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Peter Garrett: Back on centre stage to fight Adani, push for 100% renewables
Game 1 of US baseball world series breaks heat record
How the river Ganges was taken to London
Bloodhound supersonic car set for first public runs
Amid devastation, Tesla begins restoring power in Puerto Rico
Why hot weather records continue to tumble worldwide
National Park Service wants to sharply raise entry fees at most popular parks
Visitors to popular parks, including Grand Canyon, Yosemite and Zion, could see fees double or triple to address backlog of maintenance and infrastructure costs
The National Park Service is considering a steep increase in entrance fees at 17 of its most popular parks, mostly in the American west, to address a backlog of maintenance and infrastructure projects.
Visitors to the Grand Canyon, Yosemite, Yellowstone, Zion and other national parks would be charged $70 per vehicle, up from the fee of $30 for a weekly pass. At others, the hike is nearly triple, from $25 to $70.
Continue reading...Private car ownership is ridiculously wasteful
Drop, bears: chronic stress and habitat loss are flooring koalas
How climate change affects the building blocks for health
Ichthyosaur fossil discovered for first time in India
Why thousands of Bittell Reservoir fish are moving home
'Incredible' editing of life's building blocks
Viking trade in red squirrels may have spread leprosy
Prince Charles: Companies chased away from Amazonian rainforests now destroying plains
The Prince of Wales is encouraging companies to sign up to the Cerrado manifesto, which aims to protect globally important natural landscapes
The loss of rainforest in the Amazon has been a familiar cause for activism for more than 30 years, but the partial success of efforts to protect it is moving the spotlight to a new landscape: Brazil’s cerrado.
Environmentalists fear that measures to reduce the exploitation of the Amazon rainforest for commodities such as soy and beef have pushed some of those activities into formerly less exploited regions such as the cerrado, a vast tropical savannah covering more than 2m sq km.
Continue reading...Stream, Smoult and Eddie: trio of orphaned otters return to the wild
Rescued cubs had spent nine months in care at National Wildlife Rescue Centre in Fishcross, Clackmannanshire
Three orphaned otters have been released into the wild after more than nine months in care.
Stream, Smoult and Eddie were taken to the National Wildlife Rescue Centre in Fishcross, Clackmannanshire, when they were cubs aged between eight and 10 weeks old.
Continue reading...Electric cars emit 50% less greenhouse gas than diesel, study finds
Exclusive: researchers calculated the total lifecycle emissions of an electric car, including its manufacture, battery manufacture, and all of its energy consumption
Electric cars emit significantly less greenhouse gases over their lifetimes than diesel engines even when they are powered by the most carbon intensive energy, a new report has found.
In Poland, which uses high volumes of coal, electric vehicles produced a quarter less emissions than diesels when put through a full lifecycle modelling study by Belgium’s VUB University.
Continue reading...Protecting forest dwellers goes hand in hand with protecting forests, Whitehall told
Indigenous community leaders are urging the UK government to do more to protect the forest dwellers who defend rainforests from illegal loggers
Activists have marched through Whitehall to urge the UK government to give more support to environmental defenders who risk their lives protecting rainforests, rivers and the climate.
The demonstration on Tuesday was led by indigenous leader Candido Mezúa, who bore a banner reading “Guardians of the Forest: end the devastation of the forest and the killing of forest people.”
Continue reading...Big companies' climate change targets are 'unambitious', say analysts
While almost all companies have plans in place to reduce carbon emissions, those plans don’t go far enough, according to the Carbon Disclosure Project
Nearly nine out of 10 of the world’s biggest companies have plans in place to reduce carbon emissions, new research has found, but only a fifth of them are doing so for 2030 and beyond.
The Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) also found that only 14% of its sample of 1,073 large companies around the world had “science-based targets” – that is, goals to reduce carbon emissions which are in line with the global agreement to hold warming to no more than 2C, enshrined in the 2015 Paris agreement.
Continue reading...What does a sexist google engineer teach us about women in science? | John Abraham
The Google engineer’s infamous sexist manifesto is contradicted by the brilliance of women in science.
What does a sexist Google engineer teach us about women in science?
Nothing.