The Guardian
Defra challenged over 'unlawful' release of 57m game birds in UK
Wild Justice takes legal action citing ‘ecological assault’ and harm to rare wildlife from mass release of shoots’ birds
Environmental campaigners have issued a legal case against the government to try to halt the release of more than 50m non-native game birds this summer, saying the birds could damage Britain’s most important wildlife sites.
Wild Justice, a campaign group led by the environmentalists Chris Packham, Mark Avery, and Ruth Tingay, said the annual release of 47m pheasants and 10m red-legged partridges was “unlawful” without proper assessment of the ecological impacts the animals had on protected areas.
Continue reading...We have flooding crisis under control, minister tells struggling farmers
George Eustice rejects need for inquiry as NFU president calls for ‘seismic investment’
The government has rejected calls for a public inquiry into the flooding disaster, arguing it has the crisis under control.
The environment secretary, George Eustice, came under sustained attack at the National Farmers’ Union annual conference but said the government had already saved thousands of homes from flooding and would be spending “record” amounts on future defences.
Continue reading...'Part-time prime minister': Corbyn confronts Johnson over lack of flooding response – video
Jeremy Corbyn has called out the prime minister for not visiting victims of the UK's recent flooding and accused him of only 'pretending to care'. The Labour party leader called Boris Johnson a 'part-time prime minister', also noting his absences during the London riots and when Qassem Suleimani was killed
Continue reading...'It was everywhere': how lead is poisoning America's poorest children
The toxin has endangered hundreds of thousands of kids. But parents in the hardest-hit neighborhoods may never be warned of the threat
Shanaya Ball did everything right during her pregnancy: she attended check-ups, ate well, and kitted out the nursery for her son Amari, who was born in March 2017.
But by his first birthday, Amari had failed to meet almost every developmental milestone, and was unable to play, communicate or move like other infants.
Continue reading...Rio Tinto announces $1bn spend to reach net zero emissions by 2050
World’s second biggest miner says it will reduce emissions by 15% by 2030, but ‘will not set targets for our customers’
Mining giant Rio Tinto says it wants its globe-spanning operations to reach net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 and will spend US$1bn over the next five years to reduce its carbon footprint.
The second biggest miner in the world has also committed to reducing its emissions by 15% by 2030.
Continue reading...Call to end logging of ‘protective’ native forests in wake of bushfire crisis
A group of experts has called for the ban in response to ‘climate, fire and drought’ but others say it is a ‘simplistic solution to a complex problem’
A group of forestry and climate scientists are calling for an immediate and permanent end to the logging of all native forests across Australia as part of a response to climate change and the country’s bushfire crisis.
In an open letter, the group said forestry workers involved in logging in native forests should be redeployed to support the management of national parks.
Continue reading...They told me I had 18 months to live. Nothing was more important than finishing my book | Andrew Darby
Diagnosed with lung cancer, author Andrew Darby found hope in the endurance of ultramarathon shorebirds – and the book he was writing about them
- Flight Lines: the heroic story of two migratory shorebirds
- Read more about Guardian Australia’s Unmissable series
I have a thing for motels. Out of all the choices we have today, I find these plain, predictable buildings a comforting way to be away from home. So as I lay in bed at the Beaumaris Bay Motel, harrowed by fantasies of death as I slept, and gasping for air when awake, at least I was in familiar surroundings.
Embarking on my book Flight Lines I took among wildlife literature as a guiding light The Great Soul of Siberia, Sooyong Park’s quest for the Siberian tiger. Park’s philosophy was that nature was to be observed and not directed. He sentenced himself to life hidden in a little hand-dug bunker, snowbound for months beside a wildlife trail on a remote mountain range, in exchange for minutes of tiger.
Continue reading...UK must act to stamp out 'curse' of plastic sachets, say campaigners
Calls for sachets to be included in UK and European legislation banning other single-use items
The government must act urgently to stamp out the “curse” of single-use plastic sachets, billions of which are helping to fuel the global plastics crisis, campaigners are warning.
A coalition of more than 50 business leaders, politicians and campaigners is demanding that the plastic sachets – used for everything from ketchup to shampoo – be included in European and UK legislation outlawing other “throwaway” items such as plastic straws and cotton buds.
Continue reading...Specieswatch: rare bat may have been in UK for decades
Nathusius’ pipistrelle sightings reported from as far apart as Cornwall and Scotland
An elusive British mammal, the tiny bat Nathusius’ pipistrelle (Pipistrellus nathusii), may be more widespread and numerous than previously thought.
Sometimes described as a rare visitor or a new coloniser because of climate change, it may have been here decades but had gone undetected.
Continue reading...Celebrities promoting veganism 'damage farmers’ mental health'
President of farmers’ union says attacks on meat industry cause ‘enormous damage’
The National Farmers’ Union has criticised stars such as Joaquin Phoenix who use their celebrity to promote veganism, claiming the growth in meat-free living is fuelling a rise in mental health problems among British farmers.
Days after the Joker actor’s Oscars speech attacking the meat industry, the NFU president, Minette Batters, said farmers fearing the imminent loss of their livelihoods and family holdings were in a state of stress and anxiety.
