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International: All stories

More in International: All stories
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Energy windfall tax offers much better economic relief than petrol excise, study finds

4 Oct 2022

As pressure mounts on the Albanese government to tax the super profits of oil and gas companies, a new Australian study says this kind of levy would be much more effective in delivering relief from high energy prices than a discount on petrol prices.

Global Innovation Co-op Summit explores co-op solutions to global challenges

4 Oct 2022

What can co-ops do to address global challenges such as climate change, digitisation or inequality? The Global Innovation Co-op Summit in Paris (25-26 September) suggested many co-operative solutions while showcasing best practices from various sectors.

A Nord Stream disaster every day

4 Oct 2022

A half-mile wide maelstrom is swirling in the Baltic Sea as an estimated 300,000 metric tons of gas violently erupts from the sabotaged Nord Stream pipelines. Most of this gas is likely methane, a gas normally invisible to the eye that is over 80 times more potent than carbon dioxide at trapping heat over 20 years. The swirling froth recalls Hurricane Ian, another catastrophe that’s just devastated Florida.

Melbourne considering zero-carbon building rules

3 Oct 2022

A recent proposal suggests around 77 of the Melbourne CBD’s buildings would need to be “retrofitted” each year if the city is to meet its net-zero carbon emissions goals for 2040. The paper is being considered by the City of Melbourne’s Future Melbourne Committee this week.

Climate change is a class issue

3 Oct 2022

By Max Lawson - head of inequality Oxfam |As Europe is crippled by high gas and energy prices this winter, there are some who have been saying that this is an opportunity to speed a green transition, a kind of shock treatment to get us all somehow ‘used’ to high energy prices and forced to consume less.

The US ban on hydrofluorocarbons is a climate game-changer

3 Oct 2022

A lot of climate change-fighting strategies focus on removing air pollutants, or preventing them from reaching the atmosphere at all. While pretty much everybody these days can recognize carbon dioxide and methane as two of them, the US just joined around 130 other nations to take a big step in knocking out a third: hydrofluorocarbons, also known as HFCs.

‘South Asia, Himalayan region witness 40% of all climate disasters’

3 Oct 2022

The world’s largest carbon removal project will break ground in Wyoming

3 Oct 2022

A pair of climate tech companies is set to break ground on what will become the world’s largest carbon capture and storage project to help industries meet their net-zero goals and slow down the Earth’s rapidly warming climate.

Nord Stream pipeline leaks are ‘catastrophic for the climate’

30 Sep 2022

Methane leaking from yet-to-be explained damage on the Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines is likely to be the biggest burst of the potent greenhouse gas on record, raising new fears of the effect on the climate emergency.

The climate crisis is making the pacific islands uninhabitable. Who will help preserve our Nations?

30 Sep 2022

The climate crisis is creating an increasingly uncertain future for people in most parts of the world. Paradoxically in the Pacific, it is making the future increasingly certain—but not in a way that gives any kind of comfort.

Hurricane Ian: When the power grid goes out, could solar and batteries power your home?

30 Sep 2022

Hurricane Ian’s catastrophic winds and flooding are likely to bring long-lasting power outages to large parts of Florida. The storm is the latest in a line of hurricanes and extreme heat and cold events that have knocked out power to millions of Americans in recent years for days at a time.

As carbon dioxide grows more abundant, trees are growing bigger, study finds

30 Sep 2022

Trees are feasting on decades of carbon dioxide emissions and growing bigger as a result, according to a new study of U.S. forests.

COP27: Why is addressing ‘loss and damage’ crucial for climate justice?

30 Sep 2022

The death and destruction that can result from climate change is not evenly distributed around the world

Rising interest rates only a mild snag in climate battle

29 Sep 2022

Rising interest rates present no significant barrier to the world's transition to net zero emissions by 2050 despite the high levels of investment in green energy needed, according to a strong majority of climate economists polled by Reuters.

