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Updated 2025-09-09 23:15
Martin Rowson on the record leap in global CO2 levels – cartoon
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Otters among UK wildlife carrying toxic ‘forever chemicals’, analysis shows
Some wildlife species have accumulated many times more than safe amount of PFAS in their tissue and organs
Don’t Look Up director says ‘half a billion people’ have now seen film despite critics
Adam McKay says the Jennifer Lawrence and Leonardo DiCaprio-starring satire resonates with a widespread feeling of being deceived by government and mediaAdam McKay, writer-director of climate-crisis satire Don't Look Up, says that the film's popularity with viewers shows the popular will to tackle climate change, despite the critical brickbats the film attracted and political inertia around the issue.McKay was speaking to the NME during the wildfire emergency that is currently affecting Los Angeles, which has included many high-profile victims from the Hollywood community. Saying that while Netflix, the film's distributors, would not release definitive audience figures, he estimated that somewhere between 400 million and half a billion" people saw it, and that viewers all really connected with the idea of being gaslit". Continue reading...
‘It’s going to be rough’: what Trump’s response to LA fires portends for future climate disasters
Big oil executive plans to celebrate Trump's inauguration as California burns - though experts say climatic conditions are only getting more extremeDonald Trump's response to the catastrophic wildfires in Los Angeles has provided a stark prologue to how his US presidency will probably handle the growing threat of such disasters - through acrimony, brutal dealmaking and dismissal of a climate crisis that is spurring a mounting toll of fires, floods and other calamities.As of Thursday, four fires, whipped up by wind speeds more typically found in hurricanes, have torched 63 sq miles (163 sq km) of Los Angeles, a burned area roughly three times the size of Manhattan, destroying more than 12,000 homes and businesses and killing at least 25 people. The Palisades and Eaton fires, the largest of the conflagrations that have turned entire neighborhoods to ash, are still to be fully contained. Continue reading...
Week in wildlife in pictures: chilly pelicans, a baby gorilla and a spider fan’s dream come true
The best of this week's wildlife photographs from around the world Continue reading...
‘Everyone thought it would cause gridlock’: the highway that Seoul turned into a stream
Cheonggyecheon stream in the South Korean capital has become an attraction - and helps with flood management, fighting air pollution and cooling the cityOn a crisp December morning, office workers and tourists stroll along a tree-lined stream in central Seoul, pausing on stepping stones that cross its flowing waters. It's difficult to imagine that just over 20 years ago, this was a vast elevated highway carrying 168,000 cars daily through the heart of South Korea's capital.Cheonggyecheon, a stream that runs for about 3.5 miles (nearly 6km) through Seoul, was one of the earliest experiments in an increasing trend in cities globally: turning spaces where there was once car or rail infrastructure into spaces for pedestrians and cyclists. It's a powerful example of the way that these spaces can become loved and popular, along with projects such as the High Line in New York, where an old railway track has been turned into a raised park, or the city moat in Utrecht, where a multi-lane road (nicknamed the motorway from nothing to nowhere") was converted back into a canal, in part of a huge continuing push to allow pedestrians and cyclists to dominate the city's centre. Continue reading...
Scottish government must do more to control salmon farming, inquiry finds
Report criticises slow progress' on industry regulation, amid record fish mortality and concerns over welfare and environmental pollutionThe Scottish government has been criticised for its slow progress" on regulating the salmon farming industry by a parliamentary inquiry that took evidence for five months before reaching its conclusion.The report reveals that MSPs seriously considered" calling for a moratorium on new farms and expansion of existing sites due to concerns over persistently high salmon mortality rates but did not do so due to uncertainties over the impact on jobs and communities. Continue reading...
Wildfires drive record leap in global level of climate-heating CO2
Data for 2024 shows humanity is moving yet deeper into a dangerous world of supercharged extreme weatherWildfires that blazed around the world in 2024 helped to drive a record annual leap in carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere, surprising scientists. The data shows humanity is moving yet deeper into a dangerous world of supercharged extreme weather.The CO level at the Mauna Loa observatory in Hawaii jumped by 3.6 parts per million (ppm) to 427ppm, far above the 280ppm level before the large-scale burning of fossil fuels sparked the climate crisis. The Mauna Loa observations, known as the Keeling curve, began in 1958 and are the longest running direct measurements of CO. Continue reading...
