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STAY SOLVENT, SANE AND SUSTAINABLE AND BEAT THE CREDIT CRUNCH

On the 19th of September the Transition Lincoln group and the Lincoln volunteer centre organised a skills share event.  This was all about encouraging reskilling in Lincoln.  There were a wide variety of workshops, stalls and demonstrations on skills such as baking bread, making jams, jellies and preserves, growing your own food and lots more. 

The following photos give a flavour of the event.....    

Gill from WRAP talking about composting

          

People gathering round to find out about patchwork.

Spinning wool

Chatting about knitting

Finding out more about basic bike maintenance with Vincet, Bike IT officer from Sustrans

The skills share event was all about reskilling the people of Lincoln to be able to adapt to peak oil and climate change. Following this event the transition Lincoln group would like to help coordinate skills share courses throughout the city.  If you have a skill you would like to share or if you would be interested to learn more about crochet, knitting or growing your own fruit and veg contact Linda Wells to find out how you can go about this.

If you would be interested in taking part in the skills share event next year please contact Linda.


Polarstern expedition: Autonomous underwater vehicle dives under the Arctic ice
The Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research in the Helmholtz Association for the first time sent its Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV) on an under-ice mission at about 79° North. The four-metre-long, torpedo shaped underwater vehicle was deployed from the research icebreaker Polarstern under heavy pack ice. The vehicle was subsequently recovered by helicopter.

Best hope for saving Arctic sea ice is cutting soot emissions, say researchers
Soot from the burning of fossil fuels and solid biofuels contributes far more to global warming than has been thought, according to a new study. But, unlike carbon dioxide, soot lingers only a few weeks in the atmosphere, so cutting emissions could have a significant and rapid impact on the climate. Controlling it may be the only option for saving the Arctic sea ice before it all melts.

Marine biodiversity strongly linked to ocean temperature
Scientists have mapped and analyzed global biodiversity patterns for over 11,000 marine species ranging from tiny zooplankton to sharks and whales.

Marine phytoplankton declining: Striking global changes at the base of the marine food web linked to...
A new article reveals for the first time that microscopic marine algae known as phytoplankton have been declining globally over the 20th century. Phytoplankton forms the basis of the marine food chain and sustains diverse assemblages of species ranging from tiny zooplankton to large marine mammals, seabirds, and fish.

Government waste strategy must tackle recycling
Governments waste review must raise recycling targets

UK energy statistics released
UK energy use down but due to recession not action

Community-scale renewable energy generation 'vital'

BP 'under pressure'

Boat powered by renewable energy launched on Med

Energy statement claims 80% emissions cut is 'achievable'

Offshore renewable energy 'could create 5,000 Scottish jobs'

Renewable energy device receives funding

Galįpagos Islands taken off threat list
A United Nations panel has voted to remove Ecuador's Galįpagos Islands from its list of endangered sites

Cheetahs to return to India
Eighteen cheetahs to be imported from Iran, Namibia and South Africa more than 60 years after the species was hunted to extinctionThe cheetah is to return to India, more than 60 years after the last three were shot dead by hunters on the subcontinent.Indian minister for the environment and forests,

Saving the great yellow bumblebee
Ben Darvill and Bob Dawson of the Bumblebee Conservation Trust on the importance of conserving Britain's declining bumblebee population

Country diary: Shetland
The fleeting never-quite-dark nights of the Simmer Dim are some weeks past, but after a beautiful sun-filled day the light still lingers long after the sun has set. Now, at 1.30 in the morning, the sky already glows peach pink anticipating the sunrise in a few hours' time. The hills with their undul

Oil industry safety record blown open
National Wildlife Federation says catalogue of oil industry accidents proves BP disaster in Gulf of Mexico is not a one-offThe oil industry has been responsible for thousands of fires, explosions, and leaks over the last decade, killing dozens of people and destroying wildlife and the environment ac

World's oldest living creatures found in Scottish field
Two colonies of age-old and endangered tadpole shrimps discovered alive and well near Solway coastA field near Gretna in Dumfriesshire might not be an obvious place to find the world's oldest living creatures, but a team of scientists has done just that.Two colonies of a prehistoric shrimp that evol

All set for synthetic silk?
Synthetic silks have a great future - if only scientists can unlock the chemistry of natural silkIt's tougher than Kevlar and stronger than steel, and no one really knows how to make it. Except spiders of course. And silkworms. Scientists have been trying to mimic the remarkable properties of natura

Shell could pursue BP for Gulf damages
Shell refuses to rule out action against BP over losses caused by the deepwater drilling ban in the Gulf of MexicoShell today refused to rule out pursuing damages claims against BP and other companies involved in the Gulf of Mexico disaster.The company took a $56m (£36m) hit after it was forced to s
Environmental News provided by EarthWire UK

 
 
 
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