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Updated 2025-07-04 19:15
Are the climate wars really over, or has a new era of greenwashing just begun? | Joëlle Gergis
In a new Quarterly Essay, Joelle Gergis says that while Rome wasn't built in a day, the Albanese government's lack of action on climate change does not reflect the urgency of the crisis
My Climate View: online tool allows Australian farmers to project changes out to 2070
Program developed by the CSIRO and Bureau of Meteorology allows farmers to better understand the risks of the climate crisis, study found
A supreme court case about fisherman is flying under the radar, but could soon ‘create chaos’
For decades, the Chevron deference doctrine has given broad powers to federal agencies. Now it could be overturned - with major consequencesThe US supreme court is poised to decide the fate of a decades-old legal framework that has helped determine how the federal government regulates everything from pollution to financial markets.With cases on abortion, homelessness and Donald Trump grabbing the spotlight, the so-called Chevron deference doctrine has flown somewhat under the radar. But it could be among the court's most influential decisions this year, upending the way Congress legislates, how bureaucrats carry out presidential directives and how courts rule when conflicts arise over the regulatory process.Is a statute ambiguous?Is the agency's interpretation reasonable? Continue reading...
A supreme court case about fishermen could throw government into chaos
For decades, the Chevron deference doctrine has given broad powers to federal agencies. Now it could be overturned - with major consequencesThe US supreme court is poised to decide the fate of a decades-old legal framework that has helped determine how the federal government regulates everything from pollution to financial markets.With cases on abortion, homelessness and Donald Trump grabbing the spotlight, the so-called Chevron deference doctrine has flown somewhat under the radar. But it could be among the court's most influential decisions this year, upending the way Congress legislates, how bureaucrats carry out presidential directives and how courts rule when conflicts arise over the regulatory process. Continue reading...
‘It’s all we have’: young climate activists on the state of politics around the world
With elections affecting half the world's population this year, campaigners offer their views on the chances of real changeThis year elections are taking place across the globe, covering almost half of the world's population. It is also likely to be, yet again, the hottest year recorded as the climate crisis intensifies. The Guardian asked young climate activists around the world what they want from the elections and whether politics is working in the fight to halt global heating. Continue reading...
Scotland’s remote land of bogs and bugs in line for world heritage status
A decision from Unesco on giving the peat-rich Flow Country the same standing as the Great Barrier Reef is just weeks awayIt is a land of mire, mist and midges that could soon be awarded a special status among the planet's wild habitats. In a few weeks, Unesco is set to announce its decision on an application to allow the Flow Country in north Scotland to become a world heritage site.Such a designation is only given to places of special cultural, historical or scientific significance and would put this remote region of perpetual dampness on the same standing as the Great Barrier Reef, the Grand Canyon and the Pyramids. Continue reading...
Climate activist defaces Monet painting in Paris
Woman from Riposte Alimentaire arrested after sticking poster on impressionist painter's CoquelicotsA climate activist has been arrested for sticking an adhesive poster on a Monet painting at the Musee d'Orsay in Paris to draw attention to global heating, a police source said.The action by the woman, a member of Riposte Alimentaire (Food Response) - a group of environmental activists and defenders of sustainable food production - was seen in a video posted on X, placing a blood-red poster over Coquelicots (Poppies) by the French impressionist painter Claude Monet. Continue reading...
Climate deniers like DeSantis hurt most vulnerable communities, scientists say
On first day of predicted intense Atlantic hurricane season, Nature Conservancy urges action and warns against misinformationMisinformation spread by climate deniers such as Florida's extremist Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, increases the vulnerability" of communities in the path of severe weather events, scientists are warning.The message comes on Saturday, the first day of what experts fear could be one of the most intense and dangerous Atlantic hurricane seasons on record, threatening a summer of natural disasters across the US. Continue reading...
Sensor error means New Delhi heatwave record overstated by 3C
Meteorologists found 52.9C reading to be false, though new record does appear to have been setA record temperature registered this week for the Indian capital of 52.9C (127.22F) was too high by 3C, the Indian government has said.The Indian Meteorological Department (IMD) had investigated Wednesday's reading by the weather station at Mungeshpur, a densely packed corner of New Delhi, and found a 3C sensor error", the earth sciences minister, Kiren Rijiju, said. Continue reading...
