Feed aggregator
Rooftop solar hits record 52 pct share in Australia’s most coal dependent state
The post Rooftop solar hits record 52 pct share in Australia’s most coal dependent state appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Man knocked out by whale tail whack while in small boat off Gold Coastr
Queensland police say the man remained in his tinny after the whale hit him in waters near Coolangatta
A man has suffered serious injuries after being struck by a whale while in a tinny in waters near the border of Queensland and New South Wales.
Jetski riders off the coast of Coolangatta called emergency services just before 9am on Sunday when a whale reportedly collided with the man in his boat.
Continue reading...Is the hydrogen vehicle dream over? Australian car buyers are making their choice clear
Experts worry hydrogen cars will delay electrification of transport – but only five were sold in Australia in the last quarter, while EVs sell steadily
Is Australia’s love affair with the hydrogen car over before it began? New data shows just five vehicles running on hydrogen fuel-cells were sold across the country last quarter.
Battery-powered electric vehicles, on the other hand, sold steadily. Australians bought 25,353 EVs in the three months to 30 June – 8% of the total. Hybrid cars were even more popular, with 46,727 sold.
Continue reading...Croc shock as Houdini the elusive crocodile pops up again in outback Queensland town
‘Freshie’ spotted in Hughenden’s human-made lake after unexpectedly escaping death in cold snap
- Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updates
- Get our morning and afternoon news emails, free app or daily news podcast
The residents of Hughenden in Queensland’s outback have two questions.
How did a freshwater crocodile come to be living in their local swimming spot – and when is it going to move on?
Continue reading...‘It’s sometimes right to disobey laws’: Doctor struck off for Insulate Britain protests speaks out
Convicted of non-violent offences in Insulate Britain action, Dr Diana Warner is second GP to have licence suspended, which a medical tribunal ruled could damage patient trust
A retired GP has become the second doctor to have their medical licence suspended after being convicted of non-violent offences during peaceful climate protests.
Dr Diana Warner, who worked as a GP for 35 years in surgeries around Bristol, was imprisoned for a total of six weeks for twice breaching private anti-protest injunctions banning people from blocking traffic on the M25 in 2021 and 2022. She was also jailed for six weeks for gluing her hand to the dock during her plea hearing at a magistrates court in east London in 2022.
Continue reading...Speculators build CCA length, compliance shores up RGGI holdings
US oil majors defend objections to Pennsylvania county climate lawsuit
California Senator proposes to delay climate disclosure law rollout
UN talks move slowly towards setting up a global fund for sharing benefits derived from genetic resources
Girl discovers dinosaur footprints on beach walk
UK military satellite launches to boost space power
Mexico one of least exposed LATAM countries to EU CBAM, says expert
CBAM to hit Vietnam’s steel exports, researchers find
Chair of Nuclear for Australia denies that calling CO2 ‘plant food’ means he is a climate denier
Dr Adi Paterson’s statements are apparently at odds with the group’s official position, which says nuclear is needed to tackle the climate crisis
The chair of a leading Australian nuclear advocacy group has called concerns that carbon dioxide emissions are driving a climate crisis an “irrational fear of a trace gas which is plant food” and has rejected links between worsening extreme weather and global heating.
Several statements from Dr Adi Paterson, reviewed by the Guardian, appear at odds with statements from the group he chairs, Nuclear for Australia, which is hosting a petition saying nuclear is needed to tackle an “energy and climate crisis”.
Continue reading...The first rule of Bite Club? Survive an attack by an apex predator
Surviving a shark – or lion, or bear – attack is the key criteria for entry into Bite Club. Together its members navigate their next big challenge: what happens after you survive?
Paul Kenny was camping behind the dunes at Samurai beach, north of Port Stephens on the Australian east coast, when he jumped naked into the water to “just wake up”. It was freezing but he caught a good wave, got some speed up and hit something. At first he thought it was another person but there was no one else swimming. He had body surfed into the head of a 2.5-metre (8ft) bronze whaler shark and his outstretched arm was in its teeth.
And with that, Kenny met the criteria to enter the small, exclusive Bite Club.
Continue reading...Why do whales beach themselves? A vial of parasites in a Tasmanian museum may hold the answer
Pilot whale that beached itself in 1973 was infested with thousands of parasitic nematodes that may have eaten away at its blowhole
A vial of white parasitic worms left for decades in a Tasmanian museum may help solve a timeless mystery: why do whales strand themselves on beaches?
The worms were collected from the blowhole of a pilot whale that beached itself in 1973 and then stored in Launceston’s Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery.
Continue reading...Voluntary carbon standard seeks feedback on peatland restoration methodology
Climate activists in frame for £1m costs of protest bans run up by UK’s biggest law firm
DLA Piper seeking to recover costs in relation to injunctions it secured for National Highways and HS2, records show
Britain’s biggest law firm has sought more than £1m from climate protesters to cover the cost of court orders banning them from protesting, an investigation has found.
The multibillion-pound City law firm DLA Piper has been trying to recover costs from activists for work done on behalf of National Highways Limited (NHL) and HS2 Ltd – both public bodies – obtaining injunctions banning protests on their sites.
Continue reading...Large German firms reduce value chain emissions 4% in 2023 -report
Heat inequality ‘causing thousands of unreported deaths in poor countries’
Friederike Otto of World Weather Attribution says poor people and outdoor workers are dying around the world
Heat inequality is causing thousands of unreported deaths in poor countries and communities across the world, a leading analyst of climate impacts has warned, following global temperature records that may not have been seen in 120,000 years.
Sweltering conditions act as a stealthy killer that preys on the most economically fragile, said Friederike Otto, co-founder of World Weather Attribution, in an appeal for the media and authorities to pay more attention to the dangers.
Continue reading...