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How to teach climate change so 15-year-olds can act
OECD’s Pisa program will measure the ability of students to take action in response to climate anxiety and ‘take their position and role in the global world’
“It’s going to get hot and everything’s going to be on fire and the oceans will rise. That’s just like the worst of the worst. How do you combat that?” asks year 11 student, Josh Dorian.
“Well, you fix it, you stop it from happening, you take preventive measures,” says Josh, who is studying VCE environmental science at Mount Lilydale Mercy College, a high school in Melbourne’s outer east. “Involving kids in that is scary, but I think it’s necessary.”
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Continue reading...UK universities introduce hydrochar with £100/t capture potential
BIOFIN sets out actions to scale biodiversity credit market in Colombia
Oslo launches pilot biochar project to test carbon storage potential
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Water voles bounce back in key areas but distribution across UK declines
Exclusive: Efforts to eradicate American mink help boost population of river-residing mammal in 11 areas of country
Water voles continue to decline in their distribution across Britain but there are signs of recovery in some regions, with populations bouncing back in 11 key areas, according to a report.
The river-residing mammal, which inspired Ratty in the Wind in the Willows, has revived in number in parts of Yorkshire, Oxfordshire, Hertfordshire and East Anglia thanks to targeted conservation work.
Continue reading...GEF Council ringfences nearly $700 mln for biodiversity protection, chemical management in developing countries
First contracts signed under UK’s Hydrogen Allocation Round 1
Green protein startup secures €5 mln to fund commercial carbon capture scale-up
Weather tracker: Nordic countries set for unseasonably mild Christmas
Temperatures expected to reach about 10C in Copenhagen and highs of 5-6C in Oslo, Stockholm and Helsinki
Nordic countries are often associated with cold, snowy winters and temperatures well below zero celsius. However, this year unseasonably mild weather is forecast to move in across Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Finland over the Christmas period, with temperatures well above the seasonal average.
A particularly mild air mass is expected to arrive on Christmas Day, with temperatures widely rising above 0C (32F). Oslo, Stockholm and Helsinki will probably have highs of 5-6C on Christmas Day, with a high of about 10C in Copenhagen. These temperatures would be 4-5C above the seasonal average, but the highest anomalies will be found further north across Finland, where temperatures in Rovaniemi – the capital of Lapland – will be up to 8C above average with an expected high of 2C on 25 December.
Continue reading...BRIEFING: EU vows to “stay the course” on climate, while making plans to slash red tape by 25%
AU Market: ACCU prices trend lower as market enters summer doldrums
Build it and they will come: Transmission is key, but LNP make it harder and costlier
The post Build it and they will come: Transmission is key, but LNP make it harder and costlier appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Leadership reshuffle at Australia’s largest soil carbon project developer
Second Trump presidency forces Australia to push back 2035 NDC advice -Climate Change Authority
Snowy Hunter gas project hit by more delays and blowouts, with total cost now more than $2 billion
The post Snowy Hunter gas project hit by more delays and blowouts, with total cost now more than $2 billion appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Yes, reindeer actually can have red noses – and other fascinating facts about this Christmas icon
Developer launches appeal after judge rules in favour of Indigenous people in case over large Peruvian REDD project
Oslo court quashes NOK 400 mln EU ETS fine against Norwegian Air
On a wing and a prayer: the hidden beauty of insect’s flight – in pictures
For the past decade, the Barcelona-based visual artist Xavi Bou has devoted his work to revealing “the hidden beauty of natural movement”. His initial focus was birds; now he’s moved on to insects. In collaboration with US entomologist Adrian Smith he’s created an eye-popping series that captures – by merging multiple frames into a single image – the rhythmic flutterings of butterflies and chaotic leaps of spittlebugs and treehoppers. As well as their beauty, Bou was struck by the crucial role that insects play in ecosystems, even as their numbers plummet – it’s estimated that the biomass of flying insect species has decreased by 75% over the past 27 years. “We need to move beyond seeing insects as mere nuisances,” says Bou. “They are fascinating, essential creatures, and we owe them a great deal.”
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