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Updated 2025-07-05 12:45
Dead flies could be used to make biodegradable plastic, scientists say
Polymer from black soldier flies seen as promising source as it has no other competing uses such as foodDead flies could be turned into biodegradable plastic, researchers have said.The finding, presented at the autumn meeting of the American Chemical Society (ACS), could be useful as it is difficult to find sources for biodegradable polymers that do not have other competing uses. Continue reading...
Healthy diet in UK at risk from Mediterranean droughts, experts say
Fresh fruit and vegetables from Europe will be more expensive as drought and wildfires shrink suppliesA healthy diet in the UK will be put at risk by climate breakdown as European droughts shrink fresh fruit and vegetable supplies, experts have said.Fresh produce from the Mediterranean, upon which the UK is reliant, will become more expensive and harder to obtain as extreme heat causes yields to reduce, putting a healthy diet out of reach of the poorest in society, according to a report by the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit (ECIU). Continue reading...
A renewable energy battery plant will rise in US where a steel mill once stood
Communities hope good new jobs will come from Biden's historic climate investment in cities like Weirton, West VirginiaA cutting-edge energy storage company is building its main manufacturing plant where a once-thriving West Virginia steel mill once stood in the city of Weirton. According to lawmakers, the much-lauded project was made possible by incentives from 2022's Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), signed by President Biden one year ago this Wednesday.For supporters, it's a sign that climate policies can also breathe life back into deindustrialized coal and steel communities with green jobs. The symbolism is compelling but how much those communities benefit will depend on a wide array of factors. Continue reading...
Hawaii fires: questions arise over response as death toll rises to 93 – as it happened
Search for victims continues as more than 2,200 structures damaged or destroyed and more than 2,100 acres scorched
Heat deaths surge in the US’s hottest city as governor declares statewide ‘heat emergency’
David Hondula, the heat expert leading efforts to make the city more comfortable, says every heat death can be prevented with the right resourcesThe heat expert leading efforts to make America's hottest city more bearable insists that Phoenix could eventually eradicate heat deaths - despite July's record-breaking death toll.As many as 300 people may have died during the hottest ever month on record as the temperature in Phoenix topped 110F (43C) for 31 consecutive days. Heat deaths in the city have more than quadrupled in the past decade, and 2023 is on track to be another record breaking year as Phoenix braces itself for the next spell of 110F plus temperatures forecast to hit by Monday. Despite this, David Hondula, director of the city's heat response and mitigation team, insists that every heat death can be prevented. Continue reading...
Hawaii fires: a visual guide to the explosive blaze that razed Lahaina
Catastrophic' wildfires in Maui killed dozens of people, burned buildings and decimated a town - here's what we know so farExplosive wildfires on the Hawaiian island of Maui have killed dozens of people, displaced thousands and reduced much of the vibrant, centuries-old town of Lahaina to ash.As residents are beginning to return to the historic town, Hawaii is starting to reckon with the unfathomable loss left by the deadliest blaze in the US in a century. What we've seen has been catastrophic," said Josh Green, the governor. Continue reading...
Singed trees, scorched homes: shock as Lahaina reckons with unfathomable losses
Residents who returned this weekend after the devastating fires took in the sweeping view of a ruined townAs the first residents returned to Lahaina this weekend, just days after Maui's devastating fires all but leveled the historic town, some got out of their cars and simply stared.There was always much to marvel over in the waterfront community of 13,000 people, the former capital of the Hawaiian Kingdom: the shops on Front Street, the Pioneer Inn and Waiola church, and the endless sprawl of the 150-year-old banyan tree. This week's disaster laid waste to all of it. Continue reading...
