Tuesday, October 18, 2022

ARGENTINA
Worries over wind farms cloud condor repopulation program




 

NATACHA PISARENKO and DANIEL POLITI
Tue, October 18, 2022 


SIERRA PAILEMAN, Argentina (AP) — It was a sunny morning when about 200 people trudged up a hill in Argentina's southern Patagonia region with a singular mission: free two Andean condors that had been born in captivity.

While members of the Mapuche, the largest Indigenous group in the area, played traditional instruments, and a group of children threw condor feathers into the air that symbolized their good wishes for the newly liberated birds, an eerie silence engulfed the mountain in Sierra Paileman in Rio Negro province as researchers opened the cages where the two specimens of the world’s largest flying bird were kept.

Huasi (meaning home in Quechua) seemed born for this moment. As soon as the cage opened, he spread his wings and took off without a moment’s hesitation, surprising researchers who are accustomed to a more trepidatious takeoff. Yastay (meaning god that is protector of birds) appeared cautious, uncertain of the wide open Patagonia skies after spending his first two years in captivity, and it took him around an hour before taking off.

The emotion in the air was palpable. People hugged while researchers sprang into action and started tracking the birds. It was a moment that so many had been working toward for months.

It was also bittersweet.


Preliminary plans for a massive wind farm that could be located in the Somuncura Plateau to feed a green hydrogen project is putting at risk a three-decade-long effort to repopulate Patagonia's Atlantic coast with a bird that is classified as vulnerable to extinction by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature.

Conservationists fear the birds inevitably would collide with the rotating blades of the turbines and be killed. In neighboring Chile, an environmental impact study for a planned wind farm with 65 windmills concluded that as many as four of the rare condors could collide with the massive structures yearly. Environmental authorities rejected the project las year.

“Why are we freeing two? We generally free more than two,” Vanesa Astore, executive director of the Andean Condor Conservation Program, said. “We’re at like a maintenance level now.”

Researchers had to release Huasi and Yastay now or risk that they would have to remain in captivity for the rest of their lives, which can range from 70 to 80 years, Astore explained, noting condors can only adapt to the outside world if they are released before their third birthday.

The current uncertainty regarding the future of the wind farm that would be built by Australian firm Fortescue Future Industries has not only put conservationists on alert but has prompted conservationists to slow the pace of reproduction and release of the Andean condors.

Condors are notoriously slow breeders that only reach sexual maturity at 9 years old and have an offspring every three years, but researchers have found ways to speed that up by removing eggs from pairs in captivity to incubate artificially. When the egg is removed, the pair will then produce another egg within a month, which they will raise while the first one is raised by humans with the help of latex puppets meant to simulate their parents and help them recognize members of their own species.

That strategy allow researchers to “increase reproductive capacity by six times,” said Luis Jacome, the head of the Andean Condor Conservation Program.

That effort is now on pause.


“We aren’t maximizing because I don’t know what’s going to happen,” Astore explained.

Since the conservation program started 30 years ago, 81 chicks have been born in captivity, 370 condors have been rehabilitated and 230 freed across South America, including Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Chile and Bolivia.

Sixty-six of those have been released along Patagonia’s Atlantic coast, where the bird was nowhere to be seen at the turn of the century even though Charles Darwin had written in the early 1800s about the presence of the large birds in the region.

The Andean condor has now made a comeback, and for many locals that has has a spiritual resonance.

“The condor flies very high, so our elders used to say that the condor could take a message to those who are no longer here,” said Doris Canumil, 59, a Mapuche who took part in the ceremonies for the liberation of the condors.

While they celebrate the success of the program, conservationists worry it could all be erased.


“These birds that we’ve liberated, that once again joined the mountain range with the sea through their flight, that have matured and had their own offspring that live and fly here in this place, they will simply die in the blades of the windmills,” Jacome said. “So the condor would once again become extinct in the Atlantic coast.”

Conservationists found out about the proposed wind farm through the media and alarm bells immediately went off.

