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Updated 2024-11-23 10:30
Biden administration reportedly pauses approval of ‘carbon mega bomb’ gas export hub
Calcasieu Pass 2, positioned near the rapidly eroding Louisiana shoreline, would be the biggest such export terminal in the USThe Biden administration will reportedly pause a decision on approving what would be one of the world's largest gas export hubs, amid concern from climate experts that greenlighting the project would create a carbon mega bomb".The project, Calcasieu Pass 2, or CP2, would be positioned near the rapidly eroding Louisiana shoreline and be the biggest such export terminal in the US and part of a huge expansion of new gas infrastructure along the Gulf of Mexico. Continue reading...
Bumblebee among species US wildlife officials consider listing as endangered
US Fish and Wildlife Service completes review of petitions and finds 10 new species that may be added to Endangered Species ActFederal wildlife officials announced on Wednesday they will consider adding 10 new species to the Endangered Species Act, including a big bumblebee that serves as an important pollinator across the United States.US Fish and Wildlife Service officials said they had completed 90-day reviews of petitions to add the species to the list and determined that listing may be warranted. The finding triggers reviews of the species' status. Continue reading...
Minister vows to end water firms’ pollution self-monitoring in England
Environment secretary, Steve Barclay, tells firms he will toughen regulatory approach but gives no timescaleThe environment secretary has told water companies in England that they will no longer be able to monitor and report on pollution from their own treatment works.Steve Barclay told the privatised industry he would put an end to operator self-monitoring in a toughening of the regulatory approach. Continue reading...
Devastating drought in Amazon result of climate crisis, study shows
Extreme weather threatens world's biggest carbon store as the rainforest is already close to tipping pointThe climate crisis turned the drought that struck the Amazon rainforest in 2023 into a devastating event, a study has found.The drought was the worst recorded in many places and hit the maximum exceptional" level on the scientific scale. Without planet-warming emissions from the burning of oil, gas and coal, the drought would have been far less extreme, the analysis found. Continue reading...
Key climate language poorly understood by majority in UK, poll finds
Terms such as green', sustainable' and environmentally friendly' understood only by minority, says studyThe British public has a worryingly low understanding of language around the climate crisis and environmental policies to reduce waste, according to the findings of a survey.Only a quarter of people questioned clearly understood the term green" and about the same number could accurately describe what sustainable" - making something in a way that causes little or no damage to the environment - meant. Continue reading...
Australia’s wholesale power prices fall by almost half as carbon emissions drop
Victoria and NSW set records for the wholesale electricity prices at zero or negative levels
Shooting ‘deviant’ wolves with paintball guns is legal, Dutch court rules
Increasingly fearless predators found to be serious threat to safety in national parksDutch authorities can shoot deviant" wolves that could pose a danger to the public with paintball guns, a court has ruled, as debate rages in Europe over protecting the animals.After a lengthy legal battle, the court in Utrecht, central Netherlands, decided on Wednesday that the behaviour of some of the wolves in a national park was a serious threat to public safety". Continue reading...
Questions over £22bn in UK billpayer cash handed to wood-burning firms
Spending watchdog calls for biomass subsidy scheme to have tougher environmental requirements
Asbestos found in mulch at new sites across Sydney following earlier Rozelle parklands discovery
Hazardous material found in mulch at railway substations in Dulwich Hill, Canterbury and Campsie and alongside Prospect Highway, authorities say
Nuclear power output expected to break global records in 2025
Experts say world is past peak fossil power' but warn against uneven development of energy projectsNuclear power generation is likely to break records in 2025 as more countries invest in reactors to fuel the shift to a low-carbon global economy, while renewable energy is likely to overtake coal as a power source early next year, data has shown.China, India, Korea and Europe are likely to have new reactors come on stream, while several in Japan are also forecast to return to generation, and French output should increase, according to a report on the state of global electricity markets published by the International Energy Agency (IEA) on Wednesday. Continue reading...
Flash floods inundate homes in San Diego: ‘It’s never been that bad’
Torrential rain swept through a large part of the US on Monday, days after a cold spellA furious rainstorm unleashed record levels of rain on communities across San Diego county on Monday, inundating homes and overturning cars. Hundreds of people had to be rescued from flooded areas as the San Diego River surged over its banks, fueled by downpours that left the city grappling with the fourth wettest day in history.States of emergencies have been declared across the county by local officials, and hundreds of unhoused people were displaced when water rushed into homeless shelters. Residents described harrowing escapes from Alpha Project's Bridge Shelter that was quickly overtaken by waist-deep water, which had also previously flooded in 2018, the San Diego Union-Tribune reported. Continue reading...
