Feed environment-the-guardian

Link http://feeds.theguardian.com/
Feed http://feeds.theguardian.com/theguardian/environment/rss
Updated 2025-11-05 14:31
Intensive livestock farms fail to declare climate impacts in ‘emissions scandal’
Local councils are giving the green light to large-scale pig and poultry farms with patchy or non-existent climate dataPlans for intensive livestock megafarms" are omitting crucial climate impacts, it can be revealed.Campaigners last year celebrated a beginning of the end" to polluting factory farming, after the landmark Finch supreme court ruling on a Surrey oil well confirmed that applications for major developments should consider all significant direct and indirect greenhouse gas emissions. Continue reading...
California man who survived 20 days in snowy wilderness says it was walk or die
Ron Dailey, who got lost on hunting trip in Sierra national forest, resolved to walk to safety after his food ran outA hunter who spent nearly three weeks lost in the snowy California wilderness says he managed to get rescued after discerning you either try to walk out or you're going to sit here and die".The remarkable story of survival centers on Ron Dailey, whom authorities say went missing in the Sierra national forest in Fresno county after taking a solo hunting trip there on 13 October. Continue reading...
Celebrity chefs urge Britons to ‘bang in some beans’ to boost legume consumption
Jamie Oliver, Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall and major supermarkets want to double amount of beans Britons eat
Just Stop Oil protesters convicted after being denied right to state climate facts
Lawyers call for clarity over law as six are found guilty while being stopped from using defence used by fellow activistsSix environmental protesters were convicted after they were denied the ability to put a reasonable excuse" defence or climate facts before the jury, despite these being afforded to other activists acquitted for taking part in the same demonstration.After an eight-day trial at Southwark crown court in London, the six Just Stop Oil (JSO) activists were found guilty of public nuisance, which carries a maximum 10-year sentence, for climbing gantries on the M25 in 2022 to demand an end to new fossil fuel projects. They will be sentenced next month. Continue reading...
Academics say their net zero costing is being ‘misrepresented’ after Nationals repeat $9tn claim
Researchers behind report cited by some in the Coalition say their work is based on various assumptions - largely involving cost to overseas customers, not Australians
New set of forest towns to be built between Oxford and Cambridge
Communities in the middle of new national forest to show how housebuilding can be delivered alongside natureA new set of forest towns will be built in the area between Oxford and Cambridge, nestled in the middle of a new national forest.After facing anger from nature groups over the deregulation in the upcoming planning bill, ministers are trying to demonstrate that mass housebuilding can be delivered in conjunction with new nature. The government has promised to plant millions of trees to boost England's nature. Continue reading...
Reeves considers cut to green levies in effort to reduce cost of energy bills
Exclusive: Chancellor hopes to save up to 170 from average bill but industry insiders say move would be disastrous'
Munich's surfers left stunned after famed river wave vanishes
Eisbach wave in the Bavarian city had been a surfing magnet for decades but disappeared after a recent cleanupThe mother of all river waves" in a German canal that is often credited as the birthplace of freshwater surfing has mysteriously disappeared after decades of flowing smoothly, leaving enthusiasts dumbfounded.The famous stationary wave in the southern city of Munich is known as the Eisbach, or ice brook", for its frigid temperatures, and has become a pilgrimage site for surfers worldwide. Continue reading...
Galápagos had no native amphibians. Then it was invaded by hundreds of thousands of frogs
Scientists are only beginning to grasp the scale of the issue and understand what impact the tree frogs may have on the islands' rare wildlifeOn the way to her office at the Charles Darwin research station, biologist Miriam San Jose crouches down near a shallow pond shrouded by vegetation and reaches deep into the foliage, pulling out a small green plastic box recorder.She left it there overnight to capture the infamous croaks of a Fowler's snouted treefrog (Scinax quinquefasciatus), known to Galapagos scientists as an invasive threat, with repercussions researchers are only beginning to grasp. Continue reading...
Third of British farmers made no profit in past year, report finds
Only 14% of farmers surveyed for Farmdex report had 10% or more profit margin amid drop in subsidies since BrexitA third of British farmers are making a loss or breaking even as they struggle with the loss of subsidies and looming inheritance tax changes, a report on post-Brexit farming has found.Only 14% of farmers surveyed for McCain Foods' inaugural Farmdex report said they made 10% or more profit in the past year. In fact, many are making no profit at all, with 35% of the farmers reporting making a loss or breaking even. Continue reading...