I’ve been climbing Tasmanian mountains for years – but I’m terrified of heights | Ben Walter
Our society emphasises the value of conquering and overcoming your fears - but I can live with the idea of not climbing every mountainEarlier this year, I finally climbed Mount Anne. This has taken an unlikely amount of time - I've been climbing Tasmanian mountains for years, but had never been up one of the island's signature summits.A peak bagging" hobby is great fun, and takes you out to all sorts of interesting places. Some Tasmanians set themselves to climb the Abels, a list of 158 mountains that are at least 1100m high, but the list compiled by the Hobart Walking Club, the one I follow, is far more ridiculous - a total of 481 summits to find your way up. A list that huge seems bigger than most of them. Continue reading...
Australia is becoming an uninsurable nation. There may only be one solution | Nicki Hutley
With the outlook for risk of fire, flood and other disasters increasing, this is not a problem that will go awayAs we watch the horror of the Los Angeles fires, Australians are painfully reminded of our own vulnerability to climate change, which continues to exacerbate the impact and frequency of these unnatural disasters.The images of loss and destruction in LA are particularly painful to those who have experienced such losses first-hand in Australia.Nicki Hutley is an independent economist and councillor with the Climate Council Continue reading...
Fleeing mountain lions and scorched earth: can wildlife survive California’s wildfires?
The fires have been devastating for humans and taken a toll on nature, but many of California's ecosystems will be able to regenerateBeth Pratt has spent her career protecting Los Angeles' mountain lions, which roam an area currently engulfed by wildfires. These apex predators, also known as cougars or pumas, share a scrubby landscape with lavish private homes and a dense network of roads. When major fires take out huge areas of open space, their options are limited.This is the LA area - these mountain lions can't move into the Kardashians' back yard," says Pratt, California executive director for the National Wildlife Federation. My heart is very heavy right now," she says. Continue reading...
‘A ton of unknowns’: months ago, LA residents lost wildfire insurance. Then the fires came
After insurers like State Farm dropped policies, to switch to the state's Fair plan was prohibitively pricey for manyWhen James Borow realized last Tuesday that his Palisades house was on fire, he was 300 miles away in Las Vegas at the Consumer Electronics Show. The power was out at his house but a friend suggested he remotely turn on his Tesla and see if the cameras showed anything.From the car camera, he watched in a panic as his house burned. As he drove home from Vegas to LA, he called his parents and told them: You'll see it on the news tomorrow, but the house is totally gone. I just watched it." Continue reading...
UK accused of undermining democratic rights with climate protest crackdown
British director of Human Rights Watch attacks dangerous hypocrisy' of governmentBritain's crackdown on climate protest is setting a dangerous precedent" around the world and undermining democratic rights, the UK director of Human Rights Watch has said.Yasmine Ahmed accused the Labour government of hypocrisy over its claims to be committed to human rights and international law. Continue reading...
A town torched by LA fires rallies to revive its community: ‘Everybody wants to come back’
Eaton fire tore through Altadena, burning buildings and killing many. Its residents are only now taking in the scale of devastationA week after wildfires tore through the community of Altadena, the smell of destruction still hangs in the air. The acrid smoke seeped into the walls of homes that survived the Eaton fire, which burned 7,000 buildings and killed at least 15 people.On Woodbury Road, where unblemished homes stand in between blackened lots of charred rubble, the devastation overwhelms the senses. The houses that haven't completely collapsed offer glimpses of life before disaster arrived - pitchers and mugs in a cabinet, all a deep black, a bed still standing, a scorched bicycle and children's toys. Continue reading...
Revealed: drinking water sources in England polluted with forever chemicals
Exclusive: Water industry calls for PFAS ban after analysis of sampling data shows contamination across country
The media needs to show how the climate crisis is fueling the LA wildfires
With few exceptions, the news has shied away from showing how the unfolding climate crisis plays a large role in the disasterLast week, as the Sunset fire was bearing down on her Los Angeles home, Allison Agsten approached a group of television news crews gathering in her neighborhood. Did any of them plan to mention the role of the climate crisis in their reporting?The question was professional as well as personal for Agsten, who runs a climate journalism center at the University of Southern California and has trained reporters on how to connect the climate crisis to what's happening in the world. She has lived in her home along Runyon Canyon, near Hollywood, for a decade. Continue reading...
