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'The threats continue​’: murder of retired couple chills fellow activists in Turkey

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-10-18 14:00

The killing of two activists who successfully campaigned to shut down a mine has shocked environmentalists in Turkey who fear their deaths will embolden others to kill to protect their profits

Interactive: recording the deaths of environmental activists around the world

Cedar branches whisper in the Anatolian breeze. Twigs crunch underfoot. A truck rumbles from a distant marble quarry. The crack of a hunter’s rifle echoes through the forest.

The sounds of tranquility and violence intermingle at the remote hillside home of Aysin and Ali Büyüknohutçu, the Turkish beekeepers and environmental defenders whose murder in Finike earlier this year has sent a chill through the country’s conservation movement.

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Categories: Around The Web

States gobsmacked by lack of detail, research in Turnbull’s NEG

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2017-10-18 13:46
States stunned by lack of detail in new energy policy. In a testy phone hook-up they were told all the government had was a press release and an eight-page letter.
Categories: Around The Web

Origin backs NEG, even though it fails to match climate target

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2017-10-18 13:28
Origin Energy's newly released decarbonisation plan shows the gen-tailer is taking climate change rather more seriously than the Coalition.
Categories: Around The Web

On Turnbull’s electricity trilemma, are we being negged?

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2017-10-18 13:05
The Australian public has been ‘negged’ by unfounded fears of blackouts. Will we be 'negged' again by the proposed new energy policy?
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The government's energy policy hinges on some tricky wordplay about coal's role

The Conversation - Wed, 2017-10-18 11:48
By rebranding coal as 'dispatchable', the government's National Energy Guarantee looks set to preserve demand for coal-fired power by giving it a new role – one it's not well equipped to fulfil. John Quiggin, Professor, School of Economics, The University of Queensland Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

China set to add 50GW new solar PV in 2017

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2017-10-18 11:20
China has installed 42GW of new solar PV in 2017 so far, putting it on track to reach a record 50GW for the year. Meanwhile, in battery storage...
Categories: Around The Web

Photo of butchered rhino wins top award

BBC - Wed, 2017-10-18 10:14
A shocking image of a dehorned black rhino makes Brent Stirton Wildlife Photographer of the Year.
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The NEG: A carbon price by any other name

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2017-10-18 10:02
Assuming it is implemented, the Turnbull government's National Energy Guarantee will in effect establish a de facto price on carbon emissions from the power sector.
Categories: Around The Web

Federal government unveils 'National Energy Guarantee' – experts react

The Conversation - Wed, 2017-10-18 08:20
The federal government has announced a new National Energy Guarantee focused on electricity reliability, after deciding not to implement a clean energy target. Alan Pears, Senior Industry Fellow, RMIT University Anna Skarbek, CEO at ClimateWorks Australia, Monash University Dylan McConnell, Researcher at the Australian German Climate and Energy College, University of Melbourne Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2017 – the winners

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-10-18 08:00

A ceremony at the Natural History Museum, London, will reveal the winners of its Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition on Wednesday. Two overall winning images have been selected from the winners of each category, depicting the incredible diversity of life on our planet. They are on show with 99 other images selected by an international panel of judges at the 53rd exhibition, which opens at the museum on Friday.

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Replacing the Clean Energy Target with a dirty one?

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2017-10-18 07:35
The decision to walk away from a Clean Energy Target makes no sense. But small communities will forge ahead with the transition to renewable energy.
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Snack attack: alligators like to eat sharks, study reveals

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-10-18 07:20
  • Researchers find alligators preying on small sharks in Atlantic and Gulf
  • ‘The frequency of one predator eating the other is really about size dynamic’

American alligators are frequently seen ambling around golf courses in Florida as players warily compete their rounds. But new research suggests the reptiles partake in a far more outlandish habit when away from the greens – eating sharks.

Related: ‘I don’t want to imagine a world without giant snakes in it’

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Curious Kids: Why do so many animals seem to have pink ears, when their bodies are all different colours?

