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Where they eat water lilies to survive: South Sudan’s remote islands – in pictures

The Guardian - Mon, 2017-05-08 19:57

While travelling across the country’s vast swampland – the Sudd – doing medical assessments, Chandra Gilmore, International Medical Corps’ South Sudan famine response team leader, took photographs and notes

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Rare flowers destroyed in Australia after paperwork error

BBC - Mon, 2017-05-08 18:48
The French collection was incinerated by Australian biosecurity officers due to missing paperwork.
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Origin energy deal sets new renewables price benchmark

ABC Environment - Mon, 2017-05-08 18:43
A new electricity deal suggests the cost of wind power may soon be as cheap as coal.
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'Completely shattered but incredibly high': inside the mind of an ultra-distance cyclist

The Guardian - Mon, 2017-05-08 17:00

The tragic death of Mike Hall, hit by a car in an Australian road race, left a hole in the world of endurance cycling. Craig Cunningham is one of many he inspired to ride an audax and experience the thrill of these most extreme rides

On 31 March I remember waking and looking at my phone to find an abundance of posts commemorating the life of cyclist Mike Hall. Hall was hit by a motorist in Australia and killed, just hours from completing the Indian Pacific Wheel Race which saw contestants ride across Australia unsupported, with the hardest riders pushing themselves for as much as 20 hours a day.

These incredible achievements aren’t done for giant cheques or coloured jerseys – the tangible rewards are just byproducts of a more personal journey. Such motives didn’t become clear to me until I took the plunge. I only realised the true extent on completing the London Wales London (LWL) audax – a 400km ride with a 27-hour time limit, vicious climbs including Yat Rock. The name alone held gravitas, bringing to mind professional races such as Liège-Bastogne-Liège and the legendary audax events of Paris-Brest-Paris.

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Australian biosecurity officials destroy plant samples from 19th century France

The Guardian - Mon, 2017-05-08 16:58

Email mix-up blamed after historically significant plant samples incinerated by quarantine officials

Australian biosecurity officials have destroyed historically significant plant samples from 19th century France and damaged the reputation of Australian researchers, the head of the peak herbaria body has said.

In two separate incidents, quarantine officials have incinerated specimens sent to Australian research facilities from overseas.

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Deal signed for 42.5MW Collinsville solar farm to replace old coal plant

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2017-05-08 14:58
Transformation of former coal plant to 42MW solar farm in north Queensland set to begin with $60m from CEFC taking it to financial close.
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Know your NEM: 5.6GW of new wind and solar under construction

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2017-05-08 14:38
There is now 5.6GW of new wind and solar under construction in Australia, and it may already be having an impact on electricity futures contracts.
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Liberal MP says Australia's part in Paris climate pact may change if US quit

The Guardian - Mon, 2017-05-08 14:35

Zed Seselja says Turnbull government committed to climate change agreement, but if the US pulls out, it would put a question mark over the deal

A leading government conservative has put a question mark over Australia’s continued participation in the Paris climate agreement in the event Donald Trump decides the United States will pull out.

The assistant minister for social services and multicultural affairs, Zed Seselja, one of the government’s up-and-coming conservative figures, told Sky News on Monday that “as it stands” the Turnbull government was committed to Paris agreement, but if the US quit the pact, that would change the nature of the agreement.

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Where the wild garlic grows

The Guardian - Mon, 2017-05-08 14:30

Clarach, Ceredigion Some like the smell, others endure it. In my case, the scent of Allium ursinum makes me feel hungry

My route through the beech woods was chosen to avoid the worst of the cold northerly wind that was cutting across the valley. Though the majority of leaves were still to open, the trees broke up the breeze and let me slacken the pace I’d needed to keep warm.

The acoustic of this woodland is softened by its deep, moist leaf litter; outside sounds are dramatically attenuated, letting you focus on the spring birdsong and the occasional creak of high branches stirring in the wind.