Last year, Fortescue unveiled a plan to invest $8.4 billion over a decade in a project to produce green hydrogen for export in what the government touted as the largest international investment in Argentina over the past two decades. In order to qualify as green, the hydrogen must be produced using renewable power, and that is where the windmill farm would come in, taking advantage of the strong, reliable winds of Patagonia.

The government of President Alberto Fernández celebrated the project, saying it would create 15,000 direct jobs and somewhere between 40,000 and 50,000 indirect jobs.

Yet neither the company nor the provincial government of Rio Negro had carried out an environmental impact study before unveiling the project.

For now at least, Jacome said, the “only thing green are the dollars” attached to the project.

“We’re putting the cart before the horse,” Jacome said. “We need to have environmental impact studies that demonstrate what is going to be done, how many windmills, where they will be placed.”

Fortescue agrees and says it “is committed to evaluating the social, environmental, engineering, and economic considerations before committing to the development" of any project.

The Australian firm said in a statement that any pre-development study will include consultations with local organizations to “guarantee the protection of the local species such as the Andean Condor.”

Following questions about the project, Fortescue has decided to not measure winds at the Somuncura Plateau until the province finishes its environmental plan and will instead explore "other areas of interest within lands near Sierra Grande and the Province of Chubut,” the company said.

On Oct. 11, the Rio Negro provincial government said Fortescue launched a 12-month effort to analyze the environmental and social impacts of the project.

For those who have made repopulating the Patagonia coast with the condor their life’s work, the discussions over the future of the project are deeply personal.

“We feel a little bit like parents,” said Catalina Rostagno, who moved to the base camp in Rio Negro two and a half months ago for the process of liberating Huasi and Yastay. “The condor is a reflection of me.”

For the Indigenous inhabitants of the region, the way in which the planned project would produce something that will be exported, recalls a different era.

“Patagonia once again becomes the land of sacrifice,” Canumil said. “The clean energy won’t be used in Argentina, it will go to Europe, but we will be the deposit for what is left behind.”

——-

Politi reported from Buenos Aires, Argentina.

PHOTO ESSAY
















Andean condor feathers lay on a rock in the Sierra Paileman where the Andean Condor Conservation Program operates in the Rio Negro province of Argentina, Friday, Oct. 14, 2022. For 30 years the program has hatched chicks in captivity, rehabilitated others and freed them across South America. 

(AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)
1

UK
Green energy: City mayors want locals to own and control resources



BBC
Tue, October 18, 2022

A taskforce will look at how people in the North West could directly own and control green energy resources

Green resources in Greater Manchester and Liverpool City Region should be used to help control soaring energy bills, the areas' mayors have said.

Andy Burnham and Steve Rotheram said they want a "green industrial revolution" to allow local people be in control of their energy supply.

They said a task force would look at how wind, hydro, solar and grass could be used to power the city regions.

Mr Burnham said the ownership of renewable energy was "up for grabs".


The mayors said a regional task force would map the green energy potential of both city regions and look at how people in the North West could directly own and control those resources.

'Create a blueprint'

Mr Burnham said they wanted to "seize the problem in the North West head on".

"Energy bills have skyrocketed. People feel powerless," he said.

"When we look at our wind and our other renewables, ownership of our energy is up for grabs.

"Why not us, the people and businesses of the North West... make a play for this? Let the people be in control."

Mr Rotheram said Liverpool City Region had the potential to be the UK's renewable energy coast, capitalising on strengths in wind, solar, hydrogen and tidal power.

"Someone has to take advantage of the green industrial revolution, so why shouldn't it be our region?" he said.

The mayors will work with green entrepreneur Dale Vince, who found supplier Ecotricity, to investigate co-operative and community ownership, with stakeholders to potentially include local authorities, public bodies, private business and taxpayers.

Mr Vince said the task force "will create a blueprint that can be replicated across the country, by all regions - in pursuit of a net zero carbon in the 2030s".

