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Why does President Trump want to mine on the Moon?

BBC - Sun, 2020-04-12 10:09
The US president signed an order this week stating Americans had rights to use resources in space.
Categories: Around The Web

Your pictures on the theme of 'insects'

BBC - Sun, 2020-04-12 09:20
Each week, we publish a gallery of readers' pictures on a set theme. This week it is "insects".
Categories: Around The Web

Ex-Disney animator brings Antarctic story to life

BBC - Sun, 2020-04-12 09:05
After working on Frozen and Big Hero 6, Sarah Airriess left Hollywood to create a graphic about early Antarctic explorers
Categories: Around The Web

Surely the link between abusing animals and the world's health is now clear | Nick Cohen

The Guardian - Sun, 2020-04-12 03:30

This pandemic can be traced to our disregard for animal welfare. But our politicians won’t dare make the connection

The boast that “when the facts change, I change my mind” is a proud one. “When the facts change, I reinforce my prejudices” is truer. If you want proof, look at the coronavirus that has changed everything and consider the undisputed fact that it spread because of humanity’s abuse of animals.

Imagine a world where facts changed minds. The United Nations, governments and everyone with influence would now be saying we should abandon meat or at a minimum cut down on consumption. Perhaps my reading is not as wide as it should be, but I have heard nothing of the sort argued. Making the case would be child’s play and would not be confined to emphasising that Covid-19 probably jumped species in Wuhan’s grotesque wet markets. The Sars epidemic of 2002-04 began in Guangdong, probably in bats, and then spread to civet cats, sold in markets and eaten in restaurants. The H7N9 strain of bird flu began in China, once again, and moved to humans from diseased poultry.

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Categories: Around The Web

Extraordinary portraits of ordinary bugs - in pictures

The Guardian - Sat, 2020-04-11 18:00

Daniel Kariko uses microscopes to create vivid portraits of ordinary insects, including wasps, beetles, silverfish and moths. More than 60 photographs in his new book show these creatures up close, most of them found near where he lives in North Carolina. Aliens Among Us is published by WW Norton

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Categories: Around The Web

'It's positively alpine!' Disbelief in big cities as air pollution falls

The Guardian - Sat, 2020-04-11 14:00

Delhi is one of many capitals enjoying improved air quality since restrictions were introduced due to the coronavirus

The screenshots began to circulate on Delhi WhatsApp groups last week, captioned with varying expressions of disbelief. Having checked the air quality index, something of a sadistic morning ritual among residents of India’s capital, most could not believe their eyes.

Gone was the familiar menacing red banner, indicating how each intake of breath is really just a toxic blast on the lungs, replaced instead by a healthy, cheerful green. Could it really be that Delhi’s pollution levels now fell into the category of … “good”? “It’s positively alpine!” exclaimed one message.

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Categories: Around The Web

The week in wildlife – in pictures

The Guardian - Sat, 2020-04-11 02:30

The pick of the world’s best flora and fauna photos, including Indian monkeys and a Parisian duck

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Categories: Around The Web

Virus impact prompts Netherlands to delay carbon tax on ETS-covered industry -media

Carbon Pulse - Sat, 2020-04-11 01:34
The Netherlands is to delay plans to impose a carbon tax from next year on industrial firms included in the EU ETS due to the coronavirus impact, national media said on Friday, citing unnamed cabinet sources.
Categories: Around The Web

California’s carbon floor price set to rise by at least 5% in 2021, despite inflation cut

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2020-04-10 22:55
California’s ETS floor price next year is on track to rise sightly more than 5% despite inflation dropping month-on-month in March due to the COVID-19 pandemic, according to federal data released Friday.
Categories: Around The Web

CN Markets: Pilot market data for week ending Apr. 10, 2020

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2020-04-10 21:19
Closing prices, ranges and volumes for China's regional pilot carbon markets this week.
Categories: Around The Web

Draft China energy law pushes carbon emissions cuts, but vague on policy

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2020-04-10 19:38
China’s National Energy Administration on Friday published a draft version of the nation’s first-ever energy law, stressing the need to cut carbon emissions in its energy system and proposing to give renewables preferential access to the grid.
Categories: Around The Web

Scottish fishermen turn to food banks as Covid-19 devastates industry

The Guardian - Fri, 2020-04-10 17:00

Crisis destroys foreign sales of shellfish and supermarkets close fish counters causing slump during traditional Easter boom period

Scottish fishermen are turning to food banks and welfare organisations, as the coronavirus crisis has led to plummeting demand for seafood, leaving many unable to work to feed their families.

Worst-hit are lobster and crab fishermen in Scotland’s south-east and west coasts, according to the Fishermen’s Mission, a Christian welfare charity. Staff at the charity have also identified “pockets of need” in Shetland and as far south as Newlyn in Cornwall. This comes just before the Easter holiday, traditionally a period of increased demand.

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Categories: Around The Web

High winds kill thousands of migrating birds in 'disaster' over Greece

The Guardian - Fri, 2020-04-10 09:55

Swallows and swifts on their annual flight from Africa to Europe have been found dead across Greece

Thousands of swallows and swifts migrating from Africa to Europe have been left dead by high winds battering Greece, bird watchers say.

The birds have been found in the streets of Athens, on apartment balconies in the capital, in the north, on Aegean islands and around a lake close to the seaport of Nauplia in the Peloponnese.

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Categories: Around The Web

CP Daily: Thursday April 9, 2020

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2020-04-10 09:26
A daily summary of our news plus bite-sized updates from around the world.
Categories: Around The Web

Coronavirus: Great apes on lockdown over threat of disease

BBC - Fri, 2020-04-10 09:06
Fears are growing that gorillas, orangutans and others apes could contract the virus.
Categories: Around The Web

Cities struggling to boost urban tree cover

BBC - Fri, 2020-04-10 09:01
Many cities have ambitious plans to boost tree numbers, but development hinders their aims.
Categories: Around The Web

NA Markets: California allowances retrace gains amid further volatility, RGGI finds support

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2020-04-10 07:26
California Carbon Allowance (CCA) prices ceded previous gains during another hectic week of trading as participants remain wary of how the COVID-19 pandemic will impact WCI emissions, while RGGI allowances (RGAs) maintained their recent bullish trend.
Categories: Around The Web

Team Leader, Emissions Trading Scheme Compliance, NZ Environmental Protection Authority – Wellington

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2020-04-10 06:49
We are looking for a new team leader to join our Compliance, Monitoring and Enforcement (CME) group to lead, grow and develop our team responsible for CME activities with regards to the Emissions Trading Scheme that we administer under the CCRA.
Categories: Around The Web

Nova Scotia to offer 640k carbon allowances at inaugural ETS auction

Carbon Pulse - Fri, 2020-04-10 06:39
Nova Scotia will offer 640,000 permits in the cap-and-trade programme’s first auction on June 10, the Canadian province’s environment ministry announced Thursday.
Categories: Around The Web

Tolkien was right: giant trees have towering role in protecting forests

The Guardian - Fri, 2020-04-10 05:45

Study highlights importance of biodiversity as part of strategy to stop planet overheating

Scientists have shown to be true what JRR Tolkien only imagined in the Lord of the Rings: giant, slow-reproducing trees play an outsized role in the growth and health of old forests.

In the 1930s, the writer gave his towering trees the name Ents. Today, a paper in the journal Science says these “long-lived pioneers” contribute more than previously believed to carbon sequestration and biomass increase.

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Categories: Around The Web

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