The Conversation - Wed, 2017-10-18 05:14
Animals that evolved in cold parts of the world usually have lighter skin. If a light-skinned animal has blood vessels close to the surface of their ear skin, this will make the ears look pink. Wayne Iwan Lee Davies, Adjunct Research Fellow, School of Biological Sciences, University of Western Australia Shaun Collin, Winthrop Professor/WA Premier's Research Fellow, School of Biological Sciences and the Oceans Institute, University of Western Australia Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Winds have generated power for centuries | Brief letters

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-10-18 02:17
Walsall’s heyday | Wind power | Elon Musk’s Hyperloop | Today programme | Worst deal ever

“Walsall was never a pretty town”, according to Roy Boffy (Letters, 16 October); this may be true now but has not always been the case. Its handsome villas and public buildings were remarked on in 1834 by William White in The History, Gazeteer and Directory of Staffordshire and he believed it needed to yield to no other town in Staffordshire in beauty and elegance. During the 19th century, Walsall added more civic buildings, many built to help improve the life of working people. The 20th and 21st century have not been kind to the town but that is not a reason to forget its history.
Cathy Schling
London

• Regarding Paula Cocozza’s article on “the resource that could power the world” (G2, 15 October), let us not forget that wind has indeed already powered the world in the political and economic sense, powering the sailing ships of naval and merchant fleets that set up the European empires that dominated the pre-20th-century globe.
Beth Cresswell
Hightown, Merseyside

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UK withdrawal bill 'rips the heart out of environmental law', say campaigners

The Guardian - Tue, 2017-10-17 23:24

New bill omits key ‘precautionary’ principle requiring developers and industry to prove actions will not harm wildlife or habitats as well as ‘polluter pays’ protections

The cornerstones of wildlife and habitat protection have been quietly left out of the withdrawal bill ripping the heart out of environmental law, campaigners say.

A key principle under EU law which provides a robust legal backstop against destruction of the environment – the precautionary principle - has been specifically ruled out of the bill as a means of legal challenge in British courts.

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Regreening the planet could cut as much carbon as halting oil use – report

The Guardian - Tue, 2017-10-17 21:22

Natural solutions such as tree planting, protecting peatlands and better land management could account for 37% of all cuts needed by 2030, says study


Planting forests and other activities that harness the power of nature could play a major role in limiting global warming under the 2015 Paris agreement, an international study showed on Monday.

Natural climate solutions, also including protection of carbon-storing peatlands and better management of soils and grasslands, could account for 37% of all actions needed by 2030 under the 195-nation Paris plan, it said.

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Let’s get this straight, habitat loss is the number-one threat to Australia's species

The Conversation - Tue, 2017-10-17 16:31
The outgoing Threatened Species Commissioner has downplayed the importance of land clearing as a threat to Australia's plants and animals. But it's the biggest threat, and magnifies the others too. Brendan Wintle, Professor of Conservation Ecology, University of Melbourne, University of Melbourne Sarah Bekessy, Professor, RMIT University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

Abbott 1, Consumer 0. Turnbull’s energy fudge locks in high prices

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2017-10-17 15:06
If one thing is clear from the Coalition's new energy policy announcement today, it is that Tony Abbott has won, and consumers have lost. Even in the most optimistic scenario presented by the government, energy consumers will see little reduction in their energy bills over the next decade. And that's outrageous.
Categories: Around The Web

Infographic: the National Energy Guarantee at a glance

The Conversation - Tue, 2017-10-17 15:01
The National Energy Guarantee promises to make electricity supply more reliable, cheaper and less polluting. Michael Hopkin, Environment + Energy Editor, The Conversation Madeleine De Gabriele, Deputy Editor: Energy + Environment, The Conversation Wes Mountain, Deputy Multimedia Editor, The Conversation Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
Categories: Around The Web

Country diary: sycamores create painterly clumps of colour and shade

The Guardian - Tue, 2017-10-17 14:30

Cressbrook Dale, Derbyshire These often despised trees took centuries to go native but today they are a welcome addition to the autumn atmosphere – especially in the rain

I find it strange to read in Oliver Rackham’s wonderful Trees and Woodland in the British Landscape that sycamores were probably introduced to the UK in the 16th century, but only went native in the 18th. It seems odd, because it is hard to imagine this restless beast of a tree settling for domestic imprisonment for 200 years.

My experience is that its whirling helicopter-like “keys”, aided only by the slightest breeze, can unpick any attempt to block their escape into the wild. In our Norfolk village I am also astonished how quickly those seeds put down roots and I’ve even taken to using mole grips to wrestle with the saplings’ iron-like purchase on our garden soil.

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