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Updated 2024-12-21 17:30
Vegan no more: a beloved Asheville plant-based cafe pivots to stay afloat post-hurricane
Rosetta's Kitchen in North Carolina now dishes up donated animal products to weather steep losses and feed people in need - but not all are happy with the changeOne day in October, a trailer with an unusual delivery pulled up outside Rosetta's Kitchen, a beloved vegan restaurant in downtown Asheville, North Carolina.The contents: 1,500lbs of donated frozen meat, destined for area residents eating free meals at the restaurant after Hurricane Helene battered the region in late September. Continue reading...
‘I didn’t realize the role rice played’: the ingenious crop cultivation of the Gullah Geechee people
Researchers in North Carolina used underwater sonar to map a system created by enslaved people centuries agoAs a former deputy state underwater archaeologist, Mark Wilde-Ramsing can't help but look down. While rowing around North Carolina's Eagles Island, at the tip of the Gullah Geechee corridor, he noticed signs of human-made structures, visible at low tide. Though he'd retired, he was still active in the field and knew his former agency hadn't recorded the structures - which meant he had come across something previously undocumented. The next step was figuring out exactly what he'd found.Wilde-Ramsing knew the area had once been full of rice fields. His neighbor, Joni Osku" Backstrom, was an assistant professor in the department of environmental sciences at the University of North Carolina-Wilmington whose specialty was shallow-water sonar, and he had the skills and technology to explore the area. Using a sonar device, the duo detected 45 wooden structures in the river, and the remote sensing tool allowed Backstrom and Wilde-Ramsing to acoustically map the canal beds. Continue reading...
Guardian Australia’s best photos of 2024 – in pictures
From break dancing to nude bathers and the country's best mullets, here's a selection of our photographers' finest work Continue reading...
Oil and gas firms operating in Colorado falsified environmental impact reports
State's energy and carbon management commission said fraudulent pollution data was reported for at least 344 wellsOil and gas companies operating in Colorado have submitted hundreds of environmental impact reports with falsified" laboratory data since 2021, according to state regulators.Colorado's energy and carbon management commission (ECMC) said on 13 December that contractors for Chevron and Oxy had submitted reports with fraudulent data for at least 344 oil and gas wells across the state, painting a misleading picture of their pollution levels. Consultants for a third company, Civitas, had also filed forms with falsified information for an unspecified number of wells, regulators said. Continue reading...
Record number of protesters will be in UK prisons this Christmas
Forty people, aged 22 to 58, incarcerated for direct actions on climate and Gaza actions amid crackdown on dissent You won't find the real criminals here': a Just Stop Oil activist in jail at ChristmasA record number of people who have taken part in protests will be in prison in the UK this Christmas, raising concern about the ongoing crackdown on dissent.Forty people, aged from 22 to 58, will be behind bars on Christmas Day for planning or taking part in a variety of protests relating to the climate crisis or the war in Gaza. Several of them are facing years in prison after courts handed down the most severe sentences on record for direct action protests. Continue reading...
The facts about a planet facing climate disaster are clear. Why won’t this Labour government face them? | Jeremy Corbyn
Labour seems gripped by a form of denialism. The danger is real and incremental change won't avert it
University bans on big oil firms at recruitment fairs rise by 30%
Survey finds post-1992 universities leading the way on sustainability and ethicsMore universities are banning fossil fuel companies from recruitment fairs in a sign of the sector's shrinking social licence among young people.The annual survey of sustainability and ethics in higher education found there has been a 30% rise in the number of institutions stopping fossil fuel companies taking part in graduate fairs this year. Continue reading...
Week in wildlife in pictures: a dangling marmoset, rare leopard babies and an eyelash snake
The best of this week's wildlife photographs from around the world Continue reading...
CO2 emissions from new North Sea drilling sites would match 30 years’ worth from UK households
New research comes as dozens of small potential fields have received some form of license from the governmentPotential new North Sea oil and gas fields with early stage licences from the UK would emit as much carbon dioxide as British households produce in three decades.The finding has led to calls to the government to reject demands from fossil fuel producers for the final permits needed to allow their operations to go ahead. Continue reading...
