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Tesla big battery moves from show-boating to money-making
Australian solar database – 161 projects, and 19GW of capacity
Redflow produces first battery stacks in Thailand
Granville Harbour takes flight
Port Augusta solar thermal on track as renewables attract investment and create jobs
Two major new solar farms in SE Queensland going ahead
Australia’s ‘electric car revolution’ won’t happen automatically
The climate solution no-one in Davos will be talking about
China adds more solar than coal and gas for first time, as Trump slaps solar tariffs
#30: The woman who lived in a tree
RET is met, and Frydenberg concedes more wind and solar will lower prices, improve reliability
Corporations purchased record amounts of clean power in 2017
Could 'assisted evolution' save the Great Barrier Reef?
Australia's 'electric car revolution' won't happen automatically
Pioneering female becomes first wolf in Belgium in a century
Researchers have tracked Naya from eastern Germany into the Netherlands and now Belgium
The first recorded wolf on Belgian soil for at least 100 years has made her bloody mark.
Farmers in north-east Flanders have been put on high alert after evidence emerged that Naya, a female originally from eastern Germany that has been making a pioneering trek across Europe, had killed two sheep and injured a third near the Belgian town of Meerhout.
Continue reading...Fears for future of UK onshore wind power despite record growth
2.6GW of capacity built in 2017 before subsidies ban industry says will make generation dearer
A record amount of onshore wind power was built in the UK last year, but government policy has been stalling the sector and risked increasing energy bills for consumers, the industry has warned.
Turbines capable of generating 2.6GW were installed across Britain in 2017 as developers rushed to meet the government deadline for securing subsidies. The previous record was 1.3GW in 2013.
Continue reading...Why you can't judge a zebra by its stripes
ISS cosmonaut does 'test flight' on a vacuum cleaner
New Caledonian crows show how technology evolves
Switching to electric cars is key to fixing America's 'critically insufficient' climate policies | Dana Nuccitelli
Nearly 60% of US carbon pollution comes from power and transportation, and power is already decarbonizing fast
In order to meet its share of the carbon pollution cuts needed to achieve the 2°C Paris international climate target, America’s policies are rated as “critically insufficient” by the Climate Action Tracker. The Trump Administration has taken every possible step to undo the Obama Administration’s climate policies, including announcing that America will be the only world country to withdraw from the Paris agreement, and trying to repeal the Clean Power Plan.
In 2020, the next American president will have to make up the lost ground and come up with a plan to rapidly accelerate the country’s transition away from fossil fuels. Currently, transportation and power generation each account for about 30% of US greenhouse gas emissions, so those sectors represent the prime targets for pollution cuts.