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Green Investment Bank sale is 'deeply troubling', say Scottish ministers

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-01-05 19:57

Climate minister Nick Hurd told bank’s portfolio will be broken up and asset-stripped by Australia’s Macquarie

The prospect of the UK Green Investment Bank being stripped of its assets in a sale to Australian investment bank Macquarie is “deeply troubling”, Scottish ministers have told Westminster.

The sale of the Edinburgh-based bank, which supports offshore windfarms and other green projects, is expected to be agreed in January. But the Labour party, Liberal Democrats, Greens and former Conservative ministers have all raised concerns in recent weeks that privatisation may see the bank lose its environmental purpose.

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Exploring nature

ABC Environment - Thu, 2017-01-05 19:05
What does nature mean to each of us?  Why is nature so pure?  And how do we reconnect with the natural world in an age where our lives are connected to technology?  
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Bluefin tuna auctioned for £517,000 at Tokyo market – video

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-01-05 17:55

A 212kg bluefin tuna sells for 74.2m yen (£517,000) at the first auction of the year at Tsukiji market in Tokyo, amid warnings that decades of overfishing by Japan and other countries is taking the species to the brink of extinction

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UK military to build prototype 'laser weapon'

BBC - Thu, 2017-01-05 15:31
The UK Ministry of Defence has officially awarded a £30m contract to produce a prototype laser weapon.
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Dance of wings over the white crests

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-01-05 15:30

Roker beach, Sunderland Storms tore wracks from the seabed and raucous black-headed and herring gulls rode the waves

Storms had torn wracks and kelps from the seabed and driven them against Roker pier, forcing the heap higher up the beach with each successive tide. This afternoon it was seething with seabirds.

There were sanderlings, conspicuous in their pale grey and white plumage, and turnstones, whose feathers so closely matched the hues of the brown fronds that they would have been all but invisible if they had not been constantly on the move. Close by, on the seaward side, raucous black-headed and herring gulls gathered, riding the waves.

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Family out on day trip saves whale caught in fishing net – video

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-01-05 13:01

A family enjoying a new year’s trip has freed a humpback whale it found entangled in fishing nets off the coast of Antofagasta, Chile. Juan Menares said two of his children dived in to free the distressed 10-metre animal on Monday. Menares said: ‘That feeling after doing something good ... fills me with joy, fills me with pride and to be able to do something that I really had never done before.’

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Meet the latest organisation to join the Carbon Neutral Program

Department of the Environment - Thu, 2017-01-05 12:33
JCDecaux join the Carbon Neutral Network.
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Meet the latest organisation to join the Carbon Neutral Program

Department of the Environment - Thu, 2017-01-05 12:33
JCDecaux join the Carbon Neutral Network.
Categories: Around The Web

Meet the latest organisation to join the Carbon Neutral Program

Department of the Environment - Thu, 2017-01-05 12:33
JCDecaux join the Carbon Neutral Network.
Categories: Around The Web

Climate change: Fresh doubt over global warming 'pause'

BBC - Thu, 2017-01-05 11:53
New research backs a controversial study that found there had been no slowdown in global warming.
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Port Augusta residents concerned about ash blanketing city

ABC Environment - Thu, 2017-01-05 07:15
South Australian senator Nick Xenophon says the ash currently blanketing Port Augusta is so toxic it can't even be classified as waste fill.
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World's oldest known orca presumed dead in blow to endangered whales

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-01-05 05:34

Known as Granny and believed to be 105, the matriarch of a small population of struggling Puget Sound orcas was first identified by researchers in the 1970s

The world’s oldest known orca – a century-old matriarch of a small population of endangered Puget Sound orcas – has been missing for months and is presumed dead by researchers in what is being described as a tremendous blow to an already struggling population.

Known as Granny and believed to be 105 years old, the orca has not been seen by researchers since mid-October, according to the Centre for Whale Research in North America’s Pacific Northwest.

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New study confirms NOAA finding of faster global warming | John Abraham

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-01-05 05:00

Thomas Karl and colleagues were harassed by Republicans for publishing inconvenient science. A new study proves them right.

A new study has shown that a 2015 NOAA paper finding that the Earth is warming more rapidly than previously thought was correct.

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Mystery cosmic radio bursts pinpointed

BBC - Thu, 2017-01-05 04:01
Astronomers have pinpointed the source of mysterious radio bursts from space.
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Migrant farm workers may stay after Brexit but red tape goes

BBC - Thu, 2017-01-05 01:45
The government is "absolutely committed" to ensuring that British farmers have access to migrant workers after Brexit.
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Renewables investment in UK will fall 95% over next three years – study

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-01-04 23:31

Analysis reveals extent of decline because of subsidy cuts and raises concerns about Britain meeting emissions targets

Investment in windfarms will fall off a “cliff edge” over the next three years and put the UK’s greenhouse gas reduction targets at risk, according to a new analysis.

More than £1bn of future investment in renewable energy projects disappeared over the course of 2016, the Green Alliance thinktank found when it looked at the government’s latest pipeline of planned major infrastructure projects.

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Satellite Eye on Earth: December 2016 – in pictures

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-01-04 21:52

London at night, snow in the Sahara and Hawaii’s volcanoes are among the images captured by European Space Agency and Nasa satellites last month

A night-time view of western Europe captured by crew members aboard the International Space Station. London is visible in the centre of the image, photographed from more than 250 miles above.

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Listening to nature

ABC Environment - Wed, 2017-01-04 19:05
Animal sounds and bird song have adapted to specific environments and habitats, but the use of sound has in turn shaped the evolution of different species. And that includes homo sapiens. Sound has formed us as social and cultural ‘animals’.
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Feral cats now cover 99.8% of Australia

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-01-04 17:17

Feral population of up to 6.3 million, at a density of one cat for every 4 sq km ‘underlines how potent they are for wildlife’

Feral cats cover 99.8% of Australia at a density of one cat for every four square kilometres, according to new research.

The research was published in the journal of Biological Conservation and brings together data from almost 100 surveys completed by 40 environmental scientists from different institutions.

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Friends of the Earth ticked off over claims in anti-fracking leaflet

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-01-04 16:30

Ad watchdog informally resolves Cuadrilla complaints over leaflet stating chemicals used in fracking can cause cancer and contaminate water

Friends of the Earth has agreed not to reproduce an anti-fracking leaflet after the advertising watchdog upheld complaints made by the energy firm Cuadrilla.

Cuadrilla, which in October was given government permission for plans to frack after appealing two rejections by Lancashire council, made a string of complaints about the leaflet which made claims that chemicals involved in fracking can cause cancer.

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