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Updated 2025-07-10 09:45
Campaigners celebrate Heathrow ruling as 'beginning of the end'
Activists hope appeal court’s decision will mean death of third runway expansion planIn the bar of the Five Bells pub, campaigners against a third runway at Heathrow were celebrating.The 400-year-old establishment in Harmondsworth has been at the centre of the fight against the airport’s expansion for nearly 20 years. Under the plans, half of the ancient village would be destroyed, including a number of listed buildings and a small housing estate. The rest would be at the perimeter fence of the new runway, and would be, residents say, uninhabitable due to the thunderous noise and pollution. Continue reading...
Amazon people turn to water tanks after environmental disaster
Scheme provides clean water and helps foster trust between indigenous groupsRomelia Mendúa was handing out plantain drinks served in aluminium bowls. Guests were seated in a hammock and on the bare wooden floor. Beyond the window was the lush vegetation of Ecuador’s north-eastern Amazon.Chocula, as the drink is called, is made by mashing plantains into water, and is a common refreshment in the Amazon. But the water in Mendúa’s chocula was no ordinary water. It came through a tap in her kitchen connected to two tanks outside collecting and filtering rainfall. Continue reading...
Prosecutors seize Italian Scala dei Turchi over conservation concerns
Coastline that has been up for Unesco listing has been in poor condition for yearsItalian lawyers have seized control of the famous Scala dei Turchi limestone coastline, one of the Mediterranean’s main tourist attractions, citing poor handling of the cliff’s preservation.For years, the site of the Scala dei Turchi – meaning Turkish steps or stairs of the Turks – a candidate for Unesco heritage, has been in a state of degradation. It is subject to constant erosion and theft by visitors who detach pieces of marl, the white sedimentary rock that gives the steps their distinctive appearance. Continue reading...
New cars producing more carbon dioxide than older models
Demand for bigger cars drives increase in greenhouse gas emissions, says Which?New cars sold in the UK produce more carbon dioxide than older models, according to new research that suggests the industry is going backwards in tackling the climate crisis.Cars that reach the latest standards of emissions use cleaner internal combustion engine technology to combat air pollution, but the relentless rise in demand for bigger, heavier models meant that average emissions of the greenhouse gas rose, according to the consumer group Which? Continue reading...
Jacinda Ardern to pressure Australia over forced deportations during meeting with Morrison
New Zealand PM wants Canberra to change position on ‘corrosive’ issue which has seen hundreds of Kiwis deported from AustraliaNew Zealand prime minister Jacinda Ardern won’t raise climate change when she meets with Scott Morrison in Sydney but will push for a change in Canberra’s position on forced deportations.Ardern was scheduled to hold talks with Morrison in the harbour city on Friday after briefly meeting with New South Wales premier Gladys Berejiklian in the morning. Continue reading...
Minister criticised for not meeting evacuees on visit to flood-hit town
George Eustice is whisked in and out of fenced-off compound in Ironbridge
World may miss carbon targets unless big firms improve – Mark Carney
Bank of England governor warns City about need for businesses to fully disclose climate impact
Angus Taylor to announce shift in climate investment away from wind and solar
Hydrogen, carbon capture and storage, lithium and advanced livestock feed supplements to be at heart of Coalition’s technology roadmapThe Morrison government will on Friday signal plans to shift investment from wind and solar to hydrogen, carbon capture and storage, lithium and advanced livestock feed supplements, as part of a “bottom up” strategy to reduce emissions by 2050.Angus Taylor will use a speech to an economic thinktank to put some flesh on the bones of the Coalition’s much-vaunted technology roadmap. The emissions reduction minister will also declare Australia will take a technology-based long-term emissions reduction “strategy” to the United Nations-led climate talks in Glasgow at the end of this year. Continue reading...
Great Barrier Reef: coral bleaching to worsen unless weather conditions change
Cyclone is temporarily cooling distressed corals but experts say parts of reef that previously escaped bleaching are at riskThe Great Barrier Reef is still at risk of a widespread outbreak of coral bleaching despite a cyclone to the far west helping to temporarily cool stressed corals, according to US and Australian science agencies.Clearer skies, weak tides and above-average ocean temperatures are combining to create stressful conditions for corals along much of the world’s largest reef system. Continue reading...
Tears at bedtime: are children's books on environment causing climate anxiety?
