The Guardian
Centennial Coal massively increased emissions from two mines with no penalty
Miner given permission due to ‘loopholes’ in safeguard mechanism, Australian Conservation Foundation says
An Australian mining company was able to massively increase greenhouse gas emissions from two of its coalmines without penalty under a government policy that is meant to limit carbon pollution from large facilities.
Centennial Coal was given permission on three occasions since 2016/17 to increase the greenhouse gas emissions from its Myuna colliery and Mandalong mines in New South Wales, according to data kept by the clean energy regulator.
Continue reading...Water resources minister 'totally' accepts drought linked to climate change
David Littleproud signals more taxpayer support for rural communities as big dry ‘escalates’
The drought and water resources minister, David Littleproud, has acknowledged he “totally” accepts that worsening droughts are linked to climate change, as he signalled more taxpayer support for regional communities was coming as Australia’s big dry “escalates”.
Littleproud, who stumbled last month by first telling Guardian Australia he did not know if climate change was manmade, then later clarifying he had always accepted the science on the role humans play in the climate changing, told the ABC on Sunday he understood the link between global warming and drought because “I live it”.
Continue reading...Can recycled water be the 'next frontier' for towns running out of drinking water?
Toowoomba’s toxic 2006 poll put recycled water off the drinking table – but there is a push to bring it back
Right now, country towns in New South Wales and Queensland are heading for that fateful “day zero” where the supplies of drinking water end and the desperate contingency plans begin.
Pipelines are one solution and daily truck arrivals are another.
Continue reading...London police arrest activists ahead of Extinction Rebellion protest
Officers raid building used by climate crisis activists to store items for Westminster rally
Police have taken pre-emptive action against environmental protesters who are planning to cause disruption in Westminster.
Dozens of officers from the Metropolitan police’s territorial support group raided a building in Kennington, south London, where Extinction Rebellion activists were storing equipment to use in a demonstration next week.
Continue reading...Tesco and M&S likely to have soya linked to deforestation in supply chains
Exclusive: UK supermarkets admit there may be soya-led deforestation in their supply chains due to problems with traceability
- Rise of the ‘wonder bean’: from deforestation to your plate
- Home to the screaming hairy armadillo: the forest the world forgot
Tesco, M&S and several other UK supermarkets admit that they cannot guarantee that soya from deforested areas is not in their supply chain despite commitments to phase out its use, the Guardian has found.
An investigation has revealed that Tesco, Asda, Morrisons and M&S all buy products from UK farmers using animal feed that includes soya from Argentina. About 14% of Argentina’s planted soya is in the north of the country, where deforestation has laid waste to huge areas of the Gran Chaco forest.
Continue reading...Rise of the 'wonder bean': from deforestation to your plate | Bibi van der Zee, Anna Gross, Uki Goñi
The meat and dairy industry’s demand for soya is driving environmental crisis in one of the world’s most threatened forests. We trace the seven steps from the Chaco to the food we eat
- Tesco and M&S likely to have soya linked to deforestation in supply chains
- Home to the screaming hairy armadillo: the forest the world forgot
Home to the screaming hairy armadillo: the forest the world forgot | Uki Goñi
The deforestation of the Gran Chaco is dangerously overshadowed by its neighbour, the Amazon
- Tesco and M&S likely to have soya linked to deforestation in supply chains
- Home to the screaming hairy armadillo: the forest the world forgot
Somehow the Gran Chaco has remained off the world’s radar, its endless expanse of dry woodland overshadowed by the nearby superstar of forests – the Amazon.
Covering a vast area one and a half times the size of California – half in Argentina, a third in Paraguay and the remainder in Bolivia– the gargantuan scale of the Chaco tells only part of the story.
Continue reading...Links with deforestation in the Chaco: companies' full responses
Comments from ADM, Bunge, Cargill, Louis Dreyfus Company, Asda, Marks & Spencer, Morrisons, Tesco, the British Retail Consortium, Cadbury and the Food and Drink Federation
We spoke to a number of companies in the course of writing our piece on on the joint problem of soya-led deforestation in Argentina, and the lack of traceability in that country. We asked them if they were aware of the issue, and if so what action they were taking. Their full comments are below.
Continue reading...Iowa teens delighted as Greta Thunberg leads unexpected climate strike
More than 3,000 people gathered in the shadow of the University of Iowa on Friday afternoon to hear Thunberg speak
Three days prior to Greta Thunberg’s surprise visit to Iowa City on Friday, the organizer and local climate activist, Massimo Biggers, a 14-year-old Iowa City high school student, was preparing to strike – as he has done every Friday, sometimes on his own, since the Global Climate Strike day Thunberg inspired on 15 March.
Out of the blue, a message arrived from the Swedish teen activist, with whom he had been in touch, asking him if he was planning to strike again this Friday. “Of course!” he replied, and for the last 48 hours, according to his father, Jeff, neither had slept. “This was truly a miracle to have the town pull this together,” he said.
Continue reading...'Everywhere we looked': trillions of microplastics found in San Francisco bay
Most comprehensive study to date finds plastic in sediment collected from bay and tributaries and digestive tracts of fish
The most comprehensive study to date of microplastics in California has turned up a mind-boggling amount of plastic particles in the San Francisco bay.