Louisiana court upholds air permits for petrochemical complex in Cancer Alley
Decision helps clear path for Formosa Plastics to build US's largest petrochemical complex of its timeA Louisiana appellate court has upheld air permits for a giant proposed petrochemical complex in a region known as Cancer Alley, enraging local advocates.The decision, issued on Friday, will help clear a path for Formosa Plastics to build the nation's largest petrochemical complex of its kind. The project has long faced staunch opposition from local and national environmental justice groups. Continue reading...
Wars and climate crisis keep Doomsday Clock at 90 seconds to midnight
Scientists say billions of lives' under threat as symbolic clock stays at closest point to midnight since it was established in 1947The Doomsday Clock, a symbolic countdown to human extinction, has stayed at 90 seconds to midnight, the closest it had been since it was established in 1947, a panel of international scientists has said.The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists cited the continuing threat of a nuclear escalation in Ukraine, the horrors of modern war" in Israel and Gaza and the lack of action on the climate crisis, which threatens billions of lives". Continue reading...
Households across Reading left without water for three days after burst mains
Thames Water struggled to rebuild pressure to homes after an incident at Pangbourne treatment worksHouseholds across Reading, the UK's biggest town, have been without water for three days after water mains burst in the cold weather.An incident at the Pangbourne water treatment works meant that water pressure dropped across the town on Saturday. Thames Water, which has its headquarters in Reading, said that subsequent pipe bursts then made it impossible to increase water pressure to homes, meaning some people have been without water for days. Emergency bottled water stations have been set up in the affected areas. On Monday, some schools and offices were forced to close as the low water pressure meant it was unsafe to stay open. Continue reading...
EY Oceania accused of potential conflict of interest over government contracts on climate policy
Exclusive: consultancy firm supported oil and gas industry lobbying while being paid for independent advice on Albanese's signature climate policy
Five examples of the UK’s crackdown on climate protesters
As UN expert says UK's actions are chilling and regressive, we look at some of the cases
UN expert condemns UK crackdown on environmental protest
UN special rapporteur on environmental defenders says he is seriously concerned about regressive new laws'A severe crackdown on environmental protest in Britain with draconian" new laws, excessive restrictions on courtroom evidence and the use of civil injunctions is having a chilling impact on fundamental freedoms, the United Nations special rapporteur has said.As the world faces a triple planetary crisis of climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution, environmental protesters were acting for the benefit of us all" and must be protected, Michel Forst, the UN special rapporteur on environmental defenders, said on Tuesday. Continue reading...
The US says it needs 22m acres for the solar energy transition – here’s what that looks like
The Bureau of Land Management proposed using 22m acres of public land for solar projects - roughly the size of Maine, or an area larger than ScotlandIf the US is to rid itself of fossil fuels then one of its primary replacements, solar energy, is going to need land. A lot of land.The Bureau of Land Management (BLM), which oversees more of the public realm than any other federal government agency, has outlined exactly how much of western America should be made available for solar panels and their associated cables and transformers - 22m acres. That is roughly the size of Maine, or an area larger than Scotland. Continue reading...
Alarm as first uranium mine in years opens near Grand Canyon
Pinyon Plain's start comes amid US's push to boost production, but tribes fear contamination of water and cultural sitesA uranium mine in Arizona located just 7 miles south of the Grand Canyon national park has begun operations, one of the first in the US to open in eight years.The opening of the Pinyon Plain mine comes as the US seeks to boost domestic production of the mineral needed for nuclear energy and accelerate divesting from fossil fuels. Continue reading...
Cookstove carbon offsets overstate climate benefit by 1,000%, study finds
Cookstove projects are one of the fastest-growing carbon offset schemes but research finds carbon benefits are vastly overstatedClean cookstove projects, one of the most popular types of carbon-offset schemes, are probably overstating their beneficial impact on the climate by an average of 1,000%, according to a new study.Every year, an estimated 3.2 million people die prematurely from household air pollution caused by cooking with smoky fuels such as wood, paraffin or kerosene, which produce about 2% of global greenhouse gas emissions.Find more age of extinction coverage here, and follow biodiversity reporters Phoebe Weston and Patrick Greenfield on X for all the latest news and features Continue reading...
Peer who praised rising temperatures appointed to climate crisis committee
Labour says appointment of David Frost shows wacky' climate views no longer confined to Tory party fringes
The disposable cup crisis: what’s the environmental impact of a to-go coffee?