Greta Thunberg effect behind sales boom in books on everything from plastic waste to endangered wildlifeI’m reading one of a small forest’s-worth of beautiful new picture books about the environment with my eight-year-old twins. The Sea, by Miranda Krestovnikoff and Jill Calder, takes us into mangrove swamps and kelp forests and coral reefs. We learn about goblin sharks and vampire squids and a poisonous creature called a nudibranch. Then we reach the final chapter on ocean plastics. When we learn that by 2050 there could be more plastic in the ocean than fish, Esme bursts into inconsolable tears. Continue reading...
Coventry drivers could get £3,000 transport vouchers for ditching cars
Pilot project will offer people vouchers for public transport, taxis or car clubsDrivers in Coventry could be paid up to £3,000 a year in transport vouchers to ditch their cars under a UK-first scheme.The Transport for the West Midlands (TfWM) pilot project is designed to ease traffic congestion and improve air quality in the city. Continue reading...
'Without water we can't grow anything': can small farms survive California's landmark water law?
For the first time in history, the state is regulating the groundwater that fuels its massive agriculture industry. Now the smallest farms face the biggest threatNikiko Masumoto began her farming career in the summer of 2011, just as California was entering its worst drought in recorded history.Masumoto is the fourth generation of her family to farm this land in Del Rey: 80 organic acres of stone fruit in eastern Fresno county in California’s fertile Central Valley, its most perfect peaches bound for the epicurean Chez Panisse restaurant in Berkeley. Continue reading...
Everything you need to know about California's historic water law
Regulation will have significant impacts on the state’s $50bn agriculture industry, rural communities and endangered wetlands
Drax power plant to stop burning coal, with loss of 230 jobs
The 2021 plan for Yorkshire site will be four years ahead of government deadlineThe Drax power plant in Yorkshire will end all coal generation by next year after almost five decades as one of western Europe’s most polluting power plants.Drax Group will stop burning coal at Britain’s biggest power plant in March 2021, four years ahead of the government’s ban on coal-fired electricity, which comes into force in 2025. Continue reading...
Murray-Darling Basin plan: Keith Pitt rejects call for inquiry by NSW Nationals’ leader
John Barilaro says ‘irrigators are at breaking point’ but federal water minister says there have been enough reviewsThe NSW Nationals leader, John Barilaro, has called for a royal commission into the Murray-Darling Basin plan following a meeting with irrigators on Thursday – a move set to reignite concerns about NSW’s commitment to the four-state and federal compact.The release on Nationals’ letterhead, which also quotes the NSW water minister, Melinda Pavey, is understood not to have the backing of the state cabinet. Continue reading...
Fine litter louts £500 to protect wildlife, says thinktank
Report also calls for ban on black plastic and an end to bottom trawling at sea
Anger over World Bank's $55m pledge to Guyana's fossil fuel industry
Campaigners say move is ‘blatant contradiction’ of lender’s climate commitmentsThe World Bank has been criticised for providing $55m (£43m) to aid fossil fuel extraction in Guyana, at the same time that it has pledged to stop direct funding of oil and gas production.The Washington-based institution, which provides loans and grants to aid the development of poorer countries, will provide $20m to pay for the training of Guyanese oil and gas officials, including those involved in the marketing of oil. Continue reading...
More misery to come after Severn flood defences breached
Evacuation in Ironbridge, Shropshire, as Environment Agency warns of continued flooding until at least Sunday
Scathing report into NSW coal seam gas could create new hurdles for Santos Narrabri project
Failure to fully implement 14 of 16 recommendations to regulate CSG extraction could lead to more support for moratorium across NSWSantos’s coal seam gas project near Narrabri could face further obstacles after a parliamentary inquiry delivered a scathing assessment of the state government’s progress in implementing recommendations to regulate coal seam gas extraction.A New South Wales legislative council inquiry found that 14 of 16 recommendations from the 2014 report by the chief scientist have not been implemented in full. Half were found to have not been implemented at all. Continue reading...
Human disturbance increasing cannibalism among polar bears
Russian scientists record more cases of bear-on-bear attacks amid food scarcity and sea ice meltCases of polar bears killing and eating each other are on the rise in the Arctic as melting ice and human activity erode their habitat, according to a Russian expert.“Cases of cannibalism among polar bears are a long-established fact, but we’re worried that such cases used to be found rarely while now they are recorded quite often,” said Ilya Mordvintsev, a polar bear expert, quoted by Interfax news agency. Continue reading...
