Feed environment-the-guardian Environment | The Guardian

Favorite IconEnvironment | The Guardian

Link https://www.theguardian.com/us/environment
Feed http://feeds.theguardian.com/theguardian/environment/rss
Copyright Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. 2025
Updated 2025-12-19 10:45
I tried lab-grown chocolate. Could it be the future of Halloween?
It could eventually cut down on the production of traditional chocolate, which degrades soil and requires much fertilizer and pesticides
Three Just Stop Oil activists cleared over Stonehenge protest
Trio argued orange powder protest day before 2024 solstice was justified because of focus on climate emergencyThree Just Stop Oil protesters have been cleared over a protest at Stonehenge during which orange powder was sprayed on to the prehistoric circle.Rajan Naidu, 74, Niamh Lynch, 23, and Luke Watson, 36, targeted Stonehenge the day before last year's summer solstice. Continue reading...
Heavy rain floods streets in New York City – video
At least two people died on Thursday in flooded basements after record rainfall in parts of New York City that also deluged some streets and subway stations. Preliminary reports showed 45.7mm (1.8in) of rain fell in Central Park, which exceeded its record of 41.7mm set in 1917, the National Weather Service said. LaGuardia airport recorded 50mm of rain, which broke the hub's 1955 record of 30mm
Harrison Ford says Trump’s assault on climate policy ‘scares the shit out of me’
Indiana Jones star calls US president one of history's greatest criminals for attacks on science and boosting of fossil fuelsHarrison Ford has said that Donald Trump's assault upon measures to address the climate crisis scares the shit out of me" and makes the US president among the worst criminals in history.In a blistering attack upon the president, Ford told the Guardian that Trump doesn't have any policies, he has whims. It scares the shit out of me. The ignorance, the hubris, the lies, the perfidy. [Trump] knows better, but he's an instrument of the status quo and he's making money, hand over fist, while the world goes to hell in a handbasket." Continue reading...
Week in wildlife: a tiger in a tube, migrating crabs and busy Highland beavers
The best of this week's wildlife photographs from around the world Continue reading...
Weather tracker: Hurricane Melissa leaves trail of destruction across Caribbean
Category 5 storm is most powerful to strike Jamaica and has caused death and destruction in Cuba and HaitiHurricane Melissa has wreaked havoc across parts of the Caribbean in recent days, after first making landfall in Jamaica on Tuesday night as a category 5 storm - the highest strength. This was the most powerful storm to strike the island nation, packing winds of up to 185mph at its peak.Western parts of Jamaica were worst hit, with 90% of homes in the town of Black River losing their roof or being destroyed entirely. Roughly three-quarters of the country lost electricity, with at least 19 people known to have lost their lives at the time of publication. The cleanup operation was hampered by thunderstorms even after Melissa cleared to the north. The hurricane continued northwards, but was a slightly weakened category 3 storm by the time it made landfall in Cuba. Nonetheless, the storm continued to bring winds of up to 120mph and torrential rains. Continue reading...
BoM says October will be hottest ever for Queensland and NT as heat records tumble
Sydney, Brisbane and Darwin are predicted to hit hottest October in terms of maximum temperatures, the Bureau of Meteorology says
Two found dead in flooded basements as New York city hit by rainstorm
Separate incidents see bodies pulled from basements in Brooklyn and Manhattan as heavy rain closes roads and causes delaysTwo people died in flooded New York City basements Thursday during a rainstorm that shut down roadways and caused airport delays, authorities said.A scuba team recovered the body of a 39-year-old man after firefighters received a call of a person trapped in the flooded basement of a townhouse in Brooklyn at about 4.30pm, police said. A video posted online showed firefighters carrying the victim away through calf-deep water on the street. Continue reading...
Vietnam floods: streets of Hoi An submerged like canals of Venice – in pictures
Flooding that killed 10 people in central Vietnam this week turned streets in the historic town of Hoi An into canals on Thursday after a major river reached a 60-year high, authorities say. The Unesco heritage-listed town is among the country's most popular tourist destinations Continue reading...