As temperatures soar and wildfires burn abroad, summer dread is returning to my body | Danielle Celemajer
As the Australian summer approaches, my apprehension is both a daily shock and uncannily normalised - and I know I'm not the only one feeling itThese days, when I come back into the house after being out on the land, it's dust that I drop, not the mud I carried in on my boots and clothes during the past three years when the rain kept everything, and everyone, sodden most of the time. The rain that also kept at bay the feeling of impending disaster that now attaches itself to the arrival of an Australian summer.Not that La Nina was safe, as all of those whose homes and habitats were washed away know. But in the early months of 2023, as if the weather gods had snapped a finger, soaked turned to parched, and I find myself here again. Borne by news of soaring temperatures and wildfires in the northern hemisphere, the shift from a medium to a high likelihood of the arrival of El Nino to the official declaration of its onset, and the feeling of hardening earth under my feet, summer dread is returning to my body. Continue reading...
Carbon-capture gold rush an ‘insult’ to locals in emissions-hit Louisiana
US government plans to roll out carbon capture rather than phase out fossil fuels prompts outcry in heavily industrial stateMillions of dollars of investments in new carbon capture projects in Louisiana - with more announced this week, are unwelcome developments to some environmental activists in the state.We've been trying to fix the oil and gas damage, while at the same time trying to push the transition away from it," said Monique Hardin, director of law for the Deep South Center for Environmental Justice. Continue reading...
Rishi Sunak ‘will rue his green group attacks come election time’
Academics - and polls - say majority of voters back action on climate change and will punish Tories for weak tactic'The prime minister Rishi Sunak's decision to intensify attacks on green groups and exploit opposition to environmental protests could rebound badly for his party at the next general election, academics have warned.They argue that public support for achieving net zero emissions by 2050 in the UK is now entrenched and unlikely to be overturned. This view is backed by opinion polls, which show that 71% of the British public support moves that will lead to curtailment of the country's fossil fuel emissions. Continue reading...
‘An utter disgrace’: 90% of England’s most precious river habitats blighted by raw sewage and farming pollution
Observer investigation reveals the shocking state of the country's protected freshwater sites of special scientific interestMore than 90% of freshwater habitats on England's most precious rivers are in unfavourable condition, blighted by farming pollution, raw sewage and water abstraction, an Observer investigation reveals.None of the approximately 40 rivers with protected habitats in England are in overall good health, according to an analysis of government inspection reports. These include the River Avon in Hampshire, the Wensum in Norfolk and the Eden in Cumbria. Continue reading...
Hawaii congresswoman says state underestimated lethality of wildfires
Jill Tokuda says Hawaii did not learn lesson' from previous hurricane as death toll from devastating fires reaches 80The Hawaii congresswoman Jill Tokuda told CNN on Saturday morning that she believes state officials underestimated the quickness and lethality of a wildfire that as of Saturday morning had killed at least 80 people there.It's not like hurricane force winds are unknown to Hawaii, or dry brush, or red flag conditions," Tokuda said on CNN when asked to address the wildfires in her home state, which were exacerbated by winds associated with a category four Hurricane Dora as it passed far to the south-west. Continue reading...
It’s the ‘Swiss army knife of the sea’. But can kelp survive rising marine heat?
As warming oceans threaten the farming of the sustainable crop, scientists work to make the industry climate resilientOcean temperatures have hit record highs this year, growing so hot in some places that taking a dip in the sea feels like stepping into a hot tub. For kelp farmers, who grow an underwater crop with a life cycle highly dependent on temperature, that spells trouble for their harvests - and their nascent industry's future.Over the last 30 or 40 years, we've seen a pretty big decline in the kelp populations around Long Island. In large part, that's due to climate change and water temperatures increasing," said Michael Doall, a former oyster farmer and marine scientist at Stony Brook University's School of Marine & Atmospheric Sciences. Continue reading...
Shell urged not to demolish modernist HQ over carbon emissions fears
Architects, academics and climate activists launch campaign against plan to knock down five-storey building in AberdeenAberdeen is arguably best known for two things: granite - found in nearby quarries and used to construct almost all of the coastal city's buildings - and oil. After the discovery of a significant reserve in the North Sea in the 1970s, Aberdeen became known as Europe's oil capital and a thriving oil and gas industry sprang up in Scotland's north-east.At the centre of the boom was the multinational company Shell, which built a five-storey modernist headquarters in the city's Tullos area, from where it operated for half a century, before moving this year. Continue reading...
