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BYD Significantly Improves Range & Efficiency with OTA Updates

Larry Evans on CleanTechnica

While much of the news this week has been discouraging, recent reports about BYD’s over-the-air (OTA) updates have provided something positive to think about. In particular, the OTA updates have focused on BYD’s DM-i 5.0 (5th generation PHEV platform), which started rolling out across models in China last year. Consumers ... [continued]

The post BYD Significantly Improves Range & Efficiency with OTA Updates appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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Sierra Club Notice of Intent to Sue Flags Agency Failures to Protect Arctic Polar Bears from Oil & Gas Activities

Press Release on CleanTechnica

Flawed Fish and Wildlife Service Opinion Underestimates Effects on Threatened Species WASHINGTON, D.C. — Today, the Sierra Club, represented by its Environmental Law Program, and allied organizations represented by Trustees for Alaska filed a notice flagging ESA violations by the Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife ... [continued]

The post Sierra Club Notice of Intent to Sue Flags Agency Failures to Protect Arctic Polar Bears from Oil & Gas Activities appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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How climate breakdown is putting the world’s food in peril – in maps and charts
How climate breakdown is putting the world’s food in peril – in maps and charts
How climate breakdown is putting the world’s food in peril – in maps and charts

How climate breakdown is putting the world’s food in peril – in maps and charts

Frederick O'Brien, Pablo Gutiérrez and Ashley Kirk on Environment | The Guardian

From floods to droughts, erratic weather patterns are affecting food security, with crop yields projected to fall if changes are not made

Experts have warned that the world’s ability to feed itself is under threat from the “chaos” of extreme weather caused by climate change.

Crop yields have increased enormously over the past few decades. But early warning signs have arrived as crop yield rates flatline, prompting warnings of efficiency hitting its limits and the impacts of climate change taking effect.

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Country diary: Postcard from a pier, where brent geese are the main attraction | Lev Parikian
Country diary: Postcard from a pier, where brent geese are the main attraction | Lev Parikian
Country diary: Postcard from a pier, where brent geese are the main attraction | Lev Parikian

Country diary: Postcard from a pier, where brent geese are the main attraction | Lev Parikian

Lev Parikian on Environment | The Guardian

Ryde, Isle of Wight: Lots of commotion here among the hovercraft and herring gulls, but it’s the wonderful, tubby geese that make my winter

There’s a hovercraft on the sand, skirts deflated, dumped like a beached whale. Behind it, the pier stretches into the Solent. The air has the dull taste of off-season resort, with background notes of seaweed and vinegar. Welcome to Ryde.

We eat fish and chips, fending off the attention of a hungry herring gull. The clicks and whistles of 20 starlings float towards our ears from over the road. A pied wagtail, manic wind-up toy, scurries beside us. Stop, start, whirr.

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EV Road Tripping with Kids: A Dad’s Blueprint for Holiday Season Success

Guest Contributor on CleanTechnica

By Scott Koskinen, product marketing director, GM Connected Services This summer, I did something every parent looks forward to — and must mentally prepare for: I loaded up the kids, packed a questionable amount of snacks, grabbed the tablets, and hit the road for a 500-mile family trek to Michigan’s ... [continued]

The post EV Road Tripping with Kids: A Dad’s Blueprint for Holiday Season Success appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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As the US invests in fossil fuels, young climate activists push back in the courts
As the US invests in fossil fuels, young climate activists push back in the courts
As the US invests in fossil fuels, young climate activists push back in the courts

As the US invests in fossil fuels, young climate activists push back in the courts

Dharna Noor on Environment | The Guardian

In this week’s newsletter: A generation is using the legal system to demand accountability for climate harm

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Rikki Held grew up on her family’s ranch in Montana, watching the land transform amid the climate crisis. The Powder River, which runs through the property, has sometimes dried up during drought, leaving crops and livestock without water. At other points, rapid snowmelt and heavy rains have caused flooding and eroded riverbanks, making the land difficult to use.

Two years ago, the 24-year-old and a group of other young people won a groundbreaking legal victory, intended to prevent those impacts from worsening. In August 2023, a judge ruled in favour of plaintiffs in Held v Montana, in which 16 young people accused the state of violating their constitutional rights by promoting planet-warming fossil fuels. The state’s supreme court affirmed the judge’s findings late last year, but plaintiffs say lawmakers have since passed new laws that violate that ruling. So last week, they filed a new petition calling on the supreme court to enforce their earlier win, one of several youth-led constitutional climate lawsuits filed in the US this year.