UK farmland being contaminated by ‘forever chemicals’ linked to cancers
Levels of PFAS chemicals found in sludge destined for British land would not be considered safe for allotments
Window to stop decline of England’s nature closing fast, watchdog says
Office for Environmental Protection calls for urgent action after finding government is falling short on most targetsThe window to stop the decline of England's nature is swiftly closing, the environmental watchdog has said, as its latest report finds that the government is falling short on most of its targets to improve the environment.Some of Labour's actions, however, including setting up a water commission and writing a new environmental improvement plan, were praised by the Office for Environmental Protection (OEP) in its annual review of how the government was meeting the legally binding environment targets. Continue reading...
Economic growth could fall 50% over 20 years from climate shocks, say actuaries
Exclusive: Report by risk experts says previous assessments ignored severe effects of climate crisisGlobal economic growth could plummet by 50% between 2070 and 2090 from the catastrophic shocks of climate change unless immediate action by political leaders is taken to decarbonise and restore nature, according to a new report.The stark warning from risk management experts the Institute and Faculty of Actuaries (IFoA) hugely increases the estimate of risk to global economic wellbeing from climate change impacts such as fires, flooding, droughts, temperature rises and nature breakdown. In a report with scientists at the University of Exeter, published on Thursday, the IFoA, which uses maths and statistics to analyse financial risk for businesses and governments, called for accelerated action by political leaders to tackle the climate crisis. Continue reading...
California fires: LA fire crews make progress as officials expect ‘much-needed break’ from dangerous weather – as it happened
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Trump energy chief pick says linking wildfires to climate crisis is ‘hype’
Democrats criticize Chris Wright's comments during US Senate confirmation hearing for energy secretary nomineeDonald Trump's nominee for energy secretary, Chris Wright, is facing criticism for disputing the ties between climate change and more frequent or severe wildfires, the Washington Post reports, a stance that is contrary to scientific consensus.During Wright's US Senate confirmation hearing on Wednesday, Democrats, including the California senator Alex Padilla, challenged Wright over past comments, pointing to a LinkedIn post calling wildfire concerns hype" and dismissing their connection to climate policies. Continue reading...
Australians should be angry about another year of climate inaction. But don’t let your anger turn into despair | Greg Jericho
I've been writing about climate change for years. I know my graphs won't change minds, but facts matter2025 has not started well, and you should be bloody angry.We are less than five months from the federal election and both major parties' climate change policies are an amalgam of indolence and lies. Continue reading...
What do the Los Angeles fires tell us about the coming water wars? | Judith Levine
Will water soon be a marketable commodity or a priceless public good?There's a scene in the film Mad Max: Fury Road where the evil ruler Immortan Joe, gazing down from a cliff upon his parched, emaciated subjects, turns two turbines, and water gushes from three gigantic sluices. The wretched masses surge forward to catch the deluge in their pots and bowls. And as imperiously as he opened the gates, Joe shuts them. Do not become addicted to water," he roars. It will take hold of you." But, of course, he already has taken hold of them by withholding, essentially, life.We don't have to await the dystopian future for the water wars to begin. The struggle over water, between private interests and the public good, the powerful and the weak, is raging now. From Love Canal to Flint, Michigan; Bolivia to Ukraine to Tunisia; budget-cutting, privatization, corporate malfeasance and climate crises are conspiring to create political violence, mass migration, property damage and death. Continue reading...
Italian police accused of making female activists remove underwear and do squats
Climate activists say they were subjected to degrading treatment during questioning in Brescia on MondayItaly's interior minister has been urged to open an investigation into police in the northern city of Brescia amid allegations that seven female climate activists were made to take off their underwear and perform squats during questioning.The activists were among 22 people brought to Brescia's main police station on Monday morning after officers interrupted a protest held outside the Italian aerospace and defence firm Leonardo's factory. Continue reading...
