Feed aggregator

Week in wildlife in pictures: a hunting osprey, a golf-loving snake and a hedgehog in a war zone

The Guardian - 3 hours 17 min ago

The best of this week’s wildlife photographs from around the world

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

I’m all for the concept of ‘forest school’ – just not the kind I pulled my kids out of | Emma Brockes

The Guardian - 3 hours 17 min ago

I smugly assumed I was offering my children a crash course in wholesomeness. The reality was quite different

Earlier this week, I dropped my kids off at a day camp in a park in London and then congratulated myself all the way home. The summer holiday is long and camp programmes are expensive, and when you sign up for one, there is a hard-to-resist expectation that the kids will be not only entertained but improved – physically (swimming lessons), morally (team games – specifically rounders) and, in the case of the camp we signed up for, spiritually. By which, of course, I refer to two sacred words in the middle-class lexicon: forest school.

I should say I’m completely down with the broad mission of forest school. Adults and children are improved by spending time in nature; studies and experience show this. There is a difference, however, between forest school the movement, a laudable push to get kids learning outside based on ideas that stretch back to the 19th century and popularised in the 1950s by, of course, the Scandinavians, and forest school, the modern marketing and business initiative. It reminds me of the catnip status latterly occupied by Mandarin lessons in the New York state primary system, which, when my three-year-olds started pre-school in 2018 – one of them still wearing pull-ups – saw them slogging each week through a mandatory class. There is nothing wrong with learning Mandarin, but it is perhaps not a priority for people who can’t use the toilet yet.

Emma Brockes is a Guardian columnist

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Zigzag patterns on walls could help cool overheated buildings, study finds

The Guardian - 4 hours 17 min ago

An architectural zigzag design can limit how much heat is absorbed by buildings – and emitted back to space

Incorporating zigzag patterns into building walls could help cool overheated buildings, research has found.

Buildings are now responsible for approximately 40% of global energy consumption, contributing more than a third of global carbon dioxide emissions.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Crackles, clicks and pops – now we can monitor the ‘heartbeat’ of soil

The Conversation - 6 hours 17 min ago
By listening to the “heartbeat” or soundscape of soil, we can learn more about its condition. Think of poor soil as a lifeless party. Healthy soil is where you’ll find the good vibes and chatter. Jake M Robinson, Ecologist and Researcher, Flinders University Martin Breed, Associate Professor in Biology, Flinders University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

Click, crackle and pop: healthy soil makes more noise, scientists find

The Guardian - 6 hours 17 min ago

Researchers at Australia’s Flinders University hope the acoustic method will make it easier to find and fix soil degradation

Ever wondered what the Earth sounds like? New research suggests healthy soil has a distinctive soundtrack of its own – the crackles, pops and clicks of ants and worms bustling around underground.

Scientists from Australia’s Flinders University listened to microphones planted in the ground to see if invertebrate instrumentals are a good indicator of biodiversity and soil health.

Sign up for Guardian Australia’s free morning and afternoon email newsletters for your daily news roundup

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

ANALYSIS: Global South carbon markets need an explosion of Southern demand

Carbon Pulse - 6 hours 40 min ago
Heightened demand from carbon credit buyers located in the Global South will be key to retaining climate finance in-country and pursuing sustainable development in emerging economies via the voluntary market (VCM), instead of relying on foreign investors from the North, according to speakers at the Mexico Carbon Forum in Guanajuato this week.
Categories: Around The Web

Federal court dismisses SAF greenwashing lawsuit against United Airlines

Carbon Pulse - 6 hours 43 min ago
A federal court granted United Airlines’ (UA) motion to dismiss a class action lawsuit alleging the airline had misrepresented its green claims from the use of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF), according to court documents released Wednesday.
Categories: Around The Web

Regional cooperation can facilitate Article 6 development in Latin America -panellists

Carbon Pulse - 7 hours 1 min ago
Regional trade bloc agreements could help facilitate the development of Article 6 capacities and trading in Latin America, conference attendees heard Wednesday.
Categories: Around The Web

Mexico’s Hidalgo exploring options for future state carbon tax -official

Carbon Pulse - 8 hours 45 min ago
The Mexican state of Hidalgo is considering implementing a state carbon tax, which is expected to allow the use of offsets for compliance purposes, according to an official from the state’s environmental ministry.
Categories: Around The Web

WCI Markets: CCAs slip amid dampened auction expectations

Carbon Pulse - 8 hours 53 min ago
California Carbon Allowance (CCA) prices moved lower this week in light of the Q3 auction, as traders discussed whether recent feedback submitted to California regulator ARB would be incorporated into the cap-and-trade programme's formal rulemaking.
Categories: Around The Web

Canada Growth Fund invests $100 mln in carbon capture company

Carbon Pulse - 9 hours 16 min ago
The Canada Growth Fund (CGF) has allocated $100 mln towards a British Columbia-based carbon capture company, the federal government announced Thursday.
Categories: Around The Web

FEATURE: Mexican carbon market stakeholders pin high hopes on new president

Carbon Pulse - 9 hours 21 min ago
Mexican carbon market stakeholders are welcoming president-elect Claudia Sheinbaum as a fresh face with the potential to prop up green finance, Carbon Pulse heard this week in Guanajuato at the Mexico Carbon Forum, though subnational governments are still seen as a major driver of the country’s climate action.
Categories: Around The Web

Bolivian constitutional court legalises carbon trading, review requested -media

Carbon Pulse - 9 hours 33 min ago
Bolivia’s top court has struck down a provision of national legislation that previously banned carbon trading in the country, prompting a request for review by the vice presidency.
Categories: Around The Web

Mexican carbon market needs simple regulations to hit sweet spot -stock exchange

Carbon Pulse - 9 hours 42 min ago
Federal regulations are needed in Mexico to incentivise carbon credit use among businesses and foster greater voluntary market (VCM) transparency, according to a senior stock exchange official speaking at the Mexico Carbon Forum in Guanajuato this week.
Categories: Around The Web

New York ETS draft rules expected later this year -state officials

Carbon Pulse - 9 hours 46 min ago
New York officials plan to release draft rules for the state’s cap-and-invest programme later this year, a webinar heard Thursday.
Categories: Around The Web

Eight US states back Ohio’s SCOTUS appeal against California’s clean vehicle mandate authority

Carbon Pulse - 9 hours 48 min ago
Eight states last week filed a joint brief at the Supreme Court of the US (SCOTUS) in support of Ohio’s ongoing battle against the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) authorisation of California’s regulations to mandate increasing sales of zero emission vehicles (ZEVs).
Categories: Around The Web

Pages

Subscribe to Sustainable Engineering Society aggregator