Hawaii: growing threat of ‘devastating’ fires as island landscape dries and warms
Severe blazes, once a rarity in Hawaii, are increasing in strength and scale, complicating rescue efforts for the small local fire crewsLong before fast-moving flames descended on the historic town of Lahaina, the growing threats of catastrophic fire in western Maui were clear.Acres of abandoned farmland that line the picturesque coastal communities played perfect host to invasive grasses that are primed to burn, creating tinderbox conditions as the island's landscapes dried and warmed. Continue reading...
Yemen: UN removes 1m barrels of oil from ageing tanker to avert environmental catastrophe
Tanker contained four times as much oil as was spilled in 1989 Exxon Valdez disaster off AlaskaThe transfer of more than 1 million barrels of oil from an ageing tanker moored off the coast of war-torn Yemen has been completed, avoiding an environmental disaster, the UN has said.In a statement on Friday, Farhan Haq, the deputy spokesperson for UN secretary general Antonio Guterres, said the operation had prevented a monumental environmental and humanitarian catastrophe". Continue reading...
Global heating likely to hit world food supply before 1.5C, says UN expert
Water scarcity threatening agriculture faster than expected, warns Cop15 desertification presidentThe world is likely to face major disruption to food supplies well before temperatures rise by the 1.5C target, the president of the UN's desertification conference has warned, as the impacts of the climate crisis combine with water scarcity and poor farming practices to threaten global agriculture.Alain-Richard Donwahi, a former Ivory Coast defence minister who led last year's UN Cop15 summit on desertification, said the effects of drought were taking hold more rapidly than expected. Continue reading...
Ecosystems near Texas-Mexico border ‘choking’ from efforts to stop migrants
Greg Abbott, the state governor, has deployed fences, razor wires and buoys along the Rio Grande, demolishing the environmentThe leafy trees on Magali and Hugo Urbina's 350-acre orchard next to the Rio Grande river in Eagle Pass, Texas, should be bursting with pecans this time of year. Instead, most are barren.The Urbinas blame the clouds of dust kicked up by Texas officials in trucks and ATVs after the state government in recent months put fencing and roads along the riverbanks in a contentious effort to deter migration from Mexico, just across the river. Continue reading...
Why the Maui wildfires spread so devastatingly fast – video
Unprecedented wildfires burning on the Hawaiian island of Maui have killed at least 53 people, displaced thousands of residents and destroyed parts of a centuries-old town. The disaster is one of the deadliest US wildfires in recent years. The fast-moving fires, fanned by the winds of a distant hurricane, exploded overnight and moved so quickly that some residents jumped into the ocean to escape the flames and smoke. Crews are continuing to battle the blazes, which have burned through multiple neighbourhoods, including the historic town of Lahaina Continue reading...
NSW Labor accused of ‘fundamental breach of trust’ over logging in promised koala national park
Tensions are escalating in state forests near Bellingen, where a protesters' camp is locked in a standoff with a heavy police presence
Hawaii: footage emerges of houses in Lahaina being burned to the ground –video
At least 55 people have died after wildfires engulfed the historic town of Lahaina on Maui island, Hawaii. Experts say rising global temperatures and drought have fanned the flames in one of the deadliest fires in modern US history. The devastation was exacerbated by strong winds from a nearby cyclone. Wildfires in Hawaii are burning through four times the area of previous decades, studies show
UK renewable energy investment lagging behind rest of world, data shows
Figures reveal capacity has fallen to an average rise of 4.45% in past three years, compared with 9.67% globallyThe UK's investment in renewable energy has lagged significantly behind the rest of the world in recent years, according to an analysis of global data.The latest government figures reveal the UK's renewable capacity has fallen to an average increase of 4.45% in the past three years, compared with an average 9.67% annual increase globally. Continue reading...