It's easy to forget about single-use cups the moment they leave our hands, but their slow decomposition can release microplastics and pollutantsNo matter how good your office's coffee is, if you're like millions of others, you're probably popping out to a cafe at least once a week to treat yourself to a cup brewed by somebody else. Whether that's a latte from Starbucks, a cold brew from Dunkin' or a chai from the mom-and-pop shop around the corner, it's probably coming served in a disposable cup - made out of paper, plastic or polystyrene foam (which many people refer to by the brand name Styrofoam), that you can toss in the sidewalk trash on your walk back to the office. It's easy to forget about those single-use cups as soon as they leave our hands, but that's not to say their environmental impacts stop there too.Fortunately, more and more people are starting to pack a reusable insulated cup or mug alongside their water bottle - and more coffee shops are offering to pour beverages into the cups customers bring from home. This month, Starbucks announced that it was going full BYOC: bring your own cup. Although the company has allowed customers to bring their own cup for in-person orders since the 1980s, its move expanding BYOC to drive-through and app orders signaled companies' and customers' growing wariness of single-use, disposable coffee cups. Continue reading...
Coyotes stage comeback in Florida as residents report surge in sightings
Florida officials hail rare native wildlife success story and people have more chance of being killed by a golf ball than a coyoteFrom dwindling numbers of manatees, to Everglades critters decimated by invasive Burmese pythons, Florida has become more familiar in recent years with losing its native wildlife than gaining it.But a surge in the number of coyote sightings around the state is raising eyebrows, and in some places concern, as the species known as barking dogs spreads further into the state. Continue reading...
A piranha: it is boiling the water you’re swimming in and taking bites out of you
They don't chew: they bite, the meat goes straight into their stomach, and they bite againImagine a bulldog flattened with a meat tenderiser, shaved and sprinkled with glitter. Imagine more, and everywhere, or else: when I was a child, as sure as all cartoon sand would turn into quicksand, in every fictional body of fresh water swam very real fish with very real, sharp, tiny little teeth.In The Simpsons, Millhouse is more worried about piranhas than that his mother will stop loving him. Bart is reduced to a skeleton by piranhas from a hosepipe. Continue reading...
Why 2024 will be a crucial year for climate litigation
Advocates predict activists and local governments will look to the courts to bring about accountability for climate damageAmid record domestic oil and gas production in the US and broken promises from fossil fuel companies, climate champions are increasingly looking to the courts to bring about accountability for climate damage.More than two dozen local and state governments are challenging oil companies on these grounds, while youth plaintiffs have seven pending lawsuits targeting state and federal lawmakers. Continue reading...
US oil company ExxonMobil sues to block investors’ climate proposals
Motion by Follow This called on energy firm to accelerate attempts to cut greenhouse gas emissionsThe US oil company ExxonMobil has filed a lawsuit to block a vote on a climate resolution brought by a green activist, in move that will be watched closely by fossil fuel companies worldwide.The company hopes to stop investors voting on a motion put forward by Follow This, a Dutch green activist investor group, which called for Exxon to accelerate its attempts to cut greenhouse gas emissions. Continue reading...
UK needs ambitious green plan to keep up with allies, says Labour frontbencher
Jonathan Reynolds calls for version of US Inflation Reduction Act amid row over future of Labour policy
Reinventing the eel: first lab-grown eel meat revealed
Wild freshwater eels are at risk of extinction due to overfishing but their meat can now be cultivated from cellsThe first lab-grown freshwater eel meat has been produced, potentially solving a diner's dilemma. Rampant overfishing has caused eel populations to plummet and prices to soar, but the cultivated eel could provide the delicacy guilt-free.The eel meat was produced by Forsea Foods in Israel from embryonic cells of a freshwater eel. The company collaborated with a Japanese chef to create unagi kabayaki, marinated grilled eel over rice, and unagi nigiri, a type of sushi.This article was corrected on 22 January 2024. A previous version said the eel meat was produced from embryonic cells of the Japanese unagi eel: in fact they were from a freshwater eel. Continue reading...
Labour MP stirred by disappearing Antarctic ice and her father’s legacy
Anna McMorrin says Labour absolutely determined' on net zero after visiting Antarctica and finding report by her father, a polar researcherWhen Anna McMorrin MP visited the Antarctic as part of a government inquiry, she stumbled upon a report in the Rothera Research Station library that her father, a polar researcher, had written in 1962.It described the Larsen ice shelf, a beautiful stretch of thousands of miles of thick, white, crystalline snow - which has now almost completely melted away. Continue reading...
