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Coalition’s myth about renewables and high electricity prices

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2016-07-13 14:49
Coalition says it is "the only ones that can protect against the electricity price rises". But in week after its re-election, electricity prices were nearly double those during the carbon tax, and soaring gas prices and the investment drought in renewable energy are to blame.
Categories: Around The Web

This almost-island on the Welsh coast is a nowhere becoming somewhere

The Guardian - Wed, 2016-07-13 14:30

Morfa Harlech, North Wales The eye follows the incoming tide across the beach, racing into dunes green with marram grass

I know these plants: pyramidal orchid, lady’s bedstraw, common centaury, restharrow and wild thyme. I saw them up the Windmill hill only yesterday evening and to me they spell summer in the surviving fragments of limestone grassland on Wenlock Edge. I did not expect to find them so gloriously contradictory at the seaside.

A tumble of dunes barricades the golf course below Harlech castle against Cardigan Bay, the dune shapes mimicking the architecture of Snowdonia’s mountains behind them. I always fall for that trick of the sublime, looking landward from the sea: the silver of the rippled flow, the lone lost crab and scribble of seaweed.

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Categories: Around The Web

Wind energy supplied 83% of South Australia’s electricity on Monday

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2016-07-13 14:30
Wind energy delivered more than two-thirds of South Australia’s electricity over the weekend, and more on Monday.
Categories: Around The Web

Robot cars and the fear gap

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2016-07-13 14:29
Considering the major role of human error in car accidents, computer assistance and eventual control should lead to a big reduction of death and injury.
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“Internet of energy” start-up taps booming Australian solar + storage market

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2016-07-13 14:21
US energy management start-up Geli to establish regional hub in Australia, backed by $3m investment from Southern Cross Renewable Energy Venture Capital Fund.
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Beaten by solar on price: Why natural gas is next fossil fuel to go

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2016-07-13 13:57
Solar PV contracts are now cheaper than natural gas plants in the US, where even some utilities see a future where there will be no more gas turbines.
Categories: Around The Web

How Australia could reach 70% renewable energy by 2030

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2016-07-13 13:53
Getting high level of renewable energy in the electricity system will be easier and cheaper than most people think, particularly with battery storage costs falling so quickly.
Categories: Around The Web

China set to ban all new coal plant development

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2016-07-13 13:23
China is expected to suspend all new coal power plant development in its upcoming five-year energy plan, as supply far outstrips demand.
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Experimental Music attracts international visitors

ABC Environment - Wed, 2016-07-13 13:06
Today marks the start of a five day music festival but don't expect crowd surfing and mosh pits. The is a celebration of experimental music from around the globe, and some of the international artists will perform pieces live along with local musicians.
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Germany confirms end to renewable energy feed-in tariffs

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2016-07-13 13:04
Germany approves plan to end renewable energy feed-in tariffs in favor of competitive auctions and clear volumes for wind energy development.
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Kayaker captures video of humpback whales feasting in San Francisco Bay

The Guardian - Wed, 2016-07-13 11:15

The feeding frenzy lasted roughly half an hour before the mammals swam back to the Pacific Ocean under the Golden Gate Bridge

A kayaker captured video of humpback whales feasting on fish in a bay with the San Francisco skyline as a backdrop.

Lyrinda Snyderman of Berkeley, California, says she was out with three other kayakers to circle nearby Angel Island on Sunday when the group spotted the whales.

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Juno probe returns first in-orbit Jupiter photo

BBC - Wed, 2016-07-13 11:03
The American space agency's new Juno mission to Jupiter returns its first imagery since going into orbit around the gas giant last week.
Categories: Around The Web

Seeing double: LG launches its first bifacial solar panel in Australia

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2016-07-13 10:50
LG Electronics (LG) has announced its first bifacial panel will be introduced in Australia later this year.
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The Republican Party’s platform says coal is ‘clean’ energy

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2016-07-13 10:34
For the Republican Party, internet porn is a “public health crisis.” Coal, however, is perfectly “clean.”
Categories: Around The Web

Kissing coral captured by new underwater microscope

ABC Science - Wed, 2016-07-13 09:31
CORAL SECRETS: Images of kissing corals and seafloor turf wars have been captured for the first time by scientists using a revolutionary new underwater microscope.
Categories: Around The Web

Cold and calculating: what the two different types of ice do to sea levels

The Conversation - Wed, 2016-07-13 05:41

It was back in 250ʙⅽ when Archimedes reportedly stepped into his bathtub and had the world’s first Eureka moment – realising that putting himself in the water made its level rise.

More than two millennia later, the comments sections of news stories still routinely reveal confusion about how this same thing happens when polar ice melts and sea levels change.

This is in marked contrast to the confidence that scientists have in their collective understanding of what is happening to the ice sheets. Indeed, the 2014 Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reported “very high confidence” that the Greenland Ice Sheet was melting and raising sea levels, with “high confidence” of the same for the Antarctic Ice Sheet.

Despite this, commenters below the line on news stories frequently wonder how it can be true that Antarctica is melting and contributing to sea-level rise, when satellite observations show Antarctic ice expanding.

Unravelling the confusion depends on appreciating the difference between the two different types of ice, which we can broadly term “land ice” and “sea ice” – although as we shall see, there’s a little bit more to it than that. The two different types of ice have very different roles in Earth’s climate, and behave in crucially different ways.

