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Despite Paris Agreement pledges, countries 'have landed off target' on climate goals multiple times, the UN warns.
Available new climate pledges by governments have only slightly lowered global temperature rise over the course of this century, leaving the world on the path to a serious escalation of climate risks and damages.
Fractional improvement in projections will be partly negated by US withdrawal of plans to limit global warming
‘Solar Sharer’ plan aims to ease demand on grid and redeploy excess power from rooftop solar network
Opinion | As a coalition of city mayors and councillors, we call on Prime Minister Mark Carney to invest in a safe and prosperous future
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The Canadian government signaled it plans to eventually lift the controversial cap on emissions from the oil and gas sector, doubling down instead on its industrial carbon pricing system to rein in pollution.
For the full experience visit: There’s a $10 Trillion Antidote to Trump’s Climate Backlash
A quantitative fund focused on Australian equities is beating the market by betting that companies with higher ESG credentials are also more efficient and profitable.
Brazil President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has chosen to stay on a boat during his visit to Belém, the Amazonian city set to host the COP30 climate summit.
The COP30 host is aiming to raise $10 billion initially, down from an earlier target of $25 billion, for a new vehicle that will help countries protect their forests.
TotalEnergies SE raised its forecasts for long-term oil demand and concluded that the world is on track for a rise in average global temperatures in excess of 2C.
JBS NV, the world’s largest meat supplier, is committed to Brazil’s government plan to track 100% of its cattle herds as part of an effort to limit deforestation, said Chief Executive Officer Gilberto Tomazoni.
At the COP28 climate summit in Dubai two years ago, countries reached a first-of-a-kind agreement to transition their economies away from fossil fuels.
India is considering canceling green power projects equivalent to as much as a fifth of the country’s renewable capacity because they’re struggling to find state utilities to buy their electricity.
In a few days, the finance industry’s fundamentally altered approach to climate change will be on full display.
United Nations climate talks officially kick off next week. We’re tracking what’s happening in the run-up to the COP30 summit.
The next stage of Europe’s climate transition hangs in the balance, with ministers meeting in Brussels to hash out a deal on the emissions cuts they expect to deliver in the next decade.
Global efforts to slash emissions are set to pick up significantly in the years to come.
The Paris Agreement was a huge deal when it was signed in 2015 at COP21. But after 10 years and $10 trillion dollars invested into decarbonizing our economies, what has it accomplished?
Towering above Delhi’s skyline, emitting an inescapable stench of rotting flesh, are giant mountains of rubbish. Several miles wide and more than 200ft (60 metres) high, they are visible from across the city and stand as symbols of Delhi’s inability to deal with its trash. Hannah Ellis-Petersen visited communities living in the shadow of Bhalswa’s overfilled landfill heaps, to see how they have become reliant on the mountain that is simultaneously poisoning them Continue reading...
River Action bringing legal action against water regulator over who should foot bill for firms’ past failures to investOfwat is unlawfully allowing water companies to charge customers twice to fund more than £100bn of investment to reduce sewage pollution, campaigners will allege in court on Tuesday.Lawyers for River Action say the bill increases being allowed by Ofwat – which amount to an average of £123 a year per household – mean customers will be paying again for improvements to achieve environmental compliance that should have been funded from their previous bills. Continue reading...
As global leaders and environmental activists descend on Brazil for next week’s Cop30 climate summit, Madeleine Finlay speaks to the Guardian’s global environment editor, Jon Watts, who recently sat down for an exclusive interview with the UN secretary general, António Guterres. As he approaches his penultimate summit as the UN chief, Guterres reflected on humanity’s progress in attempting to limit global warming to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels, why Indigenous voices must be listened to and how he remains positive in the face of the climate crisis‘Change course now’: humanity has missed 1.5C climate target, says UN headSupport the Guardian: theguardian.com/sciencepod Continue reading...
In The White House Effect, now available on Netflix, archival footage is used to show how the US right moved from believing to disputing the climate crisisIn 1988, the United States entered into its worst drought since the Dust Bowl. Crops withered in fields nationwide, part of an estimated $60bn in damage ($160bn in 2025). Dust storms swept the midwest and northern Great Plains. Cities instituted water restrictions. That summer, unrelentingly hot temperatures killed between 5,000 and 10,000 people, and Yellowstone national park suffered the worst wildfire in its history.Amid the disaster, George HW Bush, then Ronald Reagan’s vice-president, met with farmers in Michigan reeling from crop losses. Bush, the Republican candidate for president, consoled them: if elected, he would be the environmental president. He acknowledged the reality of intensifying heatwaves – the “greenhouse effect”, to use the scientific parlance of the day – with blunt clarity: the burning of fossil fuels contributed excess carbon dioxide to the atmosphere, leading to global warming. But though the scale of the problem could seem “impossible”, he assured the farmers that “those who think we’re powerless to do anything about this greenhouse effect are forgetting about the White House Effect” – the impact of sound environmental policy for the leading consumer of fossil fuels. Curbing emissions, he said, was “the common agenda of the future”. Continue reading...
A new UN report shows that global temperatures continue to rise despite a slight slowdown in emissions. It reiterates the call for countries to be more ambitious on climate action.
The annual U.N. report card finds that, overall, countries are still far off-track from their stated goals to limit global warming.
Brazil, which is hosting the 30th U.N. Climate Change Conference this month, wants to show the world it is a leader in safeguarding the planet. Its record tells a more complicated story.
The city’s new leader will have to contend with preparing for deadly floods, rising electricity costs and the future of an ambitious energy efficiency program.