The Guardian
The week in wildlife – in pictures
The best of this week’s wildlife pictures, including rescued cheetahs, a waving seal pup and migrating red crabs
Continue reading...UK must boost recycling of materials for green industries, report says
Green Alliance says all critical raw material demands for low carbon technologies could be met from secondary materials by 2050
The UK must scale up recycling of materials for low carbon industries or risk facing a critical shortage of key metals, a new report warns.
The projected use of lithium, cobalt, silver and rare earth elements by the UK’s low carbon industries over the coming decades is set to soar. China controls 60% of global mine production and 40% of rare earth metal reserves, raising fears of a significant threat to the supply chain for businesses.
Continue reading...We face a global extinction crisis but somehow we are more afraid of spiders | First Dog on the Moon
Ridiculous. Yet perhaps we can harness this irrational fear for a good purpose?
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‘Drowning’ in waste: Australia recycled just 16% of plastic packaging last year
Report described as ‘sharp wake-up call’ finds recycling has flatlined since voluntary plan was introduced in 2017
Australia is failing to meet its own plastic reduction targets, with just 16% of plastic recovered last year despite more than half of packaging found to be easily recyclable, a new report shows.
The latest progress report released by the Australian Packaging Covenant Organisation (Apco) found plastic recycling has flatlined since a voluntary plan was implemented in 2017.
Continue reading...‘A farce’: experts dismiss government claims a controversial and unproven technology will cut emissions by 15%
Burning vegetation and injecting emissions underground ‘ecologically risky’ and ‘should be avoided’
Experts have questioned how a controversial energy technology that doesn’t currently exist in Australia could be earmarked as a major source of cuts to greenhouse gas emissions in the Morrison government’s plan to reach net zero by 2050.
According to the government’s modelling report of its “technology not taxes” plan, a technique known as BECCS – bioenergy with carbon capture and storage – would be removing about 15% from the nation’s gross greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.
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Continue reading...Dam overflows, lost crops and jumpy animals: floodwaters creep up on NSW’s central west – in pictures
As the Wyangala Dam overflowed and water broke the banks of the Lachlan River, farmers counted their losses as crops were submerged, while closer to the central-west NSW town of Forbes, locals kept a wary eye on rising flood waters. The town has been hit hard in the past and preparations had been in place since September, when the town experienced minor flooding. With more rain forecast in coming days, volunteers continued to work round the clock to protect the town from being inundated
Revealed: the places humanity must not destroy to avoid climate chaos
Tiny proportion of world’s land surface hosts carbon-rich forests and peatlands that would not recover before 2050 if lost
Detailed new mapping has pinpointed the carbon-rich forests and peatlands that humanity cannot afford to destroy if climate catastrophe is to be avoided.
The vast forests and peatlands of Russia, Canada and the US are vital, researchers found, as are tropical forests in the Amazon, Congo and south-east Asia. Peat bogs in the UK and mangrove swamps and eucalyptus forests in Australia are also on the list.
Continue reading...No country has met welfare goals in past 30 years ‘without putting planet at risk’
Exclusive: even wealthy nations seen as having good sustainability records use more than fair share of resources, finds study
No country has managed to meet the basic social needs of its population in the past 30 years without putting undue pressure on the Earth’s supply of natural resources, according to a study.
Looking at a sample of 148 nations, research by the University of Leeds found wealthy countries were putting the future of the planet at risk to make minimal gains in human welfare, while poor countries were living within ecological boundaries but underachieving in areas such as life expectancy and access to energy.
Continue reading...Canada floods leave thousands of farm animals dead and more trapped
Frantic rescue operation to save livestock from submerged farms underway, with many animals in desperate need of food
Thousands of farm animals have died and many more are trapped by floods in desperate need of food and water after the Pacific north-west storm battered a major hub of Canadian agriculture.
Torrential rains pummelled swathes of western Canada’s British Columbia and Washington state in the US in recent days – dumping a month’s worth of rain in two days in some areas – causing floods and mudslides that swallowed stretches of highways and forced the evacuation of thousands of people. One person has been killed and several have been reported missing.
Continue reading...Environment Agency launches major investigation into sewage
Agency and Ofwat say they have launched inquiry after water companies said there could be unpermitted discharges in rivers
The Environment Agency and the water regulator Ofwat say they have launched a major investigation into sewage treatment after water companies admitted that they could be releasing unpermitted sewage discharges into rivers and watercourses.
More details soon …
Continue reading...The moral case for destroying fossil fuel infrastructure | Andreas Malm
If someone has planted a time bomb in your home, you are entitled to dismantle it. The same applies to our planet
The climate struggle has entered a new phase. It is marked by a search for different tactics: something that cannot be so easily ignored, a mode of action that disrupts business-as-usual for real, some way to pull the emergency brake. This search has only just begun, but the signs are there.
