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Updated 2026-04-25 16:00
As British steel industry goes into meltdown, government faces some burning questions
In January, PM was boasting of high steel production but pressures were obvious and remedial action now is too little, too lateNobody should expect the government to write an open-ended, taxpayer-funded cheque to support the steel industry. But it is reasonable to expect ministers to be alert to a crisis at its early stages and to avoid making a bad position worse. On both counts, the government has questions to answer.Back in January, David Cameron boasted that the UK’s steel production was higher than in Labour’s last term in office “because we have a car industry that is growing, an aerospace industry that is growing, and construction is growing.” Those words now read as blinkered disregard for pressures that were obvious at the time. It is not fresh news, for example, that the steel price has plunged and that China is dumping its excess production on world markets. Continue reading...
Prince William urges Chinese to stop buying ivory and rhino horn
Duke of Cambridge uses speech hours before Chinese president Xi Jinping’s UK state visit to campaign against trade in illegal wildlife productsPrince William has told Chinese citizens to stop buying illegally traded wildlife products such as ivory and horn to save Africa’s rhino and elephants, hours before a state visit to the UK by China’s president.He said: “We have to accept the truth: that consumers are driving the demand for animal body parts, for art, for trinkets, or for medicine. Only we as consumers can put the wildlife traffickers out of business.” Continue reading...
Drought causes 450-year-old Mexican church to emerge from reservoir
The Temple of Quechula was built in 1564 but later abandoned and ultimately submerged by a dam. Now drought conditions in Chiapas have seen it rise againRelated: Conquistadors sacrificed and eaten by Aztec-era people, archaeologists sayThe ruins of a 16th century church have emerged from the waters of a reservoir in Mexico.
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Four ways Asia can cut the amount of plastic waste it dumps in the ocean
Addressing waste management in China, Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam can make a real impact on the health of world’s oceans
China deal means meltdown time for pro-nuclear 'greens'
Pro-nuclear environmentalists have finally admitted Hinkley C is a white elephant that must be scrapped, but with a Chinese deal now imminent the damage to the UK’s low-carbon future has already been done, argues Jonathon Porritt on the EcologistI wonder what our pro-nuclear greenies will be thinking this week as they listen to President Xi Jinping and George Osborne bombastically declaring ‘a new nuclear dawn for the UK’.I hope they’ll be feeling as ashamed as they should be. Continue reading...
Writer's acquittal in Turin-Lyon rail line case a victory for free speech
Acclaimed Italian novelist Erri De Luca cleared of inciting environmental activists to sabotage controversial Alpine rail projectAn acclaimed Italian writer and activist was acquitted of incitement to damage property by a court in Turin on Monday, in what is considered a major victory for free speech advocates and critics of a controversial multibillion-euro high-speed rail line at the centre of the case.Supporters of Erri De Luca broke into applause after judge Immacolata Iadeluca ruled that the 65-year-old Neapolitan writer was not guilty of incitement, bringing to an end a case that began in 2013, when De Luca said in two separate interviews that it was legitimate to sabotage the rail line between Italy and France known as the TAV. Continue reading...
Oslo moves to ban cars from city centre within four years
Proposed ban on private vehicles is part of a plan to slash greenhouse gas emissions 50% by 2020 compared to 1990 levelsOslo’s new leftist city government said Monday it wants to ban private cars from the city centre by 2019 as part of a plan to slash greenhouse gas emissions.
UK Environment Agency divests in landmark move to help meet 2C limit
Pension fund will divest 90% of coal assets and 50% of oil and gas stocks by 2020 to help limit global warming and protect the fund from climate riskThe £2.9bn UK’s Environment Agency pension fund (EAFP) has become the first in the world to change its investment choices to help meet the internationally-agreed target of limiting global warming to 2C.The move will include divestment of 90% of its coal assets and 50% of its oil and gas stocks by 2020.
