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Turnbull’s big climate fail, and no positive change in policy
NSW coal fleet feels the heat, with state at risk of “system black”
The further unravelling of Adani’s Carmichael coal project
Checkmate: how do climate science deniers' predictions stack up?
The years 2017, 2016 and 2015 will make up the three hottest years on record for the planet. But there’s no convincing some people
When the global temperature readings are in for 2017, it’s going to be a very hard sell for climate-science deniers: 2017 will likely be ranked either side of 2015 as the second or third hottest year on record, with 2016 still in top spot.
The hottest five-year period recorded in the modern era will be the one we’ve just had.
Continue reading...Redflow makes first battery components in Thailand
Mpemba effect
Tesla big battery outsmarts lumbering coal units after Loy Yang trips
Crocodile lizard is one of 115 new species found in Greater Mekong
Three mammals, 11 amphibians, two fish, 11 reptiles and 88 plants were discovered by scientists in 2016, says WWF
A snail-eating turtle found in a food market and a bat with a horseshoe-shaped face are among 115 new species discovered in the Greater Mekong region.
A report from the conservation charity WWF reveals that three new mammals, 11 amphibians, two fish, 11 reptiles and 88 plants were found by scientists in Cambodia, Laos, Burma, Thailand and Vietnam in 2016.
Continue reading...AEMO plans for future (clean) grid, with no mention of base-load
2017 Review of Climate Change Policies report released
Australia’s emissions projections 2017
Quarterly Update of Australia's National Greenhouse Gas Inventory: June 2017
New approach promises early warnings of soggy summers
Tritium Veefil-RT fast chargers chosen for EV research project in Slovakia
Climate scientists and policymakers need to trust each other (but not too much)
Interstellar object may hold 'alien' water
Ofcom to investigate BBC climate change interview
Penguin tourism
UK plan to tackle plastic waste threat
Scientists have beaten down the best climate denial argument | Dana Nuccitelli
Clouds don’t act as a climate thermostat, and they’re not going to save us from global warming
Climate deniers have come up with a lot of arguments about why we shouldn’t worry about global warming – about 200 of them – but most are quite poor, contradictory, and easily debunked by consulting the peer-reviewed scientific literature. The cleverest climate contrarians settle on the least implausible argument – that equilibrium climate sensitivity (ECS – how much a doubling of the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere will increase Earth’s surface temperature) is low, meaning that the planet will warm relatively slowly in response to human carbon pollution.
But they have to explain how that can be the case, because there are a lot of factors that amplify global warming. For example, a warmer atmosphere holds more water vapor, which is itself a greenhouse gas, adding further warming. Warming also melts ice, leaving Earth’s surface less reflective, absorbing more sunlight. There are a number of these amplifying ‘feedbacks,’ but few that would act to significantly slow global warming.
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