Paint me cool: scientists reveal roof coating that can reduce surface temperatures up to 6C on hot days
Sydney researchers commercialising a product they say can cool indoor spaces and will cost little more than standard premium paints
US climate activists condemn 18-month jail term for nonviolent art museum protester
It's hard to fathom how a peaceful protester can receive more prison time than many of the insurrectionists,' said one researcher, of Timothy Martin's sentenceClimate activists have condemned an 18-month jail term for a nonviolent protester who vandalized a display case at the National Gallery of Art as grossly disproportionate" and a violation of the constitutional protected rights to free speech and peaceful protest.Timothy Martin, along with fellow activist Joanna Smith, staged the climate protest at the Washington DC gallery in April 2023, smearing washable red and black paint on the protective glass covering Edgar Degas's Little Dancer Aged Fourteen Years sculpture. Continue reading...
Ex-EPA head urges US to resist Trump attacks on climate action: ‘We won’t become numb’
Expanded climate action from cities and states could slash planet-heating pollution despite Trump working against itAhead of next month's major United Nations climate talks in Brazil, Gina McCarthy, the former Environmental Protection Agency head, said US cities and states were keeping the climate fight alive despite an all-out assault from the Trump administration.We will not allow our country to become numb or debilitated by those who are standing in the way of progress," she said on a press call early on Thursday. Continue reading...
Ken Henry warns ‘conga line of developers’ would try to exploit exemptions in Labor’s proposed nature laws
Exclusive: Every project developer is absolutely convinced that their project is in the national interest,' Australian Climate and Biodiversity Foundation boss says
Despite what a thinktank bleats to the Coalition, heat deaths are in fact ‘a thing’ | Temperature Check
Centre for Independent Studies points to climate risk report to back up its dismissal of heat-related deaths, but neglects to use the part that actually concerns the future
The luxury effect: why you’ll find more wildlife in wealthy areas – and what it means for your health
The discovery that affluent neighbourhoods have more diversity of nature has implications for human wellbeing - and sheds light on the structural injustices in citiesFor a long time, ecology tended to ignore people. It mostly focused on beautiful places far from large-scale human development: deep rainforest or pristine grassland. Then, in the late 1990s, in the desert city of Phoenix, Arizona, scientists shifted their gaze closer to home.A team of ecologists went out into their own neighbourhood to map the distribution of urban plants in one of the first studies of its kind. Equipped with tape measures and clipboards, they documented trees and shrubs, sometimes getting on all fours to crawl through bushes under the curious watch of local people. Continue reading...
Toxin levels in fish lead to calls for UK-wide ban on mercury dental fillings
Exclusive: More than 98% of fish and mussels tested in English waters contain mercury above EU safety limitsBritain is facing mounting pressure to ban mercury dental fillings, one of the few countries yet to prevent the practice, as new data reveals alarming contamination levels in the nation's fish and shellfish.Mercury is a potent neurotoxin that can harm the nervous, digestive and immune systems, as well as the lungs, kidneys, skin and eyes, even at low levels of exposure. Its organic form, methylmercury, is particularly dangerous to unborn babies and can move through the food chain building up in insects, fish and birds. Continue reading...
When the rains don’t come: how drought and endless dry seasons are changing life in Puntland – in pictures
October rains have been light across Somalia, a country which in recent years has found itself on the frontline of the climate crisis. The latest estimate is that 3.4 million people don't have enough food. One of the worst affected areas is Puntland, where disappearing water sources, pasture and food supplies have forced many to abandon their way of life Continue reading...
Insurers calling for trees to be felled as cheap fix for subsidence, say critics
Campaigners say problem so common that some of the UK's most irreplaceable ancient trees in danger of being lostWhen Linda Taylor Cantrill finally found her dream family home in Exmouth, Devon, it wasn't the location, the square footage or the local amenities that finally made up her mind - it was the 200-year-old oak tree in the garden.The way we felt about just standing in the shade of the tree was: We need this house, because look how beautiful it is,'" she told the Guardian. Continue reading...