‘More profitable than farming’: how Ecuador’s birding boom is benefiting wildlife
With hundreds of highly prized species, bird tourism is thriving in the country - and farmers are increasingly turning their land into nature reservesWhen it came to dividing up his late father's farm between five brothers, Vinicio Bacuilima says he drew the short straw. Maraksacha, on the main road out of Ecuador's capital Quito, is a tiny patch of land on the edge of a steep ravine, making it very difficult to make a living from farming.Then Bacuilima's wife Anita Cajas had an idea: turn their paltry inheritance into a site to attract visiting birders. Creating the Maraksacha Reserve was a risky venture, but it paid off, with feeders attracting a host of colourful hummingbirds and tanagers. Continue reading...
California lake so green with algae it’s visible from space, says Nasa
Bright hue of Clear Lake, state's largest freshwater basin, may have been caused by cyanobacteria and other phytoplanktonCalifornia's largest freshwater lake has turned bright green due to algae blooms so intense they are visible from space, Nasa has announced, sharing satellite images from mid-May.The photographs showed that bright green swirls were visible across most of the lake's area", the space agency said, and may have been caused by cyanobacteria, commonly known as blue-green algae, as well as other kinds of phytoplankton. Continue reading...
‘Game-changing’: Vermont becomes first state to require big oil to pay for climate damages
Climate Superfund Act compels oil companies to pay potentially billions of dollars for climate impacts caused by their emissionsVermont has become the first state to enact a law holding oil firms financially responsible for climate damages, after the Republican governor, Phil Scott, allowed it to pass without his signature late on Thursday.Modeled after the Environmental Protection Agency's Superfund program, the Climate Superfund Act directs the state to charge major fossil fuel companies potentially billions of dollars to pay for climate impacts to which their emissions have contributed. It is expected to face legal challenges from the industry. Continue reading...
Texas sees snowploughs in May as ‘DVD-sized’ hailstones strike state
Western Texas briefly looked like a winter wonderland' amid dramatic temperature drop and hailstormJust as people start bringing out their shorts for the start of summer, one Texas town had to reach for something rarely seen in late May: a snowplough.Parts of the state saw a dramatic 50F temperature drop on Wednesday thanks to a giant dump of hail, some DVD-sized". The storm made western Texas look, briefly, like a winter wonderland. Continue reading...
Starmer admits he flew by private jet to clean energy jobs rally in Scotland
Labour leader says it was most efficient form of transport' from Wales and party has offset the carbonKeir Starmer has admitted he used a private jet to travel to a campaign rally in Scotland where he promised to create tens of thousands" of clean energy jobs with a new publicly owned energy company in the country.Responding to media questions after speaking to activists in Greenock, Inverclyde, Starmer said: We did use a private jet because we did need to get very quickly to Scotland from Wales yesterday and it was the most efficient form of transport in the middle of a very busy general election campaign." Continue reading...
New US rules aim to crack down on toxic air pollution by steelmakers
Rules target contaminants such as mercury, benzene and lead released by coke ovens used by facilities to burn coalNew Environmental Protection Agency rules aim to crack down on toxic air pollution from US steelmakers by limiting pollutants such as mercury, benzene and lead that have long poisoned the air in neighborhoods surrounding the plants.The rules target contaminants released by steel facilities' coke ovens. Gas from the ovens creates an individual cancer risk in the air around steel plants of 50 in 1,000,000, which public health advocates say is dangerous for children and people with underlying health problems. Continue reading...
Endangered penguin chicks hatched at Chester zoo named after plants
Zoo welcomes 11 Humboldt chicks, its highest number in a decade, including Thistle and DaffodilIn previous years Chester zoo's new penguin chicks have been named after crisps - Frazzle, Wotsit - and local football club owners - Ryan, Rob - but the names p ... p ... p ... picked this year are notably less frivolous.We've decided to go with plants," said Zoe Sweetman, the penguins and parrots team manager at the zoo. Two of the spikier new arrivals have been named Nettle and Thistle while two others with colourful personalities" have been named Daffodil and Tulip. Continue reading...
