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environment
Summer season
Savage Summer
Tom Griffiths
8 January 2020
The Australian bushfire has its own fine-grained local languages
Essays & Reportage
Inflammatory exchanges
Jane Goodall
7 January 2020
Was the climate debate pushed off course by a misconceived strategy of persuasion?
Essays & Reportage
Professor of everything
Tom Griffiths
3 December 2019
George Seddon helped his readers see Australia from the inside
National Affairs
Send in the tanks
Peter Spearritt
29 November 2019
What’s the best way to make households more conscious of their water consumption?
National Affairs
If not now, when?
Sarah Perkins-Kirkpatrick
13 November 2019
Diary of a Climate Scientist
| Bushfires and climate change are undoubtedly linked, so it’s time to get serious
Books & Arts
Uneasy being Green
Shaun Crowe
1 November 2019
Can the Greens reconcile internal pressures, parliamentary influence and electoral appeal?
Books & Arts
The lost world of the mayaroo
Nancy Cushing
21 October 2019
Books
| By recovering the forgotten history of the long-haired rat, Tim Bonyhady has produced a book for our times
National Affairs
Is Adani still playing for time?
John Quiggin
6 September 2019
Native title is the latest casualty of the company’s coalmining plans. But will the project really proceed?
Essays & Reportage
Rolling thunder
Ben Stubbs
4 August 2019
Extract
| Maralinga combines the devastation of atomic testing and the green shoots of the future
Essays & Reportage
The radical legacy of Apollo
Tom Griffiths
21 July 2019
They went to the moon but discovered the Earth
Essays & Reportage
Fighting for the bight
Seumas Spark
25 May 2019
A Norwegian company says it can drill safely in the Great Australian Bight. Scientists disagree.
Correspondents
“Our house is burning”
David Hayes
24 May 2019
A young prophet of apocalypse invigorates Europe’s climate debate
National Affairs
Why has the Darling dried up?
David Lewis & John Langford
8 May 2019
“Watergate” is the tip of a much bigger scandal in the Murray–Darling’s northern basin
National Affairs
How much will it cost to deal with climate change?
John Quiggin
6 May 2019
The government’s latest figures show there’s at least one wrong answer — and the same mistakes have been made before
Recovered Lives
A slight bias towards eels and lizards
Emily Gallagher
8 March 2019
Ella McFadyen (1887–1976), writer and editor
Essays & Reportage
Climate change and the new work order
Frances Flanagan
28 February 2019
We won’t solve the biggest challenges if they’re not reflected in the work we do
National Affairs
Fixing the Murray-Darling Basin
David Lewis & John Langford
22 February 2019
Good science is vital to rescuing the Basin, but the SA royal commission pushes the argument too far
National Affairs
Opportunity knocks, at a cost
John Quiggin
13 February 2019
Regardless of what happens next, the economic logic of the Rocky Hill decision will eventually prevail
Essays & Reportage
The butterfly effect
Jo Chandler
1 February 2019
Stalking a giant in Papua New Guinea’s ranges
National Affairs
Paris? We’ll always have Kyoto
Rodney Tiffen
25 January 2019
Australia’s climate “canter” relies not just on “carry-over credits” but also on the Coalition’s intransigence at the original talks
National Affairs
Another Adani alarm
John Quiggin
30 November 2018
If this isn’t the latest in a series of false alarms, then Labor might finally be forced to disown the project
National Affairs
“We are not in the aviation business, we are in the mobility business”
Melissa Sweet
12 November 2018
Could there be such a thing as a healthy airport?
International
Science under siege
Lesley Russell
5 October 2018
Donald Trump has launched an all-fronts attack on science and environmental protection
National Affairs
On the National Energy Guarantee, it’s Libs versus Libs (and Nats)
Tim Colebatch
6 August 2018
If the government offers Labor a deal it can accept, it will be rejected by the Coalition’s backbench. It’s hard to escape the obvious conclusion
National Affairs
The law of large numbers
James Murphy
2 July 2018
How much does it cost to stop a freeway?
National Affairs
“Wealthy, diversified and resilient.” Where’s the risk in that?
Saul Eslake
28 May 2018
Revoking Adani’s environmental approvals won’t create “sovereign risk” (and nor would most other government decisions)
National Affairs
Will Batman’s voters take no for an answer?
Kerry Ryan
8 March 2018
The Sunshine State continues to make its mark in Melbourne’s closely watched federal by-election
From the archive
How Harold Holt was lost
Tom Griffiths
17 December 2017
A chance encounter anticipated the shocking disappearance of a prime minister fifty years ago
National Affairs
Green in judgement
Tony Blackshield
26 October 2017
What does the High Court’s decision in the Lapoinya Forest case tell us about its evolving attitude to free speech?
Essays & Reportage
Tearing down and building up
Andrea Gaynor & Tom Griffiths
18 July 2017
Extract
| How Geoffrey Bolton’s environmental history made a difference
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