The Guardian
Fake blood sprayed on Treasury in Extinction Rebellion protest – video
Extinction Rebellion activists have sprayed 1,800 litres of fake blood on the Treasury's building in Westminster.
Protesters used an out-of-commission fire engine to drench the front of the building in red liquid and also erected a banner that read: 'Stop funding climate death'
Continue reading...Extinction Rebellion protesters spray fake blood on to Treasury
Activists use fire engine to launch water dyed red towards London government building
Four Extinction Rebellion activists have been arrested after spraying fake blood at the Treasury in Westminster from the top of a fire engine.
Dressed in funeral attire, the protesters criticised the UK’s military role in the Middle East, highlighted how UK companies cause large fossil fuel emissions and called on others to rebel.
Continue reading...'World-first' low-carbon greenhouses to grow 20 tonnes of tomatoes a day
Greenhouses bigger than O2 centre will be able to grow 10% of UK’s homegrown crop
People in Britain will soon be able to feast on tomatoes grown with the help of a water treatment plant in what backers say is a world first.
One of the UK’s largest clean energy funds has revealed plans to invest £120m in a pair of low-carbon greenhouses in Norfolk and Suffolk, large enough to grow 10% of the UK’s homegrown tomato crop.
Continue reading...Ocean cleanup device successfully collects plastic for first time
Huge floating boom finally retains debris from the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, creator says
A huge floating device designed by Dutch scientists to clean up an island of rubbish in the Pacific ocean that is three times the size of France has successfully picked up plastic from the high-seas for the first time.
Boyan Slat, the creator of the Ocean Cleanup project, announced on Twitter that the 600-metre (2,000ft) long floating boom had captured and retained debris from what is known as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.
Continue reading...Shocked scientists find 400km of dead and damaged mangroves in Gulf of Carpentaria
Mangrove monitoring trip to remote coast finds shocking impact of two cyclones across hundreds of kilometres
A cascade of impacts including rising sea levels, heatwaves and back-to-back tropical cyclones has created 400km of dead and badly damaged mangroves in the Gulf of Carpentaria, a scientific monitoring trip has discovered.
Prof Norman Duke, of James Cook University, spent 10 days monitoring 2,000km of coastline from a helicopter, as well as conducting land-based checks at 32 estuaries along the coastline between Weipa, Queensland, and Cape Barrow in the Northern Territory.
Continue reading...EPA cites San Francisco for 'water pollution', fulfilling Trump's threat
President had said agency would issue a notice because city allowed waste from homeless population to flow into the ocean
The Trump administration issued an environmental notice of violation to San Francisco on Wednesday, fulfilling Donald Trump’s threat to cite the city over an inaccurate claim that linked water pollution with the city’s homeless crisis.
Trump said the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) would issue a notice because the city allowed needles and waste from its homeless population to flow from the sewer system into the ocean – an allegation city officials disputed. In a letter Wednesday, the EPA administrator, Andrew Wheeler, accused the city of improperly discharging waste into the bay, but avoided mentioning Trump’s comments directly.
Continue reading...Queensland LNP breaks with federal branch to oppose nuclear power
Queensland LNP says it supports a greater focus on energy efficiency measures
One of the biggest detractors of the federal Queensland Liberal National party’s push to investigate nuclear energy as a potential power source for Australia has come from within its own house.
The state LNP opposition has publicly declared its opposition to making any changes to the current bipartisan ban on nuclear energy generation, declaring the government would be better served in its goals by focusing on renewable energy sources, in a marked split from their federal state colleagues.
Continue reading...Barnaby Joyce says Coalition risks 'political annihilation' in the bush over drought
Former Nationals leader says he agrees with Labor that government needs to ‘get cracking’ on dam construction
Barnaby Joyce says the Coalition risks “political annihilation” in the bush if the drought worsens and it does not start building dams, as Labor lashes the government for failing to produce a national drought strategy.
The Labor leader, Anthony Albanese, toured drought-affected Stanthorpe in Queensland on Wednesday, saying parts of the state were clearly suffering “natural disaster” and criticising the government for failing to build a single dam since being elected in 2013.
Continue reading...Specialist police assigned to Extinction Rebellion rallies
Scotland Yard plans ‘proactive and swift’ counter-action as forces send extra officers to London for October protest
Specialist police teams will be heading to London this weekend to help deal with two weeks of protests planned by Extinction Rebellion, the environmental activists who brought the capital to a standstill over Easter.
Metropolitan police will be put on 12-hour shifts from Monday, the first day of Extinction Rebellion’s action, to free up as many officers as possible from regular duties.
Continue reading...Belgium's first sighted wolf in a century feared killed by hunters
There has been no sign of Naya or the pups she was carrying since May
The first wolf to have been spotted in Belgium for more than 100 years has not been seen since May, and environmentalists believe she is likely to have been killed.