‘Largest ever’ NSW coalmine plan will put pressure on state’s net zero target, watchdog says
EPA says proposal to keep Hunter Valley Operations mines going to 2050 would release almost 30m tonnes of CO2
Week in wildlife – in pictures: playful baby lemurs, kingfisher tug-of-war and a beautiful bee-eater
The best of this week's wildlife photographs from around the world Continue reading...
Market value of carbon offsets drops 61%, report finds
Negative scientific and press reports on the efficacy of carbon credit projects has led to a direct pullback in buyer investment'The market for carbon offsets shrank dramatically last year, falling from $1.9bn (1.5bn) in 2022 to $723m in 2023, a new report has found. The drop came after a series of scientific and media reports found many offsetting schemes do nothing to mitigate the climate crisis and biodiversity loss.The research by Ecosystem Marketplace, a nonprofit initiative that collects data about the carbon market from brokers and traders, found the market had shrunk 61%. Continue reading...
Bids for bathing water status in England paused in blow for river cleanups
Campaigners suspect block on new applications for at least two years was imposed to limit burden on water firmsThe government has suspended all applications for bathing water status in waterways, delaying the cleanup of rivers and coastal waters for at least two years.River campaigners fear the block on new applications to create bathing water areas, which are regularly tested for water quality, has been introduced to stop water companies facing huge resource implications to tackle poor water quality in new bathing areas. Continue reading...
India’s ‘sinking island’ looks to election for survival – in pictures
For many on Ghoramara, the general election is about the climate crisis and survival. The island, 150km south of Kolkata and named the sinking island' by the media, has lost nearly half its area to soil erosion in the past two decades and could disappear if a solution is not found.As voters across India cast their ballots on issues ranging from the cost of living to jobs and religion, politicians trying to win votes in Ghoramara need to put the climate crisis to the fore as the island's dwindling population fight to save their homes from the sea amid rising water levels and increasingly fierce storms Continue reading...
Cleaner air in West Midlands could prevent 2,000 deaths a year, study finds
Meeting WHO guidelines would avoid many cases of diseases and save the NHS millions, research showsA study has revealed that cleaning up the air in the West Midlands could prevent the early deaths of about 2,000 people a year.If the region were to meet World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines for air pollution, it could also avoid 2,000 new asthma cases, 770 new cases of heart disease, 170 new lung cancers and 650 strokes annually, the study found. Continue reading...
Edinburgh international book festival ends Baillie Gifford partnership
Festival bows to pressure from authors and activists over investment firm's links to Israel and fossil fuel companiesThe Edinburgh international book festival (EIBF) has announced the end of its 20-year partnership with Baillie Gifford. Last week the Hay literary festival also dropped its sponsorship from the investment management firm after a series of last-minute drop-outs.The singer Charlotte Church, the comedian Nish Kumar and the politician Dawn Butler were among those due to appear at Hay who decided to boycott the festival because of Baillie Gifford's links to Israel and fossil fuel companies. By the end of the festival's second day, Hay's organisers announced the sponsorship has been suspended" for 2024. Continue reading...
No need for countries to issue new oil, gas or coal licences, study finds
Researchers say world has enough fossil fuel projects planned to meet demand forecasts to 2050 if net zero is reachedThe world has enough fossil fuel projects planned to meet global energy demand forecasts to 2050 and governments should stop issuing new oil, gas and coal licences, according to a large study aimed at political leaders.If governments deliver the changes promised in order to keep the world from breaching its climate targets no new fossil fuel projects will be needed, researchers at University College London and the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) said on Thursday. Continue reading...
