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Life of Exmoor nature writer Hope Bourne recognised with exhibition
Life of Exmoor nature writer Hope Bourne recognised with exhibition
Life of Exmoor nature writer Hope Bourne recognised with exhibition

Life of Exmoor nature writer Hope Bourne recognised with exhibition

Steven Morris on Environment | The Guardian

Views of forward-thinking artist and writer who lived off land in national park celebrated at museum in Glastonbury

She was considered an eccentric by some, eking out a frugal existence on a wild English moor, surviving off the land and exchanging her sketches of the countryside for meals.

But the first museum exhibition on the life and work of the largely forgotten nature writer and artist Hope Bourne highlights that her views on the environment, recycling, access to the countryside – even rewilding – were ahead of her time.

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NIO Day 2025, See You in Hangzhou

Press Release on CleanTechnica

Shanghai, China — NIO Day is our annual gathering with users and a stage where we share our achievements in technological innovation. This is the first time that NIO Day takes place in autumn. With a shorter preparation window and greater complexity in coordination, the Organizing Committee, guided by the ... [continued]

The post NIO Day 2025, See You in Hangzhou appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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Bill McKibben Is Right — Here Comes The Sun!

Steve Hanley on CleanTechnica

Bill McKibben is out with a new book about the ascendancy of solar power both around the world and in the United States.

The post Bill McKibben Is Right — Here Comes The Sun! appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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Six New Public EV Charging Stations Installed In Parsippany, New Jersey

Jake Richardson on CleanTechnica

While the installation of six new public EV charging stations in one place might not seem that important on the surface it is because Parsippany may have less than 30 public EV chargers total, according to various online sources. (The Parsippany-Troy Hills township has about 56,000 residents for context.) Adding ... [continued]

The post Six New Public EV Charging Stations Installed In Parsippany, New Jersey appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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Fossil fuel extractors bend the world to their will – help fund the journalism that exposes them
Fossil fuel extractors bend the world to their will – help fund the journalism that exposes them
Fossil fuel extractors bend the world to their will – help fund the journalism that exposes them

Fossil fuel extractors bend the world to their will – help fund the journalism that exposes them

George Monbiot on Environment | The Guardian

Across the globe, oil, gas and coal companies use an ever-widening set of tactics to crush competition and opposition. With the world’s most powerful man helping them at every turn, it’s critical we reveal their full impact

Today the Guardian launches its annual environment support campaign. To back our vital climate journalism, please click here

Why does capital love fossil fuels? It’s not hard to explain. They exist in a small number of discrete locations, where the right to exploit them can be owned and monopolised. Most can be extracted commercially only at scale, excluding small competitors. They can be stored and traded all over the world, allowing prices to be optimised across time and space. Renewable energy, by contrast, can be generated almost anywhere, by almost anyone with a small amount of money to invest.

Renewables might now be cheaper than fossil fuel in the vast majority of cases, but this makes them less attractive to capital, not more. Fossil fuels are uncompetitive and highly profitable. Renewables are highly competitive and not very profitable.

Join George Monbiot and special guests on 16 September for a special climate assembly to discuss the growing and dramatic political and corporate threats to the planet. Book tickets – in person or livestream

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XPENG Launches Global OTA 5.8.0 Update: Delivering Refined Experiences for Diverse User Demands

Press Release on CleanTechnica

XPENG Motors (“XPENG” or the “Company”; NYSE: XPEV, HKEX: 9868), a leading China-based high-tech company, announced that starting August 25, it will roll out the global OTA upgrade of XOS 5.8.0. This update is far more than a routine enhancement, it represents a thoughtfully localized, insight-driven integration of XPENG’s core ... [continued]

The post XPENG Launches Global OTA 5.8.0 Update: Delivering Refined Experiences for Diverse User Demands appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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Nature loss will cut UK GDP by 5% without action from private sector, say experts
Nature loss will cut UK GDP by 5% without action from private sector, say experts
Nature loss will cut UK GDP by 5% without action from private sector, say experts

Nature loss will cut UK GDP by 5% without action from private sector, say experts

Fiona Harvey Environment editor on Environment | The Guardian

Report finds regenerative approach could yield economic benefits while helping to meet environmental targets

The degradation of nature in the UK will lop nearly 5% off the country’s GDP if the private sector does not make a greater effort to halt the decline, experts have warned.

Conversely, investing in nature can produce economic returns for companies in a range of sectors, from manufacturing and construction to food, according to a report from the Green Finance Institute (GFI) and WWF.

