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Bigger or better: Are newer wind farms outperforming older ones?
In theory, bigger and more technologically advanced wind turbines should mean improved generation efficiency. But is this playing out in reality?
The post Bigger or better: Are newer wind farms outperforming older ones? appeared first on RenewEconomy.
More people not having children due to climate breakdown fears, finds research
Analysis finds concerns about environment key factor in having fewer or no children – but reasons differ around world
It was just over a decade ago that Emma Smart and her husband, Andy, first decided they would not have children. Back then, her friends and family did not understand.
“When you tell people you didn’t want to have children, that was a big social no-no,” she recalled. “And then when they asked you why, and you said for environmental reasons, that was completely unheard of.
Continue reading...John Oliver ruffles feathers in New Zealand's Bird of the Century election
Biodiversity Pulse: Thursday November 9, 2023
Kenya land rights dispute spills over into carbon market -media
Lightning fires threaten planet-cooling forests
Microplastic-eating plankton may be worsening crisis in oceans, say scientists
Rotifers could be accelerating risk by splitting particles into thousands of potentially more dangerous nanoplastics
A type of zooplankton found in marine and fresh water can ingest and break down microplastics, scientists have discovered. But rather than providing a solution to the threat plastics pose to aquatic life, the tiny creatures known as rotifers could be accelerating the risk by splitting the particles into thousands of smaller and potentially more dangerous nanoplastics.
Each rotifer, named from the Latin for “wheel-bearer” owing to the whirling wheel of cilia around their mouths, can create between 348,000 and 366,000 nanoplastics – particles smaller than one micrometre – each day.
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German coalition government agrees relief package for electricity-intensive companies
Brazilian state opens dialogue with private sector to map out carbon offset projects
Japanese carbon developers tap into Indonesia despite concerns over data availability and policy uncertainty
Biodiversity credit blockchain partnership secures Costa Rican project
Japanese energy security body pushes again for ASEAN carbon credit regime for CCS
UN seabed authority reaches no conclusion on deep-sea mining rules despite mounting support for ban
Euro Markets: Midday Update
UN hunger expert: US must recognize ‘right to food’ to fix broken system
Some states have implemented free school meals, and Maine has a constitutional amendment to guarantee the ‘unalienable right to food’
The US must acknowledge the right to food in order to transform its broken food system in the post-pandemic era and make it more resilient in the face of the climate crisis and biodiversity loss, according to a United Nations hunger expert.
“Whether we’re talking about right to food, food justice or food sovereignty, there has been growing momentum over the last 10 years to understand that food is not just something we just leave to be determined by what is available or by corporations or the status quo,” said Michael Fakhri, the UN special rapporteur on the right to food.
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