SPACE RACE 2.0
SCOTLAND
Rocket firm Orbex secures £40m funding for Highland launch plan


BBC
Tue, October 18, 2022 

Orbex has been developing a 19m-long rocket for carrying satellites into low Earth orbit

Moray-based space rocket manufacturer Orbex has secured a £40.4m funding package to help towards planned launches from a Highland spaceport.

The Scottish National Investment Bank (SNIB) and Jacobs, a company providing services to Nasa, are among the project's new investors.

Orbex has proposed launching small satellites into low Earth orbit from Space Hub Sutherland near Tongue.

The first launch could take place next year.

Orbex, which is headquartered in Forres and has manufacturing sites in the UK and Denmark, said new investment would allow it to scale up its resources - such as employing more staff - and also help it to attract further funding.

The company has been developing a 19m (62ft) long rocket, called Prime, which would be reuseable and powered by the renewable bio-fuel, bio-propane.

Chief executive Chris Larmour said it already had potential customers from the UK, Europe and America.

He said he was delighted to secure the new funding package, with SNIB as the lead investor.

Map

SNIB was launched in November 2020 and will be backed by £2bn of Scottish government funding over 10 years.

Executive director Nicola Douglas said: "This is a very exciting time for the Scottish space sector.

"With Orbex, we will have a rocket assembled in Scotland, launching from Scotland and likely transporting satellites built in Scotland into orbit.

"This investment is a great example of the bank working with other investors to support scale-ups in Scotland and aligns with our mission to invest in innovation and the industries of the future."

The other new investors include the Danish Green Future Fund, Switzerland-based venture capital firm Verve Ventures and British entrepreneurs Phillip and James Chambers.

How green is Scotland's space industry?

Why is Scotland a prime rocket launch site?

Development agency Highlands and Islands Enterprise is leading the £17m Space Hub Sutherland project. The facility is to be constructed on the Moine peninsula.

Plans for up to 12 launches a year from a single launch pad were approved by Highland Council in 2020.

Scottish Land Court approval, which was also required as the proposed development is on crofting land, was granted the following year.

There are separate plans for spaceports in Shetland, Western Isles and at Prestwick in Ayrshire.
Beneath the surface of the Thames lies a graveyard of plastic waste


BBC
Tom Edwards - Transport and environment correspondent, London
Tue, October 18, 2022 

Plastic bottles, sunglasses, cotton buds, wet wipes, food wrappers, cartons - and a Superman - are all visible

We are on the foreshore of the Thames at low tide in Fulham, right next to Fulham FC's home, Craven Cottage.

The water has gone out very quickly and left behind a very dirty secret. Plastic.

There is plastic everywhere.

Plastic bottles, sunglasses, cotton buds, wet wipes, food wrappers and cartons. Everything you could imagine that is made of plastic is here.

That all of this is ending up in the Thames, regarded as London's jewel, is, frankly, disgusting and depressing.

Researchers from local charity Thames21 believe the Thames has the most microplastics of any river in the world

The river dumps its plastic at certain corners and certain bends.

There's 'wet wipe island' at Hammersmith, where the actual bend in the river is being changed by the build up of waste.


In Fulham, it is plastics.

Alarmingly, scientists also think these bits of plastic break down and enter the food chain. Researchers from local charity Thames21 believe the Thames has the most microplastics of any river in the world.

The organisation pulls 200 tonnes of plastic from the Thames every year.

Zara Visanji from Thames21 said macroplastics, or pieces larger than 5mm, are also a serious problem, "although we're not the worst in the world".

Samples are being collected along the Thames

She is also part of a project called InNoPlastic, funded by the EU, which comes up with ways to remove macro, micro and nano plastics.

"We have been collecting samples at Sunbury-on-Thames, the freshwater side of the River Thames," Zara says.

"And we have found, of all the partners, we have the highest concentration of microplastics," she says, compared with Croatia, Holland and the Venice Lagoon in Italy.

Scientists can examine the digestive tract of snails for plastics

Zara said the entry of plastics into the food chain happened "when fish are swimming along and they are absorbing these microplastics".