‘Unliveable’: Delhi’s residents struggle to cope in record-breaking heat
Temperatures of more than 45C have left population of 29 million exhausted - but the poorest suffer mostAs the water tanker drove into a crowded Delhi neighbourhood, a ruckus erupted. Dozens of residents ran frantically behind it, brandishing buckets, bottles and hoses, and jumped on top of it to get even a drip of what was stored inside. Temperatures that day had soared to 49C (120F), the hottest day on record - and in many places across India's vast capital, home to more than 29 million people, water had run out.Every morning, Tripti, a social health worker who lives in the impoverished enclave of Vivekanand Camp, is among those who has to stand under the blazing sun with buckets and pots, waiting desperately for the water tanker to arrive. Continue reading...
Origin Energy offered to sell Eraring power station to NSW government for $544m
Exclusive: Documents reveal offer was made three years before Origin and government reached deal to keep Australia's biggest coal-fired power station open
Packaging firm calls for tighter UK rules on plastics to drive green economy
FTSE 100 firm DS Smith, which works with firms over alternatives, urges next government to match global standardsWhoever wins the UK general election must tighten regulations to reduce the use of plastic packaging, match global standards and drive green consumption", the boss of one of the sector's biggest manufacturers has urged.Miles Roberts, the chief executive of the packaging firm DS Smith, made the call to the next government as the company celebrated passing its target to replace more than 1bn pieces of plastic 16 months early. Continue reading...
New bill could bail out US farmers ruined by ‘forever chemical’ pollution
The bipartisan proposal that would remediate farms affected by toxic PFAS contamination is gaining speed in CongressThe US may soon bail out farmers whose livelihoods were destroyed by toxic PFAS forever chemical" contamination.The proposal for a $500m fund aims to head off a crisis for the nation's growers and is moving through Congress amid increasing evidence that PFAS-contaminated sewage sludge used as a cheap fertilizer alternative poisoned crops and livestock. Separately, around 4,000 farms nationwide have been contaminated by PFAS from neighboring military bases. Continue reading...
California comedown: how illicit cannabis farms have left a wilderness where ‘you’re lucky to see a lizard’
The golden state legalised marijuana production in 2016, but strict curbs have led to a thriving black market. Its hub is in Siskiyou county, where the environmental damage is clear to seeIn the shadow of Mount Shasta in northern California, a sea of makeshift greenhouses and plywood huts sprawls between the conifer trees of the high desert. From the air, many of the polytunnels look in bad shape, their plastic covers torn by the wind to reveal what's inside: hundreds of cannabis plants packet tightly together, their distinctive green leaves easily identifiable against the volcanic soil.This remote area of Siskiyou county is known for its goldrush history, black bears and returning grey wolves, but in the last few years it has also become a hub for California's parallel market in cannabis production. More than 6,000 hectares (15,000 acres) of illicit cannabis farms cover the Republic-leaning county, which voted not to legalise commercial farming despite the statewide vote for legalisation in November 2016. Continue reading...
Corporations invested in carbon offsets that were ‘likely junk’, analysis says
Analysis of the carbon offset projects used by top corporations including Delta, Gucci and ExxonMobil raises concerns around their emission cuts claimsSome of the world's most profitable - and most polluting corporations - have invested in carbon offset projects that have fundamental failings and are probably junk", suggesting industry claims about greenhouse gas reductions were likely overblown, according to new analysis.Delta, Gucci, Volkswagen, ExxonMobil, Disney, easyJet and Nestle are among the major corporations to have purchased millions of carbon credits from climate friendly projects that are likely junk" or worthless when it comes to offsetting their greenhouse gas emissions, according to a classification system developed by Corporate Accountability, a non-profit, transnational corporate watchdog. Continue reading...