Is that a goose on your head? Earth’s most spectacular inhabitants – in pictures
From sharks to rays, from island cliffs to the tribes of Africa's Omo Valley, Cristina Mittermeier's show A Greater Wisdom celebrates the beauty of our planet - and highlights the biggest threats it faces Continue reading...
‘Not over’: Liberal MPs fearing calamity in city electorates launch rearguard action to salvage net zero policy
Emissions policy brawl has become major threat to Sussan Ley's leadership ahead of key meeting at end of November
Ofwat letting water firms charge twice to tackle sewage, court to hear
River Action bringing legal action against water regulator over who should foot bill for firms' past failures to investOfwat is unlawfully allowing water companies to charge customers twice to fund more than 100bn of investment to reduce sewage pollution, campaigners will allege in court on Tuesday.Lawyers for River Action say the bill increases being allowed by Ofwat - which amount to an average of 123 a year per household - mean customers will be paying again for improvements to achieve environmental compliance that should have been funded from their previous bills. Continue reading...
Almost 120 flying foxes hospitalised after giant hail smashes Queensland colony
Rescued bats taken to RSPCA wildlife hospital in Brisbane's south-west with injuries including faces that were smashed and broken wings'
‘Serious gaps’ in Labor’s environment laws undermine attempt to fix broken system, integrity experts say
Pressure mounts on federal government to rethink controversial national interest' exemption for projects
The ground is swallowing homes in this Native village in Alaska. Residents have no choice but to move
The climate crisis is causing the permafrost to melt in Alaska, forcing the village of Nunapitchuk to relocateChildren splash gleefully in the river as adults cast fishing lines or head into the Alaska tundra to hunt. It's a scene that has characterized summer days for centuries among the Yup'ik people who have long lived in south-western Alaska, where the village of Nunapitchuk stands. But, with temperatures in Alaska warming nearly four times faster than most parts of the globe, that way of life is about to change.Homes in Nunapitchuk have been sinking into the permafrost, and residents have decided their only choice is to move the entire village to higher ground. Continue reading...
Only 3% of international climate aid going to transitioning communities: ‘This is absurd’
New report on funding to slash carbon emissions finds startlingly low engagement with the people affectedLess than 3% of international aid to slash carbon emissions is supporting a just transition" for workers and communities away from polluting industries, according to a new report.Released one week before the start of major United Nations climate negotiations in Belem, Brazil, the analysis from the climate and development non-profit ActionAid warns that the world's response to the climate crisis risks deepening inequality rather than addressing it. Continue reading...
Littleproud says the world is ‘re-pivoting’ on net zero commitments – but is that just spin? | Temperature Check
The Nationals argue the 2050 emissions target is already causing financial pain and the rest of the world is walking away from it. Neither of these things is true
Australians to get at least three hours a day of free solar power - even if they don’t have solar panels
Labor announces solar sharer' program for households in NSW, south-east Queensland and South Australia
Coalition on brink of abandoning net zero emissions pledge as Ley under pressure to side with Nationals
Decision to abandon policy could trigger revolt from moderate Liberals who are open to breaking Coalition if net zero not kept in some form
Massive crocodile taken to Steve Irwin’s Australia Zoo despite traditional owners’ anger over removal
Old Faithful, measuring more than 4 metres, rehomed to Sunshine Coast facility after removal from far north Queensland waterhole
Exxon funded thinktanks to spread climate denial in Latin America, documents reveal
Texas-based fossil fuel company financed Atlas Network in attempt to derail UN-led climate treaty processExxon funded rightwing thinktanks to spread climate change denial across Latin America, according to hundreds of previously unpublished documents that reveal a coordinated campaign to make the global south less inclined" to support the UN-led climate treaty process.The documents, which include copies of the actual cheques Exxon sent, consist of internal documents and years of correspondence between the Texas-based fossil fuel company and Atlas Network, a US-based coalition of more than 500 free-market thinktanks and other partners worldwide. Continue reading...