Authors threaten boycott of Edinburgh book festival over sponsors’ fossil fuel links
An open letter signed by more than 50 authors including Zadie Smith, Ali Smith and Katherine Rundell calls for investment firm Baillie Gifford to be dropped as main sponsor for 2024Authors including Zadie Smith, Ali Smith and Katherine Rundell have called on the Edinburgh International book festival to drop any sponsor that invests in fossil fuels.The lead sponsor of the literary festival, which is due to start on 12 August, is investment firm Baillie Gifford. According to its own report, the company has up to 5bn invested in corporations that profit from fossil fuels. An open letter signed by a group of more than 50 authors and event chairs stated that these corporations are making huge profits from global disaster, and hide behind esteemed cultural institutions, like the Edinburgh book festival, as sanction for its continued operations". Continue reading...
The desperate race to create a protection zone around the rapidly melting Arctic
The ice once protected the Arctic ocean from threats - but as it melts it exposes the sea to fishing, shipping, mining and pollution. Would a marine protected area help secure this fragile ecosystem or is it too late?When the Arctic explorer Pen Hadow had to start swimming from ice floe to ice floe, rather than walking, he experienced for himself what scientists and Indigenous peoples of the north have long known: the floating sea ice, which used to reliably cover the Arctic Ocean for most of the year, is disappearing.For Hadow - who has crisscrossed that ocean on skis, both accompanied and solo - the vanishing ice wasn't just something that made his travels difficult. He knew that the Arctic ice is home to whole ecosystems above and below the water, protecting marine life from the worst impacts of humanity, pollution and the climate crisis. The sea ice created a natural barrier," says Hadow. It's undisturbed by vessels to this point." Continue reading...
Hiker who died in Glen Coe mountain tragedy named
Family pay tribute to Graham Cox, a much-loved husband, father, son and brother' who was among three people who diedA man who was one of three hikers who died together walking the Aonach Eagach in Glen Coe last weekend has been named by his family as Graham Cox.A spokesperson for the family described the 60-year-old as a much-loved husband, father, son and brother ... He is remembered by all as the kindest, loveliest man. The family is devastated by his loss and request privacy at this time." Continue reading...
Green investment boom and electric car sales: six key things about Biden’s climate bill
The $369bn Inflation Reduction Act has boosted clean energy and EV cars, but the politics remain difficultThe US' first serious legislative attempt to tackle the climate crisis, the Inflation Reduction Act, is hitting its first anniversary both lauded for turbocharging a seismic shift to clean energy while also weathering serious attack from Republicans.Joe Biden hailed the bill, which despite its name is at heart a major shove towards a future dominated by renewable energy and electric vehicles, as one of the most significant laws in our history" when signing it on 16 August last year. Continue reading...
Orange juice prices to surge as US crops ravaged by disease and climate
Extreme weather fuelled by climate crisis and bacterial disease have led to dramatic decline' in orange cropsOrange juice prices are expected to rise further in the US after a bacterial disease and extreme weather intensified by global heating ravaged this season's crop of the citrus fruit.Last year Florida, which produces more than 90% of the US's orange juice supply, was hit by Hurricane Ian, Hurricane Nicole and freezing conditions in quick succession, devastating orange producers in the Sunshine State. Continue reading...
Devastating Hawaii fires made ‘much more dangerous’ by climate change
Global heating is causing vegetation to dry out, priming it as fuel for an outbreak of fire, says scientist at Nature ConservancyThe devastating fires in Hawaii, where at least 55 people have died after a conflagration that engulfed the historic town of Lahaina, were worsened by a number of factors including climate change, scientists have said.Rising global temperatures and drought have helped turn parts of Hawaii into a tinderbox ahead of one of the deadliest fires in modern US history, with these conditions worsened by strong winds from a nearby cyclone. Continue reading...
The week in wildlife – in pictures
The best of this week's wildlife photographs, including a waving seal pup, a hi-tech turtle and an overheated barn owl Continue reading...