Continue reading...Environmental concerns get top billing in Infrastructure Australia priority list for first time
Protecting against coastal flooding, boosting recycling and ensuring water security are now high priority initiatives
Rising sea levels, water security and waste management are among the environmental challenges that Infrastructure Australia has, for the first time, elevated to the top tier of its priorities list.
In its latest list, to be released on Wednesday, Infrastructure Australia said it was elevating environmental concerns because climate change was altering the water cycle and was projected to cause sea level rises of 0.4 to 0.6 metres. It also cited a renewed focus on “resilience” in the face of natural disasters.
Continue reading...The Coalition wants to turn scientists into lapdogs – and muzzle climate research in the process | Paul Willis
Political interference in scientific research has been weaponised during the past decade, and we are all suffering the consequences
Policies matter. Good policies lead to good outcomes, while bad policies can lead to disaster. But what about where there is no policy, or a policy that is incohesive and incomplete? We only need to look at the state of science research policy in Australia to find out.
Scientific research in Australia has always suffered from political influence, because research in Australia is heavily dependent on federal government funding. But political interference in scientific research has been weaponised during the past decade of Coalition governments.
Continue reading...Waste crisis: Victoria offers businesses $96.5m to process recycling
Premier says overhaul will ‘take responsibility for our waste’ and help fix longstanding problems
The Victorian government will double its $28m in grants for businesses to sort and process recycling as part of a $96.5m package to fix the state’s waste industry.
Another $30m will be opened up for grants for technology to create new products from recyclable materials such as glass, plastic, organics, electronic waste, concrete, brick and rubber.
Continue reading...Be honest and nuanced: how Labor can keep its green credentials and still support coal | Peter Lewis
Labor needs to move the debate beyond slogans and shouting by arguing that despite its environmental downsides, coal has a place
Having reached the self-evident conclusion that one can’t win government without the support of at least a handful of regional communities, Labor is now coming to terms with its use of the C-word.
With their opponents to their left and their right taking up the crude chant of “coal, coal, coal” – as shorthand for economic betrayal on the one side and environmental betrayal on the other – watching Labor field questions on climate is like watching a tightrope walker attempt to cross Niagara Falls.
Continue reading...Great Australian Bight: Equinor abandons plans to drill for oil
Norwegian oil company announces it has scrapped its $200m plan to deepwater drill in Great Australian Bight Marine Park
Norwegian oil giant Equinor has abandoned plans to drill for oil in the Great Australian Bight, declaring the controversial project did not make commercial sense.
The company said on Tuesday it had told federal, South Australian and local authorities it had decided to scrap the $200m project to deepwater drill in the Great Australian Bight Marine Park.
Continue reading...Newly waterproofed Arctic seed vault hits 1m samples
Rapid climate change forced urgent upgrade of ‘failsafe’ doomsday storage facility
The Arctic global seed vault has reached the milestone of having 1m varieties stored in its deep freeze. The new deposits are being made after unexpected flooding of its entrance tunnel in 2017 prompted an upgrade.
Seeds from 60,000 crop varieties from across the world are being placed in the vault to back up those held in other seed banks.
Continue reading...Farmers pile pressure on UK government over chlorinated chicken
Calls for food standards to be enshrined in law to avoid post-Brexit ‘betrayal’ of consumers
Farmers have hit back at suggestions the government will allow imports of chlorinated chicken and other low-standard farm produce in trade talks with the US, escalating the row over post-Brexit food standards.
Minette Batters, the president of the National Farmers’ Union, will call for rules on minimum standards for imports to be enshrined in law, and insist that other countries must trade with the UK “on our terms”, rather than seek to water down food rules.
Continue reading...UK lags behind in €124bn European low-carbon investment table
Britain contributed only 3% of continent’s 2019 green spending, report says
British companies are lagging far behind their European neighbours in low-carbon investment after contributing only 3% of the continent’s €124bn (£104.2bn) green spending last year.
A report has revealed that German-listed companies invested 11 times more in low-carbon investments such as electric vehicles, renewable energy and smart energy grids than UK firms.
Continue reading...Oil and gas industry rewards US lawmakers who oppose environmental protections – study
Companies spent $84m on congressional campaigns in 2018, analysis of votes and political contributions shows
The oil and gas industry substantially rewards US legislators with campaign donations when they oppose environmental protections, according to a new analysis of congressional votes and political contributions.
Oil and gas companies spent $84m on congressional campaigns in 2018. Researchers found a correlation between an increase in anti-environment votes and an increase in contributions. They documented how lawmakers’ scores from the League of Conservation Voters (LCV) dipped and then were followed by campaign funding from the industry.
Continue reading...Labour can win in 2024 with my plan to tackle the climate emergency | Rebecca Long-Bailey
Where is Boris Johnson? As flooding devastates large parts of the north, the Midlands and Wales, the prime minister’s strategy is to hide from public scrutiny and hope the whole thing blows over. It’s now 11 days and counting since his last public appearance.
This is a huge miscalculation. Because for all of Dominic Cummings’ talk of “superforecasting”, the government is ignoring the issue that will define politics for decades to come: our response to the climate crisis. From wildfires in Australia and the Amazon, to extreme heat in India, to drought in east Africa, climate-induced extreme weather is already reshaping our planet in disastrous ways.
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