account for 22 per cent of national demand and overtake the combined output of black and brown coal at that time.
Another European deal for Australia's Tritium, this time to supply 12 of its Veefil DC fast chargers for an EV network in Hungary.
ISP details reveal that the pressure is on coal, solar is assumed to be cheaper than wind, small solar is cheaper than big solar, and transmission for many renewable energy zones won't be available before 2040.
Rombalds Moor, West Yorkshire: We can’t blame the heatwave for this desiccated landscape – we’ve spent decades deliberately drying out our peatland habitats
The moors are a tinderbox. Parched and crisped by weeks of dry summer heat, the heather is a burnt brown-to-burgundy, the moorland grass yellowed. The bracken looks all right – still a deep pea-green (it takes a lot to bother bracken) – but finger-wide cracks have opened in the colourless peat of the footpath. It’s early morning; the day hasn’t yet been fully cranked up, and the broken sky is a messy palette of blues and greys. A loose flock of a dozen meadow pipits forages for caterpillars.
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Renew Estate proposes 100MW solar farm on outskirts of the national capital.
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SENG SA Newsletter - July 2018
What's In The Pipeline For Renewable Energy?
Hear from a panel of experts in the fields of Solar thermal, Geothermal and Hydrogen technologies. Includes networking time and refreshments.
Date: Thursday, 26 July 2018 Time: 6pm to 8pm Venue: Engineers Australia South Australia - Level 11, 108 King William Street Adelaide SA 5000 Cost: $10 members, $40 non-members Hosts: Engineers Australia SA Chemical Branch, IChemE, RACI and SENG Register: For further information and to register follow this link.
Pumped Storage Hydropower
This seminar explores the potential of pumped storage hydropower for Australia from current and planned state and federal government policies through to site selection, design, and construction strategies and challenges in unlocking the potential of this energy source. Speakers will include a specialist from global consultant Norconsult reflecting on the international experience with pumped storage hydropower developments.
Date: Thursday, 9 August 2018 Time: 5.45pm to 7.30pm Venue: The University of Adelaide - Lecture Theatre 102, Napier Building, North Terrace Campus, Adelaide SA 5000 Cost: Free Hosts: Engineers Australia and McConnell Dowell Register: For further information and to register follow this link.
HiTeMP Forum: Zero Carbon High Temperature Mineral Processing
The Forum aims to bring together companies, researchers, investors and policy makers to scope further action on decarbonising the mineral processing sector. Themes include:
Opportunities to become more globally competitive
Metal reduction, particularly for iron and steel
Calcination, particularly for alumina and cement
Zero carbon fuels and materials, including hydrogen, syngas and oxygend.
Date: Monday, 17 September to Wednesday, 19 September 2018 Time: 10.30am to 5.00pm Venue: National Wine Centre - Hackney Road, Adelaide SA 5000 Host: University of Adelaide - Centre for Energy Technology Register: For further information and to register your interest follow this link.
Unmaking Waste 2018 International Conference
With a particular emphasis on redesigning systems, processes and products to ‘unmake’ waste, this conference is intended to challenge researchers, from every relevant discipline, to rethink what can be done about our global consumption problem and its multiple effects. The conference’s themes are Eco-Design and Development, Sustainable Consumption, Waste Minimization, and Circular Economy.
Date: Thursday, 20 September to Sunday, 23 September 2018 Venue: Adelaide SA 5000 Hosts: China-Australia Centre for Sustainable Urban Development, and the University of South Australia Register: For further information, to register, and to read the 2015 conference proceedings, follow this link.
AIRAH Trade Night - Adelaide
Network and see the HVAC&R industry's latest innovations at AIRAH's annual exhibition.
Date: Thursday, 18 October 2018 Time: 4pm to 7pm Venue: Adelaide Entertainment Centre - 98 Port Road, Hindmarsh SA 5007 Cost: Free Hosts: Australian Institute of Refrigeration, Air Conditioning and Heating Register: For further information and to register follow this link.