Rare white Iberian lynx captured on film in Spain by amateur photographer
Researchers to investigate whether environmental factors may have affected female animal's pigmentationAn amateur photographer in southern Spain has captured unprecedented images of a white Iberian lynx, prompting researchers to investigate whether environmental factors could be at play as wildlife watchers revelled in the rare sighting.Angel Hidalgo published the images on social media, describing the singular animal as the white ghost of the Mediterranean forest". Continue reading...
Sadiq Khan calls on Reeves to bring ‘authentic’ Labour budget that boosts green investment
London mayor says government should stay true to its beliefs and face down those who claim net zero adds to cost of livingKeir Starmer's government has shown a lack of confidence that it has the answers to the country's problems, the mayor of London has said, as he called on the chancellor to back green investment in this month's budget.Speaking on the eve of a summit of world mayors in Rio de Janeiro, Sadiq Khan said the Treasury should be more supportive of the energy secretary, Ed Miliband, in his pursuit of the government's target of an 81% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2035. Continue reading...
Hiking with the wildlife author who studies Yosemite’s high peaks: ‘These animals are equal to us’
Inspired by childhood encyclopedias and Jane Goodall, Beth Pratt writes about the more than 150 species in the national park - and transports readers to a rarefied worldA shrill call was followed by a flash of movement through a pile of boulders on a high country slope in Yosemite national park. Hello, Sophie!" Beth Pratt responded to the round, feisty pika who had briefly emerged to pose defiantly in the sun.Pratt, a conservation leader and wildlife advocate, has spent more than a decade observing the tiny mammals and the other inhabitants of these serene granite domes and the alpine meadows they overlook, which gleamed gold on a crisp afternoon in mid-October. Continue reading...
Forget Jomo, gezellig and hygge – this winter, let’s get a grip and go out | Emma Beddington
The dark nights are here and staying in is more appealing than ever. But there's a very real cost to not venturing outSince the clocks changed, a damp, dark blanket settles over York from about 5pm - and it's brilliant; the perfect excuse to stay in. I love every quiet corner of home: my armchair, angled for a perfect view of bird goings-on and bleak skies outside; my marshmallowy bed; the sofa, stacked with blankets; the kitchen (I don't cook, but it's where snacks live). What could be nicer than sinking into the stifling embrace of multiple heated throws as a jacket potato crisps up in the oven and I succumb to a smorgasbord of good winter telly? Why would I ever move?Me and everyone else. Right? We're sleepmaxxing and soup-making in our slippers, sparking up fairy lights and enthusiastically appropriating hygge and gezellig (Dutch for cosy). We're sharing memes on the thrill of someone else cancelling social plans before we're forced to and proclaiming our Jomo. It's natural to retreat in winter: we're animals. But it's not just a seasonal phenomenon now, and I'm conscious I need, and maybe you also need, to get a grip and go out. Continue reading...
UK charging industry could face £100m bill under business rate changes
Industry bodies say proposals will force site closures, slow investment and cost drivers up to 300 a year moreThe UK charging industry has said it could face a 100m bill as the government considers making public charger operators pay business rates for the first time, at a time when slower-than-expected electric car sales have put pressure on the sector.ChargeUK, an industry body, said that its estimates suggest that operators will have to pay business rates on as many as 64,000 parking bays beside chargers which have not, up to now, been liable for the taxes. The lobby group said the change could add as much as 300 to the annual charging bill for some people if the cost is passed on to the customer. Continue reading...
Sussan Ley under pressure as Nationals formally scrap net zero target
David Littleproud says he informed the Liberal leader days ago of the policy position his party was considering
‘What are they going to do, chase someone up?’ Victorian rock climbers scorn ban on Mount Arapiles Indigenous sites
State park contains rock art dating back at least 3,000 years and tens of thousands of artefacts
Decision to scrap net zero commitment shows Nationals ‘profoundly out of touch’, critics say – as it happened
This blog is now closed
Australia must put politics aside and pass nature laws that benefit the economy and the environment. We owe it to our kids | Zoe Daniel
There's no such thing as a perfect legislative solution. It's about finding one that's workable - for the community, for the economy and for natureVictoria's Healesville Sanctuary is helping to protect and restore the critically endangered orange-bellied parrot which is predicted to be extinct within five years.With only 50 known to be left in the wild, a major breeding program aims to release up to 20 pairs of the migratory birds annually.Sign up for a weekly email featuring our best reads Continue reading...
