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Jaguar plans big charger network ahead of I-Pace EV release
Adani’s desperate bid to sell Carmichael coal to Vietnam
‘Coal’ made from coffee, home delivered EV charging: EnergyLab taps 14 start-ups for 2018 program
CP Daily: Thursday May 24, 2018
Experts challenge California’s ARB on allowance over-supply, carbon offsets at legislative hearing
UPC lands investor to advance huge wind, solar projects
NA Markets: WCI prices rise after over-subscribed auction
Investors increase RGGI auction participation in 2017 as compliance entities look elsewhere
Pollutionwatch: Air contamination drops by 30% in China
WHO database lowers Beijing’s particulate ranking from 40th worst in world to 187th, as coal plants flagged as key culprit
Beijing is slowly shedding its image as the world’s most polluted city. In 2013, it ranked as the 40th worst city for the particulate PM2.5 in the World Health Organisation global database. Four years on, thanks in part to a crackdown on polluters, it stands in 187th place.
Air pollution in the 62 Chinese cities tracked by the WHO dropped by an average of 30% between 2013 and 2016. China’s air pollution problems are often blamed on the country’s rapid industrial growth but the problems probably date back to the 1950s.
Continue reading...South African cabinet approves carbon tax proposal, bringing long-delayed bill a step closer to passage
Dugong and sea turtle poo sheds new light on the Great Barrier Reef's seagrass meadows
Seal released after recovering from plastic air filter injury
Seal released after recovering from plastic air filter injury
Giant canyons discovered in Antarctica
Giant canyons discovered in Antarctica
Why is there a row about Galileo?
Why is there a row about Galileo?
Brexit: UK wants £1bn back from EU if it is excluded from Galileo
EU Market: EU carbon prices hit fresh 7-yr high, have doubled since end-2017
Birds had to relearn flight after meteor wiped out dinosaurs
Fossil records suggest only flightless birds survived when T rex was wiped off the Earth
Birds had to rediscover flight after the meteor strike that killed off the dinosaurs, scientists say.
The cataclysm 66m years ago not only wiped out Tyrannosaurus rex and ground-dwelling dinosaur species, but also flying birds, a detailed survey of the fossil record suggests.
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