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Farmland could be turned into meadows post-Brexit, says Michael Gove

The Guardian - Thu, 2018-01-04 15:07

Gove will tell farmers that the current subsidy regime, which rewards land ownership, will be replaced by a scheme focused on supporting the environment

Farmers will get subsidies for turning fields back into wildflower meadows after Brexit, according to environment secretary Michael Gove.

More than 97% of the UK’s wildflower meadows have been destroyed since the second world war and their loss has played a significant role in the falling numbers of bees, birds and other wildlife.

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Alaskan infant's DNA tells story of 'first Americans'

BBC - Thu, 2018-01-04 05:34
The 11,500-year-old bones of a child unearthed in Alaska shed light on the peopling of the Americas.
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What a woman with a bionic hand can feel

BBC - Thu, 2018-01-04 04:33
Scientists have unveiled the first bionic hand with a sense of touch that can be worn outside the laboratory.
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Short-term thinking of UK nuclear policy | Letters

The Guardian - Thu, 2018-01-04 04:05
Sue Roaf writes that evacuation plans for Hinkley Point would have to involve at least a million people; while Diarmuid Foley says that, in the modern world, the route to weapons-grade material is not taken through the civilian nuclear fuel cycle

Justin McCurry (Fukushima looms large as Japan plans to restart world’s biggest nuclear plant, 28 December) quotes critics of the proposed reopening of the 8.2GW Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear plant in Japan, who say chaos would ensue if the plant failed and the 420,000 people who live within 20 miles of it had to be evacuated. But when the three Fukushima reactors failed on 11 March 2011, the radioactive plume spread over 40kms from the plant to the north-west, engulfing a large number of towns and villages. Everyone within 20kms of the plant was immediately evacuated. Iitate village, located 40kms away, and in the path of the toxic plume, was also evacuated. Many in the 20km zone may never return home but in the “return zone” villages they began to trickle back in early 2015. A 20-40km long radioactive plume issuing from the Hinkley nuclear facility could engulf both Cardiff (348,000 population) and Bristol (428,000 population), causing the evacuation of at least a million people from the region. The UK government is the only organisation brave enough to take on that level of catastrophic risk, with our money – happy to do so no doubt because the individuals who make the decisions on our behalf will be long retired when the cesium hits the fan.
Emeritus Professor Sue Roaf
Oxford

• David Lowry’s fact-finding mission to 1958 (Letters, 28 December) is correct – at the dawn of the nuclear age, the UK’s civilian nuclear fuel cycle was seen as a precursor to weapons-grade material. However, for technical and other reasons, it was soon realised that the route to weapons-grade material was not through the civilian nuclear fuel cycle. In the current (and real) world, the peaceful use of civilian nuclear energy specifically, clearly and strictly breaks any such linkage. This is enshrined in IAEA and the Nuclear Suppliers Group protocols.

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No cause for rejoicing in the countryside | Letters

The Guardian - Thu, 2018-01-04 04:04
The natural world does indeed carry on functioning, writes Margaret Porter, but it is struggling. Plus Andrew Dean says robins are as happy in an old paint tin as a nesting box

Your correspondent June Lewis (Letters, 29 December), having referred to Country diary, says that the country – by which I think she means the countryside and nature – is “carrying on happily”. While the natural world does indeed carry on functioning regardless of politics (sometimes almost in spite of it), that world of nature struggles more than ever to maintain diversity of species with loss of habitat, environmental pollution, pesticides, climate change and human thoughtlessness. I mention just a few casualties: hedgehogs, butterflies, meadow flowers and some common birds, the numbers of all of which have declined over the last few generations in particular. Not a cause for rejoicing.
Margaret Porter
Gillingham, Dorset

• John Gilbey may not be right about the new nesting box location being more desirable (Country diary, Comins Coch, Ceredigion 30 December). Robins appear to like dry shelter regardless of nesting boxes. On acquiring an unoccupied house with a detached garage with a broken window, I wondered how many times generations of robins might have been nesting in an old empty paint tin on a shelf. All fledglings got away safely.
Andrew Dean
Exeter, Devon

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Fire reductions 'make methane numbers add up'

BBC - Wed, 2018-01-03 22:34
Fewer fires globally may help explain the recent change in atmospheric methane, a study says.
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Taking your eyes off the motorway with VR

BBC - Wed, 2018-01-03 22:10
Fed up with motorway driving? Now you can switch to virtual reality thanks to a new driverless car from Renault.
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Tips and inspiration for the new year, new you cyclist

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-01-03 21:31

If you’re planning to cycle to work as part of a new year’s health kick here’s our tips to make sure you enjoy the ride rather than endure it

Come the new year, it’s traditional for people to promise themselves that the next 12 months will be marked by a health kick, and this sometimes end up as a pledge to cycle to and from work.