California pulls diesel phase-out request to EPA ahead of Trump administration
Air Resources Board withdraws request for approval of rules to limit pollution from diesel trains and big rigsCalifornia's efforts to limit pollution from diesel-powered trains and big rigs were stalled in anticipation of pushback from the incoming Trump administration.The California Air Resources Board said on Tuesday it withdrew its requests for federal approval to implement stricter emissions rules for locomotives and semi-trucks because the US Environmental Protection Agency had yet to approve them. The decision came just days before Joe Biden leaves office. Continue reading...
Climate ‘whiplash’ events increasing exponentially around world
Global heating means atmosphere can drive both extreme droughts and floods with rapid switchesClimate whiplash" between extremely wet and dry conditions, which spurred catastrophic fires in Los Angeles, is increasing exponentially around the world because of global heating, analysis has found.Climate whiplash is a rapid swing between very wet or dry conditions and can cause far more harm to people than individual extreme events alone. In recent years, whiplash events have been linked to disastrous floods in east Africa, Pakistan and Australia and to worsening heatwaves in Europe and China. Continue reading...
‘Running to danger and saving lives’: 1,100 incarcerated firefighters are on the LA frontlines
The jobs are highly coveted, offering training and reduced sentences, but face criticism over low wagesAs firefighters are battling multiple huge blazes tearing through Los Angeles, California's prisons have deployed more than 1,000 incarcerated people to battle on the frontlines.The California department of corrections and rehabilitation (CDCR) said that, as of Wednesday morning, 1,116 incarcerated people were embedded with the state's other firefighters to help slow the spread of the infernos that have killed at least 25 people and devastated neighborhoods across LA county. Continue reading...
‘I applaud the EPA’: agency launches formal review of five toxic chemicals
Review could lead to bans on plastic chemicals including vinyl chloride, compound at center of 2023 Ohio train wreckThe Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is launching a formal review of five highly toxic plastic chemicals, including vinyl chloride, the notorious compound at the center of the East Palestine, Ohio, train wreck fire. The move could lead to strong limits or bans on the substances.Vinyl chloride is most commonly used in PVC pipe and packaging production, but is also cancerous and highly flammable. For about 50 years, the federal government has considered limits on the substance, but industry has thwarted most regulatory efforts, hidden the substances' risks and is already mobilizing against the new review. Continue reading...
3M knew firefighting foams containing PFAS were toxic, documents show
Exclusive: Newly uncovered documents reveal chemicals giant was aware environmentally neutral' products did not biodegradeThe multibillion-dollar chemicals company 3M told customers its firefighting foams were harmless and biodegradable when it knew they contained toxic substances so persistent they are now known as forever chemicals" and banned in many countries including the UK, newly uncovered documents show.From the 1960s until 2003, 3M made foams containing PFOS and PFOA (perfluorooctane sulfonate and perfluorooctanoic acid), synthetic chemicals that can take tens of thousands of years to degrade in the environment and have been linked to cancers and a range of other health problems such as thyroid disease, high cholesterol, hormonal problems and fertility issues. Continue reading...
Major banks are abandoning their climate alliance en masse. So much for ‘woke capital’ | Adrienne Buller
The scope of the Cop26 net zero banking alliance may have been limited, but the exodus of six US banks signifies a seismic political shiftLast week, as flames began tearing through greater Los Angeles, claiming multiple lives and forcing more than 100,000 people to evacuate, JP Morgan became the sixth major US bank to quit the Net Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA) since the start of December. A smaller story, certainly, but the departure of top US banks from the NZBA in the weeks since Donald Trump's re-election nonetheless speaks to a seismic political shift prompting major financial institutions to turn away from the climate-related commitments they made in the optimistic years after the Paris agreement.The NZBA is a voluntary network of global banks committed to align lending and investment portfolios with net zero emissions by 2050". It is part of the umbrella Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero (GFANZ), which counts among its membership dozens of alliances" covering the various segments of global finance. For its part, the NZBA requires new members to submit science-aligned targets within 18 months of joining, alongside disclosing plans for and status updates on meeting them.Adrienne Buller is director of The Break Down and the author of The Value of a Whale: on the illusions of green capitalism Continue reading...