"Other animals are eating products that have microplastics in them and then the public population are eating the fish and meat that has microplastics, and it's getting into our blood stream as well."

The next day, I go to Royal Holloway, University of London, in Egham. Prof Dave Morritt has been studying crabs from the Thames for 10 years.

We watch him dissect a mitten crab. Inside, he finds traces of plastic that the crab has eaten. He says the fibres will have almost certainly come from the breakdown of wet wipes.

Prof Morritt says we need behavioural change: "Cutting off plastic at source before it gets into the river is far more effective than trying to clean it up once it's in the environment.

"You can clean up the bigger stuff, but with microplastics it's virtually impossible to get them out once they're there.

"A big part of that is trying to encourage people to change their behaviour."

Prof Dave Morritt has been studying Thames crabs - and their innards - for a decade

Thames21 also wants legislation to enforce strict standards on labelling for all single-use wet wipe products containing plastic. At the moment, some wet wipes are labelled as "flushable" when they contain plastic.

It also wants the government to set legally-binding targets to phase out non-essential waste items.

A spokesperson for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs said: "Through our 25 year environment plan we are committed to leaving the environment in a better state than we inherited it. As part of this work we are bringing in new rules to ensure that we recycle and reuse more of our waste to help tackle plastic pollution.

"Last year we launched a call for evidence on tackling commonly littered single-use plastics such as wet wipes, as well as sachets, cigarette filters and single-use cups.

"We are considering various options for wet wipes - including a ban on those containing plastic, a mandatory 'flushability' standard, mandatory labelling on packaging, and an extended producer responsibility scheme for wipes containing plastic."

It will be a huge challenge to reduce London's reliance on plastic and improve its disposal. Everyone can help by not flushing wet wipes and cotton buds.

At the moment, below the surface of the Thames lies a plastic dumping ground.

A GLOBAL CRISIS
UK
RSPCA struggles to care for hundreds of rescued pets


Mon, October 17, 2022

The RSPCA wants people to consider adopting or fostering a rescued animal

About 700 rescued pets are waiting for spaces at animal centres which are "full to bursting", the RSPCA says.

The charity currently pays £26,000 each week to private boarders to temporarily look after rescued animals including dogs, cats, rabbits, exotic pets, birds and farm animals.

To help ease the pressure, it has started an appeal for more fosterers in Herefordshire and Worcestershire.

"We are struggling," head of volunteering Brian Reeves said.

He added: "We are in the middle of an animal crisis and we can only see it getting worse over the winter months as the cost of living crisis bites.

"It's absolutely vital that we free up as much space in RSPCA centres now, so we've got room for animal victims of neglect and cruelty we rescued in the coming weeks and months - and more fosterers is going to be crucial in achieving that."

The charity says there are eight private boarding establishments in the West Mercia region - which covers Shropshire, Herefordshire and Worcestershire.


Maisie is overcoming surgery after having an ear tumour removed and is looking for a home

Across the UK, 691 animals are currently being boarded in temporary care with private boards due to a lack of space at centres - including 120 dogs, 144 cats, 112 rabbits, eight small furry animals, 38 exotic birds, 35 birds, 132 equines and 102 farm animals.

The number of pets being rehomed this year has dropped by 8% compared to 2020, and by 31% compared to 2019.

Maisie, a four-year-old Staffordshire bull terrier-cross, is among the pets in need of a new home in Worcester.

After having surgery to remove an ear tumour, the charity hopes her foster home will become permanent once she has recovered and been given a clean bill of health by vets.

Follow BBC West Midlands on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Send your story ideas to: newsonline.westmidlands@bbc.co.uk
Doncaster: Public consultation over UK's biggest battery farm




BBC
Mon, October 17, 2022 

A huge battery storage centre is planned for the site of a former power station in South Yorkshire.

The company behind the Thorpe Marsh scheme near Doncaster said it would store 2.8GW of electricity to be used at times of peak power demand.

Developers the Banks Group said it would be one of the largest energy storage facilities in the world and the UK's biggest.

