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Scientists detect oxygen legacy of first stars

BBC - Thu, 2018-05-17 19:58
The very first stars to shine in the Universe left a tell-tale trace in a far-distant galaxy.
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Bee crisis: EU court backs near-total neonicotinoids ban

BBC - Thu, 2018-05-17 19:52
Three insecticides blamed for bee colony collapses will be restricted to greenhouses.
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Bee crisis: EU court backs near-total neonicotinoids ban

BBC - Thu, 2018-05-17 19:52
Three insecticides blamed for bee colony collapses will be restricted to greenhouses.
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EU Market: Prices jump to new 7-year high as auction doesn’t disappoint bulls

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2018-05-17 19:50
EU carbon prices broke new ground above €15 after Thursday’s auction attracted sturdy interest and cleared at the highest level since 2011.
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New Zealand to set up NZ$100m Green Investment Fund

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2018-05-17 18:52
New Zealand’s coalition government on Thursday announced its 2018 budget, which included plans for a NZ$100-million ($69 mln) Green Investment Fund as well as additional funding to establish the Climate Change Commission advisory, carry out ETS amendments and prepare for internationally-linked carbon markets.
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SK Market: Korean CO2 prices inch up as compliance deadline draws nearer

Carbon Pulse - Thu, 2018-05-17 18:46
South Korean CO2 allowances have closed up three days in a row as demand remains strong with the June 30 compliance deadline for 2017 emissions approaching.
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Logging burns conceal industrial pollution in the name of 'community safety'

The Conversation - Thu, 2018-05-17 16:59
Every autumn Victoria copes with smoke haze from planned burns that reduce bushfire risk, but a large part of that pollution actually comes from industrial logging activity. Chris Taylor, Researcher, University of Melbourne David Lindenmayer, Professor, The Fenner School of Environment and Society, Australian National University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Australian magpies can understand other bird calls, study finds

The Guardian - Thu, 2018-05-17 15:54

Magpies know meanings of different noisy miner calls and are able to eavesdrop to find out if predators are nearby

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Australian magpies can understand what other birds are saying to each other, a new study has found.

The research, published in the journal Animal Behaviour, says the wily magpie has learned the meanings of different noisy miner calls and essentially eavesdrops to find out which predators are near.

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Magpies know what other birds are saying – video

The Guardian - Thu, 2018-05-17 15:53

A new study has found that the Australian magpie has learned to understand what noisy miner birds are saying to each other. The research, published in the journal Animal Behaviour, says the wily magpie can tell the difference between different calls and essentially eavesdrops to learn which predators are near

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SENG Event - Metropolitan Transport

Newsletters VIC - Thu, 2018-05-17 15:30
SENG Event Reminder - 24 May 2018 'A Sustainability Approach to Metropolitan People Movement' Level 31, 600 Bourke Street Melbourne, 6.00pm Thursday 24th May This seminar will look at three modes of metropolitan transport, cars, public transport and active transport (walking and cycling). It will give a perspective on how sustainable each mode may be in meeting EA’s sustainability policy. The future of the car - Dr Ian Espada The car handles the most personal trips in Australia. A scenario wherein current trends prevail into the next generation is described and discussed from the point of view of sustainability. Emerging trends on electrification, shared economy, connectivity, big data and autonomy are examined on how they impact the car of the future. Dr Ian Espadaholds degrees in traffic engineering and transport planning from the University of Tokyo (PhD) and Asian Institute of Technology (MSCE), as well as in civil engineering from Central Philippine University (BSCE). From 2001 to 2008, he worked as a transport planner for ALMEC Corporation. Dr Espada joined the Network Operations team of ARRB Group in 2008. He is currently the Network Operations Team Leader at ARRB. The future of public transport - Professor Graham Currie In considering the future of public transport he will: consider how “new mobility”, “autonomous vehicles”, “shared mobility” and “ride sharing” is going to impact urban transit; explore the future case for Urban Transit systems; look at some new and interesting developments in the field. Professor Graham Currie FTSE, is the Director of the Public Transport Research Group at the Institute of Transport Studies, Monash University. He is a research leader and policy adviser and founder of the Public transport research group at Monash Uni. Prof Currie’s experience spans Project Management, Demand Forecasting, Planning Methods in Public Transport, Regulatory Reviews, Efficiency and Performance Benchmarking, Training, Market Research, Investment Appraisal and Financial and Economic Analysis. The future of Active Transport - Ms Katie Dickson This presentation will provide insight into: space efficient movement for productive places (with a brief introduction to Movement and Place - the evolution of SmartRoads) sustainable urban living, where movement is achieved without impeding the productivity of place, noting the importance of walking and cycling; relieving train station car parks (with a brief introduction to the Victorian Cycling Strategy); city resilience in the face of disaster (predictable break downs, climate change, emissions etc); changing fuels (impact of electric motors for bicycles). Katie Dicksonhas worked in the field of strategic planning, design and planning of active transport for over 20 years. She is a geographer and transport planner by profession, and has worked for local Councils, NGOs and State Government agencies in London and Melbourne. The speakers session will be followed by a Panel Q&A. REGISTER FOR THIS EVENT Sustainable Engineering Society If you can't view this email click here to view online Click here to unsubscribe from this newsletter
Categories: Newsletters VIC