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How CLT Displacement Makes Steel & Cement Decarbonization Realistic

Michael Barnard on CleanTechnica

Cross laminated timber is often presented as a housing solution, a way to build faster and more affordably while reducing the carbon locked into buildings. That is true, but it is also part of a larger story about the heavy materials industries. Every time a cubic meter of cross laminated ... [continued]

The post How CLT Displacement Makes Steel & Cement Decarbonization Realistic appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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‘You had to fend for yourself’: Hurricane Katrina haunts New Orleans as Trump guts disaster aid
‘You had to fend for yourself’: Hurricane Katrina haunts New Orleans as Trump guts disaster aid
‘You had to fend for yourself’: Hurricane Katrina haunts New Orleans as Trump guts disaster aid

‘You had to fend for yourself’: Hurricane Katrina haunts New Orleans as Trump guts disaster aid

Dharna Noor in New Orleans with photographs by Thalia Juarez on Environment | The Guardian

As survivors and experts reflect on the storm 20 years on, fear is growing that the US is just as unprepared to take on extreme weather amid cuts to Fema

Darren McKinney grew up in New Orleans’s Lower Ninth Ward. When Hurricane Katrina struck 20 years ago this week, he watched his neighborhood wash away. From his second-floor apartment, he saw flood waters rise up to his window.

“I had no food at all, no water, no electricity,” he recounted one rainy day this month, while taking a break from his job leading home restoration in the neighborhood as field operations director of the non-profit lowernine.org.

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Texas schools that became flood ‘relief hubs’ welcome students back: ‘It’s OK to not be OK’
Texas schools that became flood ‘relief hubs’ welcome students back: ‘It’s OK to not be OK’
Texas schools that became flood ‘relief hubs’ welcome students back: ‘It’s OK to not be OK’

Texas schools that became flood ‘relief hubs’ welcome students back: ‘It’s OK to not be OK’

Olivia Empson on Environment | The Guardian

Educators across the country confronted with how to deal with children in their schools who experienced tragedy

Schools in parts of Texas reopened their doors two months earlier than planned this summer. But the reason was tragic.

They were transformed into “relief hubs” to welcome volunteers whose efforts were instrumental in responding to devastating floods in the state. Now, as lessons have mostly resumed in Texas, the classrooms have been turned back from temporary emergency centres into places of learning, but that’s not to say the memories of what was lost will linger with the community indefinitely.

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Amidst Energy Prices Rise, Trump Kills Jobs, Cuts Off Renewable Energy

Press Release on CleanTechnica

Washington, D.C. — On Friday, the Trump Administration issued a stop work order to the Revolution Wind project in Rhode Island. The project is already 80 percent completed—with 45 of its 65 wind turbines already installed—and once completed, Revolution Wind would harness enough offshore wind to power 350,000 homes in Rhode Island ... [continued]

The post Amidst Energy Prices Rise, Trump Kills Jobs, Cuts Off Renewable Energy appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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Applications Open for Collegiate Competitions Aimed at Inspiring Future Water Power Workforce

US Department of Energy on CleanTechnica

Application Period Opens for Annual Marine Energy and Hydropower Competitions, Which Challenge College Students To Find Real-World Solutions and Explore Career Pathways Calling all student innovators looking to make waves in the water power sector! The application windows for the Hydropower Collegiate Competition (HCC) and Marine Energy Collegiate Competition are now open. Submissions will ... [continued]

The post Applications Open for Collegiate Competitions Aimed at Inspiring Future Water Power Workforce appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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‘It’s a disaster’: drought measure to suck water from River Wharfe met with anger
‘It’s a disaster’: drought measure to suck water from River Wharfe met with anger
‘It’s a disaster’: drought measure to suck water from River Wharfe met with anger

‘It’s a disaster’: drought measure to suck water from River Wharfe met with anger

Helena Horton Environment reporter on Environment | The Guardian

Campaigners accuse Yorkshire Water of negligence and say plan to top up reservoirs will kill the river’s fish

With its pebble beach and shallow areas for paddling, the River Wharfe at Ilkley has long been a popular swimming location in the pretty Yorkshire town. But plagued by sewage and agricultural runoff, the river has been designated as “poor” quality, and a sign has been put up warning people against bathing in it. And now, the health of the river has been put further at risk with emergency drought plans by Yorkshire Water to suck water from it to top up its reservoirs.

A drive by campaigners and wild swimmers led it in 2021 to be the first in the country to get designated bathing status – meaning the government tests it for the harmful E coli and intestinal enterococci bacteria.

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Habitat Conservation & The Fate Of The Northern White Rhino

Tina Casey on CleanTechnica

The Last Rhinos: A New Hope documents the race to save a species almost -- but not quite -- destroyed after habitat conservation and protection efforts failed.

The post Habitat Conservation & The Fate Of The Northern White Rhino appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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A decade long mystery - why were billions of starfish turned to goo?
A decade long mystery - why were billions of starfish turned to goo?
A decade long mystery - why were billions of starfish turned to goo?

A decade long mystery - why were billions of starfish turned to goo?

