The Canopy

“Super confronting” study reveals extent of ocean waste drifting in our oceans

Written by Greenpeace Australia Pacific | Sunday, 16 October 2022

A new study by the CSIRO and University of Tasmania has revealed the staggering amounts of lost fishing gear left floating in our oceans, which includes 25 million pots and traps and 14 billion hooks. The gear was likely having deadly consequences for marine life, one of the study’s authors said.

Indigenous women from all over the world have learnt cultural burning practices from Australia as part of a unique firefighting program held in the United States. Two First Nations women from Queensland spent a fortnight camped in the Klamath Mountains with the Karuk people — one of the largest Indigenous tribes in California — who only recently gained back the right to practise cultural burning in the area.

And amid Australia’s breathtaking energy transition, investors have written off a half-a-billion-dollar investment in the country’s newest coal power station. 

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