Sea levels rise when ice resting on land, grounded ice, melts (often after forming icebergs). Floating sea ice that melts has a very important role in other areas of our climate system. Land ice

Ice sheets form by the gradual accumulation of snow on land over long periods of time. This “grounded” ice flows in glaciers to the ocean under the influence of gravity, and when it arrives it eventually melts. If the amount of ice flowing into the oceans is balanced by snowfall on land, the net change in global sea level due to this ice sheet is zero.

However, if the ice begins to flow more rapidly or snowfall declines, the ice sheet can be out of balance, resulting in a net rise in sea level.

But this influence on sea level is only really relevant for ice that is grounded on land. When the ice sheet starts to float on the ocean it is called an “ice shelf”. The contribution of ice shelves to sea-level rise is negligible because they are already in the sea (similar to an ice cube in a glass of water, although the ocean is salty unlike a glass of water). But they can nevertheless play an important role in sea-level rise, by governing the rate at which the grounded ice can discharge into the oceans, and therefore how fast it melts.

Sea ice

When viewed from space, all polar ice looks pretty much the same. But there is a second category of ice that has effectively nothing to do with the ice sheets themselves.

“Sea ice” is formed when ocean water is frozen due to cooling by the air. Because it is floating in the ocean, sea ice does not (directly) affect sea level.

Sea ice is generally no more than a few metres thick, although it can grow to more than 10 metres thick if allowed to grow over many winters. Ice shelves, on the other hand, are hundreds of metres thick, as seen when an iceberg is created and rolls over.

A big breakup.

In the ocean around Antarctica, almost all the sea ice melts in the southern hemisphere spring. This means that every year an area of ocean twice the size of Australia freezes over and then melts – arguably the largest seasonal change on our planet.

So, while ice sheets change over decades and centuries, the time scale of sea ice variability is measured in months.

Antarctic sea ice grows and shrinks dramatically over the course of the year. These changes do not directly affect sea level. Land ice changes are slower but do affect sea levels, at least until the land ice becomes afloat.

The seasonal cycle of Arctic sea ice is much smaller. This is because the Arctic retains much more of its sea ice in the summer, and its winter extent is limited by land that surrounds the Arctic Ocean.

What is happening to land ice?

The two great ice sheets are in Greenland and Antarctica. Thanks to satellite measurements, we now know that since the early 1990s both have been contributing to sea-level rise.

It is thought that most of the Antarctic changes are caused by seawater melting the ice shelves faster, causing the land ice to flow faster and hence leading to sea-level rise as the ice sheet is tipped out of balance.

In Greenland, both surface and ocean melting play important roles in driving the accelerated contribution to sea levels.

What about sea ice?

Over the last four decades of satellite measurements, there has been a rapid decrease and thinning of summer Arctic sea ice. This is due to human activity warming the atmosphere and ocean.

In the Antarctic there has been a modest increase in total sea ice cover, but with a complex pattern of localised increases and decreases that are related to changes in winds and ocean currents. What’s more, satellite measurement of changes in sea ice thickness is much more difficult in the Antarctic than in the Arctic mainly because Antarctic sea ice has a lot of poorly measured snow resting on it.

The Southern Ocean is arguably a much more complex system than the Arctic Ocean, and determining humans' influence on these trends and projecting future change is challenging.

Observations of the changes happening in the Arctic and Antarctic reveal complex stories that vary from place to place and over time.

These changes require ongoing monitoring and greater understanding of the causes of the observed changes. And public confusion can be avoided through careful use of the different terms describing ice in the global climate system. It pays to know your ice sheets from your sea ice.

The Conversation

Matt King receives funding from the Australian Research Council and the Department of Environment.

Ben Galton-Fenzi works for the Australian Antarctic Division. He receives funding from the Department of the Environment.

Will Hobbs is employed by the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Cooperative Research Centre, and receives funding from the Australian Research Council.

Categories: Around The Web

Drones to unleash vaccine-laced M&Ms in bid to save endangered ferrets

The Guardian - Wed, 2016-07-13 02:17

US Fish and Wildlife Service to target diseased prairie dogs, food for the ferrets, via specially designed drones that shoot the candies in three directions at once

The US government is set to unleash drones that fire vaccine-covered M&Ms in a bid to save the endangered black-footed ferret, a species that is facing a plague epidemic across America’s great plains.

The US Fish and Wildlife (FWS) has developed a plan to bombard ferret habitat in Montana with the vaccine, which will be administered via specially designed drones that will be able to shoot M&Ms in three directions simultaneously.

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Categories: Around The Web

Flavour changing neutrinos give insight into Big Bang

BBC - Wed, 2016-07-13 01:46
Neutrinos and their antimatter counterparts have shown a small difference that may explain why the universe did not destroy itself during the Big Bang, scientists have reported at major conference.
Categories: Around The Web

Hidden red hair gene a skin cancer risk

BBC - Wed, 2016-07-13 01:01
People can carry a "silent" red hair gene that raises their risk of dangerous skin cancer, experts warn.
Categories: Around The Web

Drought triggers 'austerity' root system in grass crops

BBC - Tue, 2016-07-12 21:35
Grass species of crops adopt an "austerity" strategy and limits the development of its root system during times of drought, a study reveals.
Categories: Around The Web

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