It’s a week of strange migrations: fish return to parts of Sweden they’ve been locked out of for centuries; giant electric Aussie ship will soon cross the Pacific; and a herd of wild African animals are charging to the Arctic for climate action!
Solar panels to be fitted on all new-build homes in England by 2027 (The Guardian)
‘World’s largest’ electric ship measuring 130 metres launched by Tasmanian boatbuilder (The Guardian)
An express tunnel for slow fish increases marine biodiversity in Sweden (DW Environment)
New rule to encourage networks to make poles and wires resistant to storms and climate risk (Renew Economy)
Lifesize herd of puppet animals begins climate action journey from Africa to Arctic Circle (The Guardian)
Marine litter on the EU coastline down by almost one-third (European Commission)
Cook Islands’ atoll officially rat free (Fix the News)
The numbers show Victoria’s get-off-gas policies are working (Renew Economy)
How Pakistan pulled off one of the fastest solar revolutions in the world (CNN)
From shared gas to shared savings: How this inner Melbourne apartment block electrified (One Step off the Grid)
Finding the right electricity plan is hard. This startup is making it easy (Switched On Podcast)
Nature nurture: the Devon estate where rewilding and mental health go hand in hand (The Guardian)
Wind, solar and batteries push fossil fuels to record lows, but costly coal and hydro keep prices high (Renew Energy)
