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UK-built Sentinel satellite to track air pollution

BBC - Fri, 2017-10-13 12:05
A UK-assembled satellite is set to go into orbit shortly to monitor air quality around the globe.
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NSW network to trial 1MWh grid support battery, as new suburbs boom

RenewEconomy - Fri, 2017-10-13 12:00
MPower tapped by Endeavour Energy to install 1MWh battery on network in NSW, in a trial hoped to save $1m a year on grid costs.
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How do you build the next-generation internet?

BBC - Fri, 2017-10-13 11:01
What will it take to build the ultra-fast internet of the future?
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Storage on hold as Victoria still reviewing battery tender

RenewEconomy - Fri, 2017-10-13 10:48
Clock ticks down on Victoria government's plans to have two large scale battery storage projects in place by January 1, with the winners still not known.
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China halts more than 150 coal-fired power plants

RenewEconomy - Fri, 2017-10-13 10:43
China is to stop or delay work on 151 planned and under-construction coal plants as Beijing struggles to respond to a flat-lining of demand for coal power.
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Shark Tank’s Steve Baxter joins climate science deniers and islamophobes for Australian LibertyFest

RenewEconomy - Fri, 2017-10-13 10:28
What do you get when you bring together some of Australia’s most fervent climate science deniers with anti-Islam activists, fledgling right-wing political groups, and an American “free market” Libertarian?
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Voters demand better policy response than baseload

RenewEconomy - Fri, 2017-10-13 10:01
New polling shows two thirds of voters would prefer to see governments increasing energy conservation rather than building new power stations.
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Chevron abandons plan to drill for oil in Great Australian Bight

The Guardian - Fri, 2017-10-13 09:31

Environmentalists hail decision that comes almost exactly a year after BP ditched its own scheme for the untapped basin

Chevron has become the second big oil company to abandon plans to drill for oil in the Great Australian Bight, almost exactly a year after BP ditched its more advanced plans for the untapped basin.

Oil companies have compared the potential of the bight to the Gulf of Mexico, where there are thousands of oil rigs.

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Penguin catastrophe leads to demands for protection in Antarctica

The Guardian - Fri, 2017-10-13 06:58

After failure of Adélie penguins to breed, WWF calls for measures to ensure they do not face competition from fishing fleets for food

Only two Adélie penguin chicks from a colony of more than 18,000 breeding pairs have survived the Antarctic summer due to unusually extensive sea ice, prompting environmental campaigners to call for a new protected marine area.

The penguins in Terre Adélie in eastern Antarctica, which only reproduce on ice-free land, suffered a catastrophic breeding season after unseasonable growth in sea ice forced parents to travel further for food, causing their chicks to starve.

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Satellites are giving us a commanding view of Earth's carbon cycle

The Conversation - Fri, 2017-10-13 05:17
New data from a NASA satellite show in unprecedented detail the flow of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Future satellites should even be able to detect the signatures of individual power stations. Pep Canadell, CSIRO Scientist, and Executive Director of the Global Carbon Project, CSIRO Alex Held, Principal Research Scientist, CSIRO Cathy Trudinger, Senior Research Scientist, CSIRO Peter Rayner, Professorial Fellow, University of Melbourne Vanessa Haverd, Research Scientist, Carbon Water Observatory, CSIRO Licensed as Creative Commons – attribution, no derivatives.
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Proof that sustainable meat and dairy farming can work | Letters

The Guardian - Fri, 2017-10-13 03:35
David Finlay writes that his experiment in sustainable and ethical meat and dairy farming shows that it is achievable

I had just got back into the house from milking the cows when I read the discussion (Letters, 7 October) on George Monbiot’s latest contribution to the debate about the future of our food production system. While George is a fundamentalist, I must confess I agree with much of what he says! The problem is that, as an extremist fundamentalist, he just goes too far. Here on our rented family farm of 100 dairy cows with some beef and sheep, we are in the first year of a three-year, final-stage experiment to challenge the idea that treating our animals, land, environment and the people who work and live here with respect is somehow incompatible with financial viability and our industry’s ability to provide adequate amounts of affordable food, and is therefore unsustainable.

This is the final part of a much longer-term experiment, incorporating agroecology, agroforestry and calf-with-cow dairying along with appropriate technologies that allow us to achieve these public benefit outcomes. On paper this could work. In practice it hasn’t been easy. But there are glimmers of daylight. We are on the final stretch and many of our targets have been met: substantial (90%-plus) cuts in the use of antibiotics, anthelmintics, vaccines, soluble fertiliser and pesticides (and diffuse pollution) without compromising productivity or animal health; and substantial increases in biodiversity and reductions in staff working hours.

