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Paul Weitz: Skylab and shuttle astronaut dies aged 85
Elephant poaching drops in Africa but populations continue to fall
New report also reveals rise in large-scale illegal ivory shipments which could be due to panic sell-off by traffickers as countries implement domestic bans
Elephant poaching in Africa has declined for the fifth year in a row, experts have said.
But elephant populations continue to fall due to illegal killing and other human activities, while seizures of large-scale illegal ivory shipments were at record highs in 2016, a new report reveals.
Continue reading...UK is 30-40 years away from 'eradication of soil fertility', warns Gove
Farmers must be incentivised to tackle decline in biodiversity, says environment secretary at launch of parliamentary soil body
The UK is 30 to 40 years away from “the fundamental eradication of soil fertility” in parts of the country, the environment secretary Michael Gove has warned.
“We have encouraged a type of farming which has damaged the earth,” Gove told the parliamentary launch of the Sustainable Soils Alliance (SSA). “Countries can withstand coups d’état, wars and conflict, even leaving the EU, but no country can withstand the loss of its soil and fertility.
Continue reading...ESB told to ignore climate, as lobby groups muscle in on policy
EU on brink of historic decision on pervasive glyphosate weedkiller
Glyphosate is found in 60% of UK bread and environmentalists welcome a ban but industry warn of uproar among farmers if herbicide is phased out
A pivotal EU vote this week could revoke the licence for the most widely used herbicide in human history, with fateful consequences for global agriculture and its regulation.
Glyphosate is a weedkiller so pervasive that its residues were recently found in 45% of Europe’s topsoil – and in the urine of three quarters of Germans tested, at five times the legal limit for drinking water.
Astrolabe: Shipwreck find 'earliest navigation tool'
Electric vehicle uptake will drain fuel tax revenue, report warns
Graphs of the Day: Wind fast, solar faster, batteries fastest
Construction begins on Emerald Solar Farm after financial close reached
Access to RenewEconomy may be slow due to denial of service attacks
The Lion Man: An Ice Age masterpiece
Energy consumers are paying for useless, profit-boosting infrastructure
‘Buy clean’ wants to change the way we build stuff
Paris accord: US and Syria alone as Nicaragua signs
Kea voted bird of the year in New Zealand – video
New Zealanders were urged to 'vote kea' in a video campaign for the world's only alpine parrot, resulting in thousands more votes cast for the species than actual birds in existence. The nation's annual bird of the year competition hit new heights this year with more than 50,000 votes cast from around New Zealand and the world. Despite their protected status, keas have divided Kiwis between those who enjoy the cheeky parrot’s animated nature and those who curse its destructive habits
Continue reading...Nicaragua to join Paris climate accord, leaving US and Syria isolated
Vice-president Rosario Murillo calls global pact ‘the only instrument we have’ to address climate change as number of outsiders shrinks to two
Nicaragua is set to join the Paris climate agreement, according to an official statement and comments from the vice-president, Rosario Murillo, on Monday, in a move that leaves the United States and Syria as the only countries outside the global pact.
Nicaragua has already presented the relevant documents at the United Nations, Murillo, who is also first lady, said on local radio on Monday.
Continue reading...New Zealand bird of the year: playful alpine parrot kea soars to victory
The world’s only mountain parrot whose cheeky antics divide Kiwis, beats kererū and kākāpō to coveted crown
• New Zealand bird of the year leaderboard: check the pecking order
The kea, the world’s only alpine parrot, has been crowned New Zealand bird of the year, with thousands more votes cast for the species than there are surviving individuals.
New Zealand’s annual bird of the year competition hit new heights this year with more than 50,000 votes cast from around the country and the world. The competition is in its 13th year, and pits the country’s rare and endangered birds against one another. No bird has won twice.
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