Britain’s canals and rivers face lack of funds amid climate pressures, campaigners warn
Many waterways vulnerable to breaches and closures and face mounting maintenance costs, charity saysBritain's network of canals and rivers is under strain from funding shortfalls and growing climate pressures, campaigners warn.Three-quarters of the country's waterways face financial peril, according to the Inland Waterways Association (IWA), an independent charity advocating for Britain's canals and rivers, as the country braces for heavier winter rainfall and intensifying summer droughts. Continue reading...
World leaders, remember that future generations will judge you. At Cop30, you can define how | Gordon Brown
Keir Starmer is taking the lead on tackling the climate crisis. With the US backing away, now is the moment when other nations must step upWith the once-familiar pillars of the old world order crumbling and the US stepping away from action on climate crisis, it falls to others to assume global environmental leadership. Those leaders who understand the urgency should seize the opportunity afforded by Brazil hosting Cop30 this month to build a coalition of committed countries determined to turn back the climate deniers.Many now see China - the most successful manufacturer of solar, wind, battery and electric vehicle technologies - as the global low-carbon powerhouse. But its national emission goals, recently submitted to the UN, are underwhelming and it is unclear whether China is willing to take up the mantle of climate leadership. Continue reading...
Gumnuts, baby! How two abseiling horticulturalists rescued specimens from an endangered tree
The threatened Jillaga Ash (Eucalyptus stenostoma) was spotted 90m down a cliff in Wadbilliga national park, in southern New South Wales
No high-level US representatives will go to UN climate talks, Trump officials say
Decision to stay away from Cop30 meeting in Brazil underscores administration's hostility to climate actionThe Trump administration has confirmed that no high-level representatives will be sent by the US to upcoming UN climate talks in Brazil, underscoring the administration's hostile stance towards action on the climate crisis.The US has always sent delegations of various sizes to UN climate summits over the past three decades, even during periods under George W Bush and in Donald Trump's first term, where there was scant desire to address the global heating crisis. Continue reading...
I tried lab-grown chocolate. Could it be the future of Halloween?
It could eventually cut down on the production of traditional chocolate, which degrades soil and requires much fertilizer and pesticides
Three Just Stop Oil activists cleared over Stonehenge protest
Trio argued orange powder protest day before 2024 solstice was justified because of focus on climate emergencyThree Just Stop Oil protesters have been cleared over a protest at Stonehenge during which orange powder was sprayed on to the prehistoric circle.Rajan Naidu, 74, Niamh Lynch, 23, and Luke Watson, 36, targeted Stonehenge the day before last year's summer solstice. Continue reading...
Heavy rain floods streets in New York City – video
At least two people died on Thursday in flooded basements after record rainfall in parts of New York City that also deluged some streets and subway stations. Preliminary reports showed 45.7mm (1.8in) of rain fell in Central Park, which exceeded its record of 41.7mm set in 1917, the National Weather Service said. LaGuardia airport recorded 50mm of rain, which broke the hub's 1955 record of 30mm
Harrison Ford says Trump’s assault on climate policy ‘scares the shit out of me’
Indiana Jones star calls US president one of history's greatest criminals for attacks on science and boosting of fossil fuelsHarrison Ford has said that Donald Trump's assault upon measures to address the climate crisis scares the shit out of me" and makes the US president among the worst criminals in history.In a blistering attack upon the president, Ford told the Guardian that Trump doesn't have any policies, he has whims. It scares the shit out of me. The ignorance, the hubris, the lies, the perfidy. [Trump] knows better, but he's an instrument of the status quo and he's making money, hand over fist, while the world goes to hell in a handbasket." Continue reading...
Week in wildlife: a tiger in a tube, migrating crabs and busy Highland beavers
The best of this week's wildlife photographs from around the world Continue reading...
