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Attenborough's new doco is bringing audiences to tears. One voice has gone completely silent in its wake
Attenborough's new doco is bringing audiences to tears. One voice has gone completely silent in its wake

Sydney Morning Herald

timea day ago

  • Entertainment
  • Sydney Morning Herald

Attenborough's new doco is bringing audiences to tears. One voice has gone completely silent in its wake

In the darkness of the cinema during screenings of Sir David Attenborough's new film, Ocean, it is not uncommon to hear members of the audience weep for what they have lost, or more specifically, what has been taken from them as they looked elsewhere. At 99, Attenborough's voice is still strong, and his capacity to move people with revelations of the astonishing world around them is undiminished. Now there is growing evidence that of the many tens of documentaries he has presented or created over his career, Ocean is having the most immediate impact of them all. 'I believe Ocean will prove to be Sir David's masterpiece,' says Andrew Forrest, the billionaire Fortescue Metals Group chairman, whose Minderoo Pictures provided almost half the film's funding, and who recently attended its world premiere in London last month with Attenborough and King Charles. The film (its full title is Ocean with David Attenborough) focuses on the wonder of our seas, and their centrality to life on earth, and reveals how rapidly they are being pillaged and destroyed by industrial fishing. Of all Attenborough's films, it is his most political. 'We have drained the life from our ocean. Now we are almost out of time,' he says at one point. One particular sequence in the film appears to having a profound impact not only on audiences, but on politicians and policymakers. Having established the extraordinary beauty and complexity of life in the shallow waters of the world's continental shelves, the camera follows the chains of a bottom trawling net to the ocean floor. In the blue-green murk, it is a scene from a horror movie. 'From the surface you would have no idea that this was happening,' says Attenborough in the narration. 'It has remained hidden from view, until now.'

Attenborough's new doco is bringing audiences to tears. One voice has gone completely silent in its wake
Attenborough's new doco is bringing audiences to tears. One voice has gone completely silent in its wake

The Age

timea day ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Age

Attenborough's new doco is bringing audiences to tears. One voice has gone completely silent in its wake

In the darkness of the cinema during screenings of Sir David Attenborough's new film, Ocean, it is not uncommon to hear members of the audience weep for what they have lost, or more specifically, what has been taken from them as they looked elsewhere. At 99, Attenborough's voice is still strong, and his capacity to move people with revelations of the astonishing world around them is undiminished. Now there is growing evidence that of the many tens of documentaries he has presented or created over his career, Ocean is having the most immediate impact of them all. 'I believe Ocean will prove to be Sir David's masterpiece,' says Andrew Forrest, the billionaire Fortescue Metals Group chairman, whose Minderoo Pictures provided almost half the film's funding, and who recently attended its world premiere in London last month with Attenborough and King Charles. The film (its full title is Ocean with David Attenborough) focuses on the wonder of our seas, and their centrality to life on earth, and reveals how rapidly they are being pillaged and destroyed by industrial fishing. Of all Attenborough's films, it is his most political. 'We have drained the life from our ocean. Now we are almost out of time,' he says at one point. One particular sequence in the film appears to having a profound impact not only on audiences, but on politicians and policymakers. Having established the extraordinary beauty and complexity of life in the shallow waters of the world's continental shelves, the camera follows the chains of a bottom trawling net to the ocean floor. In the blue-green murk, it is a scene from a horror movie. 'From the surface you would have no idea that this was happening,' says Attenborough in the narration. 'It has remained hidden from view, until now.'

The Pilbara is at risk of becoming a ‘wasteland'. Could green iron help?
The Pilbara is at risk of becoming a ‘wasteland'. Could green iron help?

Sydney Morning Herald

time25-05-2025

  • Business
  • Sydney Morning Herald

The Pilbara is at risk of becoming a ‘wasteland'. Could green iron help?

