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EU’s power emissions hit historic low last year, industrial electricity demand barely rises -data
Major US lenders exit UN-convened net zero alliance
Australia’s flying foxes are ‘curious, gentle and intelligent’ – and often misunderstood
Endangered spectacled flying foxes and vulnerable grey-headed flying foxes are ‘astonishing’ animals but misinformation is rife
One of the most spectacular sights at Adelaide’s Womadelaide music festival is not on the official lineup.
As dusk approaches, thousands of grey-headed flying foxes begin chattering and stretching their wings as they prepare to ascend from their roosts in Botanic Park and set out in search of food.
Continue reading...Florida’s manatees are actually relative newcomers, historical research suggests
State’s beloved but under-pressure sea cows were barely recorded in the area before seas warmed in the late 1700s
Manatees, long considered among Florida’s most beloved and enchanting inhabitants, are not native at all, and only came to the Sunshine state for warm temperatures and clear blue waters like any other visitor, researchers have found.
The surprise revelation by scientists at the University of South Florida (USF) and George Washington University (GWU) upends decades of thinking about the origins of the threatened species, once plentiful around the Florida peninsula, the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean.
Continue reading...Dutch developer, Sri Lankan company partner on plastic credit project under Verra’s framework
Digitalisation increasingly used by oil and gas industry to curb emissions -report
IETA sets out way forward to scale biodiversity credit markets
Taiwan boosts 2030 emissions reduction target
Abu Dhabi launches MRV programme for emissions tracking, carbon pricing
South Korea releases 10-year roadmap for ETS reforms
China hints at ETS inclusion of financial institutions, but timeline remains unclear
China clarifies trading rules for national offset market
Japan, Indonesia adopt CCS/CCUS regulations, approve new methods at Joint Crediting Mechanism meeting
Pakistan’s federal cabinet authorises carbon trading regulations
UK's biggest ever dinosaur footprint site unearthed
Fig and almond trees thriving in UK thanks to fewer frosts, RHS says
Society to retire plants no longer suited to UK’s changing climate after 14% fewer days of ground frost recorded
Fig and almond trees are thriving in Britain as a result of fewer frosts, the Royal Horticultural Society has said.
The lack of frost, one of the effects of climate breakdown, means plants used to warmer climes have been doing well in RHS gardens. Almond trees from the Mediterranean were planted at Wisley in Surrey several years ago, and without frost this year have fruited well for the first time.
Continue reading...Each year I insist we visit the same beach. Repetition tricks the mind into thinking a thing will last for ever | Jenny Sinclair
I want to give my kids that overarching sense of a single summer going on all through childhood, a door to a memory they can open any time
You never step into the same river twice. But you can step into the same ocean, or so it seems, each January when we take that first swim: ducking our heads under a wave to feel the rush of cold and the sting of salt, shaking like dogs when we emerge, washed clean of the year just gone.
When I was a child, it was Phillip Island: a green canvas tent in my grandfather’s back yard; a chipped foam surfboard rasping against my skin as I lay on it, just floating in the channel between the island and the mainland, never daring to go into the actual surf. It was the acrid smoke of mozzie coils and the oily texture of the battered flake from the fish and chip shop. Showers under the tank stand; the sun burning our skin until it peeled.
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Jenny Sinclair is a Melbourne journalist and writer of creative nonfiction and fiction
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