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New airplane biofuels plan would 'destroy rainforests', warn campaigners

The Guardian - Fri, 2017-10-13 03:17

Plan to accelerate production of biofuels for passenger planes would lead to clearing of rainforests to produce ‘vast’ amount of necessary crops

A new plan to accelerate production of biofuels for passenger planes has drawn stinging criticism from environmentalists who argue that most of the world’s rainforests might have to be cleared to produce the necessary crops.

Aviation is one of the fastest growing sources of greenhouse gas emissions, with an 8% leap reported in Europe last year and a global fourfold increase in CO2 pollution expected by 2050.

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You say tomato, retailers say waste: research finds produce problem

The Guardian - Fri, 2017-10-13 03:00

Researcher reveals up to 86.7% of edible tomatoes are thrown away, underlining Australia’s costly food waste culture

Up to 87% of undamaged, edible tomatoes harvested from a commercial Queensland farm were rejected and wasted based on appearance, a study has found, highlighting the problem of food wastage.

Tara McKenzie, an environmental scientist at the University of the Sunshine Coast, said that at every point in the supply chain, edible tomatoes that were slightly odd-shaped or marked or deemed too small or too large were rejected because they didn’t meet market standards for premium, unblemished product. She found between 68.6% and 86.7% of the produce was rejected.

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Supermarkets must stop using plastic packaging, says former Asda boss

The Guardian - Fri, 2017-10-13 02:12

Exclusive: Consumers do not want plastic-polluted oceans so supermarkets and packaging industry have to work together, says Andy Clarke

The former boss of Asda is calling for supermarkets to stop using plastic packaging saying billions of pounds of investment in recycling has failed to resolve the world’s plastic proliferation crisis.

Andy Clarke, CEO of one of Britain’s biggest supermarket chains for six years, said the only solution was for retailers to reject plastic entirely in favour of more sustainable alternatives like paper, steel, glass and aluminium.

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Ozone layer recovery could be delayed by 30 years

BBC - Thu, 2017-10-12 23:00
Rising global emissions of some chemicals could slow the progress made in healing the ozone layer.
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UK climate change masterplan – the grownups have finally won

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-10-12 22:32

Government’s clean growth strategy unequivocally states that tackling climate change and a prosperous economy go hand in hand

The grownups have finally won and everyone in the UK, from those in cold homes to those on polluted streets and in flooded towns, will benefit. The most important aspect of the UK government’s new clean growth strategy is its unequivocal statement that tackling climate change and a prosperous economy are one and the same thing.

This has been clear to many for some time, including Philip Hammond, if not his predecessor George Osborne. There is no long-term, high-carbon economic strategy because the impacts of unchecked climate change destroy economies, as Lord Nicholas Stern puts it.

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Draughty homes targeted in UK climate change masterplan

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-10-12 19:50

Ministers publish long-delayed blueprint for hitting target of cutting emissions by 57% in next 15 years

The UK’s draughtiest homes will be insulated and upgraded by 2035 to save families as much as £300 a year on their energy bills, under the government’s climate change masterplan.

The long-delayed blueprint for how the UK will hit its binding target of cutting emissions by 57% by 2032 majors on support for everything from low-carbon power, energy savings and electric vehicles to keeping food waste out of landfill.

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Clean Growth Plan could see stamp duty incentive for homeowners

BBC - Thu, 2017-10-12 19:05
The changes are part of the Clean Growth Plan to reduce the UK's greenhouse emissions.
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Finding Nemo? We may be losing him, says climate study

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-10-12 15:26

Clownfish under threat from warming ocean waters, which are damaging the anemones that serve as its home

The clownfish, the colourful swimmer propelled to fame by the 2003 film Finding Nemo, is under threat from warming ocean waters wreaking havoc with sea anemones, the structures that serve as its home, a study has found.

Closely related to corals, sea anemones are invertebrate marine creatures that live in symbiosis with algae, which provide them with food, oxygen and colour.

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'Boar War': the Forest of Dean pixies fighting against the cull of wild pigs

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-10-12 15:00

Activists claim the boar should be welcomed in Gloucestershire – and they are determined to sabotage marksmen targeting pigs roaming ancient woodland

Drew Pratten admits it can be a little unnerving to suddenly come upon a wild boar in the forest.

“They are very big. When they growl at you it’s primal. You get the sort of feeling deep in your stomach that you get when you hear a lion roar. But these animals don’t want to hurt anyone. If you slowly back away they are fine. We should all be living peacefully together.”

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