In bike-unfriendly Britain, even if your commute is short enough, this can sometimes be a tricky prospect. But if it works out, the benefits – to your health, to your wallet, to your general sense of wellbeing – can be astonishing.

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Wildlife on your doorstep: share your January photos

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-01-03 21:25

As we begin 2018 we’d like to see your photos of the wildlife you’ve discovered where you live

What sort of wildlife will we all discover on our doorsteps this month? We’d like to see your photos of the January wildlife near you, whether you’re a novice spotter or have been out and about searching for wildlife for years.

Share your photos and videos with us and we’ll feature our favourites on the Guardian site. We also occasionally print readers’ best images in the Guardian newspaper and will let you know if your image should feature.

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First polar bear cub born in the UK for 25 years at Scottish park

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-01-03 20:31

Staff at Highland Wildlife Park in Scotland confirm the birth to mother Victoria but say the first three months of life for the new-born cub are perilous

The first polar bear cub to be born in Britain for 25 years is being cared for in a private den by its mother, Victoria, at the Highland Wildlife Park in Scotland.

Staff at the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland (RZSS) park confirmed the birth after hearing distinct high-pitched sounds from Victoria’s maternity unit, which remains closed to visitors to ensure privacy.

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Bamboo worlds: the beauty of Chinese aquaculture – in pictures

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-01-03 17:00

In Coastal Geometries, architect and photographer Tugo Cheng conjures minimalist compositions from the fishing nets and bamboo poles on the coast of Fujian. It is a world that’s vanishing, since this vital culture is threatened by rapid development

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Wildflower planting on farms boosts birds, from skylarks to starlings

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-01-03 16:01

New research shows wildlife-friendly farming can quickly help bird populations bounce back, but large-scale rollout will be needed to reverse long-term declines

Planting wildflowers and protecting nests on farms enables birds, from skylarks to starlings, to bounce back rapidly from long-term declines, new research shows.

Intensive agriculture has led to overall farmland bird numbers in the UK plunging by more than 50% since 1970 and the fall has not stopped yet, with the latest figures showing a 9% drop from 2010 to 2015.

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Clean Energy Finance Corporation Statutory Review: Public Consultation

Department of the Environment - Wed, 2018-01-03 15:32
The Department of the Environment and Energy is overseeing a review of the operation of the Clean Energy Finance Corporation Act 2012. The consultation period closes at 5pm AEST Friday 16 February 2018.
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Country diary: an old railway sleeper has become a dreaming post

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-01-03 15:30

Wenlock Edge, Shropshire The weathered waymark, like a fragment of a wooden henge, is an archive of local history

At the top of steps into the railway cutting stands a wooden post. It is old and weathered and, when sunlight through trees catches it, a beautiful greenfinch blush of moss and algae.

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Weather: What to expect in 2018

BBC - Wed, 2018-01-03 10:43
More hurricanes? Rising temperatures? BBC meteorologist Tomasz Schafernaker looks ahead to the year.
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Whale people

BBC - Wed, 2018-01-03 10:35
A glimpse into the life the Inupiat, an indigenous community in Alaska.
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Why we shouldn't be too quick to blame migratory animals for global disease

The Conversation - Wed, 2018-01-03 06:51
Migratory animals are often blamed for the global spread of disease. However, recent research indicates they may not be the primary culprit. Alice Risely, PhD candidate in Ecology, Deakin University Bethany J Hoye, Lecturer in Animal Ecology, University of Wollongong Marcel Klaassen, Alfred Deakin Professor and Chair in Ecology, Deakin University Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Industry calls for rethink on recycling as China's waste import ban takes effect

ABC Environment - Wed, 2018-01-03 05:46
For decades, countries including Australia, the United Kingdom, Japan and the United States have relied on China to hoover up their waste and recycle it into new products and packaging. On January 1, the country introduced a new ban on foreign waste imports.
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AI early diagnosis could save heart and cancer patients

BBC - Wed, 2018-01-03 05:05
The systems will save billions of pounds by enabling the diseases to be picked up much earlier.
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Pret a Manger doubles discount for bringing reusable coffee cups

The Guardian - Wed, 2018-01-03 04:46

Chain will now knock 50p off prices in bid to help change customers’ habits, with the UK discarding an estimated 2.5bn coffee cups every year

Customers who bring reusable cups to Pret a Manger will be given a 50p discount on hot drinks after the company introduced the measure and said it was hoping to change people’s habits and reduce waste.

The sandwich chain has been offering 25p discounts to customers using reusable cups since 2017, alongside Costa and Starbucks. CEO Clive Schlee said he hoped that doubling the discount would make a difference, following other initiatives to reduce waste such as not using plastic cup stoppers in inner city Pret shops.

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