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Moorabool wind farm connection agreement finalised
Plunkett Homes and Bradford Energy partner to build better homes with Tesla technology
More than half your body is not human
RCR awarded $60M Greenough River solar farm 30MWac expansion project
Victoria’s brown coal power plants undermining reliability of national grid
Antarctic expedition hopes for Ernest Shackleton bonus
Mission to Antarctica's Larsen ice shelves
CP Daily: Monday April 9, 2018
Air Pollution Specialist, California Air Resources Board – Sacramento
Senior research analyst, IHS Markit – London
RGGI states call for tighter cap, consistent language in Virginia cap-and-trade programme
EU Market: EUAs climb back above €13 despite a return to weak auctions
Weatherwatch: overheating cities take steps to cool down
Light-coloured roads and rooftop gardens are planning measures being employed to combat rising urban temperatures
With summer still apparently a long way off, it seems premature to be worrying about heatwaves but they are becoming as great a threat to life as winter cold. Predictions are that, in summer, most European cities could become as much as 10C hotter by the end of this century, testing the old and very young who both have trouble regulating body temperature.
Related: Urban heat islands: cooling things down with trees, green roads and fewer cars
Continue reading...A new wave of rock removal could spell disaster for farmland wildlife
Experts raise doubts over new LCFS targets due to price, regulatory uncertainty
'It's our lifeblood': the Murray-Darling and the fight for Indigenous water rights
Securing rights to cultural flows would provide employment and skills for Indigenous communities along river system
• Murray-Darling: when the river runs dry
When the water levels of the Darling river fall, local elders in Wilcannia, New South Wales, say, the crime rate spikes, particularly juvenile crime.
It seems like an odd correlation until the elders explain just how important the river is to their everyday lives.
Continue reading...Tree clearing, not urban sprawl, wiping out koalas in Queensland, WWF says
Analysis shows 94% of the 5,000 estimated koala deaths due to habitat loss from 2012 to 2016 occurred outside the state’s heavily developed south-east
Environmentalists estimate that tree clearing in regional and rural Queensland is now 15 times more destructive to the state’s koala populations than urban sprawl.
Development, and the loss of koala habitat for housing and infrastructure, was considered a key reason why the koala was added to the “vulnerable” species list in 2012.
Continue reading...