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Phase one of “world’s largest” EV fast-charging network completed in Queensland

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2018-01-31 13:17
Electric vehicle drivers can now tap free, green, EV fast charging stations from Coolangatta to Cairns, and Brisbane to Toowoomba, as govt completes first phase of "world's largest" EV super highway.
Categories: Around The Web

Disappointing Reliability Review highlights failings of AEMC

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2018-01-31 13:07
See no problems, hear no problems, do very little. We read the AEMC's Reliability review in the hope of finding some interesting ideas. We didn't.
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Green sea turtle 'Terry' practises swimming with predators before release

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-01-31 12:26

The turtle washed up on a beach in August and will be released into the wild next month

A green sea turtle rescued from a beach has been swimming laps alongside predators at Sealife Melbourne aquarium to prepare for his release into the wild, with a phalanx of divers to act as bodyguards.

The immature turtle was discovered washed up on a beach on the Mornington Peninsula in August, severely underweight and battling pneumonia.

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Skywatchers await 'super blue blood Moon'

BBC - Wed, 2018-01-31 11:56
A blue blood supermoon and lunar eclipse across Asia heralds a year of lunar science milestones, say scientists.
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Lobsters and crabs should not be boiled alive, say campaigners

BBC - Wed, 2018-01-31 11:50
Lobsters and crabs are sentient organisms that feel pain and need more protection, say campaigners.
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Q&A: How will China’s new carbon trading scheme work?

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2018-01-31 10:42
China has unveiled some details of its much-anticipated emissions trading scheme, confirming its move to a national carbon market after several years of regional pilots projects.
Categories: Around The Web

The killer whale that can say 'hello' and 'bye bye'

BBC - Wed, 2018-01-31 09:58
A killer whale that can mimic words such as "hello" is thought to be the first of its kind to copy human speech.
Categories: Around The Web

Photon, Canadian to co-develop 1.14GW of big solar in NSW

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2018-01-31 09:01
Photon and Canadian's plans for 1.14GW of large scale solar in NSW suggest that the post-RET investment cliff predicted by some may not occur just yet.
Categories: Around The Web

Lismore opens Australia’s largest floating solar farm, could add storage

RenewEconomy - Wed, 2018-01-31 08:50
Lismore opens country’s biggest solar farm, and flags five fold increase in size and may add battery storage. The unique community funding model forms a key part of city’s push for 100 per cent renewable energy by 2023.
Categories: Around The Web

Birdwatch: purple sandpiper snatches a snooze in Somerset

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-01-31 07:30

By the tidal waters of a lowland river it’s a thrill to spot this Arctic breeding shorebird – even if, for this bird, sleep is on the schedule

The birds were so well camouflaged I almost didn’t see them. A dozen waders, perched on a rocky outcrop alongside the River Parrett, Somerset, at high tide, the water lapping at their feet. Most were turnstones, whose faded tortoiseshell plumage blended in surprisingly well with the rocks. A couple of dunlins, too, the ubiquitous small wader also in drab winter garb.

And one other bird: plump, dark and fast asleep, head tucked beneath its feathers. Only an unusual plumage feature, the patch of yellow at the base of its bill, gave away its identity as a purple sandpiper. Though at this time of year slate-grey sandpiper might be more apt.

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The make-up artist making designs with dead insects

BBC - Wed, 2018-01-31 07:19
Jasmine Ahumada, from California, attaches spiders and bees to her face to create her distinctive looks.
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RSPB Minsmere winter starling murmuration

BBC - Wed, 2018-01-31 06:26
Starlings take to the skies to create a spectacular aerial ballet before settling on roost.
Categories: Around The Web

Jon Castle obituary

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-01-31 03:49
Captain of the Rainbow Warrior who led many of Greenpeace’s most dramatic marine campaigns

The seaman Jon Castle, who has died of cancer aged 67, led many of Greenpeace’s most dramatic marine campaigns, including the occupation of the Brent Spar oil platform and the opposition to nuclear testing.

