Platypus numbers recovering in Melbourne
Platypus populations in Melbourne's suburbs and urban fringe are showing signs of recovery, five years after being devastated by drought, the .
鈥淭he most recent survey, led by wildlife ecologist Josh Griffiths, found a 2.7-kilogram platypus in Jacksons Creek, Sunbury 鈥 Griffiths said the platypus was the biggest to be found in Melbourne's urban areas during a survey by the Melbourne Water Urban Platypus Program,鈥 the ABC said.
However, signs of recovery are tentative and in some areas numbers are still much lower than they were before the drought.
鈥淲erribee is still struggling a lot 鈥 some creeks they've disappeared from and they're not coming back," Griffiths told the ABC.
鈥淚n the late '90s there were surveys done where we would catch five, six or seven in survey; these days we might get one.鈥
Greens Senator wins defamation case
Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young has against the smutty 鈥渕en's magazine鈥 Zoo.
The magazine had photoshopped Hanson-Young's face onto a pornographic image to accompany a racist and sexist article jovially offering 鈥渉ouse the next boatload of asylum seekers in the Zoo office鈥 if the senator agreed to participate in a bikini or lingerie photoshoot.
Under the ruling the magazine's publisher, Bauer Media, will have to publish an apology on its website, which will read: 鈥淲e accept that the article was in poor taste. Senator Hanson-Young has made a significant contribution to asylum seeker policy in this country. We sincerely apologise for any hurt we caused.鈥
Hanson-Young told Fairfax Media on June 7: 鈥淵oung women need to see their female leaders taking a stand against sexism. My daughter needs to know I did.
鈥淲hether it is a smutty men's magazine or in pages of the daily newspapers, there is no place for the degradation of women and the right of women to have views or opinions 鈥 There comes a time when you have to draw a line in the sand and take a stand against sexism and bigotry.鈥
Norway divests from coal
Norway鈥檚 parliament voted n June 5 to sell its country's pension fund shares in companies that mine and burn coal. This will remove $8.8 billion invested in coal, the largest fossil fuel divestment ever.
The divestment followed a campaign that included a petition signed by almost 50,000 people, 350.org reported.
However, this decision does not affect Norway's huge oil and gas industry. While Norway is often praised for the high proportion of its domestic energy that is from renewable sources, North Sea oil and gas account for more than half the country's exports and 20% of GDP.
Emissions from oil and gas that Norway exports are counted as other countries' emissions. Norway is the world's third-largest gas exporter and fifth-largest oil exporter.
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