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Shark attack closes Margaret River pro surfing event

The Guardian - Mon, 2018-04-16 12:21

Man in his 30s taken to Royal Perth hospital after being bitten on the leg off Gracetown in Western Australia

A man has been bitten by a shark off the coast of Western Australia, prompting authorities to close down the nearby Margaret River Pro international surfing event.

The man, in his 30s, was flown to Royal Perth hospital with leg injuries, but was conscious, St John Ambulance said.

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Categories: Around The Web

South Australian Beach-cast Marine Algae Fishery - Agency application 2018

Department of the Environment - Mon, 2018-04-16 11:55
The public consultation period for assessment for ongoing export accreditation will be open from 17 April until 17 May 2018.
Categories: Around The Web

South Australian Beach-cast Marine Algae Fishery - Agency application 2018

Department of the Environment - Mon, 2018-04-16 11:55
The public consultation period for assessment for ongoing export accreditation will be open from 17 April until 17 May 2018.
Categories: Around The Web

Explainer: These six metals are key to a low-carbon future

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2018-04-16 11:02
The deployment of renewables and electric vehicles is expected to skyrocket as the world strives to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Categories: Around The Web

‘Renewable energy breeding’ can stop Australia blowing the carbon budget – if we’re quick

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2018-04-16 11:00
New research by a group at UNSW shows that it is theoretically possible for Australia to move to a renewable energy future without blowing its share of the carbon budget.
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Welcome to Australia's plastic beach – video

The Guardian - Mon, 2018-04-16 10:59

How much rubbish could you collect from a suburban beach in 30 minutes? You may find the answer confronting. Guardian Australia joins Paul Sharp and Silke Stuckenbrock from the Two Hands Project to see just how prevalent plastics are on Australia's beaches

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Coalition squibs on emissions in new energy policy paper

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2018-04-16 10:58
Coalition refuses to budge on emissions targets for NEG, despite considerable shift on technical details of emissions and reliability obligations from Energy Security Board.
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Europe’s electricity networks are underused and can cope with electric cars

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2018-04-16 09:33
Electricity distribution networks in Europe run at well below their full potential, and could learn from AirBNB nd Uber to easily incorporate EVs.
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Shipping to halve carbon footprint by 2050 under first sector-wide climate strategy

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2018-04-16 09:31
Countries adopted a compromise emissions target at the International Maritime Organization on Friday, with further battles to come over how to put it into practice.
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Carbon emissions from ships to be regulated for first time

ABC Environment - Mon, 2018-04-16 08:37
A 50 per cent reduction in emissions by 2050 is a step in the right direction but some are questioning if it's enough.
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Curious Kids: When we get bitten by a mosquito, why does it itch so much?

The Conversation - Mon, 2018-04-16 06:15
Those "itchy bites" are actually reactions to mozzie spit. Cameron Webb, Clinical Lecturer and Principal Hospital Scientist, University of Sydney Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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'Renewable energy breeding' can stop Australia blowing the carbon budget – if we're quick

The Conversation - Mon, 2018-04-16 06:14
Will the renewable energy transition end up creating yet more greenhouse emissions, as we ramp up the manufacture of wind turbines and solar cells? Not if their manufacture is itself powered by renewables. Mark Diesendorf, Honorary Associate Professor, UNSW Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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'Plastic is literally everywhere': the epidemic attacking Australia's oceans

The Guardian - Mon, 2018-04-16 04:00

‘It never breaks down and goes away,’ say scientists struggling to understand the impact of widespread pollution

While heading down the Brisbane river, Jim Hinds once pulled aboard a drunken half-naked man just seconds from “going down for the last time”.

But on this day, like most other days for Hinds, it’s back to the horribly predictable as he launches his boat into the Nerang river on Queensland’s Gold Coast.

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Iain Reddish obituary

The Guardian - Mon, 2018-04-16 02:59

My friend Iain Reddish, who has died aged 72, had a varied career in which he was a parliamentary aide, teacher, public relations officer and sports executive before settling down to be an international environmental lobbyist with Greenpeace for more than a decade.