In Berlin, half a dozen young climate activists calling themselves ‘The Last Generation’ recently went on a hunger strike, eventually refusing liquids and becoming quite frail before calling the action off. But there are other things than our own bodies that can be shut down. In conjunction with this summer’s Ende Gelände camp against fossil gas, a group calling itself ‘Fridays for sabotage’ claimed responsibility for rupturing a piece of gas infrastructure and urged the movement to embrace this tactic: ‘There are many places of destruction, but just as many places of possible resistance.’ This followed the development of a veritable archipelago of forest occupations in Germany, some of which have damaged equipment for coal extraction.
Andreas Malm is a scholar of human ecology at Lund University
Continue reading...Climate-vulnerable nations call for help forcing high emitters to act
Nations most at risk warn countries such as Australia they will lose out economically if they do not raise targets
Some of the countries most vulnerable to climate breakdown have called on the UN and the UK and other countries who want to lead the climate fight to help them ensure high emitters upgrade their carbon targets, as called for at the Cop26 summit.
They added that countries such as Australia, which has refused to embrace strong carbon-cutting targets, would lose out economically.
Continue reading...Bee-harming pesticides exported from EU despite ban on outdoor use
Greenpeace says 3,900 tonnes of neonicotinoids were due to leave EU and UK in three months after ban
Thousands of tonnes of pesticides that seriously harm bees are being exported from the EU despite a ban on their outdoor use within the bloc.
Data obtained by Unearthed, the investigative arm of Greenpeace, shows that 3,900 tonnes of banned neonicotinoid pesticides were destined to leave the EU and UK for low- and middle-income nations with weaker environmental regulations in the three months after the ban came into force.
Continue reading...Does Angus Taylor’s projection of a 35% 2030 emissions cut really ‘support the Paris agreement’? | Graham Readfearn
If the world followed Australia on emissions reduction, the planet would heat by about 3C, one expert warns
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The Glasgow climate summit ended early on Sunday morning, but before the clock had struck noon the Morrison government had already said it would be ignoring one of its key outcomes.
More than 190 nations at the summit – including Australia – signed a pact requesting countries “revisit and strengthen” their 2030 targets to cut greenhouse gas emissions at the Cop27 climate summit in Egypt next year.
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Continue reading...Why do so many people hate Insulate Britain? Inside the controversial protest movement
Guardian reporter Damien Gayle spent two months with the environmental campaigners Insulate Britain as they blocked motorways, glued themselves to road networks, got arrested multiple times and defied injunctions banning them from the highways – infuriating everyone from drivers, to cyclists and presenters on breakfast TV. He finds out what drives them, how they plan for key actions, and asks what's next after nine activists are jailed for blocking the M25
Continue reading...Nine Insulate Britain activists jailed for breach of road blockades injunction
Judge imposes sentences ranging up to six months, saying some of them ‘seem to want to be martyrs’
Nine Insulate Britain protesters have been jailed for breaking a court order banning them from protesting on the M25, by a judge who said no lesser penalty “would adequately mark the gravity of the defendants’ conduct”.
Ana Heyatawin, 58, and Louis McKechnie, 21, were jailed for three months while Dr Ben Buse, 36, Roman Paluch-Machnik, 28, Oliver Rock, 41, Emma Smart, 44, Tim Speers, 36, and James Thomas, 47, each received four-month sentences.
Continue reading...EU aims to curb deforestation with beef and coffee import ban
Raft of commodities would be prohibited under draft law in fight to protect world’s endangered forests
Beef, palm oil, cocoa and other products linked to deforestation will be banned from entering the European Union under landmark legal proposals that attempt to help prevent the felling of the world’s great forests.
Two weeks after world leaders signed a plan at Cop26 to reverse deforestation at Cop26, the EU executive on Wednesday outlined a draft law requiring companies to prove that agricultural commodities destined for the bloc’s 450 million consumers were not linked to deforestation.
Continue reading...‘Cow’s milk without cows’ start-up raises $13m in seed funding
Israeli firm says dairy proteins will be made by microorganisms programmed with DNA instructions
“Cow’s milk without cows” will be in Israeli shops by 2023, after a start-up raised a record $13m (£9.7m) in seed funding from investors to help it make traditional dairy products from microorganisms.
The Tel Aviv-based Imagindairy, which announced its seed funding result on Wednesday, said the milk it produced would be identical to cow’s milk, but the cow, and her associated methane, would be replaced by fungi or other plant microorganisms programmed to produce milk proteins.
Continue reading...Canada hit by heavy rains and floods in British Columbia – in pictures
Multiple fatalities confirmed after torrential rains forced thousands in British Columbia to evacuate
Continue reading...Insulate Britain activist says he will block more roads if not jailed
Ben Taylor, 27, was one of nine members of group accused of breaching injunction over M25
An Insulate Britain activist has told the high court he will “block the highway at the earliest opportunity” if he is not jailed for breaching an order banning the group from protesting on the M25.
Ben Taylor, 27, was one of nine members of the climate activist group to appear at the Royal Courts of Justice in London on Tuesday accused of breaching the injunction, granted to National Highways, by blocking a roundabout on London’s orbital motorway.
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