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Tierra parda y estéril: la sequía histórica de Bolivia – en imágenes
Durante la peor sequía de Bolivia en 25 años, el fotógrafo Marcelo Pérez visitó los reservorios que abastecen de agua potable a las ciudades más grandes, y encontró un paisaje inhóspito y árido
Continue reading...Brown and barren land: Bolivia's historic drought – in pictures
During Bolivia’s worst drought in 25 years, photographer Marcelo Perez visited the reservoirs that supply drinking water to its biggest cities, to find a stark and arid landscape
Pigeon related to dodo found on Australian mainland for first time
The Nicobar pigeon, which is native to islands in Indian and Pacific oceans, was found by Indigenous rangers near Broome
A rainbow-coloured pigeon native to islands in the Indian and Pacific oceans has been found on the Australian mainland for the first time, by Indigenous rangers working near Broome.
The Nicobar pigeon, Caloenas nicobarica, the closest living relative to the dodo, is named for India’s Nicobar Islands, more than 4,000km north of Broome.
Continue reading...Stephen Choi - Living Future Institute of Australia
Stephen Choi - Living Future Institute of Australia
Stephen Choi is a UK-qualified Project Architect and Australian-qualified Project Manager. He has led sustainable design teams at small and large practices before founding a not-for-profit environmental building consultancy and becoming the Living Future Institute of Australia's Executive Director. Stephen’s work has included the development of global environmental assessment methods, designing and managing building retrofits and embedding sustainable development into educational curriculum. Several of his projects – both private and public sector – have been recognised in the industry for progressing “green building”
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Ears strained for a mad Highland grouse
Rothiemurchus, Strathspey Rustlings and flittings amid the calls hint at the rich biodiversity of the moor and pine forest
To me, at least, the Highlands dishes up its treats in small portions. On the first morning I stepped out of the lodge and heard the clucking undulations of a springtime black grouse somewhere to the south-east. I followed the noise but didn’t see him.
Instead the sparse pine forest offered up a bright pair of crossbills. Their “fools’ colours” – him in red, her in green – were crisp in the early light.
Continue reading...Renew Fest 2017 to be held this weekend
Applications open for Threatened Species Recovery Fund
Trump appoints renewables critic to head renewables office
CEFC backs two new waste-to-fuel plants with $30m loan
Why grid based battery storage is already a no-brainer in Australia
Graph of the Day: South Australia’s Anzac renewables bonanza
Victoria’s big renewable energy plans face major network hurdle
WA to close Muja coal units, in first signs of major shift to renewables
4 degrees of separation: Santos proves gas not climate solution
The great silence: we are on the edge of the abyss but we ignore it | Clive Hamilton
We continue to plan for the future as if climate scientists don’t exist. The greatest tragedy, Clive Hamilton writes, is the absence of a sense of tragedy
After 200,000 years of modern humans on a 4.5 billion-year-old Earth, we have arrived at new point in history: the Anthropocene. The change has come upon us with disorienting speed. It is the kind of shift that typically takes two or three or four generations to sink in.
Our best scientists tell us insistently that a calamity is unfolding, that the life-support systems of the Earth are being damaged in ways that threaten our survival. Yet in the face of these facts we carry on as usual.
Continue reading...Tesla says Powerwall 2 battery storage deliveries have begun
Ergon adds new retail tariff to home solar and storage trial
Oil company Santos admits business plan is based on 4C temperature rise
Chairman Peter Coates says company’s plan is ‘consistent with good value’, but experts call it ‘a breathtaking failure to come to grips with a world in transition’
The oil and gas company Santos has admitted its business plans are based on a climate change scenario of a 4C rise n global temperatures, at odds with internationally agreed efforts.
Its chairman, Peter Coates, made the comments at an AGM in Adelaide on Thursday, telling shareholders it was “sensible” and “consistent with good value”.
Continue reading...Negative emissions tech: can more trees, carbon capture or biochar solve our CO2 problem?
As CO2 levels rise, controversial techniques including carbon capture and storage, enhanced weathering and reforestation may be solutions
In the 2015 Paris climate agreement, 195 nations committed to limit global warming to two degrees above pre-industrial levels. But some, like Eelco Rohling, professor of ocean and climate change at the Australian National University’s research school of earth sciences, now argue that this target cannot be achieved unless ways to remove huge amounts of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere are found, and emissions are slashed.
This is where negative emissions technologies come in. The term covers everything from reforestation projects to seeding the stratosphere with sulphates or fertilising the ocean with iron fillings.
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