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JinkoSolar claims record 23.5% efficiency for PERC solar cell

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2017-11-09 07:19
Jinko sets new efficiency record for PERC solar cell and sees big future in "half cell" modules.
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What it's like spending a year in space

BBC - Thu, 2017-11-09 06:55
Long time far from home, with great views... the International Space Station is not your typical holiday spot.
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DP Energy trumps Gupta with 1.1GW of wind, solar and storage

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2017-11-09 06:28
Irish company DP Energy unveils major expansion of its Port Augusta hybrid renewable energy park, adding another 300MW of solar and 400MW of battery storage as South Australia continues to hurtle towards near 100 per cent renewable energy.
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'Zombie' star survived going supernova

BBC - Thu, 2017-11-09 06:11
Astronomers discover the celestial equivalent of a horror film villain: a star that wouldn't stay dead.
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Australia's emissions rising as world 'flat-lines' - Climate Council report

ABC Environment - Thu, 2017-11-09 05:35
To meet the goal of the Paris Climate Agreement to keep future warming 'well under two degrees, no new coal or gas resources should be opened up in Australia, says a new report from the Climate Council.
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Islands lost to the waves: how rising seas washed away part of Micronesia's 19th-century history

The Conversation - Thu, 2017-11-09 05:17
In1850, the Micronesian island of Nahlapenlohd was the scene of Pohnpei state's first battle involving cannons and muskets. Less than two centuries later, it has sunk beneath the waves. Patrick D. Nunn, Professor of Geography, Sustainability Research Centre, University of the Sunshine Coast Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Blue Planet II: Eel suffers toxic shock in underwater lake

BBC - Thu, 2017-11-09 04:35
Re-live the talked-about moment when an eel suffers the consequences of diving into a brine pool for food.
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Narcissi bobbing in the slipstream of traffic | Brief letters

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-11-09 04:33
Decline in seasons | Closure of Seer Green post office | Boris Johnson journalism fund | Government by dirty old men

I’ve not seen any wasps either, now that you mention it (Letters, 4 November). What I have seen are the first daffodils of the spring – in November, when autumn hasn’t properly happened yet. Oaks and ashes are still holding their green leaves. I expect winter-flowering cherry, winter camellias, winter iris and daffs “January” and “February Gold” to make early appearances (and to be reported on the letters page as prodigious), but along the grass verges of the North Circular Road, seeded with spring bulbs, dainty, yellow and orange narcissi bobbed in the slipstream of the traffic on 3 November. Is there now a worrying decline in seasons?
Ilona Jesnick
London

• The real tragedy of the closure of the post office in Seer Green, Buckinghamshire (Letters, 4 November) is that there will no longer be the facility in the village for its inhabitants to draw their pensions and benefits. Many who do not drive, such as my brother, rely on this service to collect the money that they live off. It is also a vital asset in providing other postal services, as well as newspapers, cards, stationary and confectionary.
Elizabeth Rawlins
Newcastle upon Tyne

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'Butterfly child' given life-saving skin

BBC - Thu, 2017-11-09 04:00
Hassan was born with skin so delicate it would tear and blister
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Europe's carmakers face 30% emission cuts target

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-11-09 03:32

New proposals to limit CO2 from passenger cars and vans by 2030 would meet climate goals, but campaigners say regulations fall short

The European commission has unveiled new proposals for limits on carbon dioxide emissions from passenger cars and vans, which would compel manufacturers to cut emissions from their vehicles by nearly a third from 2030.

But the proposals will not require manufacturers to make a fixed quota of their fleet run on electricity, as some campaigners had hoped.

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Politicians and activists gather for COP23 Bonn climate talks - in pictures

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-11-09 01:01

The world’s nations are meeting in Bonn, Germany, for the 23rd annual “conference of the parties” (COP) under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), which aims to prevent dangerous global warming. This year, Fiji plays president and meeting the Paris climate goals are top of the agenda

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Sheep 'trained to recognise celebrities' in Cambridge study

BBC - Thu, 2017-11-09 00:56
The animals have demonstrated the ability to recognise familiar human faces, according to a study.
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Don't dump your potatoes – use these easy recipes for your freezer

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-11-09 00:23

We are binning nearly half of the fresh spuds we buy. But stashing some in the freezer can save time and make for extra-crunchy roasties

Proof, as if more proof were needed, that Britain is heading to hell in a handcart, comes with the news that we waste nearly half the potatoes we buy, throwing a shameful 2.7m potential roasties or jackets in the bin every day.

The blame could be laid at the door of supermarkets, who insist on selling spuds in vast, plastic-wrapped quantities; decant them into a cool, dark place unless using immediately. And don’t be put off if they start sprouting in the gloom; simply cut off any unnerving proboscises or green patches, before cooking.