Queensland plans “supergrid” and world’s biggest pumped hydro

29 Sep 2022

The Queensland government’s new 10-year energy and jobs plan includes plans for 22GW of new wind and solar, and 11.5GW of rooftop solar, and also includes a new “super grid” and what it says will be the biggest pumped hydro project in the world.

How the EU's new energy plans impact Southeast Asia

29 Sep 2022

As European countries turn to energy suppliers in Southeast Asia, driving up global prices, there are concerns that other developing countries are being forced to spend more on increasingly expensive liquified natural gas or coal.

Grasslands: the unsung carbon hero

29 Sep 2022

What's in a grassland? There are all sorts of wildflowers, many insects, animals like prairie dogs, bison and antelope — and beneath the surface, there's a lot of carbon.

Cars are vanishing from Paris

29 Sep 2022

Bright parasols, wooden sun loungers and expanses of golden sand suddenly appear every summer on what was once a traffic-clogged, 3.3 kilometer road along the banks of the River Seine in the heart of Paris

Corporate pushback against climate action is getting desperate

29 Sep 2022

It’s not every day that professors are told they risk breaking the law for articulating basic scientific facts. But that’s the reality of giving expert advice in the deepening climate crisis.

Nations seek aviation climate pact despite global tensions

28 Sep 2022

A United Nations body has begun global talks to hammer out a consensus on reducing airline emissions in the face of lingering discord over climate change and the impact of war in Ukraine.

Tracking climate through ship exhaust

28 Sep 2022

A total of 99,800 commercial ships sail the seas, carrying around 90% of the world’s trade in goods. Their operation is vital—the transport of COVID-19 vaccines, for instance, wouldn’t have been possible without them.

Europe’s energy crisis is destroying the multipolar world

28 Sep 2022

The energy crisis provoked by the war in Ukraine may prove so economically destructive to both Russia and the European Union that it could eventually diminish both as great powers on the world stage.

Four ways carbon crediting is improving

28 Sep 2022

The age-old mantra with carbon credits is that some are good, some are bad and it’s hard to know which is which. The core issue is that we need to encourage the right kinds of projects that are actually reducing emissions and stop funding the ones that aren’t.

Reducing beef’s carbon footprint is key to achieving net-zero in Latin America and the Caribbean

28 Sep 2022

In Latin America and the Caribbean, one of the biggest drivers of greenhouse gas emissions in the region — and its best hope for achieving net-zero emissions by 2050 — remains the food system.

UN rights body rules Australia failed to protect from climate change

27 Sep 2022

The United Nations Human Rights Committee on September 23 found that the Australian government had violated the rights of Indigenous Torres Strait Islanders by failing to adequately protect them against the adverse impacts of climate change.

Young protesters demand climate action worldwide

27 Sep 2022

Young activists staged a coordinated “global climate strike” to highlight the effects of global warming and demand more aid for poor countries hit by weather chaos.

Countries try to dodge EU's carbon market fundraising plan

27 Sep 2022

European Union countries are hunting for alternatives to an EU plan to use a carbon market reserve to help finance their exit from Russian gas, as some fear the proposal would undermine the bloc’s main climate change policy.

How carbon calculators can help rail customers

27 Sep 2022

Among the freight transportation modes, the railroads are considered to be a more environmentally friendly option for shippers or customers seeking to transport higher volumes of goods while emitting fewer carbon emissions.

New report reveals organic dairy farming stores carbon, reduces greenhouse gas emissions

27 Sep 2022

A recent study published in the Journal of Cleaner Productions finds greenhouse gas emissions to be 24% lower on organic dairy farms when compared to conventional dairy farms in the United States.

What many progressives misunderstand about fighting climate change

27 Sep 2022

Since the 1960s, fighting for the environment has frequently meant fighting against corporations. To curb pollution, activists have worked to thwart new oil drilling, coal-fired power plants, fracking for natural gas, and fuel pipelines. But today, Americans face a climate challenge that can’t be solved by just saying no again and again.

