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Drug-driving cases dropped over forensics
Russia denies nuclear accident after radioactive traces found
Poland faces €100,000-a-day fines over illegal logging in Białowieża forest
Poland is given two weeks to end its destruction of the Unesco-protected forest in a landmark ruling by the European court of justice
Poland has been given two weeks to stop illegal deforestation in the Unesco-protected Białowieża forest or face fines of at least €100,000 a day.
In a precedent-setting ruling that will echo across the EU, the European court of justice ordered Poland to show it was acting lawfully in the ancient woodland, or face a €36.5m (£32m) annual penalty.
Continue reading...Bialowieza forest: EU threatens Poland with fine over logging
Ending investment in climate-damaging activities. Steps towards a sustainable festive season
Humpback dolphins offer gifts in rare courtship ritual – video
Humpback dolphins in Western Australia have been observed gifting sea sponges to potential mates in a courtship behaviour that researchers say is very rare. 'It highlights that there's another species out there that's quite socially complex, more than we previously recognised,' says Dr Simon Allen, lead researcher from the University of Western Australia. 'They are thinking animals'
Continue reading...Country diary: kingfisher inspires myth
Holme, Norfolk Myths and misconceptions surround this diminutive bird, which can hide in plain sight despite its dazzling plumage
It’s funny how kingfishers, the boldest-coloured birds in Britain, have inspired so much confusion. The commonest example concerns their size. Many people seeing one for the first time are flabbergasted at its smallness.
A recent encounter reminded me just how sparrow-like they are. For 20 minutes, I’d sat before a pool scanning the middle distance for harriers and winter geese, before noticing a kingfisher had been perched there all the time. It was only when it made its silvery piping notes that I fixed its location on a reed mace head.
Continue reading...Coughing up for coal-fired power
LNP, One Nation would force Queensland energy prices up; Greens, ALP down
Darth Vader or not, the Tesla truck changes everything
Australia to lead storage boom, as home batteries become “ubiquitous”
ACCIONA announces new head of Australian energy business
Spain: The high cost of political interference in power markets
Conservatives attack storage report as “eco-evangelism”, Finkel responds
Hunter Valley biofuel facility to advance ethanol production
Breakfast at Tiffany’s is off the menu for me because of its racial stereotyping | Letters
Despite what Elon Musk says (Keep on trucking: a swipe at rail as Tesla unveils electric lorry, 18 November), there is still a crucial role for rail freight in transporting long-distance consumer and bulk traffic in a safer low-carbon way that reduces road congestion and road damage. Also, 136 lorry platoons already exist and are called freight trains. So, during road safety week (20-26 November) we should remember that last year heavy goods vehicles were almost seven times more likely than cars to be involved in fatal crashes on local roads.
Philippa Edmunds
Freight on rail manager, Campaign for Better Transport
• One of my best-loved films, Breakfast at Tiffany’s, is now unwatchable by me for the stereotypical portrayal of Mr Yunioshi by Mickey Rooney (I like Apu from the Simpsons. But I can see the harm in stereotypes, 18 November). My father’s critical perspective was influenced by the heroine being a call girl, but then he’d been through a war against, among others, the Japanese.
Jenny Powell
Storrington, Sussex
'Finkel's new energy report' isn't new and it isn't by Finkel
Albatrosses hit by fishing and climate
Bizarre shape of interstellar asteroid
Nebraska regulators approve Keystone XL pipeline route
Pipeline plan clears last major regulatory hurdle after vote in Nebraska, but legal challenges and protest likely to follow
A panel of Nebraska regulators have voted narrowly in favor of allowing the Keystone XL pipeline to follow its proposed path through the state, removing the last major regulatory hurdle for the controversial project.
The Nebraska Public Service Commission voted 3-2 to approve a permit for the pipeline, which will stretch for 1,200 miles and carry up to 830,000 barrels of oil a day. The vote saw one of the four Republicans on the commission, Mary Ridder, join with the Democrat, Crystal Rhoades, in opposing the permit.
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