Revealed: Many more solar firms face closure if government cuts go ahead
Total of 25 businesses said they will either fold or have to cut staff, putting over 350 jobs at risk as a result of cuts to feed-in tariff and renewables obligationHundreds more jobs will be lost at solar power companies if planned changes to government policy come into force in the new year, 25 small businesses have told the Guardian.The solar and energy efficiency companies have already made 32 staff redundant between them and more than a dozen of the firms said they expect to close if the changes come to pass as expected, with the total loss of more than 350 jobs. Continue reading...
Heathrow third runway: civil service chief 'warned ministers not to comment'
Sir Jeremy Heywood’s intervention appears to reflect concerns that ministers’ remarks could make final decision vulnerable to legal challengeBritain’s most senior civil servant warned ministers not to speak out publicly over proposals to build a third runway at Heathrow before the Conservative party conference, it has been reported.Sir Jeremy Heywood, the cabinet secretary, wrote to ministers in the runup to the party conference season to caution them about commenting in public on the issue, according to the BBC. Continue reading...
Errors revealed at Chinese nuclear firm seeking to invest in UK plants
Huge quantity of protective steel was left out of initial construction of China General Nuclear Corp’s first reactor, built close to Hong Kong in 1987One of the Chinese nuclear power firms pushing for a stake in the UK’s energy industry left out hundreds of critical steel rods when building its first reactor near Hong Kong in 1987 because workers misread the blueprint.
Typhoon Koppu: race to rescue trapped villagers as floodwaters keep rising
More than 60,000 people have been displaced as heavy downpours continue to drench vital farming areas in the PhilippinesResidents of flooded farming villages in the Philippines were trapped on their rooftops on Monday as deadly typhoon Koppu dumped more intense rain.
Tiwi Islands port project needs no environmental risk assessment – EPA
Northern Territory’s Environment Protection Authority says it identified concerns with Port Melville development but is satisfied risks can be managedThe controversial Port Melville development on the Tiwi Islands does not need environmental risk assessment, the Northern Territory environmental regulator has concluded.Publishing its findings due to the “high level of interest” in the port 122km north of Darwin, the NT Environment Protection Authority (EPA) said it had identified a number of concerns with the port’s operation but was satisfied risks could be managed. Continue reading...
Malcolm Turnbull has two possible weak spots – Labor attacked the wrong one
They could have gone after his ‘more of the same’ policy dilemmas, but instead Labor attacked Turnbull personallyMalcolm Turnbull had two possible political weak spots when he became prime minister, which left Labor with two strategic choices. They picked the wrong one.Related: Bad news for Bill Shorten as revitalised Coalition surges in poll Continue reading...
Frydenberg's 'moral case' for coal at odds with World Bank, UN and agencies
Australian resources minister says coal will help the world’s energy-poor, but they are mostly out of reach of the expensive grid structures coal relies onAustralian energy minister Josh Frydenberg’s “strong moral case” for coal is at odds with the policies and research of the World Bank, the UN and the world’s most austere energy agencies and has been called “deranged”, “oxymoronic” and “wilfully deceptive” by observers.In making the case for the government’s reapproval of the Carmichael coalmine, Frydenberg invoked the lung-clogging pollution produced by the rudimentary wood, coal, petrol and dung-fired cooking stoves commonly used in the developing world. Australian coal, he said, offered salvation to some of the 2.6 billion people who currently live without access to safe cooking facilities. Continue reading...
Novice cavers find marvels beneath the fissured limestone
Selside, Yorkshire Dales The young potholers re-emerge into sunlight, blinking like startled moles and buzzing with the marvels they had seenThe cavers peer into their hands to check the bright discs of yellow light that show their headlamp beams are switched on. These twentysomething novices then follow their instructor into Lower Long Churn, a classic caving trip in the Three Peaks country of Whernside, Ingleborough and Penyghent.If only I could follow suit. But I am still recovering from my hip revision procedure of two years ago. I can at least use my trekking poles to enjoy the limestone countryside, though. The sedimentary rock hereabouts is riddled with caves etched over aeons by acidic rainwater running into the ground and attacking the fissures and cracks below the turf where aromatic wild thyme grows – and where the cavers have disappeared. Continue reading...