Presented and produced by Madeleine Finlay, sound design by Joel Cox, and the executive producer was Kate Lamble on Environment | The Guardian

For more than a decade, scientists have been puzzling over what was causing billions of starfish to dissolve into piles of white goo. Sea star wasting disease has ravaged starfish populations, wiping out 90% of the once common sunflower sea star. Now, researchers have finally identified the culprit. Madeleine Finlay speaks to Dr Melanie Prentice, one of the team to crack the case. She explains the impact the disease has had on the marine environment, how they found the pathogen responsible, and what it means for sea stars’ recovery

Scientists identify bacterium behind devastating wasting disease in starfish

Support the Guardian: theguardian.com/sciencepod

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India’s Renewable Energy Is Progressing, But The World Isn’t Paying Attention (Part 1)

Raymond Tribdino on CleanTechnica

Here is the truth the rest of the world isn’t paying too much attention to: India has emerged as a renewable energy powerhouse, transforming from a coal-dependent economy to becoming the world’s third-largest renewable energy producer in less than a decade. This remarkable transition showcases how developing nations can successfully ... [continued]

The post India’s Renewable Energy Is Progressing, But The World Isn’t Paying Attention (Part 1) appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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Counting down to zero: the final warning from a climate diplomat
Counting down to zero: the final warning from a climate diplomat
Counting down to zero: the final warning from a climate diplomat

Counting down to zero: the final warning from a climate diplomat

Peter Betts on Environment | The Guardian

Before Peter Betts died in 2023, he wanted to pass on what he had learned over many years of negotiating at Cops – including how Paris 2015 was saved at the last bell

On 15 March 2022, I was on a video call with a dear friend when I experienced a twitching on the left-hand side of my face and a slurring of my speech. My wife, Fiona, took me to hospital because we both thought I was having a stroke, and I spent the journey in the car adjusting to my probable death. Interestingly, I did not feel fear or anger; only sadness and disappointment that it was all going to end sooner than I had expected. I survived: but six days later, we learned that the cause of my condition was a particularly aggressive form of brain tumour called a glioblastoma.

Since then I have read a number of accounts written by cancer sufferers. Many of them start with an uncertain diagnosis, often with a reasonable percentage chance of survival. But unlike these accounts it was absolutely clear that the tumour would kill me: there was no cure and I was given a median life expectancy of 15 to 18 months. Of course, I hoped to do better than the median, but the medical team said that clinging to that possibility would probably be a mistake because it would distract me from enjoying the time I had left. My immediate reaction was genuinely to recognise that in some respects I was lucky. Some people drop dead with no warning, whereas I would perhaps have a year to come to terms with and make sense of my life. This enabled me from the beginning to take a positive approach to my situation and determined me to make the most of the little time I had.

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A vintage year? British growers harvest their grapes early after a dry, hot summer
A vintage year? British growers harvest their grapes early after a dry, hot summer
A vintage year? British growers harvest their grapes early after a dry, hot summer

A vintage year? British growers harvest their grapes early after a dry, hot summer

Sarah Butler on Environment | The Guardian

Warm weather has created strong flavours that some say means fruit that’s ripe enough for still wine

UK vineyards are getting ready for a vintage year – and a very early harvest – with the warm, sunny weather caused by the heating climate delivering strong flavours in their grapes.

Across the UK the total amount of wine produced is likely to be up on last year. English growers alone added more than 1,000 hectares of vines in 2024, taking the total to 4,841, of which 3,763 was in active production in 2024, according to the industry body Wine GB.

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The Birthplace Of The Boda Boda Is Electrifying Thanks To Pioneers Like Zembo

Remeredzai Joseph Kuhudzai on CleanTechnica

Uganda is widely known for being the land of hundreds of thousands of motorcycle taxis (boda bodas) — buzzing around transporting millions of passengers. Uganda also has a special place in the history of boda bodas. That’s because, over 50 years ago, Ali Mayende’s innovation in the border town of ... [continued]

The post The Birthplace Of The Boda Boda Is Electrifying Thanks To Pioneers Like Zembo appeared first on CleanTechnica.

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Country diary: This is a land of water – the Lake District in reverse | Amy-Jane Beer
Country diary: This is a land of water – the Lake District in reverse | Amy-Jane Beer
Country diary: This is a land of water – the Lake District in reverse | Amy-Jane Beer

Country diary: This is a land of water – the Lake District in reverse | Amy-Jane Beer

Amy-Jane Beer on Environment | The Guardian

Nämdö, Stockholm archipelago: A holiday to the Baltic has forced me to undergo a perspective shift to appreciate its scale and intricate wateriness

By the third week in August, Swedish school terms have restarted and the thousands who make the Stockholm archipelago their summer home have returned to the city. Ferries have switched to winter timetables and people are outnumbered by fallow deer.

I try to get my bearings using the chart hanging in my cousin’s summerhouse, but the white-tailed eagle view of 30,000 islands, islets and skerries is baffling. A boat is essential, and my son makes the necessary perspective shift before I do. “It’s like the Lake District in reverse,” he says. “The land is water and the lakes are islands.” I see what he means. There is something about the ice-worn geology and the vegetation dominated by pines, alder and birch that feels familiar, but the scale and intricate wateriness of the place is as confusing as it is beguiling.

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