'Swimming into the unknown:' Mexico's unmapped underwater caves - in pictures

The Guardian - Thu, 2018-05-17 15:00

Photographer Klaus Thymann has been exploring the underwater cave system of the Yucatán peninsula, diving 1km underwater to where salt and freshwater meet. By mapping areas that have been untouched by modern civilisation, he hopes to raise awareness of the natural and human heritage of this unique ecosystem that will hopefully result in greater protection. He talks to Eric Hilaire about making his journey into a film, Flows, featuring music by Radiohead’s Thom Yorke

I am about to climb down a 10-metre rope ladder into a manhole-sized gap in the floor of the Mexican jungle on the Yucatán peninsula, to dive an underwater cave system, exploring paths where no one has ever been in modern history.

You may be familiar with cenotes, or sink holes, the beautiful wells filled with tempting blue water, but this hole does not look like that. Why would anyone want to head down there is a good question but we are exploring places where no one has been since the Mayans. This place doesn’t exist on any maps. My objective is to explore places with the view to bringing about environmental awareness, hopefully resulting in protection.

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They didn't flip: Ukraine claims dolphin army captured by Russia went on hunger strike

The Guardian - Thu, 2018-05-17 15:00

Russia captured the dolphins in 2014 and says the trained mammals refused both to interact with their coaches, and to eat

Ukraine is home to some of the more adventurous military blue-sky thinking, mostly hangovers from the Soviet era. As well as a 160-metre high, 500-metre long radar that was supposed to be able to warn of nuclear attack, it also has a secret programme that trains sea mammals to carry out military tasks. Ukraine has a dolphin army at the Crimean military dolphin centre, trained and ready for deployment.

Or at least it did, but after the Russian annexation of Crimea in 2014, the dolphins were captured. Ukraine demanded their return, but Russian forces refused. Some believed the Russians were planning to retrain the dolphins as Russian soldiers, with a source telling Russian agency RIA Novosti that engineers were “developing new aquarium technologies for new programmes to more efficiently use dolphins underwater”.

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Adani’s vain hope global coal market will save Carmichael mine

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2018-05-17 14:30
Adani pins hopes for beleaguered Carmichael coal mine on the Asia–Pacific market. But the Australian government’s own resources forecaster is less confident.
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Country diary: willow warblers soundtrack a stoat sighting

The Guardian - Thu, 2018-05-17 14:30

Romaldkirk, Teesdale: Lithe and lethal, the stoat emerged into a patch of bare ground, sniffed the air, then vanished into a dense patch of wild garlic

The warm weather arrived, and with it willow warblers. Soon their song would merge into the background sounds of summer but this was the first of the year, so we stopped to listen.

The warbler was delivering its liquid cadences, exultant, then dying away to a subdued ending, from a hawthorn on the embankment of the disused railway line that now forms part of the Tees Railway Path. Its perch, just a bare twig a week ago, was rapidly coming into leaf. The ground at the bottom of the slope was clothed in lush new growth of meadowsweet, nettles, thistles and ground elder foliage, a knee-high mosaic of leaf shapes.

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PowerLink signs 500MW solar project, sees 30GW in pipeline

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2018-05-17 13:21
Queensland transmission company signs connection deal for first stage of 500MW solar project, and sees 30GW pipeline of renewables in the state.
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Solar and battery microgrid nears completion at NT Air Force site

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2018-05-17 13:05
Carnegie Clean Energy says Delamere Air Weapons Range solar and storage microgrid is nearly complete, and ready to cut the facility’s diesel use by 61%.
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One down, five to go: Cook Islands begins shift to 100% solar and storage

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2018-05-17 13:00
Melbourne company Entura leads project to take six of Cook Islands’ 12 inhabited islands from diesel to 100% solar and battery storage.
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ACT to change law to drop gas and pave way for all-electric suburbs

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2018-05-17 12:56
ACT takes next step in trial of gas-free suburban living, with a proposed repeal of planning laws that have made gas connection mandatory to all new housing divisions in the Territory.
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Mackay council goes solar – and saves big – with city-wide rollout

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2018-05-17 12:51
Mackay Council awards tender to install solar PV on 21 local government facilities, saving nearly 10 times its outlay over 20 years. But the bid price stuns rivals.
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NAB, CBA to provide $80m finance for Crowlands wind farm

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2018-05-17 12:08
Pacific Hydro's 80MW Crowlands wind farm in regional Victoria has reached financial close, with backing from two of the Big Four banks.
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