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100% renewables with pumped hydro would use 1/4 the water of coal and gas
AusNet, Deakin Uni to build 7.25MW solar, storage micro-grid
The Community Grid Project launches with a ‘Local Energy Hero’ competition
Improper creation of STCs results in compliance action
The first Australian utility to embrace era of “base-cost renewables”
Acciona supports Australian manufacturing as Mt Gellibrand transformer deliveries begin
The climate effect of the Trump administration
Tesla battery and “hidden demand” added to popular NEM-Watch
Polluting robots win big, clean energy workers get screwed in Trump tax bill
Five ways that cities can slash carbon pollution right now
Birds of a feather: Australian BirdLife's 2018 calendar – in pictures
The annual calendar features stunning shots of the red-tailed black cockatoo and the red-capped robin, as well as the shy and unobtrusive painted button-quail, and the crested shrike-tit, which is heard more often than it’s seen
• Vote for Australia bird of the year 2017
Continue reading...Drought on the Murray River harms ocean life too
Fraser Island marks 25 years as world heritage site
Farthest monster black hole found
A closer look at '3.67m-year-old' skeleton
Google's 'superhuman' DeepMind AI claims chess crown
Switch to electric transport will not lead to surge in power demand | Letters
You report that the defence firm Rolls-Royce has been lobbying for government funds to assist it to diversify into building nuclear reactors (Millions on offer to develop small nuclear plants, 4 December). It is arguing that the switch to electric transport will “drive up future demand”.
The National Grid concludes that, provided that vehicle recharging is concentrated into non-peak demand hours, even large-scale electrification of surface transport requires an increase in electricity system capacity by around 15%.
Continue reading...African apiarists know all about healthy bees | Letters
The photograph accompanying your piece (How Liberia’s killer bees are helping to rebuild livelihoods, 4 December) shows a Liberian beekeeper holding curved comb from a top-bar hive, not the oblong combs of the frame hives generally used in the UK. Top-bar hives, traditional in Africa, allow bees to build comb in the shape they wish, and to structure their nest according to their natural instincts. These hives are usually managed without constant intrusive inspections, chemical interventions and sugar feeding.
A significant minority of UK beekeepers have adopted these methods. We find that they keep bees healthier than conventional systems, and our experience is borne out by the work of Cornell University’s eminent Professor Thomas Seeley, among other scientists.
Continue reading...Iter nuclear fusion project reaches key halfway milestone
After a series of set backs the international project is back on track, say scientists, giving tentative hope for a major new source of clean power by 2025
An international project to generate energy from nuclear fusion has reached a key milestone, with half of the infrastructure required now built.
Bernard Bigot, the director-general of the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (Iter), the main facility of which is based in southern France, said the completion of half of the project meant the effort was back on track, after a series of difficulties. This would mean that power could be produced from the experimental site from 2025.
Continue reading...Is this the end of the road for Adani’s Australian megamine?
Australian and Chinese banks have turned it down, and analysts say Adani’s failure to secure funding for the Carmichael mine leaves it high and dry
Adani’s operations in Australia appear to be hanging on by a thread, as activists prove effective at undermining the company’s chances of getting the finance it needs.
China seems to have ruled out funding for the mine, which means it’s not just Adani’s proposed Carmichael coalmine that is under threat, but also its existing Abbot Point coal terminal, which sits near Bowen, behind the Great Barrier Reef.
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