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Graph of the Day: Australia’s surging fossil fuel emissions

RenewEconomy - Fri, 2017-09-29 12:56
Australia's fossil fuel emissions have hit record levels, and there is no federal policy in place to address them.
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The Pears Report: Summertime, and the living ain’t easy

RenewEconomy - Fri, 2017-09-29 12:22
With summer approaching, there’s a flurry of activity to ensure reliable energy generation under peak loads.
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SENG Sustainable Transport - Reality or pipe dream?

Newsletters QLD - Fri, 2017-09-29 12:20
Single-Column Responsive Email Template SENG QLD Newsletter - September 2017 Welcome to Newsletter Number 67 Dear SENG QLD members, contacts and friends, The Sustainable Transport: Reality or Pipe Dream technical session is planned for 10 October at Hawken Auditorium, Engineering House. Our guest speakers will address sustainable transport issues and innovations regarding congestion, fuel vs electricity, public transport, pedal power and urban planning. This month’s newsletter includes: Sustainable Transport: Reality or Pipe Dream Other Events Interesting Snippets Open for comment David's Blog As always, we welcome input from members regarding topics or speakers of interest. Please contact one of the Qld committee members, or consider coming along to a committee meeting, held at Engineering House prior to each of our technical seminars. We hope to see you there! Sustainable Engineering Society Qld Branch Engineers Australia. Sustainable Transport: Reality or Pipe Dream? Date: Tuesday 10 October, 2017 Time: 5:30pm for 6:00 Presenters: Rachel Smith, Gerard Reardon Venue: Hawken Auditorium, Engineering House 447 Upper Edward St, Brisbane Networking: Rachel Smith, Gerard Reardon Cost: Students - $15 Members (EA, SENG, TAs) - $15 Non-Members* - $45 *Those without an EA log in will need to create an EA account to register. This is a simple process and will only take a minute. Speakers: Rachel Smith – Author, Decongestion Rachel’s transport career spans 18 years across the public and private sectors in the UK and Australia. She has two TEDx talks, is the Author of Decongestion, has spoken in London’s Palace of Westminster’s House of Lords, is on the Smart Cities Task Force, is a Sourceable columnist, was part of the BMW Guggenheim Lab in New York, Berlin and Mumbai (nominated by Enrique Penalosa), created Cycling Super Highways, was retained by the UK Government for 6 years as an expert advisor and was awarded the BP International Road Safety Award. Rachel will discuss why the Australian Dream has become our biggest nightmare, 5 mistakes society makes and the 7 ‘sticking points’ or factors preventing change. The diversity of traveller choice now being sought is placing immense pressure on the currency and flexibility of transport policies and the priorities within infrastructure supply programs Gerard Reardon - Director, McCormick Rankin Cagney Gerard has experience in transportation planning, traffic engineering, road and highway design, and urban development within the public and private sectors in Australia. Since joining MRCagney, Gerard has been involved in many high profile planning and transport projects including the South Brisbane Riverside Renewal Strategy, Boggo Road Urban Village, Edmonton Business and Industry Park, and the Flagstone Master Plan. He has also provided traffic engineering advice on signature projects including the Queensland Children’s Hospital, the Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre, and the Gold Coast Light Rail. Gerard will discuss policy and program changes that need to be considered and the challenges and opportunities facing transport planners and traffic engineers. In Australia, the transport sector is responsible for over a quarter of our energy consumption, and almost a sixth of greenhouse gas emissions. Globally, transportation contributes around a seventh of greenhouse gas emissions. Of this approximately two thirds are due to passenger travel and one third is due to freight. This is an area in which engineers should be leading the way. Are we doing enough? What more can we do? Our speakers will address aspects of transport such as congestion, fuel vs electricity, public transport, pedal power and urban planning and the session will conclude with a panel discussion which will allow us all to consider and discuss our current progress and plans. What is the status quo in transport engineering? How is travel choice influenced by technology and climate change policies? How are transport policies and infrastructure supply affected? What does the future hold?. Please join us after the session for networking at the OBar, 52 Astor Tce, Spring Hill. Register Now Register on-line or for more information see the attached flyer. Member rates for SENG and ACF members. Other Events Engineers Australia The Design Rainfall Revision Project – 4 Oct The Bureau of Meteorology is finalising the Design Rainfall Revision Project which will provide users with new design rainfalls. This presentation will provide information on the new