After 25 years with Greenpeace he turned his skills to wider humanitarian causes, including rescuing refugees in the Mediterranean and sailing to the Chagos Islands in protest at the British refusal to allow people to return to their homeland following their eviction to allow the US to build a military base. He always acted, he said, not just out of a love of nature but for right against wrong.

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Labor branches push for new environment act and independent watchdog

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-01-31 03:00

Exclusive: ALP’s internal advocacy group wants sweeping reforms to protect natural heritage to be adopted as policy at next conference

Bill Shorten is facing rising internal pressure to make the environment central to Labor’s election pitch after 250 ALP branches passed a motion calling for strong new national laws and an independent agency akin to a “Reserve Bank for environmental management”.

Branches from every state and territory have backed a campaign by the Labor environment action network (Lean), an internal advocacy group, for sweeping reforms to protect natural heritage to be adopted as policy at this year’s ALP conference.

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UK given days to show it will comply with EU air quality laws

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-01-31 02:00

UK and eight other states will need to take drastic measures on illegal air pollution to avoid court referrals next week, says EU

The EU has given Britain and eight other states until next Friday to show how they will comply with EU air pollution laws or face the European Court of Justice.

The ultimatum came as London reached its legal air pollution limit for 2018 in just the year’s first month, and could lead to heavy fines being imposed on the UK even after Brexit.

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BP to install charging points for electric cars at UK petrol stations

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-01-31 01:07

Further indication that oil firms are planning for growth of battery-powered vehicle market

BP will add rapid charging points for electric cars at its UK petrol stations within the next two months, in the latest sign of an oil giant adapting to the rapid growth of battery-powered cars.

The British oil firm’s venture arm has invested $5m (£3.5m) in the US firm Freewire Technologies, which will provide motorbike-sized charging units at forecourts to top up cars in half an hour.

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Scrutiny over wood and coal fires in UK homes

BBC - Tue, 2018-01-30 21:37
Burning wood and coal in people's homes will come under scrutiny as part of a government drive to improve air pollution.
Categories: Around The Web

Gove criticised for lack of post-Brexit fishing industry plans

The Guardian - Tue, 2018-01-30 21:18

UK environment secretary urged to set out proposals by Dutch counterpart

The Dutch government has called on Michael Gove to provide a clear vision for the European fishing industry for when the UK leaves the EU’s common fisheries policy, amid growing insecurity in communities on both sides of the Channel.

Carola Schouten, the Netherlands’ fisheries minister, said her country’s fleet, one of the largest in the EU, needed certainty about the future, but that she had yet to see any template from the British environment secretary for how a new arrangement would work.

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Communicating the science is the next step in the evolution of the UN climate panel | Adam Corner

The Guardian - Tue, 2018-01-30 21:00

The IPCC is taking guidance on how to communicate its crucial findings beyond speciality scientific and policy circles

The remit of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is one of the more complicated jigsaw puzzles in the world.

Since 1988, it has overseen thousands of scientists pulling together tens of thousands of academic papers on atmospheric physics, meteorology, geography, marine science, economics, land-use and much more. A multi-layered process of expert assessment takes place every six or seven years where a set of carefully worded statements is approved by representatives of 120 of the world’s governments, specifying what we know about the defining challenge of the 21st century: climate change.

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How Trump's cuts to public lands threaten future dinosaur discoveries

The Guardian - Tue, 2018-01-30 20:00

Researchers have made remarkable finds at sites such as Grand Staircase-Escalante, which the administration has shrunk

The paleontologist Rob Gay wasn’t expecting to find anything significant that day. He and a few of his students were scouting in the southeast Utah badlands in summer 2016 when they came across a hillside littered with hundreds of bones. Scattered haphazardly and protruding from the earth, they were the remains of of prehistoric reptiles that lived 220m years ago, at the same time as the earliest dinosaurs.

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