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Climate Crisis – Saving landscapes?

ABC Environment - Wed, 2018-04-25 20:05
Could the carbon credit scheme help to save rural and degraded landscapes?
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America's best scientists stood up to the Trump administration | John Abraham

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-04-25 20:00

Over 600 NAS members called out ‘the Trump Administration’s denigration of scientific expertise’

Anyone who has read this column over the past five years knows that I tend to be unfettered in my criticism of people who lie and distort climate science to further their political ideologies. At the same time, I believe that the majority of climate sceptics are not willfully wishing to damage this precious Earth that we call home. I believe that there are common areas we can all agree on to take meaningful action to protect the Earth’s environment and build a new energy future; even for people who do not understand climate change or climate science.

But with the election of Donald Trump and his ushering in people who are openly hostile to the planet and future generations, my position has been strained (to say the least). We have had more than a year to observe President Trump’s efforts to roll back Obama-era regulations on pollution from coal plants, weaken pollution standards for motor vehicles, become the only country in the world to reject the Paris climate accord, and gut our climate science budget so that we become blind to what is actually happening.

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Hey millennials, don’t fall for Shell’s pop star PR | Graham Readfearn

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-04-25 15:28

Royal Dutch Shell wants to cut its own climate emissions in half by 2050 - a target wiped out by burning one month’s worth of their fossil fuels

If you’re a millennial, the global oil and gas company Shell will have been most pleased if you’d seen one their #makethefuture music videos.

Twice now Shell have lined up superstars including Jennifer Hudson, Pixie Lott and Yemi Alade to sing about solar panels, hydrogen cars, clean cooking stoves and lights powered by a bag of rocks and gravity.

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UK needs 6,000 shale gas wells to fill 50% of imports, study says

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-04-25 15:01

Friends of the Earth says countryside would be industrialised with a new well fracked daily until 2035

More than 6,000 shale gas wells would be needed to replace half the UK’s gas imports over a 15-year period, according to a new report.

The nascent UK fracking industry has argued that growing reliance on gas from Norway and Qatar necessitates developing home-produced supplies in addition to North Sea output.

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Foreign Office climate staff cut by 25% under Boris Johnson

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-04-25 15:00

Exclusive: The prime minister says the UK leads the world on climate action, but Foreign Office officials dedicated to the issue have plunged since 2016

The number of full-time officials dedicated to climate change in the Foreign Office has dropped by almost 25% in the two years since Boris Johnson became foreign secretary, according to data released under freedom of information (FoI) rules.

Johnson has also failed to mention climate change in any official speech since he took the office, in marked contrast to his two predecessors.

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Country diary: a toad dressed to a-wooing go

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-04-25 14:30

Wenlock Edge, Shropshire: Toads can control their skin tone and this soft yellowishness showed it was ready to ‘a-wooing go’

“How could a purse / squeeze under the rickety door and sit, / full of satisfaction, in a man’s house?” wrote the poet Norman MacCaig in Toad. This toad, a soft yellow-brown and ornamentally purse-like, had come through the back door somehow and was squatting defiantly on quarry tiles. It was seeking asylum from an extraordinarily brilliant morning, unfamiliar heat and ultraviolet light that the weather forecast said was moderate but to toadskin was extreme radiation. It did not seem full of satisfaction to me but then Bufo bufo’s narrowing eyes with horizontal pupils and that broad enigmatic smile may be mistaken for smugness.

The place in the toad’s head that myth says contains a jewel is hidden by an inscrutable mask that is somewhere between divine and reprobate. The bulging paratoid glands on its head, the warty skin excrescences that secrete toxins, and the sumo stance, all suggest repulsion but its soft yellowishness is the colour of fading daffs, with hints of celandine, primrose, agate and potting sand. Toads can control their skin tone and this was being dressed to “a-wooing go”.

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Community joins together to 'Hack the Reef'

ABC Environment - Wed, 2018-04-25 08:16
Scientists, entrepreneurs, students and environmentalists have gathered in Cairns to work out ways to reduce stresses on the World Heritage Area, with a particular focus on marine pollution.
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CP Daily: Tuesday April 24, 2018

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2018-04-25 08:13
A daily summary of our news plus bite-sized updates from around the world.
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Less than zero: US incentives for negative emission projects take shape

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2018-04-25 07:55
Efforts to incentivise negative emission activities in the US are slowly emerging, but they face huge challenges to play more than a supporting role over the next decade.
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Specieswatch: conservation effort is under way to save our mountain hares

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-04-25 06:30

Spring is risky for mountain hares; to avoid predators, they have to time their change from white to brown carefully

Britain’s mountain hare Lepus timidus should presently be turning from white to grey-brown with a blue tinge as the breeding season starts. Spring is a dangerous time; the snow disappears and adults need to blend in to avoid hungry eagles or a fox.