design rainfalls for Queensland and demonstrate the functionalities of the new design rainfall webpage. Clean Air Society of Australia and New Zealand (CASANZ17) Clean Air and Environment Conference: The Critical Atmosphere (15 - 18 Oct) Over 300 highly influential global industry experts, policy and decision makers, and key equipment suppliers of the environmental sector gather to understand more about the physical and chemical processes underlying air quality, their effects on human health and welfare, and our capacity to effectively control and regulate air pollution. CASANZ17 hopes to stimulate new ideas and tools that can be applied across the air quality and climate change fields by coming together for this event. Long Future, Sustain Ability and SENG Reframing the Future and Adapting to Change (25 - 26 Oct) This 2-day workshop, run by world-recognised experts in sustainability, will harness participants' ability to keep abreast of organisational, social, global and biospheric trends, identify and correct road blocks to sustainable solutions, investigate opportunities and plan activities to reframe the future of your organisation and/or project. The workshop aims to develop participants' adaptive approach to working life that will deliver sustainability outcomes. Centre for Environmental Training (cet) Erosion and Sediment Control workshops (14 – 17 Nov) Four consecutive workshops address the fundamentals of erosion and sediment control, the International Erosion Control Association (IECA) guidelines, construction site water management, and control plans. Interesting Snippets For your interest, horror and amusement. SENG makes no claims regarding the accuracy or currency of these items. Qld Gov. The Queensland Government announces a new incentive to address excess waste and increase recycling. A ten-cent refund for eligible drink containers will be paid at authorised outlets. Click the link for more details. Qld Government has also introduced a ban on light single use plastic bags to begin 1 July 2018. Find out more. A project to build the world’s longest electric super highway has been unveiled by the Qld Government. Regular electric car recharge stations will be available from Coolangatta with motorists able to recharge with green electricity that will initially be provided free. Find out more. General Aurora Solar Energy Project The Aurora Solar Energy Project is an emission-free 150-megawatt solar thermal power plant that has recently been approved for construction in Port Augusta. It is expected to supply all of the South Australian Government's electrical demands. Read more here. Optimsed battery power Collaboration between researchers from Australia and Singapore has resulted in new methods for optimising battery power. By developing alternative electro-catalysts that increase the capabilities of zinc-air batteries, the lithium-ion battery may be replaced by a ‘greener’ alternative that is more readily-available with greater capabilities. Win-win. Estimates that man made emissions higher than previously estimated Methods for constraining natural geologic methane emissions to determine its mole fraction of the global methane source have allowed for man-made emissions to be estimated, however these methods are well-known to be uncertain and imprecise. New analyses of ice-core samples, that assume constant geological methane output, indicate that man-made emissions are likely very much higher than previously estimated. Full journal article available here. Promising Pumped hydro storage ANU researchers model Australia’s potential off-river pumped hydro power storage sites, finding very promising results.. Read more about these exciting energy opportunities for Australia’s renewable energy future here. Department of Environment and Heritage Protection - Regulatory Updates Criminal ex-manager receives extended jailtime, charged under the Environmental Protection Act 1994 with two counts of operating a quarry without an Environmental Authority (EA). All EAs are now available in a spreadsheet form that can be downloaded from the Queensland Government website. Awards and Open Comment Draft 'Contaminated Sites Environment Protection' policy As part of regular Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) reviews of environment protection policies, the Draft 'Contaminated Sites Environment Protection' policy is now available for public comment. Consultation closes on Wednesday 27 September 2017. Find more details here. Protecting Queensland Environment EHP is currently seeking community feedback on its role as Queensland's environmental regulator. They are encouraging Queenslanders to complete a short survey on the environmental issues. Moment for Action Sign the petition David's Blog Keep up to date by reading David's Blog on the SENG website. Log in using your to post comments or questions. Join the conversation on our LinkedIn group page If you have an idea to share, an issue you would like feedback on, or just want to follow the conversation, click here to join the group. If you can't view this email click here to view online Click here to unsubscribe from this newsletter
Categories: Newsletters QLD