‘We’re gobsmacked’: climate groups angered by Labor’s ‘no new coalmines’ claim
Campaigners say Queensland mine given go-ahead this week is a new development, not an extension of an existing mine
‘Many highs and some unfortunate lows’: Nationals MP Keith Pitt quits politics with some parting shots
Member for Hinkler says he and David Littleproud have very different views' and implies net zero would have zero impact on the temperature of the planet'
Cyclone Chido: locals demand more help from Macron on visit to Mayotte
French president promises food, water and to rebuild as emergency services search desperately for survivorsDistraught and angry inhabitants of Mayotte shouted out their grievances to the French president, Emmanuel Macron, as he visited the island, five days after it was devastated by a cyclone.High on their list was the lack of water and food, and the fear of looting. Continue reading...
Thames Water to pay £18m penalty after breaking dividend rules
Regulator says it will claw back 131m in unjustified' payments as it announces companies can increase bills by 36% by 2030
Most pregnant women and unborn babies who contract bird flu will die, study finds
Exclusive: While risk of H5N1 pandemic in humans is low, it's really important to think about vulnerable populations', Melbourne researcher says
Revealed: how a US public university courted the gas industry despite climate impacts
McNeese State University in Louisiana building a liquefied natural gas center, prompting fears of corporate capture'One of Louisiana's top public universities has prompted concerns about corporate capture" over its expanding relationship with the liquefied natural gas (LNG) industry, despite environmental warnings about pollution and prolonging fossil fuel use.As the US's LNG boom gained momentum in south-west Louisiana, McNeese State University courted the industry to help launch a new LNG Center of Excellence currently under construction, hired a director doubling as an LNG industry lobbyist, and approached federal regulators to co-locate their own research center at the university, according to emails obtained via public records requests by DeSmog and the Guardian. Continue reading...
Taps dry in 58,000 Hampshire homes due to Southern Water fault
Outage comes as customers hear they will face the highest bill increases in England and WalesTens of thousands of homes in Hampshire are without water because of a technical fault at a Southern Water supply works.About 58,000 homes in Southampton, Romsey, Eastleigh, Totton and parts of the New Forest have outages after a problem at the Testwood water supply works prevented water from leaving the site. Continue reading...
Bird flu sweeps through zoos with ‘grave implications’ for endangered animals
Call for additional precautions as captive species including lions, tigers and cheetahs are killed by virusDozens of rare animals including tigers, lions and cheetahs are dying as bird flu infiltrates zoos, with potentially grave implications" for endangered species, researchers have warned.As a growing number of zoos report animal deaths, scientists are concerned that infected wild birds landing in enclosures could be spreading it among captive animals. In the US, a cheetah, mountain lion, Indian goose and kookaburra were among the animals that died in Wildlife World Zoo near Phoenix, according to local media reports last week. San Francisco Zoo temporarily closed its aviaries after a wild red-shouldered hawk was found dead on its grounds, and later tested positive for highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAIV). A rare red-breasted goose died at Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle, causing aviaries to close and penguin feeding for visitors to be suspended in November. These cases follow the deaths of 47 tigers, three lions, and a panther in zoos across south Vietnam over the summer. Continue reading...
US environmental agency fast-tracking new PFAS approvals for semiconductors
Hastened reviews of compounds as industry ramps up could increase pollution from likely toxic chemicalsThe US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is quietly fast-tracking approval of new PFAS forever chemicals" for use by the semiconductor industry at the same time the agency is publicly touting increased scrutiny of new PFAS and other chemicals.As US semiconductor production ramps up, the hastened reviews could sharply increase pollution containing little-studied PFAS that are likely toxic, accumulative in the environment and contribute to climate change. Continue reading...
Biden declares tougher 2035 emissions targets weeks before Trump return
President formally files new plans under Paris agreement and hails boldest climate agenda in American history'Joe Biden has announced tougher targets on the US's carbon dioxide emissions for the next decade, in a defiant final gesture intended as a capstone" on his legacy on the climate.With just weeks to go before Donald Trump enters the White House, the Biden administration is formally filing new plans under the Paris agreement - the global climate treaty from which Trump has vowed to withdraw. Continue reading...
