Breaking Waves: Ocean News

10/24/2024 - 02:39
Move is designed to combat environmental damage from single-use vapes and their widespread use by children Disposable vapes will be banned from sale in England next summer, the government has confirmed. From June 2025 it will be illegal to sell single-use vapes, in a move designed to combat environmental damage and their widespread use by children. Continue reading...
10/24/2024 - 02:02
Government agencies and departmental officials spend full day scrutinising Peter Dutton’s controversial plan to build seven nuclear power plants Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updates Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast A senior government nuclear safety official says the sites of coal-fired power plants “might not be adequate” to house the opposition’s proposed taxpayer-funded nuclear reactors. Government agencies and departmental officials were grilled in parliament on Wednesday at a government-backed inquiry into nuclear energy. The inquiry was tasked with scrutinising the Coalition’s controversial plan to lift Australia’s ban on nuclear power and build taxpayer-funded reactors at seven sites. Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news email Continue reading...
10/24/2024 - 00:00
Just designating key areas will not meet 30x30 target on nature loss, study says, pointing to oil drilling in parks Biodiversity is declining more quickly within key protected areas than outside them, according to research that scientists say is a “wake-up call” to global leaders discussing how to stop nature loss at the UN’s Cop16 talks in Colombia. Protecting 30% of land and water for nature by 2030 was one of the key targets settled on by world leaders in a landmark 2022 agreement to save nature – and this month leaders are gathering again at a summit in the Colombian city of Cali to measure progress and negotiate new agreements to stop biodiversity loss. Continue reading...
10/23/2024 - 23:00
Plant enthusiasts stumble across 2-metre long snake consuming egg-laying mammal in Marys Creek State Forest in Queensland A botanist was admiring a myrtle shrub in bloom in an obscure state forest just west of Gympie in Queensland when his companion uttered 10 words that can rarely have been heard before – at least in English. “I was just looking at a Gossia bidwillii, in flower and Darren calls out,” Elliot Bowerman said. Continue reading...
10/23/2024 - 22:54
Plant enthusiast Darren Williams made the discovery in Marys Creek State Forest just west of Gympie in Queensland. The male platypus was freshly killed, probably after what would have been a fierce struggle with the ambush predator. Williams and his companion Elliot Bowerman photographed the roughly 2-metre long carpet python with its jaw firmly clasped around the platypus before quickly moving on. 'We didn’t want to disturb the snake,' Bowerman said ‘There is a python with a platypus in its mouth: botanist’s extreme monotreme v reptile encounter Continue reading...
10/23/2024 - 16:25
Grizzly No 399 was at least 28 years old and beloved by many in Grand Teton national park A famous grizzly bear beloved for decades by countless tourists, biologists and professional wildlife photographers in Grand Teton national park is dead after being struck by a vehicle in western Wyoming. Grizzly No 399 died on Tuesday night on a highway in Snake River Canyon south of Jackson, park officials said in a statement on Wednesday. Continue reading...
10/23/2024 - 12:17
RHS says ensuring access to green space as part of housebuilding push could make Britons healthier Requirements for gardens and the planting of trees must be included in Labour’s planned new rules for housebuilders, green groups have said. The government is drawing up its future homes standard for new developments and it is not yet clear what requirements there will be for green space. Continue reading...
10/23/2024 - 12:00
With no power, no water and soon-to-spoil food, Asheville residents fired up their grills and emptied their freezers for communal meals Erin Kellem’s Asheville, North Carolina neighborhood is a short drive from the city center, but feels remote. The Haw Creek area’s culs-de-sac are fronted by spacious yards and surrounded by thick woods that give the illusion of isolation. Hurricane Helene changed that, dropping an ocean of rain on the southern Appalachian mountains. Floods of biblical proportions killed dozens. Power outages left thousands without electricity for at least two weeks in most places. There was no gas or cellphone service for days following the storm, and most of the city is still without potable water. Roads disappeared under rushing water and mud. The help that was on its way had no way in, and those stranded in their homes had no way of checking on loved ones. Continue reading...
10/23/2024 - 11:06
US firm Wolfspeed and German car parts supplier ZF postpone plans over doubts about viability A project to build a €3bn factory making microchips for electric vehicles once hailed as part of a “return of the industrial revolution” in Germany has been put on hold, as the crisis in the country’s hi-tech manufacturing industry deepens. The US company Wolfspeed and the German car parts supplier ZF have postponed plans to build an EV chip factory, adding to problems caused by a delay to two large-scale factories belonging to the US chip giant Intel and possible factory closures being considered by Volkswagen. Continue reading...
10/23/2024 - 09:17
US readers are responding to the reality of the climate crisis by adapting their homes, from insulation as a refuge from heat to removing yard debris in case of wildfires Rose, 62, was living in a remote area of Washington, west of Seattle, when the scorching “heat dome” of 2021 hit the Pacific north-west. As the house Rose shared with her then 93-year-old mother grew hotter, and their two air conditioning units struggled to make any dent on the wall of heat, Rose’s heart rate climbed, and she watched as all the rubber bands in the house liquefied. The heat dome – which broke local records to reach highs of 120F (49C) – buckled roads, melted electrical cables and caused about 600 excess deaths, and research showed it was “virtually impossible” without climate change. It’s just one example of a worsening picture for US extreme weather driven by human caused global heating: including more frequent hurricanes, wildfires and devastating floods. Continue reading...