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Welcome to Hunter Gatherer online, home to our long running Monthly Newsletter.
The Ethinvest team and our clients regularly find informative articles and news that is worth sharing. We hope you enjoy reading and please feel free to use the share features to spread the news.


The 2026-27 budget and what to make of inflation
The Australian government entered this year’s federal budget with the confidence of a nation that had largely avoided recession, but not the anxiety of one that had escaped inflation. Treasurer Jim Chalmers delivered a spending plan framed around “resilience” and “restraint,” even as households faced rising mortgage repayments, stubborn grocery prices and the prospect of further interest-rate pain from the Reserve Bank of Australia. The budget attempted a difficult balancing
3 min read


With the Middle East conflict dragging on, the kick start to renewables makes more sense than ever
The global shift from fossil fuels to clean energy is usually framed as a slow, incremental process but the conflict in the Middle East is kick starting a transformational move to home-grown renewable energy and battery storage, with independent experts saying there is no going back. The war in Iran is redrawing the contours of the global energy system, confronting governments with a stark and immediate question: do you double down on fossil fuels or accelerate the shift to c
2 min read


The Goldman Prize selects its first all-female roster of winners in its 37-year history
Six female environmental activists from across the globe were awarded the 2026 Goldman Environmental Prize – known as the green Nobel Prize – in April, marking the first time in the award’s 37-year history that all regional winners were women.
3 min read


Two Indigenous solar projects receive funding to tackle diesel shortage concerns and reduce power bills
In the outback expanse of Australia’s Northern Territory, two remote Indigenous communities have received funding to take an unprecedented step toward energy independence, as they move to build locally owned solar farms and microgrids designed to reduce both costs and reliance on diesel fuel. Backed by $11 million in federal funding, the projects in Borroloola and Santa Teresa mark the first wholly Indigenous-owned initiatives of their kind to receive such support, a mileston
2 min read


A new collective is fighting for a sensible approach to managing Dingos
With news that at least six dingoes were euthanised on K'gari (formerly Fraser Island) after the death of a Canadian backpacker, a coalition of scientists, conservation advocates and Indigenous people – the Dingo Network – has formed to advocate for policy that ensures Australia’s dingoes thrive in protected areas. In January, after the death of 19-year-old Canadian backpacker Piper James, Queensland authorities euthanised members of the pack found near her body, igniting a f
2 min read
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