Oil regulator to revise remit to address climate crisis
OGA faces tough balancing act of sustaining industry while helping to meet climate goals
Defra challenged over 'unlawful' release of 57m game birds in UK
Wild Justice takes legal action, citing ‘ecological assault’ and harm to rare wildlife from mass release of birds for shooting
Flooding crisis is under control, minister tells struggling farmers
George Eustice rejects need for inquiry as NFU president calls for ‘seismic investment’The government has rejected calls for a public inquiry into the UK flooding disaster, arguing that it has the crisis under control.The environment secretary, George Eustice, came under sustained attack at the National Farmers’ Union annual conference, but said the government had already saved thousands of homes from flooding and would be spending “record” amounts on future defences. Continue reading...
BP cuts ties with three US trade groups over climate policies
UK oil firm withdraws from energy organisations as it pursues net zero ambitionsBP is to sever links with three US-based trade associations, including the country’s main refining lobby, because of disagreements over their climate-related policies and activities.The decision comes after the UK oil corporation’s new chief executive, Bernard Looney, set an ambitious target to shrink its carbon footprint to net zero by 2050. To achieve this it will have to cut more greenhouse gas emissions every year than the amount produced by the whole of the UK. Continue reading...
One scientist's mission to save the 'super weird' snails under the sea
A ‘punk’ mollusc named after Joe Strummer and a snail with a bright orange shell are among the creatures at risk from deep sea miningIt takes an hour from the surface of the Indian Ocean, descending 3,000 metres in a submersible research pod, to reach the bizarre creatures that cluster around hydrothermal vents on the seabed. “You’re in a titanium sphere that is about two metres in diameter,” says evolutionary biologist Julia Sigwart, describing her voyage to Kairei hydrothermal vent field, east of Madagascar. Continue reading...
'It was everywhere': how lead is poisoning America's poorest children
The toxin has endangered hundreds of thousands of kids. But parents in the hardest-hit neighborhoods may never be warned of the threatShanaya Ball did everything right during her pregnancy: she attended check-ups, ate well, and kitted out the nursery for her son Amari, who was born in March 2017.But by his first birthday, Amari had failed to meet almost every developmental milestone, and was unable to play, communicate or move like other infants. Continue reading...
Rio Tinto announces $1bn spend to reach net zero emissions by 2050
World’s second biggest miner says it will reduce emissions by 15% by 2030, but ‘will not set targets for our customers’Mining giant Rio Tinto says it wants its globe-spanning operations to reach net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 and will spend US$1bn over the next five years to reduce its carbon footprint.The second biggest miner in the world has also committed to reducing its emissions by 15% by 2030. Continue reading...
Labor targets PM over sports rorts emails and robodebt – as it happened
Anthony Albanese accuses Scott Morrison of misleading parliament over his involvement in the scheme. This blog is now closed
Queensland flooding: highway shut and residents cut off as flood waters rise
Homes 500km west of Brisbane at risk of flooding with water levels expected to rise in coming daysFlood waters in a rural Queensland town have shut a main highway and are expected to continue rising throughout the week.About 35 homes were threatened by flood waters in the town of St George, about 500km west of Brisbane, on Wednesday. Continue reading...
Alpine ecosystems at risk as tahr population booms in New Zealand
Himalayan tahr numbers reach 35,000 despite controversial culling aimed at limiting them to 10,000A non-native goat-like animal is destroying New Zealand’s fragile alpine regions, and government culling has been unable to keep up with its population booms.The Himalayan tahr was introduced to New Zealand in 1904 as hunting game for sports shooters, and has thrived in the rugged, alpine environment of the South Island. Continue reading...
Specieswatch: rare bat may have been in UK for decades
Nathusius’ pipistrelle sightings reported from as far apart as Cornwall and ScotlandAn elusive British mammal, the tiny bat Nathusius’ pipistrelle (Pipistrellus nathusii), may be more widespread and numerous than previously thought.Sometimes described as a rare visitor or a new coloniser because of climate change, it may have been here decades but had gone undetected. Continue reading...
'Anti-Greta' teen activist to speak at biggest US conservatives conference
Naomi Seibt, who tells YouTube followers that Thunberg and other climate activists are whipping up hysteria, to speak at CPACA German teenager dubbed the “anti-Greta” – climate sceptics’ answer to the schoolgirl activist Greta Thunberg – is set to address the biggest annual gathering of US grassroots conservatives.Related: Greta Thunberg and Malala Yousafzai meet at Oxford University Continue reading...
