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California LCFS Roundup: April prices rise as Oregon credit bank grows
Top rock climbers head to Washington to push for public lands protection
In 62 separate meetings, 13 teams of athletes and advocates made their ask of politicians: protect public lands by supporting funding
Alex Honnold was stuck in traffic.
The world’s most renowned rock climber was due on Capitol Hill for a US Senate reception with other top climbers from around the country, who had descended en masse on Washington to lobby for greater protections for public lands.
Continue reading...From babies' bums to fatbergs: how we fell out of love with wet wipes
We now use 14,000 of the handy cloths every second - but they are increasingly clogging rivers and putting wildlife at risk. So how can we wean ourselves off them?
On the eighth-floor isolation ward of London’s University College Hospital, nurses have two lines of defence against the spread of life-threatening diseases. First are the airtight double lobbies in every room. Second – and, arguably, more importantly – are the disinfectant wipes they rely on to prevent the spread of germs and viruses.
For nurse consultant Annette Jeanes, the disposable flannels are a godsend that allow her and her staff, not only to protect themselves from superbugs such as C difficile and other viruses, but also to make the most of their time, a crucial factor in the National Health Service.
Continue reading...South Georgia's rats, Network Rail, and the millon dollar cow – green news roundup
The week’s top environment news stories and green events. If you are not already receiving this roundup, sign up here to get the briefing delivered to your inbox
Continue reading...The week in wildlife – in pictures
A nesting stork, a rescued bobcat, and flamingos at sunset are among this week’s pick of images from the natural world
Continue reading...CN Markets: Pilot market data for week ending May. 11, 2018
Senior Investment Manager, Nexus for Development – Phnom Penh
Red squirrels 'may have introduced' leprosy to Britain
Local council issues tree preservation orders to stop Network Rail felling
Bromley Council has taken steps to protect a group of mature trackside trees that are likely to be targeted in the rail operator’s plans to fell all ‘leaf-fall’ species
A local authority has imposed preservation orders on trees growing on Network Rail land to stop them being felled by the operator.
Bromley Council said on Friday it had issued two tree preservation orders (TPO) on a group of mature oaks, sycamores and ash trees which grow alongside the railway – many of which are likely to be targeted if the rail operator carries out its “enhanced clearance” plan to reduce delays, as revealed in the Guardian this week.
Continue reading...UK space needs 'bold national plan'
Switzerland approaches countries to host pilot crediting under Paris Agreement
Sellafield faces huge fine over worker's exposure to radiation
Nuclear regulator prosecutes waste firm after injury leaves employee open to exposure
Britain’s biggest nuclear waste storage and reprocessing site is facing a potential multimillion-pound fine after an employee was exposed to dangerously high levels of radiation.
The nuclear regulator said its investigation had led it to prosecute Cumbria-based Sellafield Ltd, which handles the waste from the UK’s nuclear power stations as well as spent fuel from Japan and the US.
Continue reading...Not just carbon: Fraud taints France’s white certificate scheme
CN Markets: Guangdong offsets sell at premium in small auction
Experience: I have been stung by 150 species of insect
In my job, I have been stung countless times. But nothing comes close to the pain bullet ants inflict
I carried out my first experiment with a stinging insect when I was seven, picking a honey bee off a dandelion and placing it on the arm of my teacher. My hypothesis was that it might sting her, and it turned out to be correct, much to her dismay.
Where I grew up, in the Appalachian area of the north-east US, we had lots of honey bees and wasps of various sorts. As a kid, I was stung by virtually all of them. I realised that they registered the same sort of pain – the intensity may vary from one to the next, but they were fairly similar. But an accidental run-in with a colony of harvester ants led to a life-changing revelation: they didn’t feel at all as I expected they would. They really hurt.
Continue reading...Massive wave is southern hemisphere record, scientists believe
They're out to get you: study finds cyclists face paranoia about drivers
Study finds that 70% of London cyclists believe drivers mean them harm. But is it mainly the fault of the road system?
As a cyclist in a busy urban environment, it can seem that some drivers are out to get you. And now a new study has concluded that for many bike riders, this is only too true: a sense of paranoia is a clinical reality.
The research led by Lyn Ellet, a clinical psychology academic at Royal Holloway, University of London, studied 323 cyclists in London aged between 18-66, and used a series of questions to gauge their levels of paranoia when on a bike.
Continue reading...Sharks groove to the sound of jazz – video
Researchers at Sydney’s Macquarie University discover sharks can recognise jazz music, but struggle to differentiate between styles of music.
Continue reading...The guerilla cyclists solving urban problems | Kieran Smith
From pop-up bike lanes to painted potholes, here are the imaginative ways frustrated cyclists are taking action to create a safer environment
Across the world, transport planning and infrastructure tends to favour the car, and facilities for cyclists and pedestrians are an afterthought. In response, frustrated urban cyclists have thrown caution to the wind and written their own will into the fabric of the city, overturning the dominance of the car and creating a safer environment for cycling in imaginative ways.
Cycling has the power to turn individuals into a community and communities have the power to improve our cities. These examples show how activism can be a real solution to urban problems.
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