‘Worth protecting’: Queensland government to ban carbon capture and storage in the Great Artesian Basin
Premier Steven Miles says laws prohibiting greenhouse gas storage in the basin will benefit farmers and the environment
Fire ants found on Sunshine Coast as dangerous pest continues to spread
Broadscale treatment under way after nests found at Nirimba in Queensland's south-east
‘It was like the wild west’: meet the First Nations guardians protecting Canada’s pristine shores
From crab monitoring and bear patrols to rescue operations, the watchmen are the official eyes and ears of indigenous communitiesIt's Delaney Mack's first time pulling crab traps and she is unsure what to do. Mack, the newest member of the Nuxalk Guardian Watchmen, has had months of training for the multifaceted job, which might on any given day include rescuing a kayaker, taking ocean samples or monitoring a logging operation. But winching crabs up 100ft from the sea floor was not in the manual.Soon, however, the four-person operation is humming along. The crab survey is a vital part of their work as guardians of this Indigenous territory in the Canadian province of British Columbia. It was started more than 15 years ago in response to heavy commercial crab fishing in an area where the federal government had done little independent monitoring to determine if a fishery was sustainable. Continue reading...
Rightwing NZ government accused of ‘war on nature’ as it takes axe to climate policies
Government of Christopher Luxon has made sweeping cuts to climate projects in its first budget, with no new significant environmental investmentsThe New Zealand government has been accused of waging a war on nature" after it announced sweeping cuts to climate action projects, while making no significant new investments in environmental protection or climate crisis-related policy.In its 2024/25 budget, handed down on Thursday, the rightwing coalition announced spending on law and order, education, health and a series of tax cuts, as the country struggles with inflation and cost-of-living pressures.Mori knowledge-based approaches to agricultural emissions reductionCommunity-based renewable energy schemesThe Climate Change CommissionExternal and internal specialists who supply evidence and data on environmental monitoring and scienceFreshwater policy initiativesNative forest plantingDevelopment of a circular economy, relating to recycling and reuseJobs for Nature, a programme creating jobs to benefit the environmentReducing biosecurity monitoring Continue reading...
Heatwaves increase risk of early births and poorer health in babies, study finds
Research that looked at 53 million births says Black and Hispanic mothers and those in lower socioeconomic groups most at riskHeatwaves increase rates of preterm births, which can lead to poorer health outcomes for babies and impact their long-term health, a new study found.Black and Hispanic mothers, as well as those in lower socioeconomic groups, are particularly at risk of delivering early following heat waves. Continue reading...
French fries: why chips are off the menu at the Paris Olympics
It's not just pommes frites. Beef bourguignon, avocado and foie gras will also be unavailableName: french fries.Age: invented about 300 years ago, ironically in Belgium. Continue reading...
Increasing use of renewable energy in US yields billions of dollars of benefits
New study published in Cell Reports Sustainability finds emission reductions provided $249bn of climate and health benefits
Leading Australian labs retested landscape products for waste companies after contamination findings
Exclusive: Five facilities named in documents tabled in NSW parliament defend practices, as independent experts question whether testing system is failing consumers
Orange-juice makers consider using other fruits after prices go ‘bananas’
Global industry in crisis' as fears about Brazilian harvest help push wholesale prices to record highsOrange juice makers are considering turning to alternative fruits such as mandarins as wholesale prices have gone bananas" amid fears of poor harvests in Brazil.Prices of orange juice reached a new high of $4.95 (3.88) a lb on commodity markets this week after growers in the main orange producing areas of Brazil said they were expecting the harvest to be 24% down on last year at 232m 40.8kg boxes - worse than the 15% fall previously predicted. Continue reading...
Protesting Indian farmers endure severe heatwave – video
Hundreds of Indian farmers who have been camping for more than 100 days between the Punjab and Haryana states to demand better prices for their crops have been enduring a savage heatwave sweeping swathes of northern India.Temperatures in Delhi, not far from the protest, have hit a record high of 49.9C (121.8F), as authorities warned of water shortages in the capital
Ofwat considers cutting sewage fines for financially struggling water firms
Regulator understood to be looking at recovery regime' for Thames Water and others in sector
Revealed: the rural Californians who can’t sell their businesses – because LA is their landlord
Los Angeles has long owned large swathes of the Owens valley. An investigation reveals how the city has tightened its gripThis article is reported by AfroLA and co-published by AfroLA, Guardian US and Inyo County's The Sheet. It's the first of several stories examining the impact of Los Angeles's extensive landownership in the Owens Valley.A red horse statue perched on a 12ft pole greets drivers coming to the town of Bishop from the south. It's one of the first landmarks here, part of Mike Allen's corrugated metal feed store - a local institution that sells camping gear, livestock feed and moving equipment in this expansive region of inland California. Continue reading...