Undergraduate Student Awards
Applications are closing soon for SENG SA's next round of undergraduate student awards, for projects completed in 2017. For further information and to apply, email Kurt van Ryswyk, SA Awards Coordinator.
What Do You Want To See?
Feedback is invited on ElectraNet’s Project Assessment Draft Report into a new, high capacity interconnector between South Australia and New South Wales. Submissions are due by 24 August 2018. Details here.
Have yourSAy on SA Government policies and initiatives here.
EPA SA consultations can be found here.
Get in touch with the SENG SA committee; we welcome feedback, suggestions, and content contributions. Or join us on LinkedIn.
If you can't view this email click here to view online Click here to unsubscribe from this newsletter
Geologists classify the last 4,200 years as being a distinct age in the story of our planet.
Major hurdles to Carmichael mine remain despite comments by Karan Adani that the company has ‘completed financing’
Adani says its Carmichael coalmine remains contingent on a loan to build a rail line to the Galilee Basin – comments that analysts believe will ramp up pressure on the Australian government to further subsidise the project.
Karan Adani, the son of company boss Gautam Adani, and the head of the conglomerate’s ports business, told India’s Economic Times the company had “completed financing on the mine” and that it had received all necessary approvals.
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Ancient Britons were eating dairy, peas, cabbage and oats, according to gunk trapped in their teeth.
More and more young people are living without the car. Will the government change its road-building plans?
A daily summary of our news plus bite-sized updates from around the world.
Phosphate fertilisers are causing dangerous levels of pollution in waterways that harm aquatic plants and animals
Much of the environment is awash with fertilisers, boosting thuggish weeds such as stinging nettles that swamp other wild plants. Nitrate is a big villain in this onslaught, but far less notice is taken of phosphate.
Phosphate is crucial for plant growth and development, and it is estimated that half the world’s food supplies rely on phosphate fertilisers, but this is a dwindling resource that is used very inefficiently, which is leading to widespread pollution. Unlike nitrate, phosphate binds very strongly to the soil, which makes it difficult for plant roots to get hold of. And so farmers apply even more phosphates in fertilisers and manure, although much of that phosphate then sticks to the soil again, driving the levels of phosphate in the soil even higher.
Related: Conservationists claim 'legal victory' in dispute over government protection of rivers
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A new map shows that more than 25% of all land outside Antarctica is held and managed by Indigenous peoples. This makes these communities vital allies in the global conservation effort.
Stephen Garnett, Professor of Conservation and Sustainable Livelihoods, Charles Darwin University
Álvaro Fernández-Llamazares, Researcher, University of Helsinki
Catherine Robinson, Principal Research Scientist, CSIRO
Erle C. Ellis, Professor of Geography and Environmental Systems, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Hayley Geyle, Research Assistant, Charles Darwin University
Ian Leiper, Geospatial Scientist, Charles Darwin University
James Watson, Professor, The University of Queensland
John E. Fa, Professor of Biodiversity and Human Development, Manchester Metropolitan University
Kerstin Zander, Senior Research Fellow, Charles Darwin University
Micha Victoria Jackson, PhD candidate, The University of Queensland
Pernilla Malmer, Senior Advisor, Stockholm University
Tom Duncan, Charles Darwin University
Zsolt Molnár, Scientific Advisor, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest
Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Share index compiler S&P Dow Jones has launched a series of equity market indexes to measure the performance of companies against their valuation at risk from predicted 2030 carbon prices.
Debates over a nationwide US carbon tax are heating up this week as a Republican lawmaker’s proposal to phase out environmental regulations in favour of a CO2 fee circulated on Tuesday, while other GOP lawmakers moved closer to voting on a symbolic anti-carbon tax resolution.
EU carbon prices lifted back above €16 on Tuesday as buyers stepped in despite another weak auction and lower energy prices.
The UK's partly-devolved Scottish government has fined two installations operated by energy majors Shell and Engie a total £75,000 for non-compliance under the EU ETS.
Research suggests new kinds of shark could migrate to UK waters as the oceans warm.
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