Building new homes on land prone to flooding 'making damage worse'
MPs urge review of housing policy as Environment Agency warns against developments on floodplainsThe building of tens of thousands of homes on flood-prone land is worsening the damage to surrounding areas, Conservative MPs have said, as the head of the Environment Agency warned against new developments on floodplains.Tory backbenchers called on Boris Johnson to review the government’s housing policy over concerns that new homes were either not flood-proof or were exacerbating issues in neighbouring communities. Continue reading...
Veganism row breaks out after Joaquin Phoenix is told: be kinder to farmers
Claim that celebrity campaigns cause ‘enormous damage’ draws ire from animal rights groupsHe has been called a diva and pretentious, and there are even those who don’t like his acting – but never before has Joaquin Phoenix been accused of causing mental health problems for British livestock farmers.On Tuesday, the National Farmers’ Union (NFU) president, Minette Batters, changed all that, opening a new front against the US actor by claiming that he and other celebrity campaigners for veganism had played a part in demonising the UK’s meat producers and doing “enormous damage” to their wellbeing. Continue reading...
Government to spend millions buying water from company it already paid $80m
Money will go to Eastern Australia Agriculture – founded by energy minister Angus Taylor – for additional water to save rare wetlandsThe federal government is spending up to $2m buying water from Queensland agribusiness Eastern Australia Agriculture in a bid to keep an internationally significant wetlands from dying, despite paying $80m to the same company three years ago for water rights for the same purpose.The $80m purchase of overland flows from Eastern Australia Agriculture has been controversial and is now under scrutiny by Australian National Audit Office. Continue reading...
Environmental concerns get top billing in Infrastructure Australia priority list for first time
Protecting against coastal flooding, boosting recycling and ensuring water security are now high priority initiativesRising sea levels, water security and waste management are among the environmental challenges that Infrastructure Australia has, for the first time, elevated to the top tier of its priorities list.In its latest list, to be released on Wednesday, Infrastructure Australia said it was elevating environmental concerns because climate change was altering the water cycle and was projected to cause sea level rises of 0.4 to 0.6 metres. It also cited a renewed focus on “resilience” in the face of natural disasters. Continue reading...
JP Morgan to withdraw support for some fossil fuels
Industry’s largest financier pledges to end loans to Arctic oil drillers and coalminersJP Morgan Chase is to end fossil fuel loans for Arctic oil drilling and phase out loans for coal mining under new climate initiatives.The world’s largest financier of fossil fuels set out its plans at an investor event on Tuesday, days after the bank’s economists warned that the climate crisis threatened the survival of humanity. Continue reading...
Dutton says 'leftwing lunatics' must be dealt with as Asio warns of far-right threat
The home affairs minister declares Islamic terror is leftwing extremism after being blasted by Labor for applying false equivalencePeter Dutton has declared that “leftwing terrorism” includes Islamist extremism after being blasted by Labor for applying false equivalence in the national security debate.Dutton’s intervention on Tuesday was triggered by a speech by the director general of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (Asio) Mike Burgess. On Monday night, Australia’s top intelligence chief warned the threat of rightwing extremism in Australia was real and growing. Continue reading...
Scott Morrison praises Gladys Berejiklian's plan for zero net emissions
PM blasts Labor for adopting same 2050 target as NSW premier, saying ‘we have a plan’Scott Morrison says he’s happy to work with the New South Wales government on its ambition to hit net zero emissions by 2050 because the premier, Gladys Berejiklian, “has a plan” – although the plan the prime minister referenced on Tuesday ends in 2030.Despite blasting Labor federally for adopting the same net zero target as the Berejiklian government, the prime minister told parliament circumstances were different in NSW because there was a strategy in place to deliver a transition. Continue reading...
Accountants urged to help firms worldwide combat climate crisis
ICAEW and other industry groups want climate risk to be integrated into company auditsThe world’s accountants must put the climate crisis at the forefront of their work to spur global companies to adopt green policies and help prepare them for the risks, according to the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW) and other industry groups.They have called on a global alliance of accountants, representing more than 2.5 million professionals worldwide, to put their skills to use by helping companies prepare for a climate emergency. Continue reading...
Waste crisis: Victoria offers businesses $96.5m to process recycling
Premier says overhaul will ‘take responsibility for our waste’ and help fix longstanding problemsThe Victorian government will double its $28m in grants for businesses to sort and process recycling as part of a $96.5m package to fix the state’s waste industry.Another $30m will be opened up for grants for technology to create new products from recyclable materials such as glass, plastic, organics, electronic waste, concrete, brick and rubber. Continue reading...
