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Australian bird of the year 2023 result – follow live updates as the #birdoftheyear winner is announced
The moment has arrived – and the swift parrot has taken the crown for 2023 after the votes for the final 10 candidates
The critically endangered swift parrot is the 2023 Australian bird of the year.
Voters in the Guardian/BirdLife Australia biennial poll have used this year’s competition to send a message that they want to see the habitat of the world’s fastest parrot protected.
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NSW leaps to a new renewables record of 87.5 per cent. Will it be the first coal state in Australia to reach an instance of 100 per cent renewables?
The post NSW leaps to new renewables peak of 87.5 pct: Will it be first coal state to 100 pct? appeared first on RenewEconomy.
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Swift parrot named 2023 Australian bird of the year winner
Critically endangered parrot narrowly pips the tawny frogmouth, runner-up for the third time in the biennial Guardian/BirdLife Australia poll
The critically endangered swift parrot is the 2023 Australian bird of the year.
Voters in the Guardian/BirdLife Australia biennial poll have used this year’s competition to send a message that they want to see the habitat of the world’s fastest parrot protected.
Continue reading...And the winner is ... swift parrot announced as the 2023 Australian bird of the year – video
Starting with 50 birds and ending 11 days later, with only 10 left in the running, Lenore Taylor announces the winner of the 2023 Guardian/BirdLife Australia bird of the year. The swift parrot soared to first place in the final round of voting, followed closely by the tawny frogmouth in second place (for the third poll in a row), and the gang-gang cockatoo placed third
Continue reading...Voted for bird of the year? Now make your avian affection really count | Sean Dooley
Help BirdLife Australia build a picture of how our birds are faring by joining the Aussie Bird Count. You can’t solve a problem you don’t know you have
Recently I visited Tokyo for the first time and was immediately struck by the bird calls I would hear at each train station. In an urban conglomeration of 37 million people, it was a pleasant surprise to think birds were thriving. It wasn’t until I heard the distinctive two-note call of a cuckoo that I became suspicious.
It was then that I discovered that they piped in bird sounds to help visually impaired people navigate around the extremely busy stations. In the vast megapolis itself there were very few birds. With the lack of rubbish on the streets, there were hardly even any pigeons or crows compared with Australian cities.
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The post Tasmania renewable start-up plans state’s biggest solar farm and 3.5GW of offshore wind appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Operations Associate, ACX – Singapore
Business Development & Client Relations, ACX – Singapore
Forget coal, we need more sparkies to keep the lights on – tens of thousands of them
In the shift to renewables, electricians and energy workers are becoming as scarce and indispensable as rare metals used in batteries. We need a fix – and fast.
The post Forget coal, we need more sparkies to keep the lights on – tens of thousands of them appeared first on RenewEconomy.
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Australian bird of the year 2021: free downloadable #birdoftheyear poster
Artist Georgia Angus has drawn 23 birds from this year’s poll and we’ve created a poster for Guardian readers to download and enjoy. Use it as a desktop background, print it as an A3 poster, a tea towel or a tote bag – the choice is yours
- Follow our live blog from 11.30am AEDT for the announcement
- Find all our bird of the year content
- Download your Australian birds poster as a JPEG here or PDF here (large file)
To celebrate another year of recognising our country’s wonderful birdlife, we are offering readers a glorious A3 poster featuring some of our best-loved avian species – birds that can hopefully unite a divided nation.
Georgia Angus, an artist and the author of 100 Australian Birds, provided all the illustrations which include the highly ranked gang-gang cockatoo, the powerful owl, the Gouldian finch, the tawny frogmouth and many others.
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The Guardian view on the hottest September: the climate must be prioritised | Editorial
Floods, fires and record-breaking heat demand a response from politicians, as well as Pope Francis
Another month of smashed temperature records has left scientists searching for words with which to describe what is happening. “Gobsmackingly bananas” was the phrase alighted on by Zeke Hausfather of the Berkeley Earth climate data project. This was the hottest September on record, following the hottest August and the hottest July. It beat the previous September record by 0.5C, the largest jump in temperature ever seen.
In the UK, where the summer was wet and many people have enjoyed unseasonably warm early autumn days, the disruption has not been anything like as destructive as elsewhere. But floods, fires and exceptionally high temperatures are becoming more and more frequent – with the overflow of Lhonak Lake in India, and the wildfires and baking heat in Tenerife among the latest emergencies.
Continue reading...