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Republicans fail to repeal methane regulations for drilling on public lands

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-05-11 03:01

Obama-era rule to reduce emissions from oil and gas drilling on federal land failed in 51-49 vote that saw three Republican senators defect

A Republican move to undo limits on the emission of methane, a powerful greenhouse gas, has suffered an unexpected defeat in the Senate.

A bill to repeal a Department of Interior rule that reduces the venting, flaring and leaking of methane from oil and gas drilling on federal land failed by 51 votes to 49, with Republicans John McCain, Susan Collins and Lindsey Graham siding with Democrats to vote it down.

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Bandits kill park ranger in Democratic Republic of the Congo

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-05-11 01:15

An armed group ambushed a convoy of rangers from the Itombwe reserve fatally injuring one and holding two others ransom, including a French national

A park ranger was killed and two conservation workers were briefly abducted when bandits ambushed a convoy of rangers from the Itombwe reserve in Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

Anselme Matabaro, an ICCN staff member and deputy chief of the Itombwe reserve was seriously injured in the attack on 5 May in eastern Congo and has since died.

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Indian solar power prices hit record low, undercutting fossil fuels

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-05-10 22:29

Plummeting wholesale prices put the country on track to meet renewable energy targets set out in the Paris agreement

Wholesale solar power prices have reached another record low in India, faster than analysts predicted and further undercutting the price of fossil fuel-generated power in the country.

The tumbling price of solar energy also increases the likelihood that India will meet – and by its own predictions, exceed – the renewable energy targets it set at the Paris climate accords in December 2015.

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UN examines fossil fuel influence in climate talks process

BBC - Wed, 2017-05-10 21:24
Campaigners say there should be greater scrutiny of industry bodies that are involved in UN climate talks.
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Nine dead in Amazon's worst land-related killings in decades

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-05-10 21:01

Hit men attacked a remote Brazilian settlement where deforestation, land grabbing and violence go unpunished, reports Climate Home

Nine men were stabbed or shot dead on 19 April over a territorial dispute in a remote area of Mato Grosso state, deep in the Amazon rainforest.

In the afternoon, hitmen swept through the land in question, known as Linha (road) 15, killing everyone they found. Some of the bodies bore signs of torture.

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'Fake females' to aid rare moth work in Cairngorms

BBC - Wed, 2017-05-10 19:22
Male Kentish glory moths are to be counted with the aid of bits of rubber coated in the scent of female moths.
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Yorkshire abbey that is 'world’s first eco-friendly nunnery' – in pictures

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-05-10 18:15

Stanbrook Abbey is located in the North York Moors national park and claims to be the world’s first environmentally friendly nunnery. Designed by Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios at a total cost of £7.5m, it features solar panels, rainwater harvesting and a sedum roof. The nuns relocated from a Grade-II listed church in Worcestershire that had proved to be uneconomical and unmanageable

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10 selfish reasons to save elephants

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-05-10 17:00

Elephants can help humans live longer, healthier, happier lives. Help them, and we help ourselves

It sometimes feels as if we are living in the elephant’s darkest hour. China may be closing down its domestic ivory trade and the EU getting to grips with smuggling, yet the poachers continue their bloody business. Meanwhile, forests are being destroyed, herds’ migration routes are being blocked, and humans and elephants are competing ever more fiercely for land, food and water.

So this is a good time to point out that humans have plenty of selfish reasons to make space for elephants. It’s not a question of giving them a free lunch: they can pay their own way.

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ExxonMobil criticised over response to Bass Strait oil spill

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-05-10 16:24

Investigation finds failure to properly respond to spill near drilling platform posed ‘significant threat to the environment’

Failure to properly respond to an oil spill near an ExxonMobil rig in the Bass Strait increased the risk of contamination and posed a “significant threat to the environment”, an investigation has found.

The spill was reported to the National Offshore Petroleum Safety and Environmental Management Authority (Nopsema) on 1 February after an oily sheen was spotted in the water near the West Tuna oil platform, about 45km off the coast of Lakes Entrance in Gippsland.

