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National Construction Week

National Construction Week gets underway at the Showground on Tuesday, October 12, but preparations have already begun. Follow it's progress at: http://www.epic-lincolnshire.org/national-construction-week/

Princess Anne to Headline Lincolnshire Show

HRH Princess Anne will be guest of honour for this year’s county show in June - the 125th in the history of the Lincolnshire Agricultural Society.


During her visit, the Princess will officially open the EPIC Project – the £6m flagship eco-events centre which was recently completed on the 200 acre Grange de Lings showground site.

Capable of accommodating 1,900 people, it’s the largest purpose-built eco-events centre in the East Midlands, showcasing environmental technologies to educate communities and business and capable of hosting a wide variety of conferences, balls and exhibitions.

The announcement of the Royal visit was made by Buckingham Palace this weekend, and has been welcomed by Lincolnshire Agricultural Society’s president Lord Yarborough.

“It’s a great honour and a fantastic opportunity to show some of the great things happening in the county,” he said.

This year’s show will be taking place on Wednesday 24th and Thursday 25th June and the Princess will be visiting on the second day, Thursday 25th.

The 125th anniversary of the show will be reflected in special events and exhibitions, including vintage machinery. Local children have been taking part in a Schools Challenge, and will be showcasing their entries at the Show.

Other attractions include pig racing and Nobby the famous dancing sheep in the Countryside area; in the Tastes of Lincolnshire Food Court, there are demonstrations from TV Chef Rachel Green. Elsewhere, there are motorcycle stuntmen and jousting knights; there’s the equestrian village, the horticultural zone, the sports zone and over 600 trade stands selling everything from frying pans to fashion.

Sustainable Living Exhibition: The Place for Green Businesses to be Seen

This event at the EPIC Centre on Wednesday 4th March will see a gathering of minds to build a sustainable future - a free day of continuous professional development workshops, exhibitors and the sharing good practice. The Sustainable Schools Showcase (SSS) will involve over 100 exhibitors and 20 talks, which will appeal to many school staff. Read more on the page opposite.

Official figures mask true state of environment

THE rate of land clearing is much higher than Australia's environmental accounting methods may suggest, a study by researchers at the University of Queensland shows.

It says traditional bookkeeping methods are misleading because they usually record positive and negative environmental outcomes separately, and that lack of context means big net losses of forested land can be wrongly reported as a win for conservation.

Gov't should implement Japanese-version of Green New Deal program

The new year has started amid a global recession, making many people hesitant to even say, "A happy New Year." The biggest problem is the economy. Frankly speaking, the government should take the initiative to improve the situation.

Oregonians foresee future water shortages

Oregon may be known for the rain that feeds its rivers, but Oregonians are pessimistic there will be enough water to go around as the state's population grows and climate change possibly makes summers even drier.

That was the take-home message from five "Water Roundtables" held throughout the state in September and October as an initial step toward developing a strategy for how the state will meet rising demand on its limited water supplies. Two-thirds of those surveyed at the roundtables -- held in cities from the rain-drenched coast to the high eastern deserts -- do not think that Oregon in 2028 will have enough water to cover all its needs, including the needs of wildlife.

Coping With Climate

Developing nations will bear the brunt of global warming. Public-private partnerships can help.

Even if the world were to take steps to quickly and dramatically limit greenhouse-gas emissions, the levels already in the atmosphere will continue to alter our climate in the coming decades. As the focus of the debate on global warming shifts to assessing the impact of rises in temperature and coping with their effects, it has become increasingly clear that the developing world will face some of the greatest challenges. Dealing with this problem will require broad partnerships between public, private and nonprofit organizations.

Call for ideas on living in a warming world; Competition asks designers to 'climate-proof" Bay Area

The impacts of climate change are a hot topic among scientists and environmental activists. Now the Bay Conservation and Development Commission wants to hear from another perspective: the design community.

The state agency is preparing to launch a $125,000 competition that will invite architects, planners and engineers to bring innovative proposals "to climate-proof the Bay Area," in the words of the competition outline.

Storms brew in harshest climate

Climate change, whaling, wild weather and water were the environmental issues dominating headlines this year.
Australia mourned the loss of a conservation giant, University of Canberra freshwater ecologist and self-described political ''shit stirrer'' Peter Cullen, who died in March. His funeral service was attended by more than 900 people, who came to Canberra from all over Australia to pay their respects to a courageous, outspoken champion of national water reform.

It's 'attack of the slime' as jellyfish jeopardize the Earth's oceans

It has been dubbed the "rise of slime." Massive swarms of jellyfish are blooming from the tropics to the Arctic, from Peru to Namibia to the Black Sea to Japan, closing beaches and wiping out fish, either by devouring their eggs and larvae, or out-competing them for food.
To draw attention to the spread of "jellytoriums," the National Science Foundation in the U.S. has produced a report documenting that the most severe damage is to fish: In the Sea of Japan, for example, schools of Nomurai jellyfish - 500 million strong and each more than two metres in diameter - are clogging fishing nets, killing fish and accounting for at least $20-million in losses.

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