‘A shift no country can ignore’: where global emissions stand, 10 years after the Paris climate agreement

The trauma after the storm: Hurricane Melissa leaves trail of emotional devastation across Jamaica

Synthetic chemicals in food system creating health burden of $2.2tn a year, report finds

Montana youth activists who won landmark climate case push for court enforcement

More than 40 Trump administration picks tied directly to oil, gas and coal, analysis shows

Youth-led US climate activists widen focus to fight authoritarianism

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‘I can’t think of a place more pristine’: 133,000 hectares of Chilean Patagonia preserved after local fundraising
‘I can’t think of a place more pristine’: 133,000 hectares of Chilean Patagonia preserved after local fundraising
‘I can’t think of a place more pristine’: 133,000 hectares of Chilean Patagonia preserved after local fundraising

‘I can’t think of a place more pristine’: 133,000 hectares of Chilean Patagonia preserved after local fundraising

Jonathan Franklin on Environment | The Guardian

Exclusive: Ancient forests and turquoise rivers of the Cochamó Valley protected from logging, damming and development

A wild valley in Chilean Patagonia has been preserved for future generations and protected from logging, damming and unbridled development after a remarkable fundraising effort by local groups, the Guardian can reveal.

The 133,000 hectares (328,000 acres) of pristine wilderness in the Cochamó Valley was bought for $63m (£47m) after a grassroots campaign led by the NGO Puelo Patagonia, and the title to the wildlands was officially handed over to the Chilean nonprofit Fundación Conserva Puchegüín on 9 December.

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Love the Smell of Wind in the Morning

David Waterworth on CleanTechnica

In an uncharacteristic move, I got up early a few days ago. (We usually like to stay in bed till we have to get up — retirement has to have some rewards.) So, I thought I would check the NEM Widget and see where our electricity was coming from at ... [continued]

The post Love the Smell of Wind in the Morning appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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Chevy Powers Holiday Magic Across America

Guest Contributor on CleanTechnica

Chevy is on a mission to spread holiday cheer, connect with customers, and help make family memories that will last a lifetime – in and out of their Chevy vehicles. That’s why for five years running, Chevy’s “Holiday Card to America” campaign has warmed hearts coast to coast. And this ... [continued]

The post Chevy Powers Holiday Magic Across America appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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They survived wildfires. But something else is killing Greece’s iconic fir forests
They survived wildfires. But something else is killing Greece’s iconic fir forests
They survived wildfires. But something else is killing Greece’s iconic fir forests

They survived wildfires. But something else is killing Greece’s iconic fir forests

Tam Patachako. Photographs by Ugo Mellone on Environment | The Guardian

In the Peloponnese mountains, the usually hardy trees are turning brown even where fires haven’t reached. Experts are raising the alarm on a complex crisis

In the southern Peloponnese, the Greek fir is a towering presence. The deep green, slow-growing conifers have long defined the region’s high-altitude forests, thriving in the mountains and rocky soils. For generations they have been one of the country’s hardier species, unusually capable of withstanding drought, insects and the wildfires that periodically sweep through Mediterranean ecosystems. These Greek forests have lived with fire for as long as anyone can remember.

So when Dimitrios Avtzis, a senior researcher at the Forest Research Institute (FRI) of Elgo-Dimitra, was dispatched to document the aftermath of a spring blaze in the region, nothing about the assignment seemed exceptional. He had walked into countless burnt landscapes, tracking the expected pockets of mortality, as well as the trees that survived their scorching.

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Hydrogen Can’t Cut The Mustard, Even In Dijon

Michael Barnard on CleanTechnica

Dijon is a useful hydrogen transportation case study because it was serious, early, and well funded. This was not a symbolic pilot. The city committed real capital, built infrastructure, signed supply agreements, and intended to operate hydrogen vehicles at scale across buses, refuse trucks, and light municipal fleets. The intention ... [continued]

The post Hydrogen Can’t Cut The Mustard, Even In Dijon appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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US EV Tax Credit Loophole — Make Sure You Complete The Loop

Zachary Shahan on CleanTechnica

It’s been a while since the $7,500 US tax credit for electric vehicles was ended, but the story is not over yet. As we noted a few months ago, a loophole was added, or confirmed, toward the end of the 3rd quarter. People who bought an EV before October 1 ... [continued]

The post US EV Tax Credit Loophole — Make Sure You Complete The Loop appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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Did GM Just Troll Ford?

Zachary Shahan on CleanTechnica

The EV news of the week, without a doubt, was Ford’s big pullback of its EV plans. It was disappointing, and perhaps even a bit shocking. Yes, following Donald Trump’s widespread attacks on cleantech, and electric vehicles in particular in this story, we expected legacy automakers would scale back their ... [continued]

The post Did GM Just Troll Ford? appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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How we hold back the tide: levees, drains and a bronze age circle of skulls
How we hold back the tide: levees, drains and a bronze age circle of skulls
How we hold back the tide: levees, drains and a bronze age circle of skulls

How we hold back the tide: levees, drains and a bronze age circle of skulls

David Hambling on Environment | The Guardian

Were children’s bones found at the edge of European lake settlements an attempt to appease water gods?