Great Australian Bight: Equinor abandons plans to drill for oil
Norwegian oil company announces it has scrapped its $200m plan to deepwater drill in Great Australian Bight Marine ParkNorwegian oil giant Equinor has abandoned plans to drill for oil in the Great Australian Bight, declaring the controversial project did not make commercial sense.The company said on Tuesday it had told federal, South Australian and local authorities it had decided to scrap the $200m project to deepwater drill in the Great Australian Bight Marine Park. Continue reading...
Newly waterproofed Arctic seed vault hits 1m samples
Rapid climate change forced urgent upgrade of ‘failsafe’ doomsday storage facilityThe Arctic global seed vault has reached the milestone of having 1m varieties stored in its deep freeze. The new deposits are being made after unexpected flooding of its entrance tunnel in 2017 prompted an upgrade.Seeds from 60,000 crop varieties from across the world are being placed in the vault to back up those held in other seed banks. Continue reading...
UK lags behind in €124bn European low-carbon investment table
Britain contributed only 3% of continent’s 2019 green spending, report saysBritish companies are lagging far behind their European neighbours in low-carbon investment after contributing only 3% of the continent’s €124bn (£104.2bn) green spending last year.A report has revealed that German-listed companies invested 11 times more in low-carbon investments such as electric vehicles, renewable energy and smart energy grids than UK firms. Continue reading...
Tiny Chinese seaweed is oldest green plant fossil ever found
Proterocladus antiquus carpeted seafloor 1bn years ago and was size of rice grainScientists have found in rocks from northern China what may be the oldest fossils of a green plant ever found: tiny seaweed that carpeted areas of the seafloor 1bn years ago and were part of a primordial revolution among life on Earth.Researchers on Monday said the plant, called Proterocladus antiquus, was about the size of a rice grain and boasted numerous thin branches, thriving in shallow water while attached to the seafloor with a root-like structure. Continue reading...
Rebecca Long-Bailey pledges 'climate justice fund' paid by fossil fuel firms
Companies would pay for damages caused by extreme weather such as floodsFossil fuel companies must pay for the damage caused by extreme weather due to the climate emergency such as the floods devastating parts of England, the Labour leadership contender Rebecca Long-Bailey has said.Long-Bailey, the most leftwing candidate in the contest, said she was calling for a “climate justice fund” to support affected households and communities, paid for by a windfall tax on oil and gas companies “responsible for knowingly heating our planet to dangerous levels”. This would include help towards affordable insurance for those suffering from repeated flooding, she said. Continue reading...
Oil and gas industry rewards US lawmakers who oppose environmental protections – study
Companies spent $84m on congressional campaigns in 2018, analysis of votes and political contributions showsThe oil and gas industry substantially rewards US legislators with campaign donations when they oppose environmental protections, according to a new analysis of congressional votes and political contributions.Oil and gas companies spent $84m on congressional campaigns in 2018. Researchers found a correlation between an increase in anti-environment votes and an increase in contributions. They documented how lawmakers’ scores from the League of Conservation Voters (LCV) dipped and then were followed by campaign funding from the industry. Continue reading...
Canada: police clear rail blockade by Indigenous anti-pipeline activists
Several members of the Tyendinaga Mohawk nation arrested in growing political crisis for Justin TrudeauPolice in Canada have removed Indigenous activists from a railway line in Ontario, where a two-week protest against a contentious natural gas pipeline has blocked train traffic and fueled a growing political crisis for prime minister Justin Trudeau.The Wet’suwet’en nation have lived on their territories in what is now British Columbia for thousands of years. They have never signed treaties or sold their land to Canada. Continue reading...
Greenpeace faces hefty fine after admitting defying court order
Environmental group’s lawyers said they knew boarding North Sea rig was in contempt of courtGreenpeace faces a heavy fine after admitting that its climate activists boarded a North Sea oil rig in defiance of a court order last year.Transocean, the US-based drilling contractor, has asked the court of session in Edinburgh to impose unlimited fines on Greenpeace UK and consider jailing its executive director, John Sauven, for contempt of court. Continue reading...
Essential poll: a majority of Coalition voters support a net zero emissions target for 2050
Latest fortnightly survey shows a majority of Australian voters support net zero either strongly or somewhatA clear and growing majority of Coalition voters support the Morrison government adopting a net zero target for 2050, with support for that proposition climbing 12 points in a month, according to the latest Guardian Essential poll.The latest fortnightly survey shows a majority of Australian voters support net zero either strongly or somewhat (75%, up four points in a month), and 68% of Coalition voters in the sample hold that positive view. Last month, the proportion of supportive Coalition voters was 56%. Continue reading...
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