Feed aggregator
Northern Territory lifts moratorium on fracking
Six ways to improve water quality in New Zealand's lakes and rivers
New appointments to the board of the Australian Renewable Energy agency
Renewables beware: Labor may not be able to change emissions target
NT Government ignoring the science and residents’ concerns to bring back fracking
Electrolux steps up commitment to climate action, with approved science-based targets
CP Daily: Monday April 16, 2018
Victorian innovators lead climate change action
Country diary: wild violets are an absolute joy, to us and the bees
Claxton, Norfolk: Intense blue spikes have covered half the lawn – but we can claim little credit for this
This spring I’ve been amused by our wild violets, which have spread suddenly across one half of the lawn. For anyone who has never met them, they are an absolute joy. Each flowering spike bears an asymmetrical corolla that comprises five petals of the most intense purple. Down the throat of the central spur is a delicious little nectary that bees apparently find irresistible.
If I crouch to sniff, it also yields this gentle odour, from which I judge them to be sweet violets, Viola odorata, the one common species in the family that has such a scent. It is highly evocative, bringing to mind my childhood when we used to buy those tubes of purplish sugar known as Parma Violets (a Derbyshire speciality, manufactured in New Mills).
Continue reading...Electric water taxi trialled in Switzerland
Retailers to pocket carbon credits from customers’ rooftop solar
Victoria’s biggest solar farm connected to grid – now for Tesla battery
More than 95% of world's population breathe dangerous air, major study finds
Poorest are hardest hit with many developing countries falling behind on cleaning up toxic air pollution
More than 95% of the world’s population breathe unsafe air and the burden is falling hardest on the poorest communities, with the gap between the most polluted and least polluted countries rising rapidly, a comprehensive study of global air pollution has found.
Cities are home to an increasing majority of the world’s people, exposing billions to unsafe air, particularly in developing countries, but in rural areas the risk of indoor air pollution is often caused by burning solid fuels. One in three people worldwide faces the double whammy of unsafe air both indoors and out.
Continue reading...