Shell’s profits pass $43bn after production hits new highs in Brazil and Gulf of Mexico
Oil company plans to buy back shares for 16th consecutive quarter as protesters say its earnings are horror show'Profits at Shell have climbed to more than $43bn for the year so far after fossil fuel production in the Gulf of Mexico reached a 20-year high and production in Brazil set a new record.The oil company reported better than expected earnings of $5.4bn for the third quarter, a 27% increase on the $4.3bn in the previous three-month period - but lower than the $6bn recorded over the same period a year earlier. Continue reading...
‘White-knuckled wolf spider’ thought lost is rediscovered on Isle of Wight
Conservationists hail remarkable' rediscovery after 40 years, at nature reserve only accessible by boatA tiny spider thought to have vanished for ever from the UK has been rediscovered on a remote area of a nature reserve accessible only by boat.The Aulonia albimana, a member of the wolf spider family with orange legs, was found on the Isle of Wight in a spot grazed by a flock of Hebridean sheep. Continue reading...
Hurricane Melissa hits Cuba after turning Jamaica into ‘disaster area’
Most intense tropical cyclone to hit Jamaica in nearly two centuries leaves trail of devastation in its wake
Boris Johnson tells Tories to stop ‘bashing green agenda’ or risk losing next election
Former PM says he has not seen party soaring in the polls as a result of saying what rubbish net zero is'Boris Johnson has warned the Conservatives they will not win the next election by bashing the green agenda".The former prime minister said he had not seen the Conservatives soaring in the polls as a result of saying what rubbish net zero is". Continue reading...
Grieving daughter of cruise ship passenger left behind on remote Australian island says ‘there was a failure of care’
Suzanne Rees, 80, was found dead on Lizard Island a day after her cruise ship the Coral Adventurer left without her
UK unveils ‘carbon budget delivery plan’ to get back on track for net zero targets
Ed Miliband says pushing for renewable energy and lower emissions will reduce household bills and boost economyThe UK government will go all in" on clean energy and climate policy, the energy secretary has said, as he unveiled plans to put the UK back on track to reach its net zero commitments.In the face of intensifying attacks on climate policy from the poll-leading Reform UK party and the Conservatives, the government insists that pushing for renewable energy and lower carbon emissions will reduce household bills and boost the economy. Continue reading...
Matt Kean rebukes Coalition for ‘playing politics ’ as crunch time looms for nature laws
Environment minister Murray Watt's Thursday speech warns parties it's now or never' for overhaul to EPBC Act
All operational US liquefied natural gas terminals have violated pollution limits, says report
Analysis of public records comes as Trump administration aims to fast-track approval of new LNG export terminalsEvery fully operational liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal in the US has violated federal pollution limits in recent years, a new report has found.The analysis of public records comes as the Trump administration is aiming to fast-track the approval of new export terminals in an attempt to sell more domestic LNG to Europe and Asia. Joe Biden had previously placed a pause on LNG exports, which Donald Trump lifted on the first day of his return to office. Continue reading...
Carnivorous ‘death ball’ sponge among new species found in depths of Southern Ocean
Researchers previously took first confirmed footage of a juvenile colossal squid in scarcely explored habitatA carnivorous death ball" sponge is among 30 previously unknown deep-sea species found by scientists in one of the most remote parts of the planet.Researchers sampled the depths of the Southern Ocean, including volcanic calderas, the South Sandwich trench and seafloor habitats around Montagu and Saunders islands. Continue reading...
Shark feeding frenzy spotted near shore at popular Australian surf beach
Wonderful' for people to see the predators so close and feasting on bait fish at the Gold Coast's Rainbow Bay, near Snapper Rocks, expert says
‘Storm of the century’: record-breaking Hurricane Melissa hits Jamaica and heads for Cuba
Minister says parish of St Elizabeth is under water' and that families are trapped in their homes in the community of Black River in western Jamaica
How a radical experiment to bring a forest into a preschool transformed children’s health
In Finland, kindergartens are exposing children to more mud, wild plants and moss - and finding changes to their health that show how crucial biodiversity is to wellbeingAurora Nikula, 5, is having a normal day at her nursery. She is making a cake out of sand and mud, adding in make-believe carrots, potatoes and meat. It's overcooked," she says as she splashes water in, then adds another dollop of sand. More sugar, it tastes better," she says. A handful of mud goes in, and the dish evolves into a chocolate cake.Aki Sinkkonen, a principal scientist with the Natural Resources Institute Finland, is watching. He's also very interested in Aurora's cake, but for different reasons. Perfect," he says, admiring the way she is mixing soil, sand and leaves and then putting it on her face. She's really getting her hands in it."Aki Sinkkonen (left) and Marja Roslund from the Natural Resources Institute Finland in the Humpula garden Continue reading...