True love: tiny Australian desert fish travel vast distances to find new mate
The 6cm long goby is an ‘average swimmer’ but can travel hundreds of kilometres through Australia’s red centre in just a trickle of waterA trickle of water running over parched earth is all the encouragement the desert goby needs. The unassuming little fish, reckoned by researchers to be a poor to average swimmer, only needs a few centimetres of water to follow a rivulet from one isolated, muddy puddle to the next. In the desert rivers region on the southern edge of Lake Eyre in Australia’s red centre, a few centimetres of water may be all it gets.But their ability to move quickly and opportunistically when floodwaters hit has caught the attention of researchers. Continue reading...
France launches global drive for climate deal
Diplomats mobilised for unprecedented PR push, with Paris summit seen as last chance to reach agreementFrance has launched an unprecedented diplomatic drive to shepherd nations big and small towards a major climate change deal, ahead of a Paris summit next month that is the next major make-or-break moment for the movement against global warming.Every one of France’s ambassadors, in embassies and consulates around the globe, has been educated on the demands of climate change, and instructed in how to communicate the messages to the governments they deal with, ahead of the summit, which starts on 30 November. Continue reading...
UK solar power industry proposes emergency plan to save renewables
Trade body says scheme would add just £1 to bills by 2019 and comes in response to government plans to cut subsidies for rooftop solar panels by 87%The solar power industry has proposed an emergency plan to rescue renewables, which it says would add just £1 to consumer bills by 2019, on top of the £9 a year that clean technology subsidies cost bill payers.The scheme is a response to government plans to cut subsidies for rooftop solar panel installations by 87% from 1 January. The Solar Trade Association (STA) has warned the move could cost up to 27,000 jobs and waste public money already spent on supporting the technology. Continue reading...
Mystery and beauty in the smoke of garden bonfires: Country diary 100 years ago
Originally published in the Manchester Guardian on 21 October 1915Oxfordshire
David Cameron dismisses risk of rift with US over China
Prime minister says state visit of Xi Jinping and ‘golden era’ between two nations will not harm transatlantic special relationship
A glimpse of a dipper brightens the day
A long weekend in the western Highlands of Scotland gave me the opportunity to catch up with several species I rarely get the chance to see. This was enhanced by our host’s desire to show us as much of this beautiful landscape as possible, which entailed going on very long walks, often involving dauntingly steep climbs. As I pointed out – in vain – I come from the lowlands of England, and “don’t do up”.En route, in the wilds of Perthshire, we took an eight-mile hike around a valley. Even though autumn can sometimes be rather quiet, the place was thronged with birds. Meadow pipits sprang up constantly; bouncing through the air as if hanging on invisible strings of elastic, while uttering their distinctive “sip” call. They were joined by tight little flocks of siskins and redpolls, which I rarely see at home on the Somerset Levels. Continue reading...
Typhoon Koppu weaker but still dangerous, says Philippines government
Storm leaves at least two people dead and causes massive disruption and power cuts in nine provinces before slowing downTyphoon Koppu has weakened after blowing ashore in the north-eastern Philippines, but not before it left at least two people dead, displaced 16,000 villagers and knocked out power in entire provinces, officials said.Troops and police officers were deployed to rescue residents trapped in flooded villages in the provinces of Aurora, where the typhoon made landfall early on Sunday, and Nueva Ecija, where floodwaters swamped rice farmlands during harvest. Continue reading...
Solar industry bosses attack government over jobs and subsidies
One solar executive says the 87% cut in state subsidy is ‘obscene’, and will lead to thousands of job lossesSome of Britain’s most powerful solar executives have accused the government of mounting an ideologically driven campaign against their industry which has driven it into crisis.Their criticism comes as a solar power company backed by the billionaire inventor Elon Musk has pulled out of the UK, becoming the fourth such firm to close in two weeks. Continue reading...
Shark attacks seriously injure two men off Hawaii, officials say
Separate attacks off Oahu see one man injured on his lower legs and another bitten on the foot with both hospitalized in serious conditionTwo men were seriously injured Saturday in separate shark attacks off the Hawaiian island of Oahu, authorities said.
