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Paris has revolutionized its water management, transforming the historic Canal Saint-Martin into a clean, swimmable waterway. Since 2009, the city has set up thousands of water fountains, reduced water prices by 8%, saved a million cubic meters of water a year by fixing leaks, and cut water usage by 10%.

archive.md/dsQpa

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In India almost 30,000 more children will survive past their first birthday this year compared to last year.

archive.vn/rPJEe

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Traveling through the world’s most traffic-heavy city just got a lot quicker (and greener).

popsci.com/technology/lagos-li

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Oh, and Chile just became the sixth country—and the first in South America—to implement a feminist foreign policy.

americasquarterly.org/article/

The state of New South Wales in Australia has suspended logging in 106 'koala hubs' on the mid-north coast while they consider plans to establish a great koala national park. The hubs cover about 5% of the proposed 176,000 ha of forest and contain 42% of the recorded koala sightings in the area since 2000.

theguardian.com/environment/20

Deforestation continues to decline in Brazil, with a 66% drop in August compared to the same month last year. President Lula has also designated another two new Indigenous reserves to protect almost 207,000 hectares of forest against illegal loggers and gold miners, and the government has removed thousands of cows owned by land grabbers in Ituna-Itatá, one of the most deforested areas in the Amazon.

news.mongabay.com/2023/09/defo

reuters.com/world/americas/bra

theguardian.com/world/2023/sep

Mexico has joined a growing list of countries that are working to criminalize environmental damage, also known as ‘ecocide.’ If passed, the new Mexican bill could send offenders to jail for up to 15 years for 'any unlawful or wanton act committed with the knowledge that there is a substantial likelihood of severe and either widespread or long-term damage to the environment.'

theguardian.com/environment/20

In a hard-won victory for environmentalists, new legislation in California will permanently protect the iconic Western Joshua tree, making it the state’s first law to focus on a climate-threatened species. Between 1895 and 2016, the annual precipitation in Joshua Tree National Park dropped by 39% due to rising temperatures.

theguardian.com/us-news/2023/j

Since the late 1700s, engineers have worked to tame the Mississippi River to flow in a fixed course to reduce flooding and create shipping channels. However, in the face of accelerated land loss, they have changed to an 'engineering with nature' approach, with efforts to reconnect the river to the vast areas of its delta, and to reintroduce fresh water and sediment to restore the coastal system.

e360.yale.edu/features/neptune

Peregrine falcons are back from the brink of extinction and are now flourishing across the USA, thanks to a decades-long collaboration between falconers and researchers. Since 1974, the reintroduction program has released over 6,000 peregrine falcons, and the species was officially de-listed as endangered in 1999.

thegazette.com/environment-nat

The newly designated ‘Archibald Lake Wilderness Area’ in Nova Scotia will protect 684 hectares of old-growth forest, wetlands, and three lakes. The area is home to 37 rare species, including seven that are endangered, like the mainland moose and Canada warbler.

cbc.ca/lite/story/1.6949475

Wild Atlantic salmon in New England have had their most productive year in over a decade with more than 1,500 salmon counted in the Penobscot River in Maine, which is home to America’s largest run. Conservation groups have worked hard to remove dams and restore salmon in the area, and it looks like their efforts are paying off.

apnews.com/article/salmon-rive

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The number of wild golden eagles in Scotland has risen to its highest level in 300 years.

bbc.co.uk/newsround/66707883

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Conservation group African Parks will release 2,000 southern white rhinos into the wild after buying the world's largest private captive rhino breeding operation.

bbc.com/news/world-africa-6671

According to analysts, the gap between clean and dirty energy is only going to grow. By 2030, technology improvements could slash today’s prices by half for solar, and a quarter for wind. The energy technology revolution is real and happening right now—a point that keeps getting lost in ​the drumbeat of doom about how difficult it is, and will be, to leave fossil fuels behind.