Albanese government secures further gas supply before meeting on cost-of-living relief
Deal aimed at keeping energy bills affordable will see 260 petajoules supplied to gas-fired power stations in Australia's south-east coast until 2033
Australia not prepared for how Antarctic ice changes will hit economy, scientist warns
Exclusive: Prof Matt King says accelerated melting could transform country and affect viability of some agricultural industries
More Australian wildlife added to threatened species list in 2023 than ever before, conservationists say
Australian Conservation Foundation says 144 animals, plants and ecological communities included in the list last year, double the previous record
‘Tortuguita vive’: campaigners across US hail anti-Cop City activist killed by police
Events in more than 30 cities mark Day of the Forest Defender', recognizing enduring impact of Manuel Paez TeranAt a gathering Thursday, the mother of an activist killed by police had a clear message on the first anniversary of their death: I have news for you. Manuel is alive. Tortuguita vive!"It was a message of celebration for the life of Manuel Paez Teran, also known as Tortuguita", that was being made in Atlanta and more than 30 cities across the US, a sign of the slain activist's enduring impact on several movements, observers said. Continue reading...
Fire ants detected south of Byron Bay after gardener raises alarm
NSW authorities are working to determine how long the pest has been in the area and how they arrived
Largest known deep-sea coral reef mapped off US Atlantic coast
Reef, which extends for 310 miles from Florida to South Carolina and at some points is 68 miles wide, called breathtaking in scale'Scientists have mapped the largest known deep-sea coral reef, stretching hundreds of miles off the US Atlantic coast.While researchers have known since the 1960s that coral is present off the Atlantic, the reef's size remained a mystery until new underwater mapping technology made it possible to construct 3D images of the ocean floor. Continue reading...
Labour to hold crunch talks on future of £28bn green investment plan
Sources say no decisions taken but Keir Starmer could abandon plan if it is deemed damaging to election chancesSenior Labour officials are to hold crunch meetings on the future of the party's pledge to spend 28bn a year on green investment, amid reports Keir Starmer is preparing to ditch the entire plan.Party sources said on Friday that officials would meet in the coming days to discuss the green prosperity plan, which would see a Labour government spend 28bn on environmental schemes each year by the second half of the next parliament. Continue reading...
Pale, porous and 3D-printed: inside the weird and wonderful quest to make compostable shoes
Shoes are notoriously hard to recycle and the vast majority are sent to landfill. Can a new design help reduce the environmental impact of our footwear?The shoes may not immediately strike you as the future of mainstream fashion. Pale and porous, they resemble a cross between a beige Croc and the long-net stinkhorn fungus found on forest floors. Their creators, however, hope this will be the next huge breakthrough in sustainable footwear: the world's first 3D printed, made-to-measure, compostable shoe, which can be broken down at the end of its life, in an attempt to stem the flow of millions of shoes into landfill each year.Fashion is among the world's top polluting industries. It is responsible for about 10% of global carbon emissions and consumes huge amounts of water and land for production. Modern shoes are among the hardest items to produce sustainably because of their complexity, say industry experts, and there are few reliable statistics about the number manufactured every year for the world's 8 billion humans. There is an almost total dearth of statistics about their environmental impact. Continue reading...
Women added to Cop29 climate summit committee after backlash
Panel was originally composed of 28 men, a move condemned as regressive' and shocking'The president of Azerbaijan has added 12 women to the previously all-male organising committee for the Cop29 global climate summit, which the country will host in December.The move follows a backlash after the Guardian reported the initial 28-man composition of the committee, which was called regressive" by the She Changes Climate campaign group. Climate change affects the whole world, not half of it," the group said. Continue reading...
‘It’s about living on what you have’: Four shepherds seek sustainable life in Spain
The four inhabitants of Morillo de Sampietro, an abandoned village in the Pyrenees, live a simple lifeThe tiny hamlet of Morillo de Sampietro stands high above a steep, wooded valley in the Spanish Pyrenees. Below is the glint of the Rio Yesa, beyond are the snow-capped peaks of Monte Perdido.In 1860 Morillo had 76 inhabitants; by 1995 only two remained. Now there are four. Continue reading...