Solar subsidies are slashed, but the sun always seems to shine on nuclear
Two events this week will throw the government’s contradictory attitudes to spending on green and atomic power into sharp reliefA glaring anomaly of British energy policy will be on display this week: the government will loudly trumpet a nuclear deal with China, and then will come a no-fanfare end to a controversial solar subsidy consultation.President Xi Jinping will probably sign a heads of agreement with David Cameron that will allow the government to say that a new plant at Hinkley Point in Somerset is on its way. Continue reading...
Indigenous Canadians take leading role in battle against tar sands pipeline
As Canada’s election approaches, First Nations join environmental groups in an effort to prevent the building of the country’s largest proposed pipeline – poised to travel 700 miles through some of North America’s wildest landscapesChief Na’Moks stood in the dark of a small smokehouse nestled in the Coast range of British Columbia. Hanging above him were nearly a thousand fish which glinted over the fire below.
The government seems intent on ending the solar power industry. It’s madness | Howard Johns
My company was left untenable by cuts to subsidies, so I had to close it. The ‘greenest government ever’ needs to act fast before it destroys the sectorIt was with great sadness last week that I announced the closure of Southern Solar – a firm I set up in 2002, which I grew for the first 10 years, doubling it every year.Related: Leading solar entrepreneur to put business into liquidation Continue reading...
How to stop a pipeline: Canadian First Nations' legal battle for their territories – video
A decade-long battle over a proposed pipeline is helping shape the Canadian national election even as a historic legal case may make or break the development. First Nations are playing a central role. First proposed in 2004, the Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline was planned for a 731-mile (1,177km) stretch from the center of Alberta to the coast of British Columbia. The environmental battle has united a wide variety of citizens groups against the billions of dollars of investment by oil companies and millions in secret funding from the government Continue reading...
OFM Awards 2015 best ethical restaurant: The Clink, HMP Brixton
There’s local food, recycling, composting … but at a restaurant staffed by inmates, it’s the sustainability of people that’s most important
OFM Awards 2015 best ethical restaurant: the runners-up
Sustainable, environmentally friendly and charitable: readers’ choices from across Britain
The eco guide to eating out | Lucy Siegle
Some restaurants pay lip service to environmental issues. It’s up to us to seek out those that put their ethics firstIn a restaurant, ethical instincts can go out the window. In a recent survey, 80-90% of respondents said they bought free-range eggs and seasonal fruit and veg at home. But more than 30% said they didn’t give two hoots if a meal out was an eco disaster.Diners, we must up our game, starting with the battle to stop restaurant chains snaffling tips (sign the petition at 38degrees.org.uk). We must also stand up to the 920,000 tonnes of food wasted by restaurants each year, 75% of which is edible. Doggy bags are just the beginning. Continue reading...
Josh Frydenberg puts 'strong moral case' for coal exports to prevent deaths
Energy minister says Australia’s coal exports to India can stop millions dying from burning toxic fuels, citing WHO figures that include deaths from coal stovesThere is a “strong moral case” for Australia to export coal to countries such as India in order to help prevent millions of deaths, Josh Frydenberg, the federal resources and energy minister, has claimed.
Thousands of rhinos, 500 poachers; grim toll in the hunt for prized horns
Hundreds of illegal hunters of the rhinoceros in South Africa’s Kruger national park have been shot dead by rangers in the past five years, but the temptation of a rich reward to end an impoverished life in Mozambique keeps them comingThe well-heeled tourists filing through the modest airport at Hoedspruit – Afrikaans for Hat Creek – look carefree and expectant. Guides are standing by to transport them to luxurious bush lodges offering spa treatments, campfire dinners and dawn and dusk game drives offering a potential glimpse of Africa’s “big five”.But something is different from the safaris enjoyed by the privileged generations of the past. At the 36,000-acre Moditlo private game reserve near Kruger national park, for example, the rhinos do not have horns – they have been removed for their own safety. And during night safaris on dirt tracks under the majesty of a star-studded sky visitors are warned not to use torches, lest they be confused with poachers. When guests – usually affluent and white – gaze from air-conditioned bedrooms into the perfect darkness of the bush, few are likely to consider the murderous chase taking place there between poacher, ranger and rhino. For the poachers – usually poor and black – the risks are immense, but so are the rewards. Continue reading...