Flood protection takes many forms, from the levees of Louisiana to the drains of East Anglia. Some villages in bronze age Europe may have had a more unusual barrier: a circle of skulls.

Researchers from Basel University have found children’s skulls at the edge of lake settlements vulnerable to flooding, dating to the ninth century BC. As flooding became worse, villages in the Circum-Alpine region in what is now Germany and Switzerland started building defences. These included log palisades, houses on stilts, and flood walls reinforced with stone and skulls.

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‘Radiator rattling’ earthquake hits Lancashire village for second time in two weeks
‘Radiator rattling’ earthquake hits Lancashire village for second time in two weeks
‘Radiator rattling’ earthquake hits Lancashire village for second time in two weeks

‘Radiator rattling’ earthquake hits Lancashire village for second time in two weeks

Raphael Boyd on Environment | The Guardian

People of Silverdale report rattling and shaking as 2.5 magnitude earthquake strikes in probable aftershock

A village in Lancashire has been hit by a “radiator rattling” earthquake for the second time in little over two weeks.

Residents of Silverdale, a small coastal village located five miles south of the Cumbria border, reported the now strangely familiar feeling of rattling and shaking in their homes at 5.03am as a 2.5-magnitude earthquake hit the area with its epicentre 1.6 miles (2.6km) off the coast.

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Georgia Public Service Commission Issues Final Order on Data Center Power Plan

Press Release on CleanTechnica

Today, the Georgia Public Service Commission approved Georgia Power’s plan to build the most expensive gas plants in the country. The commission unanimously approved an agreement between Georgia Power and PSC Staff — released an hour before hearing testimony from the public and advocacy groups — which is expected to ... [continued]

The post Georgia Public Service Commission Issues Final Order on Data Center Power Plan appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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Week in wildlife: honeymooning owls, an otter on the razz and a magical frog
Week in wildlife: honeymooning owls, an otter on the razz and a magical frog
Week in wildlife: honeymooning owls, an otter on the razz and a magical frog

Week in wildlife: honeymooning owls, an otter on the razz and a magical frog

Joanna Ruck on Environment | The Guardian

This week’s best wildlife photographs from around the world

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Food becoming more calorific but less nutritious due to rising carbon dioxide
Food becoming more calorific but less nutritious due to rising carbon dioxide
Food becoming more calorific but less nutritious due to rising carbon dioxide

Food becoming more calorific but less nutritious due to rising carbon dioxide

Senay Boztas on Environment | The Guardian

Researchers noticed ‘dramatic’ changes in nutrients in crops, including drop in zinc and rise in lead

More carbon dioxide in the environment is making food more calorific but less nutritious – and also potentially more toxic, a study has found.

Sterre ter Haar, a lecturer at Leiden University in the Netherlands, and other researchers at the institution created a method to compare multiple studies on plants’ responses to increased CO2 levels. The results, she said, were a shock: although crop yields increase, they become less nutrient-dense. While zinc levels in particular drop, lead levels increase.

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‘We’ve future-proofed’: how UK’s biggest car factory upgraded for EV revolution
‘We’ve future-proofed’: how UK’s biggest car factory upgraded for EV revolution
‘We’ve future-proofed’: how UK’s biggest car factory upgraded for EV revolution

‘We’ve future-proofed’: how UK’s biggest car factory upgraded for EV revolution

Jasper Jolly on Environment | The Guardian

Nissan builds in capability to go fully electric at Sunderland plant amid scaling back of transition targets across Europe

Car bodies suspended from overhead rails move through Nissan’s factory in Sunderland, with workers stepping in to fit parts at different stations. At the newly installed battery “marriage station”, lifting machines push the most crucial component up into the body. Robots fit and tighten 16 bolts in under a minute – quick enough to ensure the constant flow of vehicles around Britain’s biggest car factory.

The electric cars in question are the third generation of Nissan’s Leaf, after the Japanese carmaker this week launched production following £450m of upgrades.

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North Carolina DEQ Approves Water, Air Permits for SSEP

Press Release on CleanTechnica

RALEIGH, N.C. — Today, the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality has approved the water and air permits for Transco’s proposed Southeast Supply Enhancement Project pipeline. The NCDEQ approved the air permit on Dec. 18 and the water permit on Dec. 19. The SSEP project includes 55 miles of new pipeline ... [continued]

The post North Carolina DEQ Approves Water, Air Permits for SSEP appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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