Unlike brown hares and rabbits the mountain hare is a true native species, but is increasingly threatened by climate change as it has to climb higher to find a suitable habitat. There are mountain hares as far south as Derbyshire and on the Pennine Hills, where they have been introduced, but their true home is in alpine Scotland.

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Fancy a French farm for free?

BBC - Wed, 2018-04-25 05:47
This Brittany farm could be available to someone who will preserve its traditional methods.
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What future for British fishing? | Letters

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-04-25 03:12
We can take back control of our waters, writes Bertie Armstrong, while Steve Peak laments the Tories’ broken promises

We agree with Polly Toynbee that fishing is “deep-dyed in the national identity” (Opinion, 23 April). The UK is in the middle of some of the best fishing grounds in the world. Where she is wrong is in making two assertions: firstly, that taking back control of our waters “is not going to happen, because it can’t”; and secondly, that the problem is that UK skippers sold their quotas to foreigners.

On the first, actually it can. The United Nations convention on the law of the sea (UNCLOS) awards sovereign rights over and responsibilities for the natural resources to coastal states in their own exclusive economic zones. That will be us on Brexit, and there are a couple of pre-packed examples of the benefits in the EEZs of our near north-east Atlantic neighbours. Iceland catches 90% of the seafood resource in its EEZ and Norway some 85%. For us, under the rules in the common fisheries policy, we catch 40%, which is absurd. It certainly can change, and according to the prime minister and DexEU and Defra, it will change. It will be a negotiation, but if, as Polly says, the referendum was actually won on fishing sentiment, then public support will see the negotiations move in the right direction.

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Modified plant boosts malaria drug yield

BBC - Wed, 2018-04-25 02:57
Scientists have modified a plant's genes to make it produce high levels of a key malaria drug, potentially helping meet the large global demand.
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Dame Daphne Sheldrick obituary

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-04-25 02:53
Renowned conservationist dedicated to saving orphaned elephants and releasing them back into the wild

Elephant babies like coconut oil. This discovery has saved the life of hundreds of orphaned, unweaned elephants, left behind when their mothers were killed, victims of the ivory wars that have catastrophically reduced elephant populations across Africa.

The discovery came after two decades of efforts by the renowned conservationist Daphne Sheldrick, who has died aged 83. She devoted most of her life to rescuing young elephants and releasing them back into the wild.

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Why there are more gym supplements in a London fatberg than cocaine and MDMA

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-04-25 02:20

Substances used to aid muscle-building and weight loss made up more than half of the pharmaceuticals found in the capital’s sewers. What does this tell us about modern life?

Along with the flushed debris and the thriving bacteria – the wet wipes, condoms, and sanitary towels; the listeria and E coli – that have congealed within the giant fatbergs in the sewers under central London, are chemicals found in banned gym supplements. In fact, they were discovered in greater quantities than drugs such as cocaine and MDMA.

In tonight’s Fatberg Autopsy: Secrets of the Sewers, on Channel 4, samples from a giant block were examined to see what it contained. Caused by people pouring cooking oil down the drain – which then congeals with items that should not be flushed, such as wet wipes – fatbergs are an increasing problem for water companies, particularly in urban areas. But the examination of fatbergs’ chemical content also provides a picture of the way we live. The scientists who did the analysis discovered numerous predictable substances, such as paracetamol, prescription medications and substances used in skin creams. But more surprising was the amount of hordenine and ostarine – described by the programme-makers as often being found in gym supplements, which made up more than half of the pharmaceuticals found.

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Record concentration of microplastics found in Arctic

BBC - Wed, 2018-04-25 01:09
Discovery prompts fear that melting ice will allow more plastic to be released back into the oceans.
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Record levels of plastic discovered in Arctic sea ice

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-04-25 01:00

Samples taken from five locations found concentrations of more than 12,000 microplastic particles per litre of sea ice

Scientists have found a record amount of plastic trapped in Arctic sea ice, raising concern about the impact on marine life and human health.

Up to 12,000 pieces of microplastic particles were found per litre of sea ice in core samples taken from five regions on trips to the Arctic Ocean – as many as three times higher than levels in previous studies.

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Energy Aspects ups EUA price forecasts for 3rd month, but warns of options risk

Carbon Pulse - Wed, 2018-04-25 00:11
Analysts Energy Aspects have raised their EU carbon price forecasts for the third time in as many months, though warned that the market appears to be getting “jittery” amid heightened options-related risk.
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EU Market: EUAs ascend €13 mark after stronger auction

Carbon Pulse - Tue, 2018-04-24 23:57
European carbon prices climbed back above €13 on Tuesday after a stronger auction encouraged buyers and appeared to trigger a bout of short-covering.
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How to revive drowsy bees

BBC - Tue, 2018-04-24 23:50
A vet gives advice on how to assist dehydrated bumblebees emerging from hibernation.
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