‘Huge’ coral bleaching unfolding across the Americas prompts fears of global tragedy
Scientists stunned by unprecedented heat-stress event say they can only hope it motivates and unites people'
Underwater vision shows 'unprecedented' mass coral bleaching event in the Americas – video
A mass coral bleaching event has hit reefs in North America, Central America and the Caribbean. Scientists in the region have told Guardian Australia's environment reporter Graham Readfearn they have never seen anything like it before. The tragedy is unfolding early in the season and in areas not usually affected by coral bleaching, sparking fears it could become a global eventSubscribe to Guardian Australia on YouTube Continue reading...
Future uncertain for key Tasmania to mainland power transmission link after $2bn cost blowout
Federal government in discussion with states after cost of Marinus Link nearly doubles, putting decarbonisation and energy goals at risk
‘Heartbeat of Lahaina Town’: wildfire chars beloved 150-year-old banyan tree
Unprecedented wildfires raged through Hawaii's Maui island, also claiming tree described as the largest banyan in the USThe devastating fires that roared through Maui this week, killing dozens and ravaging the historic town of Lahaina, scorched a beloved tree that has been described as the largest banyan in the US.For generations, the majestic tree along Lahaina Town's historic Front Street served as a gathering place with leafy branches that unfurled to give shade from the Hawaiian sun. By most accounts, the sprawling tree was the heart of the oceanside community - towering more than 60ft (18 meters) and anchored by multiple trunks that span nearly an acre. This year the town celebrated the banyan's 150th birthday with cake. Continue reading...
Theresa Villiers had £70,000 in Shell shares while environment secretary
MP failed to reveal shares in oil company for more than five years despite disclosure rulesA former environment secretary has revealed she has shares worth more than 70,000 in Shell that she did not disclose as required for more than five years.Theresa Villiers was the secretary for environment, food and rural affairs from July 2019 until February 2020, but only this week disclosed she has had investments worth more than 70,000 each in Shell and the drinks company Diageo since February 2018. Villiers also disclosed shares worth more than 70,000 in Experian, held since July 2019, and in an investment trust, RIT Capital Partners. Continue reading...
Return of El Niño raises risk of hunger, drought and malaria, scientists warn
Hot natural weather pattern will exacerbate heat-related dangers brought about by climate crisisThe return of El Nino against the backdrop of the climate crisis will hurt people's health in many parts of the world, scientists have warned.The hot natural weather pattern is back after three years of its cooler sister, La Nina, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) confirmed last month. As it grows stronger, scientists fear it will raise the risk in some countries of hunger, drought and malaria. Continue reading...
Tory deputy chair Lee Anderson ‘very angry’ small boat arrivals numbers may have passed 100,000 – as it happened
This live blog is now closed, you can read more of our UK political coverage hereThe Royal College of Nursing says today's hospital waiting list figures for England (see 9.44am) show the NHS is falling into deeper crisis". In a statement Nicola Ranger, the RCN's chief nursing officer, said:With a record number of patients now on a waiting list in England, the NHS is falling into deeper crisis.A decade of underinvestment in the NHS has led to dire consequences for patients and pushed many nursing staff out of the profession they love and with unrelenting pressure on those who remain.
Sweden criticised over plan to build at least 10 new nuclear reactors
Environmental experts say proposals are too expensive and will come too late to meet energy needsEnvironmental experts have criticised the Swedish government's plan to build at least 10 nuclear reactors in the next 20 years, more than doubling the current number, saying it will be too expensive and will come too late to meet energy needs.The climate minister, Romina Pourmokhtari, announced on Wednesday that in order to meet its climate goals Sweden needed to double electricity production in the next two decades. Continue reading...
Revealed: Louisiana created alleged conflict of interest in ‘Cancer Alley’ case
Louisiana AG hired lawyers for EPA negotiations who were also representing chemical firm at center of inquiry, documents showFacing a pivotal federal investigation into Louisiana's relationship with petro-chemical companies, the state's attorney general hired lawyers who were simultaneously representing one of the main corporations at the center of the investigation, documents reveal.The revelations, contained in documents released under public records requests, have led to allegations of a major conflict of interest and come just weeks after the Environmental Protection Agency [EPA] dropped its civil rights investigation. Continue reading...