What if carbon border taxes applied to all carbon – fossil fuels, too?

23 Sep 2022

The European Union is embarking on an experiment that will expand its climate policies to imports for the first time.

Offsets aflame: The risk of wildfires to tree-planting carbon credits

23 Sep 2022

Recent fires at reforestation projects raise the question, can the carbon-capture claims of a booming offset industry hold up?

Puerto Rico is in the dark again, but solar companies see glimmers of hope

23 Sep 2022

Much of Puerto Rico is still without power after Hurricane Fiona battered the island on Sept. 19. The storm laid bare how vulnerable the territory's power system still is five years after Hurricane Maria plunged it into an 11-month blackout — the longest in American history — and led to the deaths of almost 3,000 people. Yet, some see hope.

China tells Europe to not backslide on climate commitments

23 Sep 2022

China has accused some European nations of a “backswing” in the implementation of urgent climate change goals as geopolitical turmoil grips the continent.

World Bank chief walks back on climate skepticism in note to staff

23 Sep 2022

World Bank President David Malpass said in a note to staff Thursday that it is "clear" that humans are causing the planet to heat up by emitting greenhouse gases

Salesforce will launch carbon credit marketplace

22 Sep 2022

Business software provider Salesforce is bringing a new platform to the carbon market, where businesses will be able to buy carbon credits from a trusted partner with a third-party verification.

EU governments carving out €20 bn in carbon market exemptions for shipping

22 Sep 2022

Government ministers are in the process of carving out €20 billion worth of exemptions for the shipping industry in the new maritime carbon market (ETS), according to a new analysis.

Vultures prevent tens of millions of metric tons of carbon emissions each year

22 Sep 2022

New research shows vultures are 'nature’s flying sanitation crew' and play an important part in mitigating greenhouse gas emissions.

As UN climate summit looms, Denmark becomes first country to pay for ‘loss and damage

22 Sep 2022

Denmark is directing more than $13 million to aid countries hard hit by climate change, becoming the first wealthy nation to pay for “loss and damage” from increasingly extreme weather.

When the EU and US score climate points off China, Africa suffers: comment

22 Sep 2022

Africa’s contribution to climate change is historically negligible. Around 15% of the world’s population lives on the continent but contribute less than 3.8% of greenhouse emissions responsible for global warming.

UN General Assembly: 5 burning climate issues for world leaders gathering in New York

21 Sep 2022

This week more than 150 world leaders are expected to come together in New York to address the UN General Assembly (UNGA).

International "collaboration gap" threatens to undermine climate progress and delay net zero by decades

21 Sep 2022

A new IEA report sets out urgent priorities to rapidly make more clean technologies the most affordable options in key sectors

Victoria urged to shoot for net-zero by 2034, after 2020 emissions target “smashed”

21 Sep 2022

Victoria is being challenged to shoot for net-zero emissions more than 16 years ahead of schedule – an easy target according to modelling based on new data showing the government has beaten its 2020 target by nearly 10 per cent.

Squaring off between carbon taxes and renewable energy incentives

21 Sep 2022

Some European renewable energy producers are concerned that the EU may lose green energy investments to the United States in the wake of recently enacted U.S. legislation.

Mangroves keep carbon in the soil for 5,000 years

21 Sep 2022

On top of all the other dazzling biology, mangrove forests are massive carbon sinks. According to new research on a Mexican mangrove forest, they can keep carbon out of the atmosphere for millennia.

We owe Pakistan climate reparations

21 Sep 2022

It is almost impossible to comprehend the scale of the crisis Pakistan is facing. A third of the country has been flooded, 1400 people killed, one million homes destroyed, and fifty million people—almost the entire population of England—have been displaced from their homes as a result of this ecological crisis.

Climate change threatens up to 100% of trees in Australian cities, and most urban species worldwide

21 Sep 2022

A study published today in Nature Climate Change found climate change will put 90-100% of the trees and shrubs planted in Australian capital cities at risk by 2050.