Cop28 deal will fail unless rich countries quit fossil fuels, says climate negotiator
G77 president Pedro Pedroso warns deal risks failing if polluters like UK, US and Canada don't rethink plans to expand oil and gasThe credibility of the Cop28 agreement to transition away" from fossil fuels rides on the world's biggest historical polluters like the US, UK and Canada rethinking current plans to expand oil and gas production, according to the climate negotiator representing 135 developing countries.In an exclusive interview with the Guardian, Pedro Pedroso, the outgoing president of the G77 plus China bloc of developing countries, warned that the landmark deal made at last year's climate talks in Dubai risked failing. Continue reading...
The week in wildlife – in pictures
The best of this week's wildlife photographs from around the world Continue reading...
Social enterprise offers young people paid opportunity to protect UK oceans
Sea Ranger Service will offer the chance to carry out maintenance work and climate research on sailing vesselsA social enterprise has launched offering people between the ages of 18 and 29 the chance to protect the seas around the UK while getting paid.The Sea Ranger Service (SRS) will offer young people the chance to sail out to sea and undertake vital work to conserve Britain's oceans. Continue reading...
‘The pigs have disappeared’: swine fever threatens food source for millions as disease hits wild herds
Scientists call for urgent intervention, as bearded pig populations are devastated by the deadly virus on islands such as BorneoPopulations of wild pigs are crashing due to the spread of African swine fever (ASF), threatening the livelihoods of millions who depend on them for food, researchers warn.With a fatality rate of almost 100%, ASF has swept across Asia, Europe and Africa, devastating domestic and wild pig populations over the past 10 to 20 years. The impacts are especially significant in Borneo, in south-east Asia, where bearded pig numbers have declined by between 90% and 100% since it arrived on the island in 2021, researchers said. Continue reading...
Fury at plan to extend Drax subsidy to burn trees for electricity
Climate groups and MPs criticise proposals for consumers to foot bill to support biomass plant after existing scheme ends in 2027The government has proposed plans to offer the Drax power plant extra subsidies to burn trees for electricity, provoking a backlash from climate groups and green Tory MPs.Ministers have begun consulting on plans for bill payers to foot the cost of supporting Drax until the end of the decade once its existing subsidy scheme, which pays on average more than 500m a year, ends in 2027. Continue reading...
Environment Agency told staff to delay inspections to stay on target last year
Regulator accused of massaging figures' by telling staff to pause inspections at poorly performing waste sites until JanuaryThe Environment Agency told staff in September to stop inspecting the most poorly performing waste sites until January in order to meet corporate compliance targets, it can be revealed.The regulator has been accused of massaging the figures", with an insider telling the Ends Report and the Guardian that a lack of resources means the body is failing to do its statutory duty in a timely manner". Continue reading...
Fears of ‘weed highways’ as summer rains spread invasive plants through rural Australia
Floods and extreme weather causing greater spread of seeds, buds and roots, while weed spraying interrupted by rain and wind
NSW can avoid electricity shortages without paying hundreds of millions to keep Eraring open, expert says
New renewable energy and battery projects will provide enough capacity when Australia's largest coal-fired power station closes, report finds
Carbon released by bottom trawling ‘too big to ignore’, says study
Fishing nets churn up carbon from the sea floor, more than half of which will eventually be released into the atmosphereScientists have long known that bottom trawling - the practice of dragging massive nets along the seabed to catch fish - churns up carbon from the sea floor. Now, for the first time, researchers have calculated just how much trawling releases into the atmosphere: 370m tonnes of planet-heating carbon dioxide a year - an amount, they say, that is too big to ignore".Over the study period, 1996-2020, they estimated the total carbon dioxide released from trawling to the atmosphere to be 8.5 to 9.2bn tonnes. The scientists described trawling as marine deforestation" that causes irreparable harm" to the climate, society and wildlife. Continue reading...
Meadow brown butterflies ‘adapt’ to global heating by developing fewer spots
Study finds female chrysalises that develop at higher temperatures have fewer eyespots, making them harder to see in dry grassFemale meadow brown butterflies who develop in warmer weather sport fewer spots on their wings, in an unexpected adaptation to global heating.The discovery was made by University of Exeter scientists who found that females whose chrysalises developed at 11C had six spots on average, while those developing at 15C had just three. Continue reading...
Nature in England at risk due to government failures, says environment watchdog
Office for Environmental Protection report shows only four of 40 targets for England likely to be achievedThe government is failing on almost all of its environmental targets, risking an irreversible spiral of decline" in nature, a damning report by the environment watchdog has found.Dame Glenys Stacey, chair of the Office for Environmental Protection (OEP), has said in the report, published today, that if action is not taken England will fail to meet its goal of halting nature's decline by 2030, as well as a host of other vital nature targets. Continue reading...
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