He joined Greenpeace in 1995, moving to its Amsterdam headquarters, and worked on various projects, including the Save the Whale campaign. By the time he left in 2007, he had visited 149 cities in 38 countries. His final role was as European coordinator for Eurogroup for Animals, an organisation based in Brussels that seeks to improve the treatment of animals throughout the European Union, a job he held until retirement in 2012.

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ACT takes lead in transition to electric vehicles

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2018-04-16 00:06
ACT unveils major push into electric vehicles, including for government fleets, charging infrastructure, use of transit lanes, salary sacrifice for electric bikes, and studies on using EVs and their batteries to help manage the grid.
Categories: Around The Web

Hidden plastics: just when you thought it was safe to dunk a teabag

The Guardian - Sun, 2018-04-15 16:00
Five surprising objects that contain plastic – with toxic implications for the environment

Last Tuesday, Waitrose announced plans to remove all disposable coffee cups from their stores by autumn of this year – customers will have to bring a reusable one of their own. Despite their cardboard appearance, coffee cups are actually lined with polyethylene and are hard to recycle. The cups gradually break down to form microplastics, which make their way into our waterways and food supply.

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Categories: Around The Web

As public pressure grows, Clipper is latest brand to end use of plastic in teabags

The Guardian - Sun, 2018-04-15 15:04
Firm joins PG Tips in dropping synthetic sealants as other major producers look to make bags 100% biodegradable

The UK’s longest-established Fairtrade tea brand has become the latest to ditch synthetic sealants in its teabags, amid mounting consumer pressure on manufacturers to help cut down on plastic pollution.

Clipper Teas – which champions the unbleached teabag – hopes to introduce a new, fully biodegradable bag free of polypropylene, a sealant used across the industry to ensure bags hold their shape, by the summer.

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Government sets aside £60m to fight scourge of plastic waste

The Guardian - Sun, 2018-04-15 07:30

Fund to be split into three pots to tackle ocean pollution, research and waste management

The government has earmarked £61.4m from the public purse to fight the rising tide of plastic pollution in the world’s oceans.

Theresa May announced the fund ahead of the Commonwealth heads of government meeting in London next week.

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British farmers in turmoil as delayed spring plays havoc with growing season

The Guardian - Sun, 2018-04-15 05:26
A combination of the beast from the east and a dismal bank holiday weekend has put the nation’s crops on hold

Last year, asparagus growers were harvesting as early as 8 April. This spring, they are not expecting to harvest their open-field crop until the last week of April – a week later than the official start of the season, St George’s Day, 23 April. Welcome to just one of the consequences of Britain’s disastrously delayed spring.

“We have had a very challenging time,” said Guy Smith, vice president of the National Farmers’ Union (NFU). “March breezed in with the ‘beast from the east’ and went out with the worst bank holiday on record.” For asparagus-lovers there is at least an upside. “The combination has to be right for the crowns to push through,” explained Per Hogberg, of grower Wealmoor. “The air temperature has to be at least 12C, while the soil temperature should be between 8C and 10C. With warmer weather expected, consumers can expect a bumper crop in mid-May,” he said.

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'Suddenly my eyes and throat started burning': what caused Birling Gap's toxic cloud?

The Guardian - Sat, 2018-04-14 18:00

Last August, holidaymakers in East Sussex fell ill after a poisonous yellow cloud spread across the sky. What was it, and where did it come from?

Mark Sawyer has worked for the Royal National Lifeboat Institution for nearly 30 years, and since 2001 he’s been the full-time coxswain at the Eastbourne lifeboat station. Shortly after 5pm on the Sunday of a bank holiday weekend last August, he received a report from the coastguard in Southampton about an incident at a beach seven miles west of his station. “The call we got was that there had either been a fire or an explosion at Birling Gap, and they’d got 50-plus casualties suffering from smoke inhalation or burns.” There was what looked like a layer of thick smoke hanging just above the sea.

Birling Gap is a popular National Trust spot between Beachy Head and Seaford, a dip in the chalk cliffs of the Seven Sisters, with a steel staircase leading down to a pebble beach. At low tide there is sand and rockpools; on the cliffs above there is a visitor centre, cafe, car park and coastguard station.

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Categories: Around The Web

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