A future of extreme heatwaves, drought and collapsing habitats awaits if we continue to ignore the danger signs
What does British summertime mean to you? Blackberries? Picnics? Festivals? Ticks? This summer has been the hottest on record in the UK. As human-caused climate breakdown intensifies, the outdoor areas we spend time in are changing – and so, too, are our relationships with the land and the ecosystems we live in.
My home is in the south of England, near beautiful woodlands. Since moving there in 2016, the number of ticks my family has picked up in the woods has increased each year, but this summer has been astonishing. For a few weeks, our four-year-old came home from nursery with a tick almost every day. I’ve had many: some tiny nymphal ones that could be easily missed. We spend time in Scotland, too, and find ticks often when we go there now.
Lucy Jones is a journalist and the author of Losing Eden and The Nature Seed
Continue reading...
09/03/2025 - 02:00
09/03/2025 - 00:00
Hundreds of billions of dollars invested in extractive mining for green transition with few safeguards, research finds
The financing of transition mineral mining is driving widespread environmental destruction and human rights abuses, according to a report.
Banks and investors have ploughed hundreds of billions of dollars into companies mining for minerals for the manufacture of solar panels, wind turbines, batteries, energy grids and electric vehicles in the past decade, according to the research.
Continue reading...
09/02/2025 - 21:02
Australia’s 2035 target for cutting emissions will reveal how serious we are about addressing the climate crisis
Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updates
Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast
Want to get this in your inbox when it publishes? Sign up for the Clear Air Australia newsletter here
The climate crisis is often a fight over numbers – and we are coming towards the end of a big one. It will shape how ambitious Australia will be in addressing this era-defining problem, over the next decade and beyond.
The Albanese government is weighing a decision on the national emissions reduction target for 2035. Along with the policies that follow, it will be a legacy marker for a prime minister who is sometimes accused of being risk averse.
Sign up to get climate and environment editor Adam Morton’s Clear Air column as a free newsletter
Continue reading...
09/02/2025 - 15:50
More than 97% at Yosemite and Sequoia & Kings Canyon parks voted to unionize as president enacts major cuts
Hundreds of staff at two of California’s most popular national parks have voted to unionize, a move that comes during a troubled summer for the National Park Service, which has seen the Trump administration enact unprecedented staff and budget cuts.
In an election held between July and August, more than 97% of workers at Yosemite and Sequoia & Kings Canyon national parks voted in support of organizing a union, according to a statement from the National Federation of Federal Employees. The Federal Labor Relations Authority certified the results last week.
Continue reading...
09/02/2025 - 13:37
‘Megaberg’ known as A23a has rapidly disintegrated in warmer waters and could disappear within weeks
Nearly 40 years after breaking off Antarctica, a colossal iceberg ranked among the oldest and largest ever recorded is finally crumbling apart in warmer waters, and could disappear within weeks.
Earlier this year, the “megaberg” known as A23a weighed a little under a trillion tonnes and was more than twice the size of Greater London, a behemoth unrivalled at the time.
Continue reading...
09/02/2025 - 12:56
MPs on Commons committee describe figures as a waste and say money should have been used to fix infrastructure
English water companies have spent £16.6m fighting legal action against regulators and campaigners over environmental breaches such as illegal sewage spills.
Correspondence from the companies to the Commons environment, food and rural affairs (Efra) committee published on Tuesday reveals that millions of pounds of billpayers’ money has been spent over the past five years on expensive external lawyers enlisted to reduce liabilities for regulatory breaches.
Continue reading...
09/02/2025 - 12:46
Authorities said the boy, who survived and was hospitalized, was bitten while snorkelling near Key Largo
An eight-year-old child suffered “a significant amount of blood loss” after he was bitten by a shark as he was snorkelling near Key Largo on Monday, authorities in Florida said.
The boy survived and was taken by helicopter to hospital in Miami for treatment to a leg wound above the knee. His condition was unknown on Tuesday morning, but local media reports described his wounds as “severe”.
Continue reading...
09/02/2025 - 10:01
Exclusive: The progressive thinktank, which has championed a ‘real zero’ emissions policy, says it protects privacy of donors to avoid them being targeted
Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updates
Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast
Andrew Forrest’s charity has made an undisclosed donation to the Australia Institute, raising transparency concerns about the funding of influential advocacy groups.
The donation to the progressive thinktank, which has been confirmed by several sources familiar with the deal but not authorised to comment, highlights differing disclosure standards across the research and advocacy sector.
Continue reading...
09/02/2025 - 10:00
More than 40 round-leaf pomaderris discovered by environmental community group inside the area earmarked for fire break in July
Sign up for climate and environment editor Adam Morton’s free Clear Air newsletter here
A mere 150 round-leaf pomaderris were thought left in the world in 2021 and now a planned firebreak in Victoria could destroy dozens of the plants.
The critically endangered shrub, which bursts into cascades of creamy flowers, is known to exist in only a handful of locations in central Victoria’s hill country.
Continue reading...
09/02/2025 - 08:00
Over 85 top climate specialists lambasted administration’s review, calling it a ‘shoddy mess’ that downplays risks
A group of the US’s leading climate scientists have compiled a withering review of a controversial Trump administration report that downplays the risks of the climate crisis, finding that the document is biased, riddled with errors and fails basic scientific credibility.
More than 85 climate experts have contributed to a comprehensive 434-page report that excoriates a US Department of Energy (DOE) document written by five hand-picked fringe researchers that argues that global heating and its resulting consequences have been overstated.
Continue reading...