Albanese government approves four coalmine expansions as Greens condemn ‘despicable’ move
Tanya Plibersek says projects in NSW and Queensland produce coal for making essential steel as critics say move opposite of climate action'
Time to be shellfish: why the UK should go back to feasting on oysters and mussels
Popular in Victorian times, they are sustainable, a good source of protein and brilliant for biodiversity, say those championing the bivalvesA splash of white wine, a handful of basil leaves and a few minutes preparation are all it takes to transform mussels that 24 hours ago were filtering seawater off the south Devon coast, into a delicious starter.At the training kitchen in London's oldest fish market, Billingsgate, in Poplar, we learn that fresh mussels require two vital preparation steps that the vacuum-packed, cooked variety don't: debearding" or pulling off the byssus" thread that attaches the shell to rocks and other substrate, and the discarding of any with broken or open shells Continue reading...
Montana supreme court upholds right to ‘stable climate system’ for youngsters
Court rules in favor of 16 young people who said their health and prospects were being imperiled by climate crisisMontana's top court on Wednesday held that the state's constitution guaranteed a right to a stable climate system and invalidated a law barring regulators from considering the effects of greenhouse gas emissions when permitting new fossil fuel projects.The Montana supreme court upheld a landmark trial court decision last August in favor of 16 young people who said their health and futures were being jeopardized by climate change, which the state aggravates through its permitting of energy projects. Continue reading...
Thames Water to get green light to hike bills by more than a third by 2030
Exclusive: Long-awaited decision by water regulator Ofwat falls short of utility's requested 59% riseTroubled Thames Water will be allowed to increase customer bills by just over a third by 2030 after a decision by the industry regulator, the Guardian has learned.Ofwat is poised to announce on Thursday that the heavily indebted company, which serves 16 million consumers in London and the Thames Valley area, will be permitted to raise bills by just over half the level the company had demanded. Continue reading...
Cyclone Chido deaths rise in south-east Africa as Mayotte toll remains unclear
Powerful storm in drought-hit region confirmed to have killed 45 people in Mozambique and 13 in Malawi
Biden administration allows California to ban new gas-powered car sales by 2035
EPA agreed to grant the state's requests and permit similar proposals from other states, a step Trump has vowed to undoThe Biden administration granted two requests from California to enforce strict standards for vehicle emissions, including a rule aimed at banning sales of new gas-powered cars by 2035 in a move that Donald Trump is expected to roll back immediately.The Environmental Protection Agency said it would grant California's request for the waivers to allow the state to enforce the proposed rules, the agency announced on Wednesday. Continue reading...
Can everyone eat for the planet? I shopped at Dollar Store for a week to find out
In 2019, scientists published a climate-friendly food plan. I've long wondered: could it work for most Americans?
People in the US: how do you eat a climate-friendly diet on a budget?
We want to hear how you manage to eat a planet-friendly diet despite soaring food prices and lack of access
Dear Santa, please bring back the plastic lids on yoghurt pots | Adrian Chiles
Gone are the pleasures of licking the foil cover on yoghurts and soft cheese. Plus no one consulted me about this dismal change to my home routinesAll I want for Christmas is the return of yoghurt pot lids. And not just for me, for everyone. In this season of goodwill, I want everyone to get a share of the joy. The lids disappeared very suddenly, without so much as a goodbye. It didn't seem right. And it wasn't just yoghurt pots, either. Creams, buttermilk, cottage cheese, you name it, were suddenly minus their lids, hatless, naked.For me, this was a blow. I've always taken my plastic pot management very seriously. I have strict rules. Not for me pulling back the foil cover, leaving it attached to the tub, and then replacing the lid on top of it. No, not neat. The foil would be removed completely, possibly licked, and discarded.Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...
Pakistan and Bahamas join push for global pact to phase out fossil fuels
Climate-vulnerable pair add weight to proposed treaty seeking transition from coal, oil and gas in equitable wayPakistan and the Bahamas have joined a growing bloc of climate-vulnerable countries seeking to broker a global pact to phase out fossil fuels in an equitable way, the Guardian can reveal.The Bahamas is the 15th nation to fully endorse the proposed fossil-fuel non-proliferation treaty, which would provide a binding global roadmap to explicitly halt expansion of coal, oil and gas in a fair way - with wealthy nations responsible for the highest emissions transitioning first and fastest. Continue reading...
Energy firms to spend £77bn to rewire Great Britain’s electricity grid
National Grid, SSE and ScottishPower submit five-year plans amid shift from fossil fuels to clean electricityEnergy companies have promised to spend up to 77bn over five years to help rewire to Great Britain's electricity infrastructure in the global race to shift from fossil fuels to clean electricity.The companies that own the high-voltage power system - National Grid, SSE and ScottishPower - have submitted the spending plans to the regulator Ofgem for the period from 2026 to 2031, which could support about 100,000 jobs. Continue reading...
