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UK rebuffed over Galileo sat-nav procurement
Doug Ford’s disastrous agenda can be derailed by a massive grassroots movement | Martin Lukacs
The right-wing triumph in Ontario shows the left needs a new populism – backed by street protest and a bold NDP
The guardians of respectable opinion forecast that Doug Ford would never become Ontario’s Premier. Now that he has, they are suggesting his reign might be orderly and painless.
While agreeing with his basic agenda, the Globe & Mail is crossing its fingers that Ford “moves slowly on the public-service layoffs and program cuts…to avoid strikes and social discord.”
Continue reading...What paddleboarding through plastic taught me about our disposables problem
My daughter and I spent a weekend scouring the Salcombe estuary for discarded plastics. What we found proves that a throwaway culture is simply not sustainable
One My Little Pony, two crabbing buckets, five balloons, six balls, seven straws, nine shoes, a dozen coffee cups, 20 carrier bags, 205 plastic bottles and lids, polystyrene and a huge amount of rope. That is just a fraction of what my six-year-old daughter, Ella, and I collected over the course of two days last weekend, as we paddleboarded around the Salcombe-Kingsbridge estuary in south Devon, scouring the foreshores of every creek and cove for 22 miles.
Within seconds of setting off from South Sands beach by the mouth of the estuary, we spotted a clear plastic carrier bag floating in the shallows. Marine wildlife could easily have mistaken it for a jellyfish. Ella grabbed it with a litter picker as we paddled past.
Continue reading...Rise in global carbon emissions a 'big step backwards', says BP
Coal rebound and slowing efficiency gains in 2017 suggest Paris goals may be missed, says oil firm
The renewed upward march of global carbon emissions is worrying and a big step backwards in the fight against climate change, according to BP.
Emissions rose 1.6% in 2017 after flatlining for the previous three years, which the British oil firm said was a reminder the world was not on track to hit the goals of the Paris climate deal.
Continue reading...EU lawmakers likely to set clean energy goals above 30% -Arias Canete
How Horizon Power are developing their microgrid capability
Raccoon hailed a hero after Minnesota skyscraper climb
British man disqualified for £7m carbon trading tax evasion
Lightsource BP turns site on Australia residential solar and battery market
China offers glimmer of hope for carbon offset developers
Chepstow celebrates plastic-free status with plastic banner
Councillor calls for sign to be removed from battlements saying it is ‘beyond irony’
A historic town in south Wales has been criticised for celebrating becoming a plastic-free community by hanging a banner made of plastic from a 13th-century gateway.
Chepstow fixed the large banner to the battlements of its town gate after being granted plastic-free status by the green charity Surfers Against Sewage.
Continue reading...Michael Gove appoints UK 'tree champion'
Sir William Worsley is tasked with stopping the unnecessary felling of trees and support plans to plant 11 million trees
The environment secretary, Michael Gove, has appointed a “tree champion” to stop the unnecessary felling of trees and boost planting rates.
Sir William Worsley, chairman of the National Forest Company which oversees the National Forest, has been appointed to support government promises to plant 11 million trees, plus a further 1 million in towns and cities. The move, part of the pledges in the government’s 25-year environment plan, comes after a controversial tree-felling programme in Sheffield.
Continue reading...Mass slaughter of wedge-tailed eagles could have Australia-wide consequences
Are solar panels a middle-class purchase? This survey says yes
Fifth of Britain’s wild mammals ‘at high risk of extinction’
Species including the wildcat and black rat may be lost within a decade while others such as deer are thriving, analysis shows
The wildcat and mouse-eared bat are on the brink, but deer are spreading and otters bouncing back, according to a comprehensive analysis.
At least one in five wild mammals in Britain faces a high risk of extinction within a decade and overall populations are falling, according to the most comprehensive analysis to date.
Continue reading...Could Australia follow Cuba and become living museum of petrol cars?
Investors to make hay from sunshine
Spark of life: There’s electricity in nature
India doubles down on renewables as coal left idle by cheaper solar
Country diary: gatecrashing an extraordinary party of orchids
Wenlock Edge, Shropshire: There were masses of southern marsh orchids, many of which were in the early stages of flower opening like a slow-motion firework display
The southern marsh orchids, Dactylorhiza praetermissa, are almost knee high, with apple-green leaves, thick hollow stems and a spearhead of extraordinary purple-pink, cryptically lined flowers. They have suddenly and ceremoniously materialised in the abandoned field like ambassadors from another planet. Despite their indolence, everything about them – their form, colour, identity, presence, future – is mysterious. They stand among us, splendidly alien, as if they’ve entered consciousness from a terra incognita outside our everyday experience. These are not just flowers but an event with a magenta aura.
Only last week I wandered into this field, really just a fenced-off patch of limestone quarry spoil, to check on what might be flowering. In some years there are dense colonies of common spotted orchids and one year there were dozens of bee orchids, but the larger groups of orchid never last long and some years they are few and far between. I was beginning to think this year would be a poor show until I came across a couple of big southern marsh orchids, opening from places that had been really wet all winter.
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