As avian flu hops to cows and at least two humans, migrant farm workers are at risk
Officials are now incentivizing testing, but experts say workers need protective equipment and paid sick leave to prevent further spreadOn a US dairy farm, working in the milking parlor can mean seven-day weeks, 12-hour shifts and intimate contact with cows and everything they expel.When you disconnect the machine from the udder, it can shoot milk in your face," said Jose Martinez, a former dairy worker and United Farm Workers advocate based in Washington state. And there's no time or place to eat. So we ate our tacos in spare moments with cow shit on our hands." Continue reading...
Alarming levels of ‘forever chemicals’ found in water near Bangladesh garment factories
Study confirms huge concentrations of potentially dangerous PFAS in rivers, lakes and taps in DhakaRivers, lakes and tap water in areas of Bangladesh that host garment factories are swarming with dangerous levels of toxic forever chemicals", some with links to serious health issues, according to new research.In the first study of its kind conducted in Bangladesh, a global fashion hub supplying international brands, per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), commonly known as forever chemicals, were found in 27 water samples collected close to textile factories in the capital, Dhaka. Continue reading...
Wealthy white men are UK’s biggest transport polluters, study finds
IPPR research examines transport emissions by income, gender, location, ethnicity and ageWealthy white men from rural areas are the UK's biggest emitters of climate-heating gases from transport, according to a study.Research by the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) looked at transport emissions by income, gender, location, ethnicity and age. The study broke down the transport emissions into international and domestic flights, private road transport and public transport. Continue reading...
Make accreditation mandatory for low-carbon heating installers, says Which?
Widening government-run scheme would counter mistrust among householders, says consumer groupThe next government should force all tradespeople who install home heat pumps, solar panels and insulation to sign up to a mandatory accreditation scheme to counter mistrust in the industry, a leading consumer group is demanding.A report from Which? found that households face significant anxiety" in choosing tradespeople to fit low-carbon heating systems, such as heat pumps, and insulation after press stories about poor work and rogue traders". Continue reading...
CSIRO stands by nuclear power costings that contradict Coalition claims
The Coalition has attacked the GenCost report that found nuclear power plants would be at least 50% more expensive than solar and wind
EPA accused of ‘egregious’ misconduct in PFAS testing of pesticides
US agency found PFOS and other types of PFAS in pesticides but failed to disclose those results, watchdog group allegesDocuments obtained from the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) indicate the agency may have presented false information to the public about testing for harmful contaminants in pesticides, according to allegations being made by a watchdog group and a former EPA research fellow.The claims come almost a year to the day after the EPA issued a May 2023 press release that stated the agency found no per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in testing of samples of certain insecticide products. The press release contradicted a published study by the former EPA researcher that had reported finding PFAS in the same pesticide products.This story is co-published with the New Lede, a journalism project of the Environmental Working Group Continue reading...
Majority of US voters support climate litigation against big oil, poll shows
And almost half of respondents back the filing of criminal charges against oil companies that have contributed to the climate crisisAs US communities take big oil to court for allegedly deceiving the public about the climate crisis, polling shared with the Guardian shows that a majority of voters support the litigation, while almost half would back an even more aggressive legal strategy of filing criminal charges.The poll, which comes as the world's first-ever criminal climate lawsuit was brought in France last week, could shed light on how, if filed, similar US cases might be viewed by a jury. Continue reading...
No Tory MPs voted positively on climate issues since party took power, study finds
Labour and Liberal Democrats dominated list of MPs who were rated as very good in backing environmental policiesNo elected Tory MPs have been rated as voting positively on climate issues, under a survey of parliamentary voting patterns since the Conservatives took power in 2010.Only a single sitting Conservative was rated as good" on climate votes in the ranking, but that was Lisa Cameron, the MP for East Kilbride, who defected from the Scottish National Party in October. Continue reading...
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