‘Animal cruelty’: two-year-old humpback whale found dead in NSW shark net causes anger
It is the first whale to have died out of 15 entangled in shark nets on Australia's east coast so far this year
Rising heat kills one person a minute worldwide, major report reveals
Biggest analysis of its kind finds millions are dying each year because of failure to tackle climate crisisRising global heat is now killing one person a minute around the world, a major report on the health impact of the climate crisis has revealed.It says the world's addiction to fossil fuels also causes toxic air pollution, wildfires and the spread of diseases such as dengue fever, and millions each year are dying owing to the failure to tackle global heating. Continue reading...
America’s super-rich are running down the planet’s safe climate spaces, says Oxfam
Exclusive: Data shows wealthiest 0.1% of the US burn carbon at 4,000 times the rate of the world's poorest 10%The US's super-rich are burning through carbon emissions at 4,000 times the speed of the world's poorest 10%, according to an analysis provided to the Guardian.These billionaires and multimillionaires, who comprise the wealthiest 0.1% of the US population, are also running down our planet's safe climate space at 183 times the rate of the global average. Continue reading...
Bill Gates says climate crisis won’t cause ‘humanity’s demise’ in call to shift focus to ‘improving lives’
Billionaire's statement comes a day after UN said humanity missed 1.5C climate target and warned of devastationBill Gates has called for a strategic pivot" in the effort against the climate crisis, writing that the world should shift away from trying to limit rising temperatures to instead focusing on efforts to prevent disease and poverty.Writing on his Gates Notes website, the billionaire Microsoft co-founder criticized what he described as a doomsday view of climate change" which is focusing too much on near-term emissions goals". Continue reading...
Offshore windfarm projects may be exempted from new UK nature rules
Exclusive: Firms say added costs would mean they are unable to install enough turbines to meet green energy goalsOffshore windfarm companies may be exempted from new UK nature rules in an attempt to keep down the cost of renewable energy, the Guardian has learned.The energy firms have said they would be unable to build the vast number of turbines required to meet the government's green electricity goals if they have to meet new rules for nationally significant infrastructure projects (Nsips). Continue reading...
‘Heat deaths aren’t a thing’: Coalition MPs weighing net zero given sceptical briefing on climate science
Exclusive: Briefing by conservative think-tank Centre for Independent Studies was arranged by a Coalition backbench committee
How do you move a village? Residents of France’s last outpost in North America try to outrun the sea
As rising tides eat away at the Saint-Pierre and Miquelon archipelago off Canada, plans to move the historic village to higher ground have divided residentsFranck Detcheverry, Miquelon's 41-year-old mayor, trudges up a grassy hill. The view isn't too bad, huh?" he jokes. The ocean sparkles 40 metres below the empty mound. The sound of a man playing the bagpipes, as if serenading the sea, floats up from the shoreline. This hill will be the location of his new home and those of all his fellow villagers.In the distance, about half a mile away, you can see the outline of the 400 or so buildings in the village of Miquelon. It sits only 2 metres above sea level on the archipelago of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon. Situated off the Canadian coast to the south of Newfoundland, it is an overseas collectivity" of France, and the country's last foothold in North America. Continue reading...
Pakistani farmers to sue German polluters over climate-linked flood damage
Claimants seek compensation from RWE and Heidelberg Materials after extreme flooding destroyed harvestsA group of Pakistani farmers whose livelihoods were devastated by floods three years ago has fired the starting shot in legal action against two of Germany's most polluting companies.Lawyers acting for 43 men and women from the Sindh region sent the energy firm RWE and the cement producer Heidelberg formal letters before action on Tuesday warning of their intention to sue later this year. Continue reading...