The climate litigation trend is gathering global momentum

20 Sep 2022

The legal pressure on governments around the world to deliver more ambitious climate policies is continuing to intensify, according to a major new analysis from the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at the London School of Economics and Political Science.

First public global database of fossil fuels launched as UN holds climate talks

20 Sep 2022

A first-of-its-kind database for tracking the world’s fossil fuel production, reserves and emissions was launched on Monday to coincide with climate talks taking place at the United Nations General Assembly in New York.

New tech aims to track carbon in every tree, boost carbon market integrity

20 Sep 2022

Climate scientists and data engineers have developed a new digital platform billed as the first-ever global tool for accurately calculating the carbon stored in every tree on the planet.

Australia
More Australia >

Datacentres should be forced to invest in wind and solar energy, all states agree – except Queensland

Wed 13 May 2026

Power hungry datacentres that are growing to meet the demands of artificial intelligence could be forced to invest in enough new solar and wind generation to completely cover their electricity needs.

United States
More United States >

Some inconvenient truths in bringing climate science to the judiciary

Thu 14 May 2026

OPINION: Climate science had been knocking on the courthouse doors for quite some time when the Supreme Court of the United States finally invited it into the realm of legal action in 2007.

China
More China >

China’s leadership calls for ‘strict control’ of fossil fuels

28 Apr 2026

Chinese government leaders published a policy document on 22 April – Earth Day – calling for stricter controls on fossil-fuel consumption and greater oversight of heavy emitters.

Europe
More Europe >

Inequality causing 100,000 extra deaths a year from heat and cold in Europe

Tue 12 May 2026

Economic inequality adds more than 100,000 deaths to the vast toll from heat and cold in Europe each year, research has found.

United Kingdom
More United Kingdom >

Risk of drought in UK grows after unusually dry start to spring

Thu 14 May 2026

The risk of drought is rising after an unusually dry start to spring has pushed river flow, groundwater and reservoir stores below normal levels across much of the country, especially in central and southern England.

Canada
More Canada >

Carbon capture ‘doesn’t work’: Former British Columbia premier

8 May 2026

Former British Columbia Premier Gordon Campbell warned the costly, troubled technology has failed to deliver, undercutting a central justification for billions in public subsidies and new oil infrastructure.

Asia
More Asia >

While the world hesitates, India must continue leading on climate

Thu 14 May 2026

India’s updated climate targets must translate into systems that secure growth, resilience, and autonomy.

Pacific
More Pacific >

How climate change threatens the economic backbone of the Pacific

4 May 2026

The vast Pacific Ocean and the islands dotted within it produce more than half of the world's tuna.

Antarctic/Arctic
More Antarctic/Arctic >

‘Triple whammy of climate chaos’: Why Antarctica's sea ice collapse is no longer a mystery

Mon 11 May 2026

Scientists have finally identified the ‘triple whammy’ behind Antarctica’s dramatic collapse, shedding new light on the chain reaction that has pushed its sea ice to record lows.

Africa
More Africa >

With its first marine reserve, Ghana protects its ocean to secure its future

5 May 2026

Comment: Last month, Ghana made news when it declared its first marine reserve and sited it in one of the nation’s most ecologically and biologically significant marine environments.

South America
More South America >

The country where lethal hantavirus cases are on the rise. Experts blame climate change

Wed 13 May 2026

Experts believe environmental degradation caused by climate change and human activity is contributing to its spread by allowing the rodents that transmit the virus to thrive in new areas.

United Nations
More United Nations >

UN methane alert system expanded to coal and waste sectors after Indian landfill named among world’s top emitters

6 May 2026

The United Nations is expanding its methane monitoring system to cover coal mines and waste facilities, after satellite analysis identified a landfill in India among the world’s three largest methane-emitting sites.

More in International: All stories
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