Arctic powers gather for Alaska talks as pace of global warming threatens ice cap
US to host summit of polar nations as fears grow that the Earth’s frozen wastes are losing their ability to deflect harmful raysScientists in Alaska will raise the vexed issue of methane and “black carbon” pollution as they discuss tipping-point dangers posed by global warming in the Arctic.A crucial meeting of the Arctic Council, in Anchorage, comes amid evidence that the polar region is warming faster than any other place on Earth and that sea ice coverage there has shrunk by nearly a third since 1979. Researchers now fear that new threats to climate stability are about to be unleashed in the Arctic. Warming in high latitudes is causing permafrost in Siberia and northern Canada to thaw and release plumes of methane stored there, they say. Methane is a powerful greenhouse gas and these releases threaten to trigger secondary rises in global temperatures. Continue reading...
Fall colors in North America: Send us your best photos of autumn foliage
Wait for the light to be right and then snap stunning scenes of fall colors. Share your best photographs via GuardianWitness – we’ll feature our favoritesBeautiful fall leaves have started to paint hills and valleys across the United States and Canada. Whether you’re enjoying the warm autumn hues in the park, the forest or your own backyard, we’d love to see the colors of the season wherever you are. Share your best photo with us. Continue reading...
Sierra Leone's stinking seaweed linked to Caribbean invasion
Proliferation of thick brown algae is affecting fishing, tourism and marine life on both sides of the Atlantic, say scientistsThe pristine white beaches may not be as famous as those of the Caribbean, but their unspoilt beauty makes them a haven for locals and tourists alike.
American coast braced for El Niño return
Oceanic warming event could wreak havoc in western Pacific but provide respite from US firesBack in March, following months of speculation, the US Climate Prediction Service declared the official start of El Niño. The first such event since 2009 and currently building across the Pacific, El Niño refers to a period of oceanic temperature changes coupled with atmospheric effects that can be a blessing or a curse for those on the receiving end. Continue reading...
The 20 photographs of the week
The continuing violence in Jerusalem and the West Bank, Europe’s refugee crisis, the anniversary celebrations in Pyongyang, Rugby World Cup 2015 – the best photography in news, culture and sport from around the world this week Continue reading...
Thinking ethical pays off as good guys come out on top
You can’t be entirely sure where your cash will go, but funds that have steered clear of controversial sectors such as gas and oil are prosperingThey have been ridiculed by some and overlooked by others, but ethical investment funds – and the people who have put money into them – are having the last laugh.The funds appear to have benefited from their low or non-existent exposure to sectors such as mining and oil, where share prices have collapsed in recent months. Continue reading...
Feast for four-legged vacuum cleaners
New Forest The older pigs are intent on the job but the younger ones are behaving more like a bunch of playful children, bumping and chasing each other all over the placeFour-legged vacuum cleaners are out. It’s been an excellent fruiting year. Hollies are heavily berried. Hawthorn hedges have a magenta sheen where the ripened fruits are increasingly hidden in colouring foliage. The strippings of cobnuts lie under many hazel bushes. Wild apples have produced an abundant crop, their fallers a magnet for foraging cows. The woodland floor is already white-speckled with the star-shaped shucks of the prickly cases of sweet chestnuts, occupied now by only the two outer nuts in the case, poor apologies for a fruit, their juicy swollen companions already stored away to be winter-life sustaining for squirrel – and jay.Three ponies block the lane but on this grey day they are not in summer mood, motionless apart from a constant flick of the tail, enjoying the slightest breeze that keeps the flies at bay. Head down, side by side, rumps towards me, they are oblivious that they are blocking my way as they gorge on the acorns the wind has scattered across the tarmac. As I wait to get past them, more acorns bounce off the roof of the car. I sense that once the ponies have cleared the road in front, they will turn to feast on those already dropping behind. Continue reading...
