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Australia added 1.3GW of solar in 2017, and could treble it in 2018
‘We have to change capitalism’ to beat climate change, says world’s biggest asset manager
AusNet services to develop terminal station for Pacific Hydro’s crowlands wind farm
Conversion efficiency at 20.41%, LONGi solar creates world record of monocrystalline PERC module
Tesla among 19 groups competing to build Darwin big battery
Sound waves 'can help' early tsunami detection
Hundreds of wildflower species found blooming in midwinter
UK survey finds 532 types – far more than older textbooks suggest should be out
It’s been said that spring is coloured by flowers, while the colour of winter is only in the imagination.
Not so for intrepid botanists who discovered 532 species of wildflowers in bloom across Britain and Ireland around New Year’s Day.
Continue reading...Cloned monkeys: First primate clones are created in lab
How to escape from a lion or cheetah - the science
Exposing UK government folly of investment in new nuclear | Letters
In 1976, Lord Flowers pronounced that there should be no further commitment to nuclear energy unless it could be demonstrated that long-lived highly radioactive wastes could be safely contained for the indefinite future. Ever since, efforts to find a suitable site for a geological disposal facility have been rejected by communities (Wanted: community willing to host a highly radioactive waste dump in their district, 22 January).
There is, therefore, little evidence to support the government’s claim that “it is satisfied that effective arrangements will exist to manage and dispose of the waste that will be produced from new nuclear power stations”. Deep disposal may be the eventual long-term solution but demonstrating a safety case, finding suitable geology and a willing community are tough challenges and likely to take a long time. The search for a disposal site diverts attention from the real solution for the foreseeable future, which is to ensure the safe and secure management of the unavoidable legacy wastes that have to be managed. It is perverse to compound the problem by a new-build programme that will result in vastly increased radioactivity from spent fuel and other highly radioactive wastes which will have to be stored indefinitely at vulnerable sites scattered around our coasts.
Continue reading...Donald Trump's 'hatred of sharks' benefits conservation charities
Big SpaceX rocket lights 27 engines
First monkey clones created in Chinese laboratory
'Disco ball' put into space from NZ
Stuck in first gear: how Australia's electric car revolution stalled
As sceptics fretted over price, range and lack of charging stations, Australia was overtaken by the rest of the world. Now policymakers are being urged to jumpstart the industry
In Elizabeth in South Australia, they stood in a huge line, only three months ago, and spelled out HOLDEN for the helicopters. Thirteen weeks later, after the plant closed and the last car rolled away, the talk began of rejuvenation, a new owner and the promise of the electric.
The proposal, from the British billionaire Sanjeev Gupta, to refit the old Holden plant to make electric cars is still just a suggestion, but it has captured the imagination of a country suddenly keen to talk. On Monday, the idea was backed to the hilt by the premier, Jay Weatherill, and the Australian Manufacturing Workers’ Union. On Tuesday, the federal energy minister, Josh Frydenberg, said the electric car would do to Australia “what the iPhone did to the communications sector”.
Continue reading...Local people tackle tide of beach plastic in Mumbai
Clean-up has collected more than 12,000 tonnes of plastic since 2015
A beach in Mumbai is looking much cleaner thanks to the efforts of local people to remove a tide of plastic waste that appears on the shore.
A regular group of people, including children, use equipment donated by Bollywood stars to scour a 3km stretch of Versova beach every weekend, and have collected more than 12,000 tonnes of plastic since 2015.
Continue reading...NTAs: David Attenborough on Blue Planet II's Impact
Python owner was killed by his 8ft-long pet, coroner rules
Dan Brandon kept 10 snakes and 12 tarantulas in his bedroom and was said to be responsible owner
A lover of exotic animals died of asphyxia after his 8ft-long pet African rock python called Tiny wrapped itself around him, a coroner has ruled.
Dan Brandon was found dead by his mother, Babs, in his bedroom in Hampshire, with the python concealed close by.
Continue reading...World's first electric container barges to sail from European ports this summer
Dubbed the ‘Tesla of the canals’, the unmanned vessels will operate on Dutch and Belgian waterways, vastly reducing diesel vehicles and emissions
The world’s first fully electric, emission-free and potentially crewless container barges are to operate from the ports of Antwerp, Amsterdam, and Rotterdam from this summer.
The vessels, designed to fit beneath bridges as they transport their goods around the inland waterways of Belgium and the Netherlands, are expected to vastly reduce the use of diesel-powered trucks for moving freight.
Continue reading...Remote Amazon tribe hit by mercury crisis, leaked report says
Peru’s Health Ministry found shocking contamination among the Nahua, but hasn’t published its full report
An indigenous people living in one of the remotest parts of the Peruvian Amazon has been struck by a mystery mercury epidemic, according to an unpublished Health Ministry report dated 2015 and 2017 seen by the Guardian.
The Nahua only entered into sustained contact with “outsiders” in the mid-1980s, which led to almost 50% of the population dying mainly from respiratory and infectious diseases. Today, numbering less than 500 people, the vast majority live in a village in the Kugapakori, Nahua, Nanti and Others Reserve established for indigenous peoples in “voluntary isolation” and “initial contact” in south-east Peru.
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