canarymedia.com/articles/clean

China installed 44.8 GW of solar in the second quarter of 2023, a 153% year-over-year growth, according to its National Energy Administration. In the first six months of this year, China installed 5.4 GW of hydropower, 22.9 GW of wind, 78.4 GW of solar, and 1.7 GW of biomass generation. No other country comes even close.

mercomindia.com/china-solar-ca

The world’s largest wind turbine, a 16 MW monster from Goldwind, located offshore from Fujian Province, China, has smashed the record for the most power produced by a single turbine. On the 1st September, the turbine—which has a 252-meter diameter—produced 384.1 MWh in 24 hours as a typhoon hammered southeast China, enough to power roughly 170,000 homes.

euronews.com/green/2023/09/07/

Clean steel is coming. Over the past 12 months, the outlook for a sector once considered hard to abate has changed significantly. Last week was a huge one for companies trying to pioneer steel decarbonization technologies, with three enormous investments announced in Sweden, the United States, and Japan.

archive.md/hIOHJ

reuters.com/business/finance/s

mining-technology.com/news/bos

asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/Envi

German lawmakers have approved legislation for the replacement of fossil-fuel heating systems, passing a major climate policy plan that will require newly installed heating systems in new housing developments to be at least 65% powered by renewable energy starting in January next year.

apnews.com/article/germany-cli

Cheap, long-lasting LEDs are the latest chapter in the extraordinary decline in illumination costs since the Middle Ages. In 2010, LEDs accounted for barely more than 1% of global lighting sales; last year, they were more than 50%. In the United States, residential energy consumption for lighting has fallen by half in less than a decade.

archive.md/fqfjE

Sticking with the theme. In April this year, The Wall Street Journal published an article with the headline "Don’t Expect Mass Adoption of Electric Cars Anytime Soon" that included a forecast showing that global sales would only reach 15% of the total market by the end of this decade. In July 2023, global EV sales reached 16%. Ouch.

cleantechnica.com/2023/09/10/w

The US battery manufacturing sector shares something in common with Spinal Tap, in that it's being cranked to the max. In the past week we've seen a $3 billion joint venture unveiled by Daimler, Cummins and Paccar; a $542 million investment into materials firm Ascend Elements; and a $2 billion gigafactory announced in Illinois by Chinese manufacturer Gotion.

daimlertruck.com/fileadmin/use

nasdaq.com/articles/blackrocks

energy-storage.news/gotion-to-

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If you're tired of feeling hopeless about climate change then you should look at these charts.

archive.md/EUDN5

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Electric scooters are already displacing four times as much oil as all the electric cars.

twitter.com/bradplumer/status/

Researchers at Imperial College have invented a blood test for children that analyses changes in 161 genes to determine whether a fever is caused by bacteria, viruses, or an inflammatory disease. Current tests aren't great—three-quarters of children hospitalised for fever never receive a diagnosis. Genetic tests could speed up and improve diagnoses and reduce unnecessary antibiotic use.

archive.vn/tO9Yl

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You've probably heard about, or thought about the use of artificial intelligence to talk to animals. Turns out this is a lot more complicated than it seems.. Elizabeth Kolbert, who does this kind of thing better than anyone, takes a deep dive into global efforts to use AI to decipher the clicks of sperm whales. This is mind-expanding stuff, and finishes with a jaw-dropping account of the birth of a baby whale. Best thing we read this week.

newyorker.com/magazine/2023/09

A tour de force from global health researcher Saloni Dattani on the story of the malaria vaccine. Malaria has long been one of the deadliest diseases on the planet, killing hundreds of thousands of people every year, and yet it took 141 years to develop a vaccine. Why? And what happens now that we have one?

worksinprogress.co/issue/why-w

Ok folks that's it for a while.

Thanks for reading.

I now return you to "God Damn Politics."
And "Stupid people doing Stupid stuff."

@corlin

Thanks for posting all of those! I really appreciate the positivity this morning.

@corlin

thank you, that was a very good buncha stuff!

@corlin
Thanks. You've made my "hope" levels go up some this morning.

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