Ball-shaped debris washes up at Sydney’s Bondi, Coogee, Maroubra and Cronulla beaches
Penny Sharpe says mystery' debris sent for testing and beaches not closed as there were so few balls
Two Sydney beaches still closed after mystery debris ‘grease balls’ washed ashore
Dee Why and South Curl Curl remain closed but seven others reopen after marble-sized debris washed up at multiple locations
The Guardian view on chemical pollution: the UK can’t ignore the risks from PFAS | Editorial
Efforts by the plastics industry to thwart regulation come from a familiar playbookAs the public wake up to the risk of forever chemicals", or PFAS, the industry is fighting back with a campaign researchers have compared with big tobacco's battle against restrictions on smoking. New findings about its intense lobbying efforts are highly concerning and require a response from the environment secretary, Steve Reed. A recent consultation by the European Chemicals Agency, regarding proposals for comprehensive regulation of the substances, which take an enormous length of time to degrade, was inundated with responses from business.Varieties of these chemicals have been used in manufacturing and consumer goods since the 1950s. They protect equipment, remove grease and smooth skin - hence their appearance in kitchenware and cosmetics. But they can also leak into soil and water, and accumulate inside human tissues. Some have been linked to health problems including cancer and high cholesterol. Continue reading...
Climate activists who target artworks ‘using Suffragette tactics’, says artist
Alex Margo Arden says symbolic damage' helped force public conversation about climate crisisProtesters who targeted paintings to raise awareness of the climate crisis were using an effective" tactic also used by the Suffragettes, according to an artist whose new show focuses on recent attacks on high-profile artworks.Alex Margo Arden, whose exhibition, Safety Curtain, opens this week at Auto Italia in east London, said the symbolic damage" caused to the images, which were protected by glass, helped force a public conversation about the climate crisis. Continue reading...
‘Assume the worst’: fears rise that LA drinking water could be contaminated
Growing concern that toxic chemicals released by wildfires can get into damaged drinking water systemsAs fires continue to burn across Los Angeles, several utilities have declared their drinking water unsafe until extensive testing can prove otherwise.A warmer, drier climate means wildfires are getting worse, and encroaching on cities - with devastating impact. Toxic chemicals from those burns can get into damaged drinking water systems, and even filtering or boiling won't help, experts say. Continue reading...
Private school run in south London linked to 27% rise in air pollution
Campaigners say pollution levels in street in Herne Hill were far higher when private schools were openParents driving children to private schools is associated with a 27% increase in air pollution and congestion in a south London street, according to campaigners who are calling for private schools to make greater use of sustainable transport.The analysis by Solve the School Run found that nitrogen dioxide levels and fine particulates produced by vehicles in the street in Herne Hill were far higher when nearby private schools such as Dulwich college were open, compared with when only local state schools were open. Continue reading...
Chemicals in sewage sludge fertilizer used on farms pose cancer risk, EPA says
Environmental Protection Agency officials warn of toxic PFAS found in sewage often spread on pastureHarmful chemicals in sewage sludge spread on pasture as fertilizer pose a risk to people who regularly consume milk, beef and other products from those farms, in some cases raising cancer risk several orders of magnitude" above what the Environmental Protection Agency considers acceptable, federal officials announced on Tuesday.When cities and towns treat sewage, they separate the liquids from the solids and treat the liquid. The solids need to be disposed of and can make a nutrient-rich sludge often spread on farm fields. The agency now says those solids often contain toxic, lasting PFAS that treatment plants cannot effectively remove. When people eat or drink foods containing these forever" chemicals, the compounds accumulate in the body and can cause kidney, prostate and testicular cancer. They harm the immune system and childhood development. Continue reading...
No 10 blocks beaver release plan as officials view it as ’Tory legacy’
Exclusive: Natural England furious that years of work has been undone, with minister urged to push policy throughDowning Street has blocked plans to release wild beavers in England because officials view it as a Tory legacy", the Guardian can reveal.Natural England, the government's nature watchdog, has drawn up a plan for reintroductions of the rodent, which until about 20 years ago had been extinct in Britain for 400 years, having been hunted for their fur, meat and scent oil. Beavers create useful habitats for wildlife and reduce flooding by breaking up waterways, slowing water flow, and creating still pools. Continue reading...
Sizewell C cost ‘has doubled since 2020 and could near £40bn’
Treasury expected to decide whether to support EDF-backed nuclear power plant in this year's spending review
Revealed: US hazardous waste is sent to Mexico – where a ‘toxic cocktail’ of pollution emerges
A Guardian and Quinto Elemento Lab investigation finds very high levels of lead and arsenic in homes near a factory processing US toxic waste
Five years, multiple deaths: what is happening at the home of the last captive whales in Canada?
