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Australia is well positioned for space launches
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South Australia: Wombat with the zoomies goes viral
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Date Time
Viterra’s Port Lincoln and Thevenard grain ports not exempt from Bulk Wheat Code
The ACCC has determined not to exempt the services provided by South Australian grain handler Viterra at its Port Lincoln and Thevenard facilities from parts of the Port Terminal Access (Bulk Wheat) Code.
The decision means that Viterra will continue to be subject to the non-discrimination requirements of the Code at its Port Lincoln and Thevenard facilities, and must also provide access-related dispute resolution processes for exporters. Viterra will also continue to require ACCC approval for any changes made to its capacity allocation systems, and must publish certain information about expected capacity and bulk grain stocks held at these port terminals.
Stephanie Richards
July 19, 2021
The Whalers Way Orbital Launch Complex on the tip of the Eyre Peninsula. Photo: Southern Launch.
Three test rockets are set to be launched from South Australia within months, after the company behind the launchpad complex secured a licence from the Australian Space Agency.
Space industry company Southern Launch last week announced federal space minister Christian Porter had signed off on its launch facility licence, meaning it could now launch three test rockets from its Whalers Way Orbital Launch Complex on the Eyre Peninsula of South Australia in the “coming months”.
The complex is located about 25km southwest of Port Lincoln and will be used to host satellite launches into orbit around the Earth’s poles.
Here’s what kids can learn from sharks Rachel Ng © None MZ3408 EX 180208 08730.jpg
Marine biologist and conservationist Naomi Clark-Shen used to be petrified of the ocean. “From a very young age, I’ve been obsessed with animals,” she says. “But I was never that interested in marine life. I was scared of the dark murky areas that I couldn’t see. I had a big imagination and would psych myself out thinking about predators sharks and crocodiles coming to get me.”
When her parents would take the family on snorkeling holidays in Malaysia, Clark-Shen would stay in the shallow sandy areas. All that changed when, at age 14, she saw a documentary about sharks in Costa Rica. She was mesmerized. “I watched hundreds of them swimming elegantly through the water. There was something so tranquil about it. From that moment, I knew I wanted to work with sharks,” she says. “My fear of the ocean slipped. I just became curious.”
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