Tsunami drives species 'army' across Pacific to US coast

BBC - Fri, 2017-09-29 11:44
Hundreds of Japanese species have been found on US coasts, swept there by the deadly 2011 tsunami.
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Trump officials have no clue how to rebuild Puerto Rico’s grid. But we do.

RenewEconomy - Fri, 2017-09-29 10:59
Florida and Japan show clean energy is fastest, cheapest way to restore power. Too bad Trump's administration hates it.
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EasyJet eyes battery-powered short haul flights within decade

RenewEconomy - Fri, 2017-09-29 10:53
EasyJet believes it could operate electric flights under two hours in duration within the decade.
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National Landcare Program Phase Two announced

Department of the Environment - Fri, 2017-09-29 10:53
The Coalition Government is continuing its longstanding commitment to natural resource management, investing more than $1 billion for phase two of the National Landcare Program.
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Air pollution: Sadiq Khan calls for ban on wood-burning stoves

The Guardian - Fri, 2017-09-29 10:08

London mayor cites figures showing that the home stoves, used in 16% of households, produce up to a third of all the capital’s fine-particle pollution

Wood-burning stoves could be banned in some areas to combat air pollution under proposals by the London mayor, Sadiq Khan.

Khan has written to Michael Gove, the environment secretary, to request extra powers to improve air quality in the capital, including measures to tackle solid-fuel burning and construction pollution. The proposed measures include minimum emissions standards for vessels on London’s waterways and heavy construction machinery like diggers and bulldozers.

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Debris from the 2011 tsunami carried hundreds of species across the Pacific Ocean

The Conversation - Fri, 2017-09-29 05:05
Japanese vessel washed ashore on Long Beach, Washington being inspected by John Chapman. Russ Lewis

When a foreign species arrives in a new environment and spreads to cause some form of economic, health, or ecological harm, it’s called a biological invasion. Often stowing away among the cargo of ships and aircraft, such invaders cause billions of dollars of economic loss annually across the globe and have devastating impacts on the environment.

While the number of introductions which eventually lead to such invasions is rising across the globe, most accidental introduction events involve small numbers of individuals and species showing up in a new area.

But new research published today in Science has found that hundreds of marine species travelled from Japan to North America in the wake of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami (which struck the east coast of Japan with devastating consequences).

Read more: Widespread invasive species control is a risky business

Marine introductions result from biofouling, the process by which organisms start growing on virtually any submerged surface. Within days a slimy bacterial film develops. After months to a few years (depending on the water temperature) fully formed communities may be found, including algae, molluscs such as mussels, bryozoans, crustaceans, and other animals.

Current biosecurity measures, such as antifouling on ships and border surveillance, are designed to deal with a steady stream of potential invaders. But they are ill-equipped to deal with an introduction event of the scale recorded along most of the North American coast. This would be just as true for Australia, with its extensive coastlines, as it is for North America.

Mass marine migration Marine animals were transported vast distances on tsunami debris. Carla Schaffer / AAAS

This research, led by James Carlton of Williams College, shows that over a few years after the 2011 earthquake and tsunami, many marine organisms arrived along the west coast of North America on debris derived from human activity. The debris ranged from small pieces of plastic to buoys, to floating docks and damaged marine vessels. All of these items harboured organisms. Across the full range of debris surveyed, scores of individuals from roughly 300 species of marine creatures arrived alive. Most of them were new to North America.

The tsunami swept coastal infrastructure and many human artefacts out to sea. Items that had already been in the water before the tsunami carried their marine communities along with them. The North Pacific Current then transported these living communities across the Pacific to Alaska, British Columbia, Oregon, Washington and California.

Japanese tsunami buoy with Japanese oyster Crassostrea gigas, found floating offshore of Alsea Bay, Oregon in 2012. James T. Carlton

What makes this process unusual is the way a natural extreme event – the earthquake and associated tsunami – gave rise to an extraordinarily large introduction event because of its impact on coastal infrastructure. The researchers argue that this event is of unprecedented magnitude, constituting what they call “tsunami-driven megarafting”: rafting being the process by which organisms may travel across oceans on debris – natural or otherwise.

It’s not known how many of these new species will establish themselves and spread in their new environment. But, given what we know about the invasion process, it’s certain at least some will. Often, establishment and initial population growth is hidden, especially in marine species. Only once it is either costly or impossible to do something about a new species, is it detected.

Biosecurity surveillance systems are designed to overcome this problem, but surveillance of an entire coast for multiple species is a significant challenge.

Perhaps one of the largest questions the study raises is whether this was a once off event. Might similar future occurrences be expected? Given the rapid rate of coastal infrastructure development, the answer is clear: this adds a new dimension to coastal biosecurity that will have to be considered.

Investment in coastal planning and early warning systems will help, as will reductions in plastic pollution. But such investment may be of little value if action is not taken to adhere to, and then exceed, nationally determined contributions to the Paris Agreement. Without doing so, a climate change-driven sea level rise of more than 1 m by the end of the century may be expected. This will add significantly to the risks posed by the interactions between natural extreme events and the continued development of coastal infrastructure. In other words, this research has uncovered what might be an increasingly common new ecological process in the Anthropocene – the era of human-driven global change.