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Challenge Conservatives on energy priorities and cuts to renewables

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-05-10 15:30

Onshore wind has higher public approval than nuclear and fracking, so why are Tories expanding unpopular industries with higher carbon footprints?

Renewable power expanded exponentially under the Tory-Lib Dem coalition elected in 2010 and by 2015 the renewable industries had a turnover of £14.9bn and had reduced wholesale electricity prices. If this expansion had continued under the next government, an all-renewable UK electricity supply was achievable by 2025.

Though the 2015 Tory manifesto claimed onshore wind farms “often fail to win public support”, the government’s own surveys demonstrate widespread approval. Support remains high even for a large-scale local wind farm.

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Turnbull lets fig leaf droop and stands naked on climate policy

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2017-05-10 15:16
Turnbull government's budget had nothing to say on climate, and little on energy. The policy he once derided as a "fig leaf" for climate action is coming to an end, leaving the PM with nothing to meet climate targets, and no strategy to manage the energy transition.
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Conservationists plan expedition to secret ‘Noah’s Ark’ in Sumatra

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-05-10 14:45

After photographing tigers and tapirs in one of Sumatra’s least known wildernesses, an unlikely pair of conservationists are hoping to discover a hidden population of orangutans in high altitude forests – and who knows what else.

Just a few years ago this place had no name. And in fact its new moniker – Hadabaun Hills – is the sole creation of Indonesian conservationist Haray Sam Munthe. Hadabaun means “fall” in the local language – Munthe suffered a terrible one in these hills while looking for tigers in 2013. But Hadabaun or Fall Hills remains unrecognised by the Indonesian governments and is a blank spot on the world’s maps – though it may be one of the last great refuges for big mammals on the island of Sumatra.

Last year a ragtag, independent group of local and international conservationists, led by Munthe and Greg McCann of Habitat ID, used camera traps to confirm Sumatran tigers and Malayan tapirs in these hills. Next month they hope to uncover a lost population of Sumatran orangutans.

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Know you NEM: Comparing centralised and distributed models

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2017-05-10 14:43
Two renewables penetration studies: One takes a centralised grid approach, the other takes a distributed approach. Here's what they found.
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Ratch appoints EPC Contractor for Collinsville Solar Project

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2017-05-10 14:40
Ratch Australia Corporation announced today that it has awarded the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract for its $100 million Collinsville Solar PV Project.
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Sweetness of woodruff lingers down the ages

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-05-10 14:30

Benthall Edge, Shropshire This plant has had a symbolic, medicinal and folkloric importance for centuries

The margins of woodland paths are full of woodruff, white on green, and sheltered under trees is the ghost of its scent. Galium odoratum is the sweet woodruff, an erect perennial of limestone woods, 15cm-30cm high with square stems through whorls of up to nine leaves – the ruffs – ending in tight umbels of cross-shaped, bright white flowers that have a vanilla scent.

Woodruff grows in dense rugs in the shady woods of Benthall Edge at the northern limit of Wenlock Edge before it plunges into the River Severn of the Ironbridge Gorge behind Buildwas power station, whose abandoned funnel looms above the tree tops.

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India sets new solar tariff low, now beating domestic coal generation

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2017-05-10 13:49
India solar prices fall again, now at a record low for the subcontinent and cheaper than the cost of domestic coal generation.
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Identity of famous baby dinosaur fossil revealed

BBC - Wed, 2017-05-10 13:33
The fossil of a hatchling dinosaur dubbed Baby Louie is recognised as a new species of feathered dinosaur.
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Investors “hypnotised” by Tesla’s Musk, who is “anti-selling” Model 3

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2017-05-10 13:08
Tesla’s Elon Musk said the company will be offering no test drives or advertising for six to nine months for the Model 3.
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Baby brain scans reveal trillions of neural connections

BBC - Wed, 2017-05-10 12:51
Scientists release groundbreaking medical scans that reveal how the human brain develops.
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Turnbull’s budget ignores energy crisis and dodges climate

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2017-05-10 11:37
The second budget of the Turnbull Government continues their dire management of Australia’s energy and climate change policy.
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