Feed aggregator
Sweden's green industry hopes hit by Northvolt woes
California’s voluntary carbon market disclosures compliance kicks in
Grieving killer whale who carried calf’s body spotted again with dead baby
Experts say sighting of orca in Puget Sound with second deceased calf is ‘devastating’ for ailing population
An apparently grieving killer whale who swam more than 1,000 miles pushing the body of her dead newborn has lost another calf and is again carrying the body, a development researchers say is a “devastating” loss for the ailing population.
The Washington state-based Center for Whale Research said the orca, known as Tahlequah, or J35, was spotted in the Puget Sound area with her deceased calf.
Continue reading...California expected to miss 200 hydrogen fuelling stations by 2025 target – gov’t report
Monarch butterflies are in decline in NZ and Australia – they need your help to track where they gather
Australia needs better ways of storing renewable electricity for later. That’s where ‘flow batteries’ can help
Global emissions set to rise as uncertainty boosts fossil fuel markets in 2025, analysts warn
Early phase-out of full hybrid vehicles may be a political risk too far for UK ministers | Nils Pratley
Pragmatism will win over purism, unless the government favours early closure for car manufacturers
The main timetable is set: no new petrol and diesel cars will be allowed to be sold in the UK after 2030, and sales of all new hybrids will be forbidden from 2035. But that phasing still leaves open the critical matter – for the automotive industry, and for a couple of manufacturers in particular – of which new hybrids will be allowed to be sold until the last day of 2034.
Just the variety that comes with a socket – plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs)? Or should old-style hybrids, such as the Toyota Prius, which have smaller batteries charged by a main internal combustion engine, also be permitted?
Continue reading...Funding gaps, North-South spat jeopardise Global Biodiversity Framework implementation -study
eDNA key to improving biodiversity monitoring within forest carbon markets, study says
UK electricity cleanest ever in 2024, with record 58% from low-carbon sources
UK has more than halved amount of electricity generated from fossil fuels but gas still had largest share at 28%
The UK’s electricity was the cleanest it has ever been in 2024, with wind and solar generation hitting all-time highs, according to a report.
The analysis by Carbon Brief found that in the past decade the UK had more than halved electricity generated from coal and gas and doubled its output from renewables.
Continue reading...EU’s power emissions hit historic low last year, industrial electricity demand barely rises -data
Major US lenders exit UN-convened net zero alliance
Australia’s flying foxes are ‘curious, gentle and intelligent’ – and often misunderstood
Endangered spectacled flying foxes and vulnerable grey-headed flying foxes are ‘astonishing’ animals but misinformation is rife
One of the most spectacular sights at Adelaide’s Womadelaide music festival is not on the official lineup.
As dusk approaches, thousands of grey-headed flying foxes begin chattering and stretching their wings as they prepare to ascend from their roosts in Botanic Park and set out in search of food.
Continue reading...Florida’s manatees are actually relative newcomers, historical research suggests
State’s beloved but under-pressure sea cows were barely recorded in the area before seas warmed in the late 1700s
Manatees, long considered among Florida’s most beloved and enchanting inhabitants, are not native at all, and only came to the Sunshine state for warm temperatures and clear blue waters like any other visitor, researchers have found.
The surprise revelation by scientists at the University of South Florida (USF) and George Washington University (GWU) upends decades of thinking about the origins of the threatened species, once plentiful around the Florida peninsula, the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean.
Continue reading...