African penguins could be extinct by 2035, campaigners say
Population has declined dramatically due to overfishing and environmental changes in the PacificAfrican penguins are on track for extinction by 2035 if measures are not taken to ensure their survival, campaigners have said.The population of African penguins has declined dramatically over the past 100 years. In the early 20th century, it is thought that there were probably several million breeding pairs: today, fewer than 11,000 breeding pairs remain, and the population continues to fall sharply. Continue reading...
Water wars: meet the guardians of one of Europe’s most vital wetlands
Donana national park in Andalucia, Spain, is being threatened by drought, over-consumption and rightwing MPs. Seven people who work there describe the fragile ecosystem and what it means to themIn the heart of Spain's Donana national park, a battle is being waged to safeguard one of the most important wetlands in Europe. Donana, with its impressive landscapes and extraordinary biodiversity, hosts an estimated 6 million migratory birds every year. But its fate hangs in the balance.Despite declining water supplies, illegal wells and encroaching strawberry farms, and amid warnings from Unesco and the European Commission, the People's party (PP) and far-right Vox party in the Andalucian regional government are pushing to legalise irrigation in the park, which straddles the provinces of Huelva and Seville in south-west Spain. Continue reading...
China’s moratoriums on fishing do ‘nothing to protect squid’
Analysis by conservation group Oceana suggests areas where suspension imposed are not fished by fleets anywayAnnual short-term moratoriums on squid fishing imposed by Chinese authorities are probably meaningless as there appeared to be little fishing activity in the areas before the bans were announced, analysis has claimed.In 2020, China's ministry of agriculture and rural affairs announced a pilot program banning fishing in parts of the south-west Atlantic Ocean from July to October, and parts of the eastern Pacific Ocean from September to December. Continue reading...
Lake District visitors urged to curb spread of invasive weed
New Zealand pigmyweed harms waterways by forming dense mats and depleting oxygen, say expertsVisitors to the Lake District are being asked to help prevent the spread of a particularly bad" invasive weed that could wipe out native species if left unchecked.Conservation organisations said they were dismayed to find New Zealand pigmyweed spreading rapidly across a number of lakes in the national park, including a previously pristine waterway.Check all clothing, footwear and equipment for plant fragments and living organisms before leaving a water body. Pay particular attention to any crevices.Clean and wash all equipment on site, leaving all organisms and plant fragments behind. Or wash on a hard standing surface away from a draining system.Dry all equipment and clothing thoroughly before heading to the next water body. Some species can survive for two weeks in damp conditions. Continue reading...
Nomads of the sea: stateless Bajau face up to a future on land – photo essay
Famed for their freediving skills, only a few hundred Bajau still live in the traditional way. Caught between laws hostile to their unique way of life, they are being forced to resettle as outcasts on shoreWords and photographs by Claudio Sieber in SempornaThe Bajau people have been crisscrossing the waters of the Sulu Sea for centuries, the world's only community of self-sufficient sea nomads. To the Bajau, a border" is merely the farthest distance they can reach by boat.Noted for their exceptional freediving abilities, the Bajau have evolved to have larger spleens, enabling them to stay underwater for up to 10 minutes at depths of 200 feet. Their diet includes a diverse array of sea creatures, including sea cucumbers - a valuable protein source also used for medical purposes and even as an aphrodisiac.Only about 100 to 200 Bajau families still live on the traditional Lansa houseboats. This one, part of the Bohey Bual community off Bodgaya Island, has 10 sq metres of living space and houses nine people Continue reading...