The wolf, given the name Naya, was first sighted in Belgium in the north-east province of Limbourg in January 2018. She was fitted with a collar containing a transponder to track her movements.
Continue reading...Activists set sail across the Atlantic to Chile to demand curbs on flying
Sailing ship leaves Amsterdam for COP25 climate summit with 36 campaigners on board
A group of environmental activists have set sail from Amsterdam on a seven-week voyage to South America to attend the UN climate conference.
It had been raining on the Amsterdam waterfront on Wednesday but the sun came out in the early afternoon as a small crowd waved farewell to the 36 activists and five crew on the boat.
Continue reading...Scientists hope to breed sheep that emit less greenhouse gases
Initiative aims to improve the animals’ feeding efficiency and reduce methane emissions
Scientists are working to breed sheep that produce less greenhouse gases in order to reduce their impact on the environment.
The Grass to Gas initiative will combine international scientific and industry expertise to measure two major factors affecting the environmental consequences of the livestock – feed efficiency and methane emissions.
Continue reading...How can shoppers make sense of sustainable fish labels?
As North Sea cod and wild Atlantic salmon added to at-risk list, calls grow for simplified rules
Overfishing is the greatest single threat to marine life, and at least a third of the world’s key populations of fish species are currently overexploited while most of the remainder are reaching their limits. Meanwhile, climate chaos and the scourge of plastic are only adding to the oceans’ problems.
Continue reading...EU imposes hen welfare standards on egg imports for first time
Conditional trade agreement covers eggs from Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay
A trade agreement to import produce into the European Union is set to be conditional upon animal welfare requirements for the first time.
Eggs imported from Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay to member states will only be duty-free if the hens are kept in line with EU standards under the provisional terms of the new EU-Mercosur trade agreement.
Continue reading...Shoppers told to avoid North Sea cod and wild Atlantic salmon
Exclusive: species added to at-risk list as numbers fall, but hake and plaice are booming
Consumers are being urged to steer clear of North Sea cod and wild Atlantic salmon – and eat more herring, plaice and hake – in a fresh attempt to alleviate pressure on threatened stocks.
The Marine Conservation Society (MCS) will publish its updated 2019 Good Fish Guide this week, setting out which is the most sustainable seafood and what to avoid in order to help safeguard of at-risk species in UK waters.
Continue reading...How worried should we be about microplastics?
Plastic is everywhere – in our food, air, water and oceans. But do we know enough to determine how harmful it is to our health?
If you enjoy a spot of food, like to breathe air and partake in the occasional drink of water (tap or bottled), then you’re almost certainly an unwitting consumer of microplastics.
People who use triangular nylon tea bags are the latest group to be shocked at their exposure to plastics. According to one study, they could be getting about 11bn or so particles of plastic with their Earl Grey or breakfast tea.
Continue reading...NSW considers laws to stop courts and planners blocking coalmines on climate grounds
Move comes after Minerals Council attacked planning decisions that cited carbon emissions as a reason for rejecting or imposing conditions on a mine
The New South Wales government is considering legislation that could limit the ability for planning authorities to rule out coalmines projects based on the climate change impact of emissions from the coal once it is burned.
It comes after a campaign from the NSW Minerals Council over decisions that have referenced the impact of “scope 3 greenhouse gas emissions” as a reason for either rejecting a mining project entirely or for imposing conditions on it.
Continue reading...World's largest wind turbines to be built off Yorkshire coast
Biggest offshore windfarm in North Sea will generate electricity for 4.5m homes
The largest offshore wind turbines ever built will begin powering millions of British homes using blades more than 100 metres long by the early 2020s.
Each of the new mega-turbines planned for the world’s biggest offshore windfarm at Dogger Bank in the North Sea will reach 220 metres high and generate enough electricity for 16,000 homes.
Continue reading...Australia’s vast carbon sink releasing millions of tonnes of CO2 back into atmosphere
Australia’s mangroves and seagrass meadows absorb 20m tonnes of CO2 a year but report warns damage to ecosystems contributing to climate change
Australia’s mangroves, tidal marshes and seagrass meadows are absorbing about 20m tonnes of carbon dioxide every year, according to a major new study that is the first to measure in detail the climate benefits of the coastal ecosystems.
But the study, published in the journal Nature Communications, warns that degradation of these “vegetated coastal ecosystems” was already seeing 3 million tonnes of CO2 per year being released back into the atmosphere.
Continue reading...City-sized iceberg separates from Antarctic ice shelf – video
A gigantic iceberg has broken away from the Amery ice shelf in east Antarctica. The tabular iceberg, officially named D28, is 1,636 square kilometres in size, or about 50 x 30 kilometres - the size of greater London or greater Sydney. It separated from the ice shelf last week, on 26 September but scientists said it was not related to climate change
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