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Know your NEM: Waiting for COAG to vote on the NEG
Guardian Australia wants you to vote for Australia’s most-loved native bird
In partnership with BirdLife Australia, Guardian Australia has launched its annual Australian bird of the year poll to ask readers to nominate their favourite bird and encourage others to do the same
This week Guardian Australia and BirdLife Australia are asking readers to cast their vote on their favourite native bird. From the gregarious sulphur-crested cockatoo to the ubiquitous bright lorikeet, it’s time to recognise our country’s wealth of amazing native birds.
The poll aims to celebrate the uniqueness of Australian birdlife and raise awareness of the threats facing many of the birds on the list, including climate change, habitat loss, land-clearing and feral animal predators.
Continue reading...National Food Waste Strategy launched
National Food Waste Strategy launched
National Food Waste Strategy launched
We're so lucky to share Australia with a stunning array of birds | Sean Dooley
Australia has some of the most glorious birds on the planet. Our shortlist of 50 birds includes truly spectacular ones. Which one should be number one?
• Vote for your favourite Australian bird
The recently released The Australian Bird Guide (CSIRO Publishing) chronicles a whopping 927 species seen in Australia since 1940. About 160 are considered vagrants – birds that have accidentally arrived here, blown off course or, in the case of North American migratory shorebirds, literally taken a wrong turn at Albuquerque – and vast numbers of the rest are rare, difficult to see or only occur in remote areas, so that only the most dedicated of bird nerds ever gets to delight in their magnificence.
Related: Australian bird of the year 2017: vote for your favourite
Continue reading...What is Australia's favourite bird? Have your say in the Guardian's 2017 poll
In a new poll, run in conjunction with BirdLife Australia, we want you to tell us your best-loved native bird
• Vote here for Australia’s bird of the year 2017
Birds. From the glorious king parrot to the much-maligned white ibis, Australians are passionate about them.
But is there one bird that reigns supreme in the hearts and minds of the public?
Continue reading...Australian bird of the year 2017: vote for your favourite
From the promiscuous willy wagtail to the magnificent but slightly terrifying cassowary, Australia has an abundance of wonderful native birds. Vote here to determine the bird of the year 2017. A shortlist of 51 species has been selected – if your favourite is not included, you can add it. The poll is open until 9 December. You only get one vote – use it wisely.
• Photographs and descriptions courtesy Sean Dooley and BirdLife Australia.
Continue reading...Renewables option $1.3 billion cheaper than keeping Liddell open
Australia under new pressure to get serious about climate
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Replacing Liddell coal plant with clean energy $1.3bn cheaper – analysis
A clean energy package will have a zero pollution outcome compared with 40m tonnes under Coalition’s plan to extend the NSW plant, UTS modelling reveals
• Renewables could reliably contribute 50% to power grid, Finkel report finds
Replacing the Liddell coal power station with clean energy technologies would slash pollution and be at least $1.3bn cheaper than the Turnbull government’s plan to extend the life of the New South Wales plant by five years, a new analysis has found.
A second report released on Monday also found Australia has the potential to lead the world in developing large and home-scale energy storage systems if public uncertainty can be overcome.
Continue reading...How the International Energy Agency is steering world to climate disaster
COAG: Doctors call on states to reject the NEG
Country diary 1917: drizzle and the dripping, decaying wood
20 November 1917 The few leaves which still remain upon the branches hang like soiled and tattered rags
The wonderful colouring of a few weeks ago has vanished, and the few leaves which still remain upon the branches hang like soiled and tattered rags; the litter below the trees is full of moisture, blackening with decay. For once the wood is positively untidy. Windfall boughs and twigs, green and red with fungoid growths, lie everywhere, the larger branches holding the withered leaves; the healthy, living tree is the first to shed its foliage. A red campion here and there and a few thistles are the only visible flowers; the latter are bravely open, though their stalks, wilting slightly, are without a single living leaf. The osiers stand a foot deep in water, for the ditches have overflowed, converting the withy bed into a lake from which the willows rise, many islands.
Related: Why we should celebrate winter woodland – not just the Christmas tree
Continue reading...Destructive Arundel bypass route would be a national scandal
Thank you to Patrick Barkham for highlighting the destructive insanity of the Arundel bypass scheme (The road to rural oblivion, 14 November). He mentions ancient woodland and says it needs legal protection. Actually ancient woodland (ie, wooded since 1600) already has legal protection, and “compensation planting” is required – the ratio is decided by English Nature, but may be a multiple of seven or even up to 30 times the area taken.
The legislation to protect ancient woodland may have the perverse effect of causing the most damaging option to be chosen. Highways England has run a public consultation, which blatantly favours the route through Binsted woods, 100 hectares of superb quality semi-natural broadleaved woodland. The woods have been here since the Domesday Book – huge, mysterious, unmanaged, full of fallen trees that have regrown from horizontal, and an incredibly rich hotspot for rare wildlife. But some parts have had a cleared period in the last 400 years, so are not designated as ancient woodland.
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