Thursday briefing: Inside South America’s summit to save the Amazon
In today's newsletter: After years of rampant exploitation under a far-right government, Brazil has brought together leaders to help secure the future of the world's biggest rainforest - and create a just ecological transition' Sign up here for our daily newsletter, First EditionGood morning. I think the world needs to see this meeting in Belem as the most important landmark ever ... when it comes to discussing the climate question." For once you can forgive the hyperbole of Brazil's president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, when he spoke about this week's Amazon summit.Leaders from the eight South American countries that share the river basin have been meeting this week in the Brazilian city to discuss an issue that, by any measure, is a global emergency: how to protect the vast rainforest and safeguard its critical role in regulating the planetary climate.Education | Rising costs and family needs could force one in three students starting university this year to opt to live at home, according to new research. While some of the Covid generation" of school-leavers said they planned to live at home because their preferred university was nearby, most said they could not afford to live away from home.Northern Ireland | The UK's Information Commissioner's Office has launched an investigation into an unprecedented data breach that disclosed details of more than 10,000 police officers and staff in Northern Ireland. The agency, which regulates data privacy laws, is working with the Police Service of Northern Ireland to establish the level of risk amid warnings that the leak may compel officers to leave the force or move their home address.Hawaii | Six people were killed after unprecedented wildfires tore through the Hawaiian island of Maui. The fires, fanned by strong winds from Hurricane Dora, destroyed businesses in the historic town of Lahaina, and left at least two dozen people injured.Ecuador | Ecuadorian presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio was shot dead at a campaign rally on Wednesday. The country's president, Guillermo Lasso, said he was outraged and shocked by the assassination" and would convene a meeting of his security cabinet.Media | Employees at ITV's This Morning were allegedly subjected to bullying, discrimination and harassment", according to staff members who have spoken out after Phillip Schofield's departure from the programme. Some workers claim they attempted to raise concerns about the programme only to face further bullying and discrimination" by bosses for speaking out. Continue reading...
Hundreds of buildings in historic town of Lahaina destroyed in Hawaii wildfires – video
Wildfires fanned by strong winds from Hurricane Dora have burned through the town on Lahaina in Maui. The US Coast Guard had to pull a number of people from the ocean beside the town after they dived in to escape smoke and flames. 'It's like an apocalypse,' said a local resident
Six dead, dozens injured in Hawaiian blazes – as it happened
This liveblog is now closed. You can read our full story on the wildfires below:
State-owned VicForests unlawfully spied on anti-logging campaigners, report finds
Victorian Information Commissioner says use of private investigator in 2010 or 2011 seriously and flagrantly breached information privacy principles
Climate activists outraged over Biden claim he ‘practically’ declared US emergency
Biden said I've done that' when asked about declaring climate emergency, yet White House has not announced such a declarationJoe Biden has said that he has practically" declared a national emergency on the climate crisis, despite not actually taking that step, vexing climate campaigners.I've already done that," Biden said when asked if he intends to declare a climate emergency in a Weather Channel interview aired on Wednesday. Continue reading...
Fury as Alberta cuts renewables during Canada’s worst fire season ever
Critics of the policy expressed concern that decision will weaken investor confidence in solar and wind energy in the regionA decision by Canada's largest oil and gas-producing province to halt new wind and solar projects has prompted disbelief among environmental groups and economists. The move comes as the country struggles with its worst wildfire season on record, a situation that experts agree is worsened by the climate crisis and a reliance on fossil fuels.Alberta last week announced a six-month moratorium on large solar and wind projects so it can review policies surrounding the projects' construction and impact on the power grid, as well as rules for their eventual decommissioning. Continue reading...
‘Nature needs money’: Lula tells rich countries to pay up and protect world’s rainforests
Brazilian president says developed nations that over centuries have pumped emissions into the atmosphere must pay their bit'The Brazilian president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, has told developed countries to put their money where their mouth is when it comes to protecting the world's remaining tropical forests, as major rainforest nations demanded hundreds of billions of dollars of climate financing and a greater role in how those resources are spent.It's not Brazil that needs money. It's not Colombia that needs money. It's not Venezuela. It's nature," Lula told journalists on the second day of a major environmental summit in the Amazon city of Belem. Continue reading...
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