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Plans brewing for Australian gigafactory and A-EV manufacture

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2017-05-08 14:15
New company reveals plans to mass-produce autonomous electric vehicles, and potentially build a battery gigafactory, on Australian soil by 2020.
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Worries over US pullout to dominate UN climate talks

BBC - Mon, 2017-05-08 14:08
As negotiators meet in Bonn, the talk is of the US president and his intentions for the Paris accord.
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World Bank: let climate-threatened Pacific islanders migrate to Australia or NZ

The Guardian - Mon, 2017-05-08 14:04

World Bank argues structured migration program would prevent forced migration in future generations

Australia and New Zealand should allow open migration for citizens of Pacific nations threatened by climate change, to boost struggling island economies and prevent a later mass forced migration, a paper from the World Bank argues.

The policy paper, Pacific Possible, suggests, as one climate change adaptation measure, open access migration from Tuvalu and Kiribati – for work and permanent settlement – to Australia and New Zealand.

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Higher, cheaper, sleeker: wind turbines of the future – in pictures

The Guardian - Mon, 2017-05-08 14:00

With the UK government ending subsidies for onshore wind and the Trump administration pushing for a return to coal, you might think the wind power revolution had run out of puff. Far from it. The cost of energy from offshore wind in Britain has fallen by a third since 2012, and wind accounts for over 40% of new capacity in the US, representing an annual investment of $13bn. Now next-generation wind technologies promise to make wind energy safer and more affordable – if they can make the difficult jump from research prototypes to commercial products

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Redflow resumes battery storage deliveries, scores biggest sale

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2017-05-08 12:33
Redflow says it has resumed deliveries after solving a problem with impurities, and has also secured its large contract – for a Pacific Islands hybrid storage installation.
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Herbert Smith Freehills advises Origin Energy on the sale of Stockyard Hill wind project

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2017-05-08 12:00
Herbert Smith Freehills has advised Origin Energy on its agreement to sell the Stockyard Hill wind project in Victoria to Goldwind International.
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Farming the Sun has begun its first ever Northern Rivers Bulk Buy

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2017-05-08 11:57
Farming the Sun's solar power bulk-buy programs are being extended to the Northern Rivers region.
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South Australia: Big no to higher FiT, big yes to batteries, big yes to EVs

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2017-05-08 11:54
Koutsantonis rejects calls for higher solar feed in tariff, saying the emphasis needs to switch to battery storage and electric vehicles.
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Origin stuns industry with record low price for 500MW wind farm

RenewEconomy - Mon, 2017-05-08 10:11
Origin to buy output from 530MW Stockyard Hill wind farm at less than $60/MWh in price that will stun Australian industry. Following numerous solar deals, it expects renewables to account for more than 25% of its supply by 2020.
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Welcome back Darling! Anabranch converges with Murray River

Department of the Environment - Mon, 2017-05-08 09:57
Environmental flows down the Darling Anabranch from Lake Cawndilla have converged with the Murray River downstream of Wentworth creating a fish highway not seen for three years.
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Feast leaves bees lethargic and sleepy: country diary 100 years ago

The Guardian - Mon, 2017-05-08 07:30

Originally published in the Manchester Guardian on 11 May 1917

The bees are exceedingly busy amongst the flowers, the stocks and flowering currants perhaps getting most attention in the garden, but the gooseberry bushes and other blossoms on the fruit trees also prove attractive. Enjoying their feast of honey, these insects bustle from flower to flower, poking in their tongues and dusting their hairy heads and bodies with pollen; they comb it off with their legs until their “thighs” are thickly loaded with yellow, brown, or white lumps. The earth bees, many of them ruddy-haired, are the smallest but most numerous; they but lately emerged from pupal sleep, but are now filling their newly-excavated burrows in grass plot, path, or sunny bank with pollen food for their infant grubs which will shortly emerge from the eggs. They have various parasitical enemies, and it is amusing to see them enter the burrow, see that all is well within, back out and back in again, remaining then looking out from their doorway, alert and on guard.

The round-bodied flower bees, many of them with long, hairy legs, are larger; they too, inhabit burrows which they excavate themselves. The biggest of all are the bumble-bees, some banded with brown and black, some with white, some with reddish tails, others warm brown all over, and the biggest and handsomest of all black, with big red tips to their ample abdomens. Often after a feast these bumble-bees are so lethargic that they halt to snooze on the flower heads, the stones, or, at the peril of their lives, on the public paths. If we touch them gently they raise an expostulating leg, one of the second pair, waving away the approaching finger. They do not sting readily; they are far too busy when really awake and too sleepy at other times to be troublesome, but it is well not to handle them roughly.

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