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'Extinct' butterfly species reappears in UK
Brazil’s Javari valley is under threat. Lula’s government must protect it | Beto Marubo
Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira were killed in a region where 23 Indigenous groups live – and we all face the same danger
Among my people, the Marubo, knowledge is transmitted through oral history, passed down by elders throughout the centuries. For many generations these stories described the approach of people we call nawas – outsiders who always brought misfortune, usually in search of natural resources from the forests we inhabit.
My ancestors spoke of Catholic missionaries from Spain and Portugal, of Peruvian rubber barons and logging companies. The stories my generation tells are of fundamentalist evangelical missionaries, illegal miners and fishing gangs bankrolled by drug trafficking networks.
Continue reading...Events in Brazil and UK to celebrate lives of Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira
British journalist and Brazilian Indigenous expert were killed a year ago on Monday in remote Amazon region they tried to defend
Friends and admirers of Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira are preparing to gather in towns and cities across Brazil as well as London to remember the men and the causes they cherished.
The British journalist and the Brazilian Indigenous expert were shot dead during a reporting trip in the Amazon’s remote Javari valley region one year ago, on 5 June 2022.
If you want to help finish Dom Phillips’s book on the Amazon you can contribute here.
Continue reading...Solar panels - an eco-disaster waiting to happen?
Queensland to legislate renewable targets in $62 billion wind, solar and storage plan
Queensland to legislate renewable targets to build 22GW of wind and solar, and 12GW of storage. But it will still have the lowest share of renewables in 2035.
The post Queensland to legislate renewable targets in $62 billion wind, solar and storage plan appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Conservationists tackle decline of Scottish coastal species
Humpback whale freed after gruelling eight-hour rescue mission in Australia
Deteriorating conditions and other whales in area south of Sydney hampered attempts, say rescuers
A humpback whale trapped in waters south of Sydney has finally been freed after a gruelling eight-hour rescue mission.
Rescue efforts began on Saturday morning after reports of a whale in distress off Five Islands near Port Kembla. Volunteer crews from Marine Rescue NSW and NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service were called to assist at about 8.30am.
Continue reading...Iraq’s oil boom blamed for worsening water crisis in drought-hit south
Pollution from gas flaring – the burning of natural gas associated with oil extraction – is also a major concern in the oil-rich but extremely dry south
Western oil companies are exacerbating water shortages and causing pollution in Iraq as they race to profit from rising oil prices after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Water scarcity has already displaced thousands and increased instability, according to international experts, while Iraq is now considered the fifth most vulnerable country to the climate crisis by the UN. In the oil-rich but extremely dry south, wetlands that used to feed entire communities are now muddy canals.
Continue reading...Japanese firm signs broad carbon credit MoU with the Philippines
CP Daily: Friday June 2, 2023
Financial players shore up length across North American carbon markets, producers shed CCAs, RGGI
Don’t Look Up director Adam McKay to triple donations to Just Stop Oil
Hollywood director of climate crisis satire praised protestors for waking up ‘sleeping governments’ and will triple donations over weekend
The Hollywood director of Netflix film Don’t Look Up has pledged to triple donations to Just Stop Oil over the weekend, the group has said.
Adam McKay, who made the satire on the climate crisis as well as Step Brothers and The Big Short, said he stands with the protesters, praising them for waking up “sleeping governments”.
Continue reading...Ethereal beauty: Milky Way photographer of the year 2023 – in pictures
Travel blog Capture the Atlas has crowned its best Milky Way photographs of the year. This year’s shots captured the galaxy glowing above dramatic landscapes in Namibia, Chile, Japan, Spain, Iran and New Zealand
Continue reading...Top US chemical firms to pay $1.2bn settle water contamination lawsuits
Dupont, Chemours and Corteva agree deal and 3M also reportedly considering $10bn settlement to avoid trial due to start on Monday
DuPont and two related companies said they would pay close to $1.2bn to settle liability claims brought by public water systems serving the vast majority of the US population on Friday, just days before the start of a bellwether trial in South Carolina over PFAS contamination.
PFAS maker 3M was reportedly also considering a settlement that would keep the company from having to face allegations that it was responsible for knowingly contaminating drinking water supplies around the United States.
Continue reading...Snow fly in US and Canada can detach its legs to survive, research shows
Flies chilled to sub-zero temperatures amputate one or more of their six limbs to protect their internal organs
Flightless snow flies in the US and Canada can amputate their legs to survive as they begin to freeze, researchers have discovered.
Lab experiments in which the flies were chilled gradually to sub-zero temperatures revealed they can detach one or more of their six legs, an apparent “last-ditch tactic” to protect their internal organs from the advancing cold.
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