A public consultation is about to be launched in the local area.

The proposal would see up to 2.25 million tonnes of ash from the demolished former coal-fired power station excavated and used to make concrete blocks for the building trade.

After the ash is cleared the site would be levelled and more than 50 batteries in shipping containers installed with a new electricity substation.

A number of proposals for the Thorpe Marsh site have been put forward over the years since the power station shut in 1994, including building gas turbines.

Lewis Stokes, senior community relations manager at The Banks Group said the site's existing connection to the National Grid and its closeness to wind farms of the Yorkshire coast made it "an excellent location for this project."

"This is a nationally important project that will put South Yorkshire at the forefront of developments in the increasingly important energy storage industry," he said.

"Our vision is to deliver a range of long-term environmental, energy security, employment, economic and community benefits through the reclamation and restoration of this landmark site while also supporting the UK's drive towards its crucial net zero targets."

The company said that it would restore the site's rail link to avoid using lorries to remove the ash waste and bring in equipment and would plant a woodland on part of the site.

A planning application could be submitted to Doncaster Council in the coming months. If approved, Banks said they hoped to start work by 2024.

Follow BBC Yorkshire on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Send your story ideas to yorkslincs.news@bbc.co.uk or send video here.

UK

Homes in London remain at risk 

of sewage flooding, report finds

BBC
Mon, October 17, 2022 


Homes across London remain at risk of being flooded by effluvia as a result of the capital's Victorian sewage system and heavy rainfall.

The London Flood Review concluded current infrastructure is unfit for purpose, especially in extreme weather.

Downpours last July, equivalent to two months' of rain within two hours, led to about 1,500 properties being covered in excrement and dirty water.

Flash floods lifted manhole covers and caused waste to rise through toilets.

The city needs a better way to cope, the review said, according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service.

"Such events are likely to occur more frequently in the future and the various organisations which manage flood risk will need to work collaboratively to ensure that the impacts of flooding are managed appropriately," it added.

Torrential rain hit London in August

Among the ideas to help stop London's sewers from flooding were "regreening" areas so there is less surface run-off, and introducing bigger pipes.

Although at the time of construction the Victorian sewer system for London had ample capacity, "the evolution of the cityscape has had an effect on the ability of the sewerage system to cope with the current flows which drain to it, which has resulted in some areas now not being able to cope with a 1-in-5 year event".

The report also analysed whether the Thames barrier could be used to help control water levels. But it ruled that the barrier would not be able to be raised quickly enough to cope with fast rainfall.

Its release came a fortnight after Londoners and people in north Kent and south Essex were invited to give their comments on managing the risk of flooding amid climate change and rising sea levels.

The Thames Estuary 2100 Plan is a joint project by the Environment Agency and a number of other bodies to ensure homes, businesses and critical services from Teddington to Sheerness and Southend remain protected by the end of the century.

Follow BBC London on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Send your story ideas to hellobbclondon@bbc.co.uk

UK 
Rampion 2: Offshore windfarm extension area 'nearly halved'



Sun, October 16, 2022 

A planned extension to an offshore windfarm will now cover an area almost half the size of what was originally proposed, its owners have said.

Owners of the Rampion wind farm, based off the West Sussex coast, said they now plan to build 90 new turbines instead of the original 116 turbines.

RWE Renewables is launching public consultation focussing on changes to cable routes.

RWE said Rampion 2 could could create energy for more than one million homes.

The company said the sea bed area covered by proposed new offshore wind turbines had been reduced by "nearly half" since initial plans were published.

Drop-in events are being held along the proposed cable route to see the plans and meet the Rampion 2 team, RWE said:

Public events:

1 November: 13:00-22:00 GMT at Arundel Town Hall, Atherley Chamber, Maltravers Sreett, Arundel BN18 9AP

2 November: 13:00-22:00 at Arun Yacht Club, Rope Walk Riverside West, Rope Walk, Littlehampton BN17 5DL

11 November: 13:00-22:00 at Ashurst Village Hall, The Street, Ashurst, Steyning BN44 3AP

12 November: 13:00-22:00 at Washington Village Memorial Hall, School Lane, Washington RH20 4AP

Chris Tomlinson, development and stakeholder manager for Rampion 2, said: "The electricity cable installation from the wind farm to the new electricity substation would be a temporary impact during construction, as all cables would be buried underground.