The Conversation

Steven Chown is the President of the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research.

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Alarm as study reveals world’s tropical forests are huge carbon emission source

The Guardian - Fri, 2017-09-29 04:00

Forests globally are so degraded that instead of absorbing emissions they now release more carbon annually than all the traffic in the US, say researchers

The world’s tropical forests are so degraded they have become a source rather than a sink of carbon emissions, according to a new study that highlights the urgent need to protect and restore the Amazon and similar regions.

Researchers found that forest areas in South America, Africa and Asia – which have until recently played a key role in absorbing greenhouse gases – are now releasing 425 teragrams of carbon annually, which is more than all the traffic in the United States.

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Europe plans Sentinel satellite expansion

BBC - Fri, 2017-09-29 02:58
The process begins of scoping new spacecraft for the Sentinel Earth observation network.
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Will this rover succeed in exploring the Moon's surface?

BBC - Fri, 2017-09-29 02:23
A team in Bangalore has entered the Google Lunar X Prize to land a rover on the Moon.
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Sussex chemical haze: MPs criticise decision to curtail investigation

The Guardian - Fri, 2017-09-29 00:21

Concern grows that cause of toxic plume last month, which left 150 people seeking hospital treatment, may never be known

MPs have criticised a decision to wind down an investigation into the mysterious chemical haze that caused Sussex beaches to be evacuated and left dozens of people reporting sore eyes and breathing problems.

Victims of the incident, after which 150 people sought hospital treatment, expressed alarm that they may never know the cause of the toxic plume that gave them sore throats for weeks after it drifted on to Birling Gap and other beaches on 27 August.

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Monsanto banned from European parliament

The Guardian - Fri, 2017-09-29 00:15

MEPs withdraw parliamentary access after the firm shunned a hearing into allegations that it unduly influenced studies into the safety of glyphosate used in its RoundUp weedkiller

Monsanto lobbyists have been banned from entering the European parliament after the multinational refused to attend a parliamentary hearing into allegations of regulatory interference.

It is the first time MEPs have used new rules to withdraw parliamentary access for firms that ignore a summons to attend parliamentary inquiries or hearings.

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Embryo: Precise 'chemical surgery' performed

BBC - Thu, 2017-09-28 23:01
Sir Paul Nurse says this kind of technique could be done in the UK.
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Dirty laundry a powerful magnet for bedbugs, study finds

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-09-28 23:00

To sleep tight and dodge the bedbug’s bite, pack away worn clothes to avoid spreading the insects, which are attracted to human scent, travellers advised

After a long day of sightseeing in a foreign city, you might be tempted to kick off your socks, sling your sweaty T-shirt across your hotel room room and flop down on the bed. Think again.

Dirty laundry acts as a powerful magnet for bedbugs, a study published in the journal Scientific Reports has found. Its authors have warned that a failure to securely pack away clothes while travelling may explain why populations of biting parasites have soared during the past decade.

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'Virtual flu'

BBC - Thu, 2017-09-28 22:45
A major citizen science project will spread virtual flu with the aim of understanding how to stop the real thing.
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New species of giant rat discovered on the Solomon Islands

BBC - Thu, 2017-09-28 20:50
Four times larger than regular rodents, a large, tree-dwelling rat has been found in the Pacific.
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Satellite eye on Earth: August 2017 – in pictures

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-09-28 20:14

Greenland wildfires, deforestation and tropical storm Harvey are among the images captured by Nasa and the ESA last month

Tropical storm Harvey in the Gulf of Mexico on 24 August. This geocolor image appears differently depending on whether it is day (right of the image) or night (left).

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Climate and energy are becoming focal points in state political races | John Abraham

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-09-28 20:00

The latest example, Minnesota gubernatorial candidate Rebecca Otto has a strong clean energy proposal

As soon as Donald Trump won the presidential election, people in the US and around the world knew it was terrible news for the environment. Not wanting to believe that he would try to follow through on our worst fears, we held out hope.

Those hopes for a sane US federal government were misplaced. But they are replaced by a new hope – an emerging climate leadership at the state level and a continuation of economic forces that favor clean/renewable energy over dirty fossil fuels. In fact, it appears that some states are relishing the national and international leadership roles that they have undertaken. Support for sensible climate and energy policies is now a topic to run on in elections.

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