‘Trump doesn’t represent us’: US activist groups to push for climate action at Cop30 in Brazil
US groups aim to represent country at UN climate summit even as Trump administration declines to send a delegationDespite historic environmental rollbacks under a president who pulled the US from a key international climate treaty - and recently called global warming the greatest con job ever perpetrated on the world" - US civil society groups say they are gearing up to push for bold international climate action at a major UN conference next month.This is a really important moment to illustrate that Trump does not represent the entirety, or even anywhere near a majority, of us," said Collin Rees, US program manager at the environmental non-profit Oil Change International, who will attend the annual UN climate conference, known as Cop30. Continue reading...
Is it possible to find a sensible centre on climate change? | Fiona Katauskas
Murray Watt seems to think so
Biodiversity is in catastrophic decline. Here are three ways to ensure Australia’s conservation law actually works | Atticus Fleming and Andrew Macintosh
The highest priority must be to ensure land-clearing is properly regulated to save our native forests
UN chief António Guterres: 'We don't want to see the Amazon become a savannah' - video
UN secretary general Antonio Guterres speaks to the Guardian and Sumauma about the 'failure' of the Cop process to limit global heating to 1.5C, that overshooting is now 'inevitable', and why defending the rights of indigenous communities should be a top priority for global leaders Continue reading...
‘Change course now’: humanity has missed 1.5C climate target, says UN head
Exclusive: Devastating consequences' now inevitable but emissions cuts still vital, says Antonio Guterres in sole interview before Cop30
Experts say Ed Miliband’s £1.1bn for new offshore wind projects not enough
One energy industry source says they expected an annual budget as high as 2bn to meet UK's green energy targetsThe energy secretary, Ed Miliband, has set aside 1.1bn a year for offshore wind power developers investing in new projects in a funding round seen by some in the industry as too small to meet the UK's green electricity targets.The government's energy department said today it had budgeted 900m to pay developers of fixed wind turbines at sea and 180m for floating platforms. Continue reading...
Two crucial Florida coral species left ‘functionally extinct’ by ocean heatwave
Climate crisis drives near-total collapse of staghorn and elkhorn corals that formed backbone to state's reefsTwo of the most important coral species that made up Florida's reef are now functionally extinct after a withering ocean heatwave caused catastrophic losses, scientists have found.The near-total collapse of the corals that once formed the backbone of reefs in Florida and the Caribbean means they can no longer play their previously crucial role in building and sustaining reef ecosystems that host a variety of marine life. Continue reading...
The acquisitions of a fortunate life have accumulated over the years. All must be culled while I have the wherewithal | Paul Daley
Do I really need to replace my telephone every two years? Could my next laptop be recycled rather than brand new?I have an urgent desire to shed myself of goods and chattels.The acquisitions of a fortunate life have accumulated like an overflowing email inbox and simply must be dealt with while I am alive, and not left to my children to wrangle when they'll (hopefully, long down the track) be grieving. Continue reading...
Night-flying insects over UK in decline, weather radar study reveals
Study of Met Office data one of first to show how nocturnal insects affected by factors such as light pollutionScientists have used Met Office radar data to track the trillions of insects flying above the UK for the first time, revealing a concerning decline in nocturnal species.The team repurposed data from the UK's network of 15 weather surveillance radars, which scan the sky hundreds of times a day. Continue reading...
Environment minister could approve projects at odds with nature laws under Labor overhaul
New national interest' provision revealed as extracts of legislation circulated to stakeholders before bill introduced to parliament later this week
Boy, 14, in hospital after crocodile attack while fishing at far north Queensland beach
Incident follows several crocodile sightings around Cape Tribulation as breeding season begins and risks of aggression increase
Bear attack survival tips released in Japan as encounters surge
Governor of one prefecture says he is considering asking the military for help to tackle increasing attacks amid thousands-strong bear populationKnowing what to do in the event of a close encounter with a bear was once a concern only for hikers and foragers in Japan. Now, however, people in populated areas are being urged to learn how to protect themselves following a spate of attacks, as the animals leave their natural habitats in search of food.Bear encounters are generating almost daily headlines. In the past week in Akita prefecture, the animals attacked a jogger and a walker in built-up areas, while another terrorised four people before holing up inside a nearby house. None of the victims was seriously injured. Continue reading...
...567891011121314...