Australia's vast Pilbara iron ore industry has the potential to reinvent itself into a lucrative 'green iron' export powerhouse, research suggests, amid warnings that China's hunt for higher-quality ore to make cleaner steel may hasten the mining province's demise. Andrew Forrest, the billionaire chairman of Western Australia's third-largest iron ore shipper, Fortescue Metals Group, declared last week that Chinese steel mills' shift away from traditional blast furnaces to less-polluting technologies threatened to turn the iron ore mining hub into a 'wasteland'. 'They're looking straight into a future that may or may not include WA,' Forrest told a mining summit in Perth. Iron ore – the raw material needed to manufacture steel – is Australia's biggest export commodity, raking in more than $100 billion in export revenue a year, and China is the world's biggest importer. But as Australia's iron ore giants face difficulties maintaining the quality of their supplies, there are fears demand could shrink as Chinese steel mills turn to less-emitting processes that use electricity instead of coal and require higher grades of iron ore with fewer impurities. Rod Sims, the long-serving former chair of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, said China's effort to clean up its polluting steel industry posed a threat but also a potentially enormous opportunity for Australia, which he said was 'superbly well positioned' to pivot to green iron manufacturing. 'Green iron is the next great chapter in Australia's export story,' Sims said. 'As the world decarbonises, our fossil fuel exports will inevitably decline – but by using our unparalleled renewable energy resources to make green iron, we can replace those exports with high value, zero carbon products that the world will need.' One way to produce green iron involves the use of green hydrogen – hydrogen produced using renewable energy to split water into hydrogen and oxygen – as a substitute for coal in the steel-making process to ensure the end product is emissions-free.

The Pilbara is at risk of becoming a ‘wasteland'. Could green iron help?
The Pilbara is at risk of becoming a ‘wasteland'. Could green iron help?

The Age

time25-05-2025

  • Business
  • The Age

The Pilbara is at risk of becoming a ‘wasteland'. Could green iron help?

Australia's vast Pilbara iron ore industry has the potential to reinvent itself into a lucrative 'green iron' export powerhouse, research suggests, amid warnings that China's hunt for higher-quality ore to make cleaner steel may hasten the mining province's demise. Andrew Forrest, the billionaire chairman of Western Australia's third-largest iron ore shipper, Fortescue Metals Group, declared last week that Chinese steel mills' shift away from traditional blast furnaces to less-polluting technologies threatened to turn the iron ore mining hub into a 'wasteland'. 'They're looking straight into a future that may or may not include WA,' Forrest told a mining summit in Perth. Iron ore – the raw material needed to manufacture steel – is Australia's biggest export commodity, raking in more than $100 billion in export revenue a year, and China is the world's biggest importer. But as Australia's iron ore giants face difficulties maintaining the quality of their supplies, there are fears demand could shrink as Chinese steel mills turn to less-emitting processes that use electricity instead of coal and require higher grades of iron ore with fewer impurities. Rod Sims, the long-serving former chair of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, said China's effort to clean up its polluting steel industry posed a threat but also a potentially enormous opportunity for Australia, which he said was 'superbly well positioned' to pivot to green iron manufacturing. 'Green iron is the next great chapter in Australia's export story,' Sims said. 'As the world decarbonises, our fossil fuel exports will inevitably decline – but by using our unparalleled renewable energy resources to make green iron, we can replace those exports with high value, zero carbon products that the world will need.' One way to produce green iron involves the use of green hydrogen – hydrogen produced using renewable energy to split water into hydrogen and oxygen – as a substitute for coal in the steel-making process to ensure the end product is emissions-free.

Denmark Diamonds' Emma-Lee Dellar named Football West's female Coach of the Year
Denmark Diamonds' Emma-Lee Dellar named Football West's female Coach of the Year

West Australian

time25-05-2025

  • Sport
  • West Australian

Denmark Diamonds' Emma-Lee Dellar named Football West's female Coach of the Year

Denmark Diamonds coach Emma-Lee Dellar has been named Football West's Commbank Coach of the Year for 2025 . Dellar was delighted to receive her award during Female Football Week at the Sam Kerr Football Centre in Perth on May 9. She said it was humbling to work with a group of women who 'took camaraderie to the next level'. 'I'm actually super privileged to be able to do it,' she said. 'I get so much out of it, seeing players progress and being part of the community.' When she's not pitch-side, she is the principal geophysicist for the Fortescue Metals Group. Soccer has been her first love, and her most recent, but she played Gaelic football while living in Ireland and also represented Australia at gridiron — the American game. She played soccer as a child in the Pilbara and in the United States where she spent a year of high school. However, her playing career ended after suffering a cruciate ligament injury playing at Curtin University, where she was studying geophysics. After a break, she decided the time was right to transition into coaching. She has since completed her foundation level certificates and said she loved embracing the challenge of coaching a group of women in a country town. 'It's great to see people bonding through sport,' she said. 'It gets women engaged in the community, they are able to express themselves physically and it's great for everyone's mental health. 'We have a super profile in the town — a town of 6000 people supporting four women's soccer teams is extraordinary.' Known as Dells to the players, her coaching is not about systems and tactics. 'For me, it's about setting the scene and delivering philosophies,' she said. 'A coach can make you feel included or excluded and it's that sense of inclusion that is most important to me.'

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