Australia produces enough food for 75 million people. But intensifying heat and natural disasters plus competition for water are eroding food security.
👉 Read the full story: theconversation.com/overhea...
Posts by Doug Hendrie
You can set your watch to autumn headlines declaring a catastrophic El Niño or La Niña. In this article, I throw a bucket of cold water on the heated headlines and reflect on why autumn forecasts of Nino3.4 are to be read with caution.
theconversation.com/why-the-phra...
Nature and agriculture are often at odds. But an Australian study suggests farmers who plant more trees are better off – financially and environmentally.
Citizens have contributed to science in Australia for many decades – and the field is now undergoing rapid growth
Diesel powers most freight trucks. As oil prices spike, electric trucks are looking more attractive – if upfront cost and charging barriers can be overcome
A plantation worker photographed this creature in New Guinea, thought to have been dead for 6,000 years.
👉 Read the full story: theconversation.com/meet-to...
Often a person believes himself to be so wise and believes to gain highest fame thereby, when the juice of the grapes has affected him negatively. The next one believes that he is so rich that even the emperor might not be an equal to him. The third appears like an extremely hungry horse, so no one can push enough of fresh or rotten food into the ever open mouth. The fourth one screams cries over his heavy sins, and his heart is passionately in flames out of deep repentance for strange reasons that no one can comprehend. The fifth one desires to do unchaste actions, to which he is dedicated day and night, once he has become addicted to the power of wine. The sixth has a miserable practice: He condemns the soul through [false] oaths so that she will be entirely exhausted when facing God.
The seventh is ready to fight, he growls like a dog held by a chain and who barks all the time; its round head is ready for a fight. The eighth becomes so happy out of drunkenness that he is ready to sell his honor, property, wife, and children; the evilness of drunkenness shows in him. The ninth helplessly becomes crazy, everything that he knows, sees, or hears, he presents openly to everyone. The tenth fights against sleep. The eleventh sings wild songs and screams totally uninhibited both in the evening and in the morning. The twelfth becomes so drunk from heavy drinking that he feels the alcohol already at the top portion of his throat and voluntarily pays a tribute to the innkeeper.
15th century poem by Oswald von Wolkenstein listing the 12 types of drunkard
People can retreat indoors from extreme weather, but crops can’t. Farmers are increasingly looking at nets, misters, polytunnels and greenhouses to protect crops.
Australia’s new fuel efficiency standards are already working to cut emissions – but the real story is behind the scenes.
👉 Read the full story: theconversation.com/how-aus...
‘Blood cobalt’ is disappearing from batteries – and cheaper, cleaner batteries are arriving
theconversation.com/blood-cobalt...
Extreme heat is fast becoming one of the biggest threats to global food systems. Our new piece in The Conversation looks at how intense heatwaves put crops and native species at risk — and what we can actually do about it.
🔗 theconversation.com/intense-heat...
It’s easy to think cheaper EVs will encourage more people to switch. But new research shows subsidising these vehicles is poor value for money. There’s a better way.
NEW ANALYSIS: China's CO2 has now been 'flat or falling' for 21 months
* Down in 2025
* Still below Mar 2024
* Clean energy wave a key factor
If this is China's peak (TBC) it's the climate story of the century so far…
www.carbonbrief.org/...
Is a treaty to end thermal coal mine approvals possible?
Sounds counterintuitive, but Chris Wright argues the treaty's cartel-like logic might win industry support for climate goals.
New piece in @theconvo-bot.bsky.social explores why Indonesia + Australia alone could shift the global market.
Every new extinction ripples out beyond the affected species, from ecosystems to human knowledge across culture, spirituality and science.
In Tasmania’s remote southwest, dry lightning storms are starting huge conflagrations across treeless plains. Could a return to cultural burning help?
this is not behavior becoming of a FIFA Peace Prize recipient.
Serious fires in recent days reflect deeper shifts in climate and fuel conditions. Centre Director A/Prof Rachael Nolan explains the sequence of factors driving sudden, high-intensity fire behaviour - and what to watch for next.
theconversation.com/primed-to-bu...
#wildfire #bushfire #climaterisk
Electric container ships won’t work – but a fleet of auxiliary battery ships could clean up shipping
theconversation.com/electric-con...
First take on EPBC amendments in the compromise deal struck to get it passed
Justine Bell-James, @euanritchie.bsky.social, @drphilmccormack.bsky.social & me in @aunz.theconversation.com
#NativeForestLogging #MinisterialDiscretion #UnacceptableImpacts #PayToDestroy #NationalEnvironmentalStandards
Australia will walk away from hosting #COP31 in a compromise in which Australia takes the presidency role and the Pacific hosts a pre-COP event. @wesmorgan.bsky.social explains what happened, the broader context, and what comes next. This is an important read. theconversation.com/australia-ha...
My latest on Brazil's efforts at the UN climate talks to push back against the tide of fossil fuel lobbying and climate misinformation @aunz.theconversation.com @cssn.org
theconversation.com/brazil-is-tr...
"Graphs of primary energy make it seem almost impossible to end our long reliance on fossil fuels. But primary energy doesn’t really matter. If we focus instead on useful energy, the task ahead is much more doable."
theconversation.com/this-widely-...
Hold up
(New from us)
‘Now the Pacific is leading the way again. Island leaders have a bold plan to become the world’s first region powered entirely by renewables and energy storage.’ #ClimateCrisis #COP30
w/ @wesleymorgan.bsky.social @smartenergycouncil.bsky.social theconversation.com/how-pacific-...
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We just published the Global Carbon Budget 2025, with a mix of bad news (CO2 emissions continue to grow) and encouraging news (35 countries saw emissions decline over the past decade while growing their economies).
Read the highlights in a short article:
theconversation.com/the-worlds-c...