‘Ridiculous’ ban on exotic animal skins at London fashion week criticised by experts
Trade can help protect species - and real skins are often more sustainable than synthetic alternatives, say conservationistsConservation experts have criticised a decision by London fashion week to ban exotic animal skins from its 2025 shows as ridiculous", warning that it is ill-informed and could harm the protection of many snakes, crocodiles and reptile species.Last month, the British Fashion Council's deputy director for policy and engagement, David Leigh-Pemberton, told parliament that next year's fashion shows would prohibit the use of skins from alligators, snakes and other animals. In a statement, the council said the ban was part of a wider range of standards to promote sustainable practices in the fashion industry. Continue reading...
Study examines women’s proximity to incinerators and chemical level in breast milk
Researchers find winds affecting emissions from incinerators play role, though diet still thought to be largest factorToxic chemicals in breast milk have been identified in mothers living near waste incinerators in the UK, a study has found.The study looked at complex chemicals called polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and dioxins. These are found in the fumes from burning waste and can persist in the environment for a long time. They can also accumulate in the fat in our bodies, with more than 90% coming from food. Continue reading...
Coal use to reach new peak – and remain at near-record levels for years
Spike in fossil fuel use a result of global gas crisis triggered by Russia's invasion of UkraineThe world's coal use is expected to reach a fresh high of 8.7bn tonnes this year, and remain at near-record levels for years as a result of a global gas crisis triggered by Russia's invasion of Ukraine.There has been record production and trade of coal and power generation from coal since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine inflated global gas market prices, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA). Continue reading...
‘Dark day for New Zealand’: outcry as bill to fast-track controversial mining projects is approved
Critics and opposition parties vow to oppose major projects they fear could damage the environmentA new law that could see controversial mining and infrastructure projects fast-tracked for approval across New Zealand has sparked protests in parliament and vows from critics and opposition parties to stop proposals that they fear will wreak havoc on the environment.The coalition government's Fast-Track Approvals legislation passed into law on Tuesday, despite thousands of public submissions opposing it. Continue reading...
Pollution exposure linked to mental health hospital admissions, says study
Researchers from St Andrews found rise in nitrogen dioxide exposure associated with higher admissionsExposure to air pollution is linked to an increased risk of hospital admission for mental illness, according to the most comprehensive study of its kind.The research, involving more than 200,000 people in Scotland, found an increase in exposure to nitrogen dioxide in particular was associated with a higher number of people being admitted to hospital for behaviour disorders and mental illnesses. Continue reading...
Biden administration warns natural gas expansion would drive up domestic costs
New study shows LNG exports risk raising greenhouse gas emissions, hampering efforts to curtail climate crisisThe Biden administration has released a long-awaited analysis on the economic and environmental effects of liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports, concluding any further expansion would drive up costs for domestic consumers and hamper efforts to curtail the climate crisis.In January Joe Biden paused the Department of Energy's approvals of fossil gas exports to big consumers in Asia and Europe in order to conduct the review, in a move welcomed by climate scientists, environmental justice advocates and public health experts but decried by the oil and gas industry. Continue reading...
Road safety campaigners lose high court challenge against Tower Hamlets mayor
Save Our Safer Streets extremely disappointed' judge finds against them over removal of low traffic neighbourhoodsRoad safety campaigners in east London have lost a high court challenge against the mayor of Tower Hamlets over his decision to remove three low traffic neighbourhoods (LTNs) in Bethnal Green.The campaign group Save Our Safer Streets (SOSS) raised nearly 80,000 through a crowdfunder to bring judicial review proceedings. After a two-day hearing last month a judge ruled on Tuesday that the mayor, Lutfur Rahman, did not break the law when he announced in September 2023 that he would be removing the LTNs. Continue reading...
