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climatejustice.social

Zeitpunkt              Nutzer    Delta   Tröts        TNR     Titel                     Version  maxTL
Di 06.08.2024 00:01:06     9.883       0      561.694    56,8 Climate Justice Social    4.2.1... 5.000
Mo 05.08.2024 00:00:08     9.883      +1      560.873    56,8 Climate Justice Social    4.2.1... 5.000
So 04.08.2024 00:01:06     9.882      +2      560.161    56,7 Climate Justice Social    4.2.1... 5.000
Sa 03.08.2024 00:01:09     9.880      -1      559.289    56,6 Climate Justice Social    4.2.1... 5.000
Fr 02.08.2024 00:01:13     9.881      +1      558.580    56,5 Climate Justice Social    4.2.1... 5.000
Do 01.08.2024 00:00:38     9.880      +1      557.631    56,4 Climate Justice Social    4.2.1... 5.000
Mi 31.07.2024 00:00:31     9.879      +2      556.975    56,4 Climate Justice Social    4.2.1... 5.000
Di 30.07.2024 00:00:30     9.877      +1      555.902    56,3 Climate Justice Social    4.2.1... 5.000
Mo 29.07.2024 00:01:12     9.876       0      555.053    56,2 Climate Justice Social    4.2.1... 5.000
So 28.07.2024 00:00:27     9.876       0      554.241    56,1 Climate Justice Social    4.2.1... 5.000

Di 06.08.2024 11:22

Here's hoping they don't get overruled.

theguardian.com/commentisfree/

The news that the Western Australian Environmental Protection Authority is likely to recommend that a massive gas export development off the state’s north-west shouldn’t go ahead is remarkable, but shouldn’t be.

We don’t know much about what the EPA told Woodside Energy in February about its Browse project off the state’s Kimberley coast. All we have is a line that WAtoday extracted from the EPA – that it had formed a “preliminary view” that the proposal was “unacceptable”.

But the thinking is easy enough to imagine. Browse is Australia’s biggest untapped conventional gas basin. It extends under the pristine Scott Reef, an extraordinary ecosystem that would be more widely celebrated were it not so remote. By Woodside’s own estimate it is home to more than 1,500 species. Many are unique to the area. Some are listed as endangered.

They include pygmy blue whales, which migrate through the area, green sea turtles that nest on a sandy islet within the reef, and the dusky sea snake, which is endemic to this part of the world.

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