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Germany's dirty coalmines become the focus for a new wave of direct action

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-11-08 23:47

Not far from the UN climate talks taking place in Bonn, activists frustrated with slow progress by governments are turning up the heat at the Hambach opencast mine, highlighting Germany’s failure to live up to its green pledges

A giant black mark on Germany’s environmental record is scarred on the land an hour’s drive from the venue of this year’s UN climate talks in Bonn.

Stretching 85 kilometres wide and 400 metres deep, the opencast coalmine near Hambach forest is the biggest hole in Europe and one of the biggest single sources of carbon on the continent.

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SENG Vic-Tas Newsletter November 2017

Newsletters VIC - Wed, 2017-11-08 21:50
Single-Column Responsive Email Template Vic-Tas Chapter Newsletter November 2017 SENG Vic-Tas chapter AGM Level 31, 600 Bourke Street Melbourne, 5.30pm Thursday 23rd November All SENG Vic-Tas members are warmly invited to attend the chapter AGM. We also invite expressions of interest (following the meeting) from members interested in joining the chapter committee. Our Guest speakers will be Bronwyn Wauchope and Carol Ride from Psychologists for a Safe Climate. Their topic will be 'Bridging the climate awareness chasm - psychological perspectives'. Meeting agenda will include: Chair's Report National Board Report Office Bearer Elections Guest Speakers (as above) 2017 National Conference The SENG 2017 National Conference 'Engineering Sustainable Cities' was held on 18th October 2017. The conference was a great success, attracting over 90 registrations, five keynote addresses and 18 technical presentations in two streams. Video recordings of the presentations are now available on the Conference Website . Past SENG Events Want to look back at past SENG events? Presentations from most of our events are available on our website LinkedIn SENG is on LinkedIn. Visit the group here Other useful links Alternative Technology Association Environment Victoria The Conversation Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute. Melbourne Energy Institute Climate Council Beyond Zero Emissions Future Melbourne Network If you can't view this email click here to view online Click here to unsubscribe from this newsletter S
Categories: Newsletters VIC

'As close as the US gets to Egypt’s pyramids': how Chaco Canyon is endangered by drilling

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-11-08 21:00

Irreplaceable cultural resources in New Mexico are among those areas targeted for expedited drilling – and conservationists say it’s ‘like losing pages and chapters of that history book’

In Chaco Canyon, New Mexico, it is still possible to wander the maze of rooms of an ancestral Puebloan village erected roughly 1,000 years ago.

Visitors use the same staircases and duck through the same T-shaped doorways as residents did at the time. A jigsaw puzzle of rocks form walls that stand several feet thick and multiple stories tall. Where rooftops are gone, windows now let in glimpses of sky. It’s a simultaneous experience of vast space and marvelous connection.

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Air pollution crisis in New Delhi

ABC Environment - Wed, 2017-11-08 17:43
Doctors are calling New Delhi's air pollution levels a medical emergency.
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The seven megatrends that could beat global warming: 'There is reason for hope'

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-11-08 17:00

Until recently the battle to avert catastrophic climate change – floods, droughts, famine, mass migrations – seemed to be lost. But with the tipping point just years away, the tide is finally turning, thanks to innovations ranging from cheap renewables to lab-grown meat and electric airplanes

‘Everybody gets paralysed by bad news because they feel helpless,” says Christiana Figueres, the former UN climate chief who delivered the landmark Paris climate change agreement. “It is so in our personal lives, in our national lives and in our planetary life.”

But it is becoming increasingly clear that it does not need to be all bad news: a series of fast-moving global megatrends, spurred by trillion-dollar investments, indicates that humanity might be able to avert the worst impacts of global warming. From trends already at full steam, including renewable energy, to those just now hitting the big time, such as mass-market electric cars, to those just emerging, such as plant-based alternatives to meat, these trends show that greenhouse gas emissions can be halted.

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Australia might water down illegal logging laws – here's why it's a bad idea

The Conversation - Wed, 2017-11-08 16:11
The federal government is considering watering-down laws against importing illegal timber, but this flies in the face of international evidence. Beatriz Garcia, Lecturer, Western Sydney University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Nearly half of all fresh potatoes thrown away daily by UK households

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-11-08 16:01

Figures show nearly 3 million potatoes a day are wasted, at a cost of £230m a year

Nearly half of the edible fresh potatoes bought by UK householders each day are thrown away - nearly 2.7 million of them per day, and at a “staggering” annual cost of £230m, figures show.

The humble spud is the second most wasted food in the UK, behind bread, according to new official figures released on Wednesday. The new research was offered in support of a government campaign to encourage consumers to reduce their domestic food waste.

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