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World Bank loan scheme 'failing clean energy'
Apollo I disaster: How three astronauts died on Earth
Skeleton offers clues to medieval spread of leprosy
‘Clean coal’ power is not the answer to Australia’s emissions targets
Origin Energy ignores coal seam gas well leaks, whistleblower says
Statement of claim lodged at federal court alleges that a general manager said company calculated it was cheaper to pay fines than comply with regulations
Origin Energy has had a deliberate policy of ignoring coal seam gas wells that have been leaking and an offshore gas well that has potentially been leaking for more than a decade, a corporate whistleblower has alleged.
The claims, filed in a revised statement of claim to the federal court and denied by Origin Energy, suggest Origin also failed to properly measure the amount of gas it was producing and therefore underpaid its royalties to the Queensland government – something the whistleblower says senior management were alerted to but also ignored.
Continue reading...Climate concerns, Trumpian “facts” push Doomsday clock close to midnight
PERC solar technology comes full circle as UNSW installs panels
UK offshore wind power falls below £100/MWh 4 Years ahead of schedule
Menai the rare Olive Ridley turtle's scan is 'good news'
EPA staff experiencing stress and fears Trump will suppress climate science
Environmental Protection Agency spokesman says employees are anxious after Trump team placed a hold on the release of work and edited website
Fears that Donald Trump’s presidency will suppress climate science at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) are causing widespread unease, with a spokesman for the administration admitting staff are experiencing “tension and stress” over the transition.
Related: Standing Rock Sioux tribe says Trump is breaking law with Dakota Access order
Continue reading...Martin Alder obituary
My friend Martin Alder, who has died aged 69 from an embolism, was a driving force in building the renewable energy industry in Britain.
Martin led the renewable energy committee of the Association of Electricity Producers from 1992 until 2014, by which time it had become Energy UK. He also served as the association’s vice-chair, supporting renewable energy interests on the board alongside representatives from the largest British electricity companies. He steered this broad church of member companies towards policies that have increased the proportion of UK electricity provided from renewable energy from 2% in 1992 to more than 25% today.
Continue reading...Margaret Bowdery obituary
The name of my friend, Margaret Bowdery, who has died aged 83, will be forever linked with the public footpaths of east Berkshire.
When she moved to Maidenhead in 1964 the paths were in a dire state. An officer from the former Berkshire county council told her that they were not needed and should not be maintained. Margaret was indignant and swiftly called a public meeting to form the East Berkshire Ramblers’ Group, with herself as footpath secretary.
Continue reading...Human-pig 'chimera embryos' detailed
Doomsday clock moves closer to apocalypse
Two wildlife rangers shot dead in Catalonia
Accused has ‘no memory’ of shotgun killings in Spanish olive grove
Two forest rangers have been shot dead in the Spanish region of Catalonia after approaching a hunter reportedly carrying an unlicensed shotgun.
The rangers, who worked for the region’s agriculture department, were on a routine mission on Saturday when they met a hunter in an olive grove and asked to see his firearms licence, according to Roger Cole, from the International Rangers Federation.
Continue reading...We may be closer than we thought to dangerous climate thresholds | John Abraham
A new study identifies an extra 0.1°C of human-caused warming
We don’t want the Earth to warm more than 1.5–2°C (2.7-3.6°F) compared to the pre-industrial climate. These targets are not magical; they are expert judgements about what it takes to avoid some of the more serious effects of climate change. We know the seas will rise (they already are). We know droughts and flooding will get more severe (they already are). We know there will be more heat waves, more intense storms, and ocean acidification (all happening now). We cannot stop some of the changes. But if we keep climate change to these limits, we think we can avoid the worst effects.
Where did these targets come from? Well, I mentioned that they are expert judgements but they are based on science. For instance, we can look into the deep past using ice cores, sediment records, and other tools to see how the past climate changed. We can also look into the future with computer models to predict how the future climate will evolve. Through these tools we can get a sense of how large the impact is if temperatures rise.
Continue reading...Tim Peake's capsule goes on display at Science Museum
Emeritus Professor Alan Mackay-Sim honoured for stem cell research
Tim Peake's capsule goes on display at Science Museum
Makhado mine: flashpoint for tensions over South Africa's pro-coal policies
A campaign by locals and farming businesses to halt a large opencast mine highlights a far wider conflict over South Africa’s continued addiction to coal
On the horizon are the mountains, verdant rainforest on their well-watered, shaded southern slopes and arid scrub on the dry reverse slopes. Then there is the plain, studded with baobab trees and outcrops. Finally there is the river Limpopo. Beyond is another country: troubled, restive Zimbabwe.
But here in the far north-east of South Africa, there is tension, too. In the Soutpansberg range and on the flat lands beyond, an improbable coalition of local farmers, villagers, big agricultural businessmen and activists are fighting to halt the development of a large opencast mine which, they say, would cause massive harm to the region.
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