‘Bad deal for taxpayers’: huge losses from NSW forest logging, reports reveal
Former MP astonished that taxpayers are literally paying' to cut down forests sustaining koalas and greater gliders and providing clean drinking water
Concerns new police powers in Victoria could be used to target climate movement
Jacinta Allan's plans to give police wide-ranging power' to help tackle antisemtism could be used against other protesters, lawyer says
Whaling activist Paul Watson celebrates release from jail after Denmark refuses extradition to Japan
US-Canadian pioneer member of Greenpeace, who was arrested in Greenland in July, will now spend Christmas with his sonsPaul Watson, the anti-whaling campaigner, has spoken of delight that he will be reunited with his young children for Christmas after Denmark rejected Japan's extradition request and released him from prison in Greenland.After 150 days in jail on the Danish autonomous territory, Watson, 74, was told by his lawyer on Tuesday morning that the Danish authorities had decided he was free to leave the island. Continue reading...
More than 6m homes at risk of flooding in England, says Environment Agency
Report says rivers, the sea and surface water endangering properties and that number could hit 8m by 2050More than 6m homes in England are at risk of flooding under the latest climate projections, a study by the Environment Agency has found.This could rise to 8m - or one in four properties - by 2050, the study said. Continue reading...
Watchdog warns Defra and Ofwat they could face court over sewage dumping
Environment Agency also served notice after investigation found failures to comply with lawThe government, its water regulator and the Environment Agency could all be taken to court over their failure to tackle sewage dumping in England after a watchdog found failures to comply with the law.An investigation by the Office for Environmental Protection (OEP) found Ofwat, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) and the Environment Agency (EA) all failed to stop water companies from discharging sewage into rivers and seas in England when it was not raining heavily. The OEP was set up in 2020 to replace the role the European Union had played in regulating and enforcing environmental law in the UK. Continue reading...
Flat tax rate is an ‘attractive idea’, Kemi Badenoch says
Rule would mean a tax rise for basic ratepayers and a huge cut for higher earners if change was fiscally neutralA flat tax rate is an attractive idea", which the Conservatives would aim for if in power, Kemi Badenoch has said.The leader of the opposition made the comments on Monday while standing on a Robin Hood pantomime set at the London Palladium, which owner Andrew Lloyd Webber had lent to farmers and business owners so they could stage an event protesting against changes to inheritance tax. Continue reading...
Ukraine calls for sanctions against Russia oil tankers over Black Sea spill
Top adviser says vessels that sank and ran aground are part of aged fleet that will continue to cause large-scale damageUkraine has called on the international community to take action against Russia's sanctions-busting oil fleet, after an ageing tanker sank in the Black Sea, causing a major environmental disaster.The Russian cargo ship, Volgoneft-212, broke in half during a heavy storm off the coast of occupied Crimea on Sunday. A second tanker, Volgoneft-239, got into difficulties in the same area. It eventually ran aground near the port of Taman at the south end of the Kerch strait. Continue reading...
A sea anemone: I have pronounced their name incorrectly most of my life | Helen Sullivan
It is probably wrong to touch, even gently, these creatures. But even now I find it difficult to resistIn her book Theatres of Glass, Rebecca Stott writes about the Victorian craze for home aquariums - which swept London in the 1850s, with people taking animals from the seaside and making miniature rock pools at home in large glass enclosures or pie dishes. The craze did not last long; people didn't have a way to oxygenate the water and most of what they collected died.
Farming has always been gambling with dirt – but the odds are getting longer | Gabrielle Chan
Rainfall patterns are changing, crops are ripening earlier and the normal rhythms of farming have fallen off - exactly as climate scientists warned
‘Increasingly worried’: more than a quarter of a million waterbirds disappear from eastern Australia
One of the world's longest continuous bird counts has dashed the wistful optimism' of scientists hoping for a La Nina-driven recovery
More than a million vapes a day in UK thrown away, says research
From June 2025 it will be illegal to sell single-use vapes to combat environmental damageThirteen vapes are thrown away every second in the UK - more than a million a day - leading to an environmental nightmare", according to research.There has also been a rise in big puff" vapes which are bigger and can hold up to 6,000 puffs per vape, with single use vapes averaging 600. Three million of these larger vapes are being bought every week according to the research, commissioned by Material Focus, and conducted by Opinium. 8.2 million vapes are now thrown away or recycled incorrectly every week. Continue reading...
‘Like a giant bird box’: the volunteers building huge snowdrifts for Finland’s pregnant seals
As warmer winters melt the snow drifts that endangered Saimaa ringed seals use to raise their young, humans are giving them a helping hand
EV sales reach new highs in Australia, making up nearly 10% of car market
Report by EV Council expects popularity to double by 2026 due to influx of cheaper electric vehicle models and increased number of charging stations
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