Ontario's Marineland lost five belugas last year, which the park's management puts down to the circle of life'. But activists claim animal welfare is at stakeOn the southern shores of the Niagara River, a few hundred feet from the thundering falls, sits Marineland of Canada - an amusement park, zoo, aquarium and forest occupying nearly 1,000 acres of land (400 hectares). Over the years, millions of people have clamoured to view the park's 4,000 animals, including its prized walruses, orcas, dolphins and belugas.But over the past few years, the park has taken a decidedly dark turn as there has been a string of deaths among the world's largest captive beluga population. Last year, five belugas died at the facility bringing the total number of whales and dolphins to die there since 2019 to more than 20. Continue reading...
Biden Trump-proofs $74bn in climate funding but $20bn remains vulnerable
Allocation of funds from Inflation Reduction Act makes it harder for president-elect to halt green initiativesThe Biden administration has raced to allocate $74bn of funding for climate initiatives before Donald Trump's inauguration, leaving $20bn vulnerable to potential rollback by the incoming president, new figures reveal.As the inauguration of Trump looms, the outgoing administration has been accelerating its allocation of cash for climate change and clean energy programs before they are throttled by the incoming US president. Continue reading...
Dream come true for Australian funnel-web spider enthusiast after he discovers a new species
Newcastle funnel-web spider's last shared common ancestor with the Sydney funnel-web was 17 million years ago, experts say
Nobel prize winners call for urgent ‘moonshot’ effort to avert global hunger catastrophe
More than 150 Nobel and World Food prize laureates sign open letter calling for immediate ramping up of food productionMore than 150 Nobel and World Food prize laureates have signed an open letter calling for moonshot" efforts to ramp up food production before an impending world hunger catastrophe.The coalition of some of the world's greatest living thinkers called for urgent action to prioritise research and technology to solve the tragic mismatch of global food supply and demand". Continue reading...
Ministers to appeal against river pollution ruling won by Yorkshire anglers
High court had ruled government was not meeting legal duty to clean up Costa Beck near PickeringThe UK environment secretary, Steve Reed, is pursuing legal action against a group of anglers who are trying to restore the ecosystem of a river.Lawyers for Reed will argue on Tuesday in the court of appeal that cleaning up individual rivers and streams devastated by pollution is administratively unworkable. Continue reading...
‘Down but not out’: Queensland farmers end 11-year legal fight against New Acland coalmine expansion
Oakey Coal Action Alliance says it will still oppose inappropriate' mining after abandoning court appeal to stop New Hope Group's project
Biden urges Congress to ‘step up’ on California aid as LA warned of ‘explosive fire growth’ – as it happened
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LA fires forecast to be costliest blaze in US history with estimate of over $200bn in losses
Fires have killed at least 24, displaced thousands, destroyed over 12,000 structures as winds predicted until WednesdayFire crews are trying to get the upper hand on blazes that are tearing through Los Angeles before expected high wind gusts threaten their progress. The fires, which may become the most expensive in US history, have killed at least 24 people, displaced thousands, destroyed more than 12,000 structures and have 100,000 people under evacuation orders.Sustained winds of up to 40mph (64km/h) and gusts in the mountains reaching 65mph (105km/h) are predicted through Wednesday, forecasters said. Winds picked up on Monday and were expected to strengthen on Tuesday, fire behavior analyst Dennis Burns said. Continue reading...
Dangerous winds expected to amplify California wildfires as death toll hits 24
Warning of particularly dangerous situation' with gusts expected as LA fire chief says: We are not in the clear yet'Firefighters battling the disastrous wildfires around Los Angeles were prepared for a return of dangerous winds that could again stoke the flames as the death toll in the tragedy has hit at least 24.Fierce gusts known as Santa Ana winds have been largely blamed for turning the wildfires into devastating infernos that leveled huge tranches of neighborhoods around America's second-largest city, which has also been hit by drought. Continue reading...
Where there’s fire, there’s smoke: Los Angeles blazes raise fears of ‘super toxic’ lung damage
Concerns that dangerous fine particle pollution can become embedded in bloodstream and lungs
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