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China contractors and finance may help Adani’s mega coal mine
Rejected teenagers: the trend of closing young coal plants
Energy technologies and business model innovator Justine Jarvinen takes up role as Wattwatchers Chair
Rooftop solar pushes WA grid demand to 8-year low
Extreme weather leads to public health crises – so health and climate experts must work together
Fracking protest injunction based on 'flimsy evidence'
Ineos exaggerated the threat posed by protesters to justify its temporary legal action, court hears
A multinational firm has been accused of using “flimsy and exaggerated” evidence when it obtained an “astonishingly broad” injunction against all anti-fracking protesters, a court has heard.
Petrochemicals giant Ineos is seeking to enforce a sweeping injunction to prevent any protester from obstructing its fracking operations. Campaigners face being jailed, fined or having their assets seized if they break the injunction.
Continue reading...Wildlife on your doorstep: share your November photos
There will be further autumnal signs in the northern hemisphere in November, while the southern hemisphere can finally begin to enjoy springtime. We’d like to see your photos of this month’s wildlife near you
What sort of wildlife will we all discover on our doorsteps this month? We’d like to see your photos of the November wildlife near you, whether you’re a novice spotter or have been out and about searching for wildlife for years.
Related: Your best pictures of insects around the world
Continue reading...Stranded elephant rescued from well in Sri Lanka
Trump statements on North Korea 'dangerous': former US Def. Secretary
Fossil fuel companies undermining Paris agreement negotiations – report
Exclusive: report says outcomes of climate negotiations have been skewed to favour biggest corporate polluters
Global negotiations seeking to implement the Paris agreement have been captured by corporate interests and are being undermined by powerful forces that benefit from exacerbating climate change, according to a report released ahead of the second meeting of parties to the Paris agreement – COP23 – next week.
The report, co-authored by Corporate Accountability, uncovers a litany of ways in which fossil fuel companies have gained high-level access to negotiations and manipulated outcomes.
Continue reading...Colombia's land battles shatter the peace in Cauca Valley – in pictures
As the peace deal opens up new areas to extractive industries, a long-running fight for land and the environment has erupted anew as indigenous communities try to reclaim their territory
• Read more: Indigenous people of Colombia fighting for their lands
Continue reading...Most of UK's fruit and veg is from other EU nations 'so Brexit impact may be dramatic'
RSA launches food and farming inquiry as it highlights small quantity of these crops grown in UK and picked by non-EU staff
The UK faces serious health implications if the government fails to agree a Brexit deal, finds a report that says of 35 portions of fruit and vegetables, a figure relating to the five-a-day recommendation for individuals, just one “portion” is grown in the UK and picked by British or non-EU workers.
The report, to mark the launch of a new RSA commission examining the impact of Brexit on food and farming, found that the five-a-day health target – which adds up to the 35 portions of fruit and vegetables a week – was overwhelmingly met by food grown in the EU or harvested by EU workers in the UK.
Continue reading...Country diary: bright berries and noisy visitors in the churchyard
Wenlock Edge, Shropshire Scratch-calls and white strobing underwings announce a flock of fieldfare in the abbey ruins
Yew berries glow brilliant red at the green edges of the tree’s inner darkness. It is five minutes to closing time when I slip into the Wenlock Priory ruins. Lawns have been freshly cut; towering stones radiate warmth on one of the last of the fine autumn days; no other feet tread the paths.
It is still bright as the church clock strikes five. Lime, hazel and beech have the smouldering brassy ochre of a slow autumn’s burn, only now reaching their peak. A large horse chestnut bough has been downed in a recent gale. Tall pines rise skyward like those marking drover roads in the hills. Where they end the sky is blue beyond smoky clouds.
Continue reading...