An estimated 7tn pieces of microplastics flow into the San Francisco bay via stormwater drains alone, researchers discovered. Nearly half of the microscopic particles found in stormwater looked suspiciously like tiny fragments of car tires, which rainfall washes off the streets and into the ocean.
Continue reading...The week in wildlife - in pictures
A crayfish crossing a road, fur seals living on a volcanic island and dissected seahorses
Does Extinction Rebellion have a race problem?
Critics say group is not doing enough to involve people of colour, or expose links between climate crisis and inequality
It was just a tweet, and whoever sent it probably didn’t think much about it. It was a sunny day in July and environmental activists had blocked the Strand with a big blue boat.
“Live from the royal courts of justice,” Extinction Rebellion London wrote. “It has been announced that all protesters arrested during the April rebellion will be prosecuted. We are asking the police and legal system to concentrate on issues such as knife crime, and not non-violent protesters who are trying to save our planet.”
Continue reading...Why are female cyclists targeted by aggressive drivers for abuse?
By being on the road, women seem to be transgressing a boundary that some men find intolerable
I commute in London by bike. Run-ins with aggressive drivers are as much a part of my daily routine as brushing my teeth. Recently though, I’ve started to wonder whether there is a distinctly gendered dimension to the frequency and intensity with which I am shouted, sworn and honked at.
When I talk to friends who cycle, I’m struck by the instant recognition of this phenomenon by fellow women, who are quick to share their stories. Sometimes the abuse is explicitly sexual, more often it’s simply aggressive and unpleasant, or merely patronising. Almost without exception, it’s perpetrated by men.
Continue reading...Greater horseshoe bats living in Kent after absence of 115 years
Climatic change may be behind expanded range of very rare native mammal of British Isles
One of Britain’s and northern Europe’s rarest and most elusive mammals has been discovered living in the east of England for the first time in 115 years.
The return to Kent of the greater horseshoe bat has delighted and astounded conservationists, who are now examining whether climate change is shifting the species’ range. The bat is normally found only in Wales and the west of England.
Continue reading...Daily life of Amazonian Tembe tribes - in pictures
Tembe warriors in Brazil wear colourful headdresses of macaw and other feathers, and wield bow and arrows to hunt and protect their homeland, which is constantly under threat in the globally vital Amazon region. Like their ancestors, the Tembe plant trees to teach their children the value of preserving the world’s largest rainforest, which is a critical bulwark against global warming
Continue reading...No Casino shootout: police deny plan to kill swooping magpies in NSW town
Police say media reports that trained marksmen would be brought in to control the town’s magpies were incorrect
Police in the northern New South Wales town of Casino have denied they planned to deploy specially trained officers to shoot and kill magpies, contrary to media reports.
On Friday the Northern Star reported that elite police officers would descend on the town to shoot local magpies which have been deemed too dangerous to live.
Continue reading...Video shows 400km of dead and badly damaged mangroves in the Gulf of Carpentaria – video
Vision taken from a helicopter shows 400km of dead and badly damaged mangroves in the Gulf of Carpentaria. The mangroves have been hit by a combination of rising sea levels, heatwaves and back-to-back tropical cyclones. Prof Norman Duke, of James Cook University, spent 10 days monitoring 2,000km of coastline from a helicopter. For hundreds of kilometres, Duke says what would usually be a landscape of lush green mangroves has been replaced by struggling dull grey trees with stripped foliage.
Continue reading...Adani mine: another insurer distances itself from Carmichael project
Possible rail line insurer Canopius says it is ‘not involved in any negotiations’ over the Queensland project
A Lloyd’s of London insurer – considered one of the few remaining possible underwriters for elements of the Carmichael coal project – has distanced itself from Adani and says it is not involved in negotiations.
Canopius was one of two global companies understood to have held discussions with a broker about insuring the construction of Adani’s proposed rail line, linking the Carmichael mine site to the Queensland freight network.
Both now appear to have ruled themselves out. It was reported on Thursday that Axis Capital withdrew its bid. Canopius said in a statement on Friday it was “not involved in any negotiations to provide insurance coverage for the Adani mine project”.
Rescuers free whale humpback calf tangled in net off Sydney beach
Whale calf caught near Bilgola beach was nearing point of exhaustion after spending days caught in netting
Rescuers have freed a humpback whale calf off Sydney’s northern beaches that had been tangled in netting for days.
In a frantic, last-minute rescue effort, crews from National Parks and Wildlife freed the whale on Friday morning after hours of work near Bilgola beach.
Continue reading...Electric cars: call for tax on road usage to cover lost fuel revenue
IFS warns the switch from fossil fuel to electric will cause tax revenue to drop £28bn
Britain should move to a system of road pricing to combat congestion and compensate for the £28bn loss of revenue from fuel duty as the country makes the transition to electric vehicles, the Institute for Fiscal Studies has said.
The thinktank said the government’s pledge that the UK would reach zero net emissions by 2050 meant the tax take from petrol and diesel would shrink to nothing over the coming decades and a new way to raise money from drivers was needed.
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