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Toxic clouds rise up as lava from Kilauea volcano hits sea – video
White clouds of gas billow into the sky over Hawaii as molten rock from the Kilauea volcano pours into the ocean. People have been warned to stay away from the fumes, which are laced with hydrochloric acid and fine glass particles that can irritate the skin and eyes and cause breathing problems.
Continue reading...Goldwind begins construction of 144MW Tasmania wind farm
Solar shines in global shift to renewables
Why car dealers don’t want to sell electric vehicles
Australia on cusp of new mining boom, driven by electric vehicles
Unions support Liddell’s clean energy transition
Clean air plan 'ambitious but vague'
'Living fossil' giant salamander heading for extinction
'Living fossil' heading for extinction
Malaria genetics: study shows how disease became deadly
Malaria genetics: study shows how disease became deadly
Fatal confusion
Fatal confusion
Could culling brumbies help save our national parks?
CP Daily: Monday May 21, 2018
Senior Operations Officer, Climate Policy, IFC (World Bank) – Washington DC
Michigan utilities, environmental campaigners agree to RPS compromise
Peru agrees to ‘nest’ Althelia’s REDD projects into its Paris efforts
NSW's no-cull brumby bill will consign feral horses to an even crueller fate
Human race just 0.01% of all life but has destroyed over 80% of wild mammals – study
Groundbreaking assessment of all life on Earth reveals humanity’s surprisingly tiny part in it as well as our disproportionate impact
Humankind is revealed as simultaneously insignificant and utterly dominant in the grand scheme of life on Earth by a groundbreaking new assessment of all life on the planet.
The world’s 7.6 billion people represent just 0.01% of all living things, according to the study. Yet since the dawn of civilisation, humanity has caused the loss of 83% of all wild mammals and half of plants, while livestock kept by humans abounds.
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