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Trash talk: New York City has finally discovered the wheelie bin – and it only cost $4m | Arwa Mahdawi
After decades of bags lining the streets, the mayor has proudly wheeled out a McKinsey-approved trash can
The revolution will not be televised. Unless it’s Mayor Eric Adams’s Trash Revolution, of course. In which case a press conference will be held, music blasted, and every camera crew in the five boroughs invited.
On Monday the mayor of New York, with Jessica Tisch, the sanitation commissioner, by his side, unveiled New York City’s first official trash bin. The mayor wheeled the new NYC Bin down Gracie Mansion’s driveway and, with his characteristic swagger, demonstrated how the innovative new technology works: you open the lid and you put the rubbish in. It’s highly intuitive technology.
Continue reading...Green steel can help cut emissions from cars, without adding costs -study
Blockchain carbon trading firm to acquire marketplace specialising in large-scale CDR projects
Durable carbon removals credits from UK supplier to be sold on Xpansiv exchange
Euro Markets: Midday Update
Ireland targets developing farmland nature credits
Southeast Asia set for massive offshore natural gas investments -analysts
Certifier validates new carbon capture methodology
Malaysia in talks with neighbours to establish CCUS trading agreements
How might the Melbourne factory fire affect health and the environment? An air pollution expert explains
Australia puts 8 mln hectares of land, sea under Indigenous protection
Britain has been invaded by parakeets – and it’s got nothing to do with Jimi Hendrix | Tim Blackburn
These exotic birds are common in the UK now. That raises many questions, some fears, and a fair few myths
- Tim Blackburn is professor of invasion biology at UCL
What links a film starring Katharine Hepburn, Jimi Hendrix, bits of a plane falling on to Syon Park in London and the great storm of 1987? The answer is that they’ve all been proposed as the origin of one of Britain’s loudest, most colourful and recognisable birds: the ring-necked parakeet.
Parakeets are unusual among British birds in that they actually need an origin story. A century ago, there were none flying free in Britain and, as recently as the early 1990s, parakeets were relatively hard to find in the country. There were only a couple of reliable sites – the leafy Berkshire village of Wraysbury, or the trees around Esher rugby club in Surrey – where they would roost on winter evenings. Since then, their population has exploded into the tens of thousands. They’ve spread across the country from Plymouth to Aberdeen, and even over the water to Northern Ireland. London is their stronghold, though, and it’s increasingly rare to venture outside without hearing their raucous cries or seeing their long-tailed silhouettes skimming the rooftops.
Continue reading...Australia CCS will struggle to scale without bipartisan political support, conference hears
New big battery breaks habit, goes for morning stretch and takes state to new record
The post New big battery breaks habit, goes for morning stretch and takes state to new record appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Squadron says innovation needed to overcome jump in wind costs, but nuclear not the answer
The post Squadron says innovation needed to overcome jump in wind costs, but nuclear not the answer appeared first on RenewEconomy.
ETS, nature-based solutions key pillars in new NZ climate strategy
Australian solar glass company lands another US greenhouse order
The post Australian solar glass company lands another US greenhouse order appeared first on RenewEconomy.
New consultation round opened for giant pumped hydro project
The post New consultation round opened for giant pumped hydro project appeared first on RenewEconomy.
SwitchedOn podcast: The electrician who swapped his diesel guzzling ute for a Tesla
Practical tips on electrification from an electrician.
The post SwitchedOn podcast: The electrician who swapped his diesel guzzling ute for a Tesla appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Power of good: how solar sponge tariffs can be a win for your pocket and the planet | Peter Mares
These cheap daytime tariffs match the time when solar panels pump out the most energy and households use the least electricity
When our ageing immersion hot water system needed replacing, I wanted to install an energy saving heat pump.
They cost more but consume far less power, and I calculated we would get the money back by trimming $270 off our annual bills. Plus we’d be doing our bit to cut greenhouse gases and reduce demand on a stressed electricity grid.
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