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Country diary: wood pigeons dice with death on the road
Sandy, Bedfordshire: These grit peckers are masters of last-minute escapology. But not always
Twice every day, soon after dawn and a little before dusk, wood pigeons come down on country roads to feed. Not for them the tyre-stamped carcasses that are peeled off the asphalt by crow beaks. Pigeons are grit peckers, heads down like chickens in a yard. They gobble up tiny stones to act as so many grinding pestles in the mortar of their digestive tract.
While crows have adapted to life in the fast lane with cunning and calculating judgment, wood pigeons are masters of last-minute escapology. But not always. Last autumn, I noticed one standing in the middle of a straight, wood-edged road, head lowered, picking away at the ground. I drove on, slowed and waited for it to fly. It flew all right: just a few metres in front of the car it gave a tiny hop that brought it just above the bumper. I heard a soft thud and then, through an explosion of down, a grey bundle smacked against the windscreen, after which I looked in the rear-view mirror to see the poor bird’s body cartwheeling off towards the verge. Weeks later, I was still picking out pale feathers that had wedged firmly on impact in the radiator grill.
Continue reading...Anthony Albanese rules out retrospective legislation to fight Adani
Labor frontbencher says party must ‘get the policy mechanisms right’ over Carmichael coalmine
Anthony Albanese says Labor should not single out existing projects, like the Adani coalmine, that have already gone through approval processes “and then retrospectively change existing laws, which would have ramifications across the board”.
The Labor frontbencher has effectively ruled out Labor overhauling the Environmental Protection Biodiversity and Conversation Act as part of a strategy to boost legal options of killing the controversial Queensland coal project.
Continue reading...Stronger storms mean new 'category six' scale may be needed
Traditional scale used goes only to five but strength and intensity of storms is increasing, says scientists
The increasing strength, intensity and duration of tropical cyclones has climate scientists questioning whether a new classification needs to be created: a category-six storm.
The Saffir-Simpson hurricane wind scale currently runs in severity from one to five, with five describing near-total destruction.
Continue reading...Will the NEG make the energy transition easier or harder?
Weatherill: Why state election will be referendum on renewables
Three SA Fisheries - Agency application 2018
Three SA Fisheries - Agency application 2018
Herbert Smith Freehills advises Ararat wind farm on innovative corporate PPAS with flow power
Your drive to the shops makes life pretty noisy for whales
Adani abandons March deadline to secure funding for Carmichael coalmine
Multinational says deadline was predicated on a subsidised Australian government loan
Adani’s plan to build Australia’s largest coalmine has suffered another setback. The company has abandoned its March deadline for securing financing for the first stage of the Carmichael mine.
In October, Jeyakumar Janakaraj, the chief executive of Adani Australia, told Reuters it aimed to settle financing for the project by March 2018.
Continue reading...Germany’s sonnen to build battery manufacturing plant in Adelaide
Sun Metals, MSF Sugar sign up to Queensland “virtual power plant”
Weatherwatch: floating windfarms prove their worth
Potential for floating windfarms is huge, as many countries have windy sites close to shore
Floating windfarms are likely to be the next large-scale development in renewable energy. The first Hywind Scotland, developed by the Norwegian state oil giant, Statoil, has proved a greater success than its designers hoped. The five giant six-megawatt turbines, 25 miles east of Peterhead, produced more power than expected in the first three months and withstood hurricane-force winds and giant waves.
The potential for this technology is hard to overstate. Few countries have shallow continental shelves like the UK to build offshore windfarms on the sea bed, but many have windy sites close to shore where floating windfarms could be anchored to provide power for coastal cities.
Continue reading...The humble 'bin chicken' is helping science understand the Tyrannosaurus rex – video
The Australian white ibis, AKA the 'bin chicken', might not have won the title of Australia's favourite bird, but its next race might help scientists understand how dinosaurs walked and ran
Continue reading...Ancient Britons 'replaced' by newcomers
Should Australia recognise the human right to a healthy environment?
Calling citizen scientists: more data needed to protect echidnas
These masters of disguise are some of the world’s oldest surviving mammals, but they are threatened by habitat loss, traffic and feral cats – and they need our help
They may be one of the world’s oldest surviving mammals – around for at least 25m years – but scientists don’t know much about echidnas. Now researchers believe the remaining Australian population may be threatened and they need citizen scientists’ help to save them.
Related: 'Fantasy documents': recovery plans failing Australia's endangered species
Continue reading...National Farmers' Union elects first female president
Minette Batters becomes first woman to hold top job since NFU was founded in 1908
The National Farmers’ Union has elected Minette Batters as the first female president in the organisation’s 110-year history.
Batters, a Wiltshire beef, sheep and arable farmer who has also diversified her business into weddings and catering, was previously the NFU’s deputy president.
Continue reading...High court rules UK air pollution plans 'unlawful'
Government loses third court case as judge says approach to tackling pollution in 45 local authority areas is ‘not sufficient’
The government will have to do more to tackle illegal levels of air pollution after a high court judge ruled its current plans are “unlawful”.
Mr Justice Garnham told the London court on Wednesday the approach to tackling pollution in 45 local authority areas was “not sufficient”.
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