Marine parks plan for north-west WA doesn't go far enough – conservationists
Horizontal Falls – described as one of the wonders of the natural world – would be included in marine parks, but critics say plan should ban commercial fishingThe Western Australian government has released a proposal for two new marine parks which will protect a pristine stretch of Australia’s north-west coast. However, environmental groups say the decision to allow prawn trawling and fishing within the marine parks could affect their conservation value.The draft management plan, released on Friday, includes long-awaited protection for Horizontal Falls, a tidal lagoon encircled by cliffs and described by David Attenborough as “one of the greatest natural wonders of the world” for the rapids that form at the two narrow entries to the lagoon as the tide comes rushing in and out each day. Continue reading...
Exxon's climate change denial warrants federal inquiry, congressmen say
Members of Congress claim that oil company’s ‘sustained deception campaign’ could be prosecuted through truth in advertising and racketeering lawsMembers of Congress have asked for a federal investigation into whether ExxonMobil broke the law by intentionally obscuring the truth about climate change.
Obama administration blocks new oil drilling in the Arctic
Interior Department cancels two future offshore leases in Chukchi and Beaufort seas and will refuse requests from oil companies to renew existing leasesBarack Obama blocked off the prospects for future oil drilling in the Arctic on Friday, imposing new lease conditions that make it practically impossible for companies to hunt for oil in the world’s last great wilderness.The Department of Interior said it was canceling two future auctions of Arctic offshore oil leases in the Chukchi and Beaufort seas, and turned down requests from Shell and other oil companies for more time on their existing leases. Continue reading...
Former coal executive says company took safety shortcuts under ex-CEO
Former executive testifies Massey Energy was more concerned about having to pay fines than actually keeping mines safe under Don BlankenshipA former coal executive who was dealt a prison sentence for mine violations testified on Friday that his company sometimes took shortcuts to produce coal under his top boss, ex-Massey Energy CEO Don Blankenship.Taking the stand in Blankenship’s criminal trial, former Massey subsidiary president David Hughart said that under Blankenship and former COO Chris Adkins, the company was more concerned about having to pay fines than actually keeping mines safe. He said his mines would sometimes be short-handed and still producing coal. Continue reading...
Elizabeth May: Canadian Green leader elbows her way into election picture
The party doesn’t enjoy the same high profile in Canada as in Europe, but the tenacious May could very well wind up a power broker in a minority government
Solar firm blames subsidy cuts for UK exit
Parent company says government does not support solar development, as Zep Solar UK becomes fourth UK solar business to close in a fortnightzA solar power company backed by the billionaire inventor Elon Musk has pulled out of the UK, blaming the government for not supporting the technology.Zep Solar UK, which is owned by SolarCity where the Tesla boss is chairman, becomes the fourth UK solar business to close in a fortnight. SolarCity laid the blame squarely on cuts to solar subsidies announced by the Department of Energy and Climate Change in the summer. Continue reading...
The Indian child labour behind our patio stones
A new report reveals that the Rajasthani sandstone sector relies on child labour and urges businesses and the government to take actionBest known for its gemstones and jewellery trade, Rajasthan is also home to a far less glittering industry. The Indian state’s sandstone sector employs millions of people , thousands of whom are child workers, some as young as five.Related: Child labour in the fashion supply chain - where, why and what can business do? Continue reading...
Tories and Labour would kill for unity shown at SNP love-in
Any dissent was kept well off stage in Aberdeen, with anti-fracking and land reform hardliners quickly voted downThere was genuine excitement on the conference platform. At last a vote that was close enough to require a count rather than a unanimous show of hands. A vote to challenge the SNP’s anti-fracking commitment on the grounds that it wasn’t hardline enough. It was also something of a surprise, as there didn’t appear to have been any arrangements put in place for such an eventuality.“Can we have some stewards please?” asked an astonished Susan Aitken, the session chair. Five minutes later some stewards appeared, and it was eventually agreed that the official anti-fracking position had been adopted. The extreme anti-frackers had been defeated. Continue reading...
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