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Koalas face death, attacks and starvation as blue gums chopped down in Victoria
The state government is aware of koala welfare problems but says it has ‘no cost-effective’ solutions
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Thousands of koalas are being displaced each year as blue gum plantations are cut down in Victoria, worsening overcrowding in nearby forests and exacerbating the risk of injury and death during bushfires.
An estimated 42,500 koalas live in blue gum plantations in south-west Victoria, data shows. Between 8,000 and 10,000 hectares of plantation are harvested each year, making thousands of koalas homeless.
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Continue reading...Fixing England’s water isn’t just the right thing to do – it can be the start of Labour’s fightback | Clive Lewis
There is an appetite in this country for policy that will change lives. What is more fundamental than the water we use and bills we pay?
- Clive Lewis is the Labour MP for Norwich South
In the wake of a brutal set of local election results, MPs from across the Labour party are trying to establish what went wrong. To me, it’s very clear that this was no fluke: it was the entirely foreseeable outcome of my party’s approach to Reform UK. And as the party moves forward and prepares to face Reform at future elections, it’s key that we learn the right lessons.
From flip-flopping on climate commitments to framing disabled people as part of the undeserving poor, Labour thus far hasn’t challenged Reform’s worldview – it has legitimatised it. However, there are some perhaps surprising areas where Labour isn’t copying Reform: public ownership of water for one.
Continue reading...Aphids plaguing UK gardens in warm spring weather, says RHS
Sap-sucking insects top list of queries to gardening charity after causing significant harm to plants
Aphids are plaguing gardeners this spring due to the warm weather, with higher numbers of the rose-killing bugs expected to thrive in the UK as a result of climate breakdown.
The sap-sucking insects have topped the ranking of gardener queries to the Royal Horticultural Society, with many of its 600,000 members having complained of dozens of aphids on their acers, roses and honeysuckle plants.
Continue reading...15 states sue over President Trump’s “national energy emergency”
BRIEFING: Washington cap-and-trade advisory groups discuss EITE provisions with linkage in mind
Canadian farm workers oppose consumer costs from Quebec’s carbon pricing scheme
CFTC: Investors resort to V25 CCA, LCFS, RGGI spreads awaiting programme updates
BRIEFING: With endangerment finding under review, EPA considers pathways for repeal
Rhode Island, oil majors debate discovery in climate change liability lawsuit
Brazil’s $125 bln forest fund design “unbalanced” to developing country needs -report
New dynamic baseline AI tool can provide results in under 10 days
White House, EPA limit agency use of social cost of carbon in policymaking
Danish investor offers $500 mln to expand US natural gas producer’s CCUS projects
New agreement advances industrial decarbonisation plans in Louisiana
Gold Standard publishes new recycling carbon crediting methodology
UN proposes update to key tool used for calculating cookstove carbon credit issuance
Swiss court approves Nord Stream 2 debt restructuring deal
Plastics in everyday objects may disrupt sleep in same way as caffeine, study finds
Findings show for first time how plastic chemicals throw off the body’s internal clock by up to 17 minutes
Chemicals in everyday plastics may disrupt the body’s natural 24-hour sleep-wake cycle and circadian rhythm in a way similar to coffee, which increases the risk of sleep disorders, diabetes, immune problems and cancer, new in vitro research shows.
The study looked at chemicals extracted from a PVC medical feeding tube and a polyurethane hydration pouch, like those used by long-distance runners. PVC and polyurethanes are also used in everything from kids toys to food packaging to furniture.
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