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Are you walking your dog enough?
Why AGL should be worried by the ESB/ACIL price predictions
“This is huge” – rule changes to boost solar PV and batteries
Tesla owners hijack UK ICE racing event, Elon Musk impressed
Country diary: a change in the ecological weather
High Fields, Stoney Middleton, Derbyshire: These exhausted hay meadows, now owned by the National Trust, are on the way to being restored
Climbing up from the top of Coombs Dale, I turn up a rough road known as Black Harry Lane. I don’t know the origins of the name; my hunch would be that it’s related to the region’s distant lead-mining past. There was an 18th-century highwayman called Black Harry, who was gibbeted nearby, but he was named after the packhorse road, not the other way round.
On a warm summer’s evening, there is nothing malevolent about the place. The verges are thick with flowers: meadow crane’s-bill, a flower that when I notice it reminds me I’m home, its commonplace purple threaded with the subtler, paler scabious. The track itself has needed heavy repairs in recent years, thanks to off-road enthusiasts, whose local reputation, like that of highwaymen, is mixed.
Continue reading...Alinta seeks 1,000MW of large scale renewable projects
Lunar eclipse: Skygazers await century's longest 'blood moon'
EV fast-charging network to roll-out in Australia after funding boost
Why the ESB must release its agenda driven modelling
Lord of the forest: New Zealand's most sacred tree is under threat from disease, but response is slow
Local industry briefing for Cattle Hill wind farm
Victoria’s biggest solar farm reaches financial close, to power steel works
Science behind the blood moon
CP Daily: Thursday July 26, 2018
Senior Climate Change Policy Analyst, Oregon Department of Environmental Quality – Portland
California LCFS prices shake off waiver news to hit another new high
NA Markets: WCI ignores Ontario cap-and-trade repeal as RGGI trends upward
EU Market: EUAs recover from auction-led dip below €17
Farmers across UK braced for heavy rain and thunderstorms
Sudden weather change after weeks of drought could cause flooding and crop damage
Farmers across many parts of the UK are bracing themselves for thunderstorms and outbursts of heavy rain after weeks of drought and high temperatures.
The sudden change in the weather, expected to affect eastern areas hardest but spreading to the north and Midlands over Friday, is likely to cause problems of flooding and potential crop damage.
Continue reading...Why is it so hot? – video explainer
As the northern hemisphere endures record breaking temperatures, scientists and meteorologists are looking at the possible causes.
Climate change is partly responsible, but the summer has also featured unusual jet stream activity, which is bringing the subtropical heat north
• UK ‘woefully unprepared’ for deadly heatwaves, warn MPs