Breaking Waves: Ocean News

09/04/2024 - 11:12
Scheme helping people in England connect with nature led to better mental health, report finds A major scheme helping people in England connect with nature led to big improvements in mental health, a report has found. The prescribing of activities in nature to tackle mental ill health has benefited thousands of people across England, a government-backed project has shown. Continue reading...
09/04/2024 - 06:00
California, Nevada and Arizona swelter in what could be the most intense heatwave of an already blazing season Searing temperatures are roasting the US west once again this week, as a brutal heatwave could bring some of the highest temperatures of the summer so far. Excessive heat warnings were in effect across parts of southern California, Arizona and Nevada, affecting tens of millions of people. The harsh weather was predicted to peak beginning on Wednesday and last into the weekend. Continue reading...
09/04/2024 - 05:58
ELM Mobility joint venture by Prodrive and Astheimer Design aims for 10,000 one-person quadricycles by 2030 Two British automotive companies have teamed up to build thousands of electric delivery vehicles in the UK – the latest in a line of businesses attempting the risky push into vehicle manufacturing after several prominent failures. The motorsport manufacturer Prodrive and Astheimer Design have said they plan to build 10,000 of their one-person delivery vehicles by 2030, with production planned for the UK. Continue reading...
09/04/2024 - 05:08
Guitarist says he is recovering after ‘little health hiccup’ last week left him unable to use his left arm The Queen guitarist Brian May has revealed he recently had a minor stroke that left him unable to use his left arm. The band’s lead guitarist and astrophysicist announced he had experienced a “health hiccup” last week but reassured fanshe was recovering and able to play music again after being temporarily unable to control his limb. Continue reading...
09/04/2024 - 04:50
Nuclear is costly, risky and slow, Ramana says. Why then, he asks in his new book, do governments still champion it? You would be forgiven for thinking that the debate on nuclear power is pretty much settled. Sure, there are still some naysayers, but most reasonable people have come to realise that in an age of climate crisis, we need low-carbon nuclear energy – alongside wind and solar power – to help us transition away from fossil fuels. In 2016, 400 reactors were operating across 31 countries, with one estimate suggesting roughly the same number in operation in mid-2023, accounting for 9.2% of global commercial gross electricity generation. But what if this optimism were in fact wrong, and nuclear power can never live up to its promise? That is the argument the physicist MV Ramana makes in his new book. He says nuclear is costly, dangerous and takes too long to scale up. Nuclear, the work’s title reads, is not the solution. This wasn’t the book Ramana, a professor at the University of British Columbia, planned to write. The problems with nuclear are so “obvious”, he wagered, they do not need to be spelled out. But with the guidance of his editor, he realised his mistake. Even in the contemporary environmental movement, which emerged alongside the anti-war and anti-nuclear movements, there are converts. Prominent environmentalists, understandably desperate about the climate crisis, believe it is rational and reasonable to support nuclear power as part of our energy mix. Nuclear is Not the Solution: The Folly of Atomic Power in the Age of Climate Change by MV Ramana is out now Continue reading...
09/04/2024 - 04:25
Climate activist one of six detained by police after students block university building in Danish capital Israel and Hamas at war – live updates Danish police have arrested the environmental activist Greta Thunberg in Copenhagen at a protest against the war in Gaza, a spokesperson for the student group organising the demonstration has said. Six people had been detained on Wednesday at the University of Copenhagen after 20 people blocked the entrance to a building and three entered, a police spokesperson said. Continue reading...
09/04/2024 - 04:08
New data reveals the virus has spread to endangered species in Antarctica – yet the H5N1’s risk to biodiversity, farming and human health is little explored With at least 280 million birds dead since October 2021, the highly infectious H5N1 strain of avian flu has devastated poultry and caused the biggest sudden drop of the world’s wild bird population in decades. The millions of wild birds killed includes tens of thousands of endangered and endemic species – and tens of thousands of mammals have died too. Today, new data, published in Nature Communications, documents the disease’s spread to the southernmost tip of the planet – the Antarctic region – where it has inflicted significant die-offs in elephant seals and fur seals. This outbreak has affected every continent except Oceania, and yet there has been little coverage of the impact on global biodiversity and farming systems – or of potential risks to human health. Continue reading...
09/03/2024 - 23:00
npj Ocean Sustainability, Published online: 04 September 2024; doi:10.1038/s44183-024-00079-1 From oceans apart to the global ocean: Including marine connectivity in global conservation targets
09/03/2024 - 20:15
Three states and the Northern Territory face an increased risk of bushfire this spring, according to fire authorities and the BoM Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updates Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast Large parts of Queensland and the Northern Territory, the south-west of Victoria and south-east corner of South Australia face an increased risk of bushfires this spring. An official assessment from fire authorities and the Bureau of Meteorology, co-ordinated by the Australasian Fire and Emergency Service Authorities (AFAC) and released on Wednesday morning, points to a likely early start to the fire season in Victoria. Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news email Continue reading...
09/03/2024 - 17:50
Take renewable energy out of the equation and there isn’t much else expected to reduce fossil fuel use this side of 2030 Get our morning and afternoon news emails, free app or daily news podcast Australia has a problem with greenhouse gas emissions – a bigger problem than the political debate concedes. Late last week, as Australians endured record August warmth and global heating-fuelled extreme rain, the federal government released data that suggest heat-trapping gases across most of the economy are currently headed in the wrong direction or yet to budge much from historic highs. Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news email Continue reading...