"We can also announce today that in response to feedback on visual effects and shipping from key stakeholders, including Natural England, we have reduced the extent of our offshore wind turbine array proposals by nearly half.

"In addition, we have decreased the maximum number of turbines down from 116 to 90.

Mr Tomlinson said the company was aiming to submit final proposals to the Planning Inspectorate in 2023, and should the project be given consent construction would start in 2026.

Four public consultation events will be held at Arundel, Ashurst, Climping and Washington.

A public consultation on the wind farm expansion was extended in February after some residents did not receive leaflets requesting their views.
Missouri pulls $500 million from BlackRock over asset manager's ESG push

Tue, October 18, 2022

People are seen in front of a showroom that hosts BlackRock in Davos


(Reuters) -Missouri has pulled $500 million out of pension funds managed by BlackRock Inc, state Treasurer Scott Fitzpatrick said on Tuesday, accusing the asset manager of "prioritizing" environmental, social and governance (ESG) over shareholder returns.

Several Republican-led states have sought to cut business ties with BlackRock over its ESG push, with Louisiana earlier this month saying it would pull $794 million out of the company's funds.

While environmentalists have protested that the world's largest asset manager does too little to press for change at fossil fuel portfolio companies, Republican politicians have accused it of boycotting energy stocks.

Chief Executive Officer Larry Fink last week defended the company's investments, saying "(I am) now being attacked equally by the left and the right so I'm doing something right".


"While the actions of some elected officials have attracted media headlines, they do not reflect the totality of our clients’ investment decisions," a BlackRock spokesperson said on Tuesday, adding that the company had attracted $248 billion in net new long-term assets from clients this year.

Missouri State Employees' Retirement System had asked BlackRock to abstain from proxy voting at companies on its behalf, but the asset manager refused its demand, Fitzpatrick said. Proxy voting is done by asset management firms on behalf of shareholders.

(Reporting by Niket Nishant in Bengaluru;Editing by Vinay Dwivedi)
Two Major Indian Refiners Just Stopped Buying Russian Crude

Editor OilPrice.com
Tue, October 18, 2022 

Two of the biggest refiners in India have stopped looking for spot Russian crude oil supply set to arrive after December 5, the day on which the EU embargo on Russian oil shipments enters into force, sources familiar with the Indian firms’ procurement plans told Bloomberg on Tuesday.

The two refiners are Indian Oil Corporation and Bharat Petroleum Corporation Limited (BPCL), according to the sources.

India, the world’s third-largest crude oil importer, has been importing large volumes of Russian oil after the Russian invasion of Ukraine due to the cheap supply with hefty discounts on the Russian grades compared to benchmarks.

Now IndianOil and BPCL, two of the biggest state-owned importers of Russian crude oil in India, are awaiting more clarity on the EU sanctions regime ahead of the December 5 deadline, including on the possibility of secondary sanctions on buyers of Russian crude.

The EU is set to impose as of early December an embargo on imports of Russian crude by sea and ban all maritime transportation services to all buyers unless the Russian oil is priced at or below a certain price cap, yet to be determined. Russia has repeatedly said that it would not export its oil to any country that will have joined the G7 and U.S.-led proposal for a price cap.

As early as September, Indian purchases of Russian oil were already expected to slow as the Asian importer was looking to more African and Middle Eastern supply as shipping rates on longer voyages jumped. With a recent surge in freight rates, Russian oil doesn’t look so cheap, and the discount of Russia’s oil to benchmarks has narrowed.

India will also further diversify its oil imports to better prepare for future OPEC+ production cuts that raise oil prices and tighten supply, its Petroleum Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said last week.