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Australia Market Roundup: First ACCU issuance for 2024 sees 1 mln units released, Tasmania gets cash for Hydrogen Hub
The Tories are right, we should stop the boats. Just not the ones they’re talking about | Aditya Chakrabortty
The ocean-poisoning superyachts of global plutocrats are a symbol of the class that’s really behind Britain’s misfortunes
Rishi Sunak is in thrall to just two syllables: small boats. Plunging wages, extortionate heating bills, collapsing public services – such trivia does not detain the UK’s first Goldman Sachs prime minister from his Peloton. But small boats crossing the Channel? These he will vow to stop, fulminating in speeches, plastering the words across his lectern as if in a deadly pandemic.
To pull it off, he is yet again this week burning through his dwindling political capital, just like those tech venture capitalists he adores. So he’s declaring Rwanda safe for refugees – which, according to our supreme court, is like claiming black is white – while handing Rwanda hundreds of millions of pounds (its president was yesterday promising a refund). Our chief lawmaker promised this week to break international law and to strip asylum seekers of court protection – or, as he termed it, “the legal merry-go-round”.
Aditya Chakrabortty is a Guardian columnist
Continue reading...Asian CCS work sees another collaboration
Antechinus males drop dead after breeding, poisoned by raging hormones. Some also get eaten by their own | Andrew M Baker for the Conversation
When males die from sex-fuelled exhaustion, still-living members of the species are known to feast on fallen comrades
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If you are exploring our beautiful Australian wilderness this year, keep an eye out for animals behaving in interesting ways. You never know what you might see, as our research team discovered.
In 2023, our colleague from Sunshine Coast council, Elliot Bowerman, took a two-night trip to New England national park – its 1,500-metre-high mountain peaks are some of the loftiest on Australia’s mid-east coast.
Continue reading...Bottom trawling responsible for ~370 Mt of emissions annually -study
Meadow brown butterflies ‘adapt’ to global heating by developing fewer spots
Study finds female chrysalises that develop at higher temperatures have fewer eyespots, making them harder to see in dry grass
Female meadow brown butterflies who develop in warmer weather sport fewer spots on their wings, in an unexpected adaptation to global heating.
The discovery was made by University of Exeter scientists who found that females whose chrysalises developed at 11C had six spots on average, while those developing at 15C had just three.
Continue reading...Home battery boom: Solar batteries double to more than one million in Germany
New data shows Germany's market for home and commercial battery storage systems grew by over 150 per cent in 2023 – and that's with "market barriers."
The post Home battery boom: Solar batteries double to more than one million in Germany appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Sunshine State milestone as Queenslanders install one million solar rooftops
Clean Energy Regulator data shows Queensland reached one million rooftop solar installations in 2023, beating out every other state in the country.
The post Sunshine State milestone as Queenslanders install one million solar rooftops appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Federal funding jump-starts great green hydrogen hope, the “stalled” Bell Bay hub
One of Australia's greatest green hydrogen hopes, singled out by the IEA for delays, will get underway this year after a federal and state funding boost.
The post Federal funding jump-starts great green hydrogen hope, the “stalled” Bell Bay hub appeared first on RenewEconomy.
CP Daily: Wednesday January 17, 2024
Climate change and the cost of living: everything is going up | Jess Harwood
Fancy a mango?
Continue reading...“Fundamentally flawed” or “perfectly sensible”: Chevron doctrine cases see SCOTUS reconsider interpretation of federal law
Certifier confronts Sri Lankan govt fund over unauthorised use of REDD+ methodology
Ark progresses plan for solar farm next to world’s largest eight-hour battery
With plans locked in for a battery that could be the largest of its kind in the world, Ark Energy is seeking approval for a 500MW solar farm to go with it.
The post Ark progresses plan for solar farm next to world’s largest eight-hour battery appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Unseen images of code breaking computer that helped win WW2
Nature in England at risk due to government failures, says environment watchdog
Office for Environmental Protection report shows only four of 40 targets for England likely to be achieved
The government is failing on almost all of its environmental targets, risking an “irreversible spiral of decline” in nature, a damning report by the environment watchdog has found.
Dame Glenys Stacey, chair of the Office for Environmental Protection (OEP), has said in the report, published today, that if action is not taken England will fail to meet its goal of halting nature’s decline by 2030, as well as a host of other vital nature targets.
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