• ECOS - Towards a Sustainable Future
Ecos Issue 155 - Table of Contents

 

Spotlight on CSIRO

Solar air-conditioning research facilities

Conserving nature and dollars: delivering cost-effective biodiversity protection

 

Table of Contents


ECOS ECOS
Issue 133

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Editorial - Vision rewarded

This issue's lead feature article celebrates Brad Norman becoming the first Australian in 25 years to win a Rolex Award for Enterprise.

Climate change planning call for 'sea change' regions

Scientists have highlighted that concerted preparations need to be made to combat sea-level rise along coastal areas. They are particularly calling for the development of constructive national and international partnerships to underpin efforts to manage climate change.

Call for more dingoes to restore native species

Reintroducing more dingoes to Australia would help control the population of nuisance pests and restore some of the country's dwindling native species populations, according to research by Professor Chris Johnson from the School of Marine & Tropical Biology at James Cook University.

South Australia's grid payback makes solar easier

South Australia will be the first Australian state to introduce a Feed-In Tariff policy for electricity, providing renewed incentive and support for the take-up of solar energy technology by households.

Aluminium's 30 per cent energy reduction target

Australian researchers are investigating a new way of making aluminium that could cut the energy required to produce the metal by up to 30 per cent, appreciably reducing greenhouse impacts.

Shower with air to save water

Researchers at CSIRO's Manufacturing and Materials Technology have developed a showerhead that could save up to 20 000 litres of water per year per household.

Wungong's Urban Water Master Plan a pace-setter

Catering for 40 000 residents, the recently launched Wungong Urban Water Master Plan, the first of its kind in Australia, is Western Australia's largest planned redevelopment, showcasing best practices in ecologically sustainable urban development.

First environment business community gets a green light

South-east Queensland is set to house the proposed Yarrabilba Environmental Business Cluster and residential development on a 2014-hectare site in the Beaudesert Shire, about 45 kilometres from Brisbane.

The mechanics of social change

Rarely before has society had to consider the prospect of changing its ways so wholly and quickly as it does with the currently emerging environmental priorities. On a global scale, it has never happened. The big question is how do we get society to quickly take a radically different path, and what are the mechanisms behind such a shift?

WA's mining boom: where does it leave the environment?

Western Australia is in the grip of its biggest-ever mining boom. The economy is buoyant and unemployment is at a record low; however, all this activity is occurring amongst internationally unique landscapes and biodiversity - which leads to the question, when commodity prices inevitably fall, what will be the legacy of the boom on WA's famous natural environment?

Queensland's dam strategy raises bigger questions

In April this year, against recommendations and protests, the Queensland Government announced the construction of a new mega-dam on the Mary River, some 16 km south of Gympie. While proponents see the project as a necessary investment in south-east Queensland's water supply, opponents are incensed about another dam project's seeming disregard for due process and independent findings of both its infeasibility and negative environmental impacts.

Stars in the sea

Driven by a love of the sea and its largest fish, the elusive whale shark, Australian naturalist Brad Norman has created a worldwide photo-identification system which enables ordinary people to assist in its conservation. In recognition of his contribution to the understanding of the threatened shark, Norman has become the first Australian Laureate of the Rolex Awards for Enterprise in 25 years.

The biofuels promise: updated thinking

Biofuels seem an obvious alternative given the recent surge in fossil fuel prices and more emphasis on environmental impacts. However there are some serious implications of biofuels' wider use that need deeper consideration.

New approaches for traditional ways

Things are looking up for the traditional villagers around Bach Ma National Park in Vietnam's highlands. A cooperative international project is teaching them new farming methods that both help preserve their protected region and increase their incomes.

Safeguarding dangerous shores

In nature, some things are best left alone, buried well beneath the surface. But housing, marina and infrastructure developments frequently disturb coastal acid sulfate soils and sediments, sometimes with disastrous consequences. Now a national atlas is providing a clearer picture of the extent and severity of this phenomenon along Australia's coastline.

Review - Water perspectives elegantly collected

In Australia's Water Resources: From Use to Management, John Pigram serves the current bubbling Australian water debate by both getting to its crux and mapping its tributaries and ripples.

Review - Nuts and bolts of sustainability online

Sustainable Development Online (SDO) is a growing, submissions-based international reference database and part of EnviroWindows, an environmental information website. Ecological Internet (EI) is a slightly different portal for environmental sustainability news, expert analysis and information retrieval tools.

Naturally regrowing eucalypts is a challenge

Large areas of Australia's grazing lands now need restocking with native vegetation in order to restore the integrity of the landscape and recharge ecosystems. But while 'natural regeneration' of eucalypts is typically relatively cheap for farmers compared with direct seeding or planting tubes, research shows that natural regeneration is fickle and can involve some risk in the allocation of resources to it.

Algae bioreactors that tackle CO2 emissions

An Australian company is assessing an innovative, natural system for reducing CO2 emissions right at their source, before they hit the atmosphere. Using NASA inspired research, the technique utilises the carbon-fixing abilities of single-celled algae, cultured in specially designed bioreactors, to consume carbon dioxide and nitrogen oxide at their source.

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