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Native Americans seek to rename Yellowstone peak honoring massacre perpetrator
Activists also target valley named for advocate of extermination, amid nationwide fight to reject legacy of racism
Continue reading...Energy and Climate Policy Associate, The Nature Conservancy – Richmond, VA
Adani coal port faces possible 'stop order' after traditional owners object
Exclusive: Queensland government must rule on application to cease work around Abbot Point coal terminal
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Adani is facing the prospect of being ordered to cease work in the vicinity of its Abbot Point coal terminal and planned rail corridor, after Juru traditional owners applied for a “stop order” to protect sacred sites.
Guardian Australia understands the application was lodged with the Queensland Department of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Partnerships on Thursday by lawyers for Juru Enterprises Limited (JEL).
Rooftop solar clocks second-best month ever, buoyed by commercial boom
Rooftop solar start-up Matter Technology in administration
Monash University signs off-take deal with Victorian wind farm
Country diary: A daddy-longlegs and its eggs have a narrow escape
Crook, County Durham: Pholcus has a reputation for preying on other spiders, by entering their webs and vibrating, imitating struggles of a snared fly
When I leaned the steps against the conservatory wall and climbed, my brush loaded with paint, it could so easily have ended in tragedy.
A daddy-longlegs spider, Pholcus phalangioides, hanging upside down in her flimsy web, came within an inch of being submerged in a tide of Apricot Blush emulsion.
Continue reading...Impact reaches $55m first close with second solar investment fund
Iconic VW Beetle could be reborn as electric four-door
The changing shape of wind and solar in Australia’s grid
Transgrid seeks 40MW demand management to defer huge network upgrade
Sentinel satellite exposes sulphur dioxide pollution
Tritium lands massive EU-wide deal for EV fast-chargers
Western Australian Temperate Shark - application 2018
Western Australian Temperate Shark - application 2018
Business lobby urges electrification, network write-downs
Ecosystems across Australia are collapsing under climate change
CP Daily: Wednesday July 4, 2018
EU Market: EUAs advance towards 3-week high after strong auction
New green watchdog must be well-funded and independent | Letters
George Monbiot is right to argue that much of our wildlife is in peril and that independent environmental bodies need enough money to do their job (As the state is dismantled, who will save Britain’s wildlife?, 4 July). Declines in wildlife have coincided with significant funding cuts to organisations such as Natural England. The government has recently pledged to set up a new environmental body, a green watchdog, to “hold the powerful to account” on maintaining protections and standards. While this is welcome, there remain questions over its independence and funding. The watchdog will fall at the first hurdle if its budget is not protected from ministerial meddling, especially as much of the new body’s focus will be on holding the government to account. A ring-fenced budget, provided and held by parliament and not government, will help, as well as ensuring operational independence. Only then can we be assured that government is truly committed to enforcing green laws after Brexit.
Ruth Chambers
Senior parliamentary adviser, Greener UK
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