Weather tracker: Hurricane Melissa leaves trail of destruction across Caribbean
Category 5 storm is most powerful to strike Jamaica and has caused death and destruction in Cuba and HaitiHurricane Melissa has wreaked havoc across parts of the Caribbean in recent days, after first making landfall in Jamaica on Tuesday night as a category 5 storm - the highest strength. This was the most powerful storm to strike the island nation, packing winds of up to 185mph at its peak.Western parts of Jamaica were worst hit, with 90% of homes in the town of Black River losing their roof or being destroyed entirely. Roughly three-quarters of the country lost electricity, with at least 19 people known to have lost their lives at the time of publication. The cleanup operation was hampered by thunderstorms even after Melissa cleared to the north. The hurricane continued northwards, but was a slightly weakened category 3 storm by the time it made landfall in Cuba. Nonetheless, the storm continued to bring winds of up to 120mph and torrential rains. Continue reading...
BoM says October will be hottest ever for Queensland and NT as heat records tumble
Sydney, Brisbane and Darwin are predicted to hit hottest October in terms of maximum temperatures, the Bureau of Meteorology says
Two found dead in flooded basements as New York city hit by rainstorm
Separate incidents see bodies pulled from basements in Brooklyn and Manhattan as heavy rain closes roads and causes delaysTwo people died in flooded New York City basements Thursday during a rainstorm that shut down roadways and caused airport delays, authorities said.A scuba team recovered the body of a 39-year-old man after firefighters received a call of a person trapped in the flooded basement of a townhouse in Brooklyn at about 4.30pm, police said. A video posted online showed firefighters carrying the victim away through calf-deep water on the street. Continue reading...
Vietnam floods: streets of Hoi An submerged like canals of Venice – in pictures
Flooding that killed 10 people in central Vietnam this week turned streets in the historic town of Hoi An into canals on Thursday after a major river reached a 60-year high, authorities say. The Unesco heritage-listed town is among the country's most popular tourist destinations Continue reading...
Paint me cool: scientists reveal roof coating that can reduce surface temperatures up to 6C on hot days
Sydney researchers commercialising a product they say can cool indoor spaces and will cost little more than standard premium paints
US climate activists condemn 18-month jail term for nonviolent art museum protester
It's hard to fathom how a peaceful protester can receive more prison time than many of the insurrectionists,' said one researcher, of Timothy Martin's sentenceClimate activists have condemned an 18-month jail term for a nonviolent protester who vandalized a display case at the National Gallery of Art as grossly disproportionate" and a violation of the constitutional protected rights to free speech and peaceful protest.Timothy Martin, along with fellow activist Joanna Smith, staged the climate protest at the Washington DC gallery in April 2023, smearing washable red and black paint on the protective glass covering Edgar Degas's Little Dancer Aged Fourteen Years sculpture. Continue reading...
Ex-EPA head urges US to resist Trump attacks on climate action: ‘We won’t become numb’
Expanded climate action from cities and states could slash planet-heating pollution despite Trump working against itAhead of next month's major United Nations climate talks in Brazil, Gina McCarthy, the former Environmental Protection Agency head, said US cities and states were keeping the climate fight alive despite an all-out assault from the Trump administration.We will not allow our country to become numb or debilitated by those who are standing in the way of progress," she said on a press call early on Thursday. Continue reading...
Ken Henry warns ‘conga line of developers’ would try to exploit exemptions in Labor’s proposed nature laws
Exclusive: Every project developer is absolutely convinced that their project is in the national interest,' Australian Climate and Biodiversity Foundation boss says
Despite what a thinktank bleats to the Coalition, heat deaths are in fact ‘a thing’ | Temperature Check
Centre for Independent Studies points to climate risk report to back up its dismissal of heat-related deaths, but neglects to use the part that actually concerns the future
The luxury effect: why you’ll find more wildlife in wealthy areas – and what it means for your health
The discovery that affluent neighbourhoods have more diversity of nature has implications for human wellbeing - and sheds light on the structural injustices in citiesFor a long time, ecology tended to ignore people. It mostly focused on beautiful places far from large-scale human development: deep rainforest or pristine grassland. Then, in the late 1990s, in the desert city of Phoenix, Arizona, scientists shifted their gaze closer to home.A team of ecologists went out into their own neighbourhood to map the distribution of urban plants in one of the first studies of its kind. Equipped with tape measures and clipboards, they documented trees and shrubs, sometimes getting on all fours to crawl through bushes under the curious watch of local people. Continue reading...
12345678910...