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PREVIEW: Chubb review findings to be released Monday as ACCU market hopes for an end to uncertainty
The week in wildlife – in pictures
The best of this week’s wildlife pictures, including fur seals, sandbar sharks and Thor the walrus
Continue reading...Over 100 writers sign letter in solidarity with jailed UK climate activists
Ben Okri, Simon Schama, Helen Pankhurst and AL Kennedy among those saying they ‘stand with’ protesters
Ben Okri, Simon Schama, Helen Pankhurst and AL Kennedy are among more than 100 writers who have signed a letter in solidarity with UK climate protest prisoners.
“That the UK now has political prisoners, incarcerated for defending sustainable life on Earth is yet another national disgrace,” Kennedy said.
Continue reading...Wind generated a record amount of electricity in 2022
Kimberley floods: 'the worst flooding Western Australia has ever seen' – video
Communities in the Kimberley in Western Australia are reeling from the largest flooding event in the state's history, which has wreaked havoc in the region. The Fitzroy River peaked at 15.81 metres, about 1.8 metres above the previous record. Emergency evacuations continued on Thursday as the Fitzroy's flood peak bore down on tiny Noonkanbah. Helicopters plucked anxious residents from sodden outstation as evacuations continue, with three Australian Defence Force planes helping with the airlift
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- ‘They’ve been texting us for food’: remote communities left ‘abandoned’ in Kimberley flood response
- Authorities struggle to deliver food and essentials to towns stranded by WA’s ‘worst ever’ floods
Befriending a wild animal will make you a better human – here’s why | Kate Ahmad
If you return to the same spot often enough, you’ll get to know the regulars
The movie adaptation of Tim Winton’s novel Blueback is out this week. It focuses on a friendship with a big friendly fish – the blue groper; and the powerful response to humans threatening the animal. As with My Octopus Teacher, it’s a highly emotive story, and seen by most people as unusual or unique. Because humans only befriend domestic animals such as cats and dogs. Or do they?
Let’s start with the blue groper. This is a charismatic Australian native, with many interesting characteristics. They are protogynous hermaphrodites, starting life as juveniles with the potential to be male or female; and always starting as green-coloured females. The dominant male has a harem and, if he dies, the largest female will become male and adopt the striking blue hue which gives the fish its name. These fish can live up to 70 years and are the state emblem of New South Wales.
Continue reading...CP Daily: Thursday January 5, 2023
*Senior Carbon Analyst, ClearBlue Markets – Toronto/Amsterdam/Flexible
WCI Markets: CCAs prices slide into New Year, Washington allowances soar ahead of programme launch
ANALYSIS: California cap-and-trade registration backlog more than doubles in Q4 amid longer wait times
Sierra Madre: The deadly battle to save a rainforest in the Philippines
US approves world’s first vaccine for declining honey bees
Merger of UK tech firm, Canadian ESG investor to expand global environmental credit blockchain platform
Climate change is leaving African elephants desperate for water
Insects and spiders make up more than half NZ's animal biodiversity – time to celebrate these spineless creatures
Half of glaciers will be gone by 2100 even under Paris 1.5C accord, study finds
If global heating continues at current rate of 2.7C, losses will be greater with 68% of glaciers disappearing
Half the planet’s glaciers will have melted by 2100 even if humanity sticks to goals set out in the Paris climate agreement, according to research that finds the scale and impacts of glacial loss are greater than previously thought. At least half of that loss will happen in the next 30 years.
Researchers found 49% of glaciers would disappear under the most optimistic scenario of 1.5C of warming. However, if global heating continued under the current scenario of 2.7C of warming, losses would be more significant, with 68% of glaciers disappearing, according to the paper, published in Science. There would be almost no glaciers left in central Europe, western Canada and the US by the end of the next century if this happened.
Continue reading...The Guardian view on Europe’s heatwave: the door is closing – but there is a way out | Editorial
Temperature records have toppled across the continent. Governments must not delay any longer
Warm winter days do not instinctively feel like an extreme weather event. Unlike the freezing bomb cyclone endured by the US at Christmas, or the floods that swept through the Philippines, they are unlikely to cause immediate widespread death and devastation. At a time when soaring energy costs have pushed so many into poverty, many will have welcomed the warmth that has been felt across Europe, especially the millions in Ukraine suffering due to Russia’s attacks on its power infrastructure.
Yet the heatwave should alarm us all. Though it may have been less punitive to experience than last summer’s record temperatures, which led to thousands of deaths, it has spread across many more countries. “We can regard this as the most extreme event in European history,” said one climatologist. Poland, where the average January temperature is around 1C, saw the thermometer climb to 19C on New Year’s Day. At least seven more European countries have seen record highs. Ski resorts closed slopes or resorted to artificial snow. Though the weather might seem mild, it is disrupting crops and wildlife, and of course sudden thaws can lead to avalanches or floods.
Continue reading...'It's heartbreaking': ski slopes forced to close as Europe experiences record warm winter – video
Europe's record-breaking winter weather has closed ski slopes after temperatures exceeded 20C in parts of Switzerland and southern Germany. Footage from across the continent shows people braving the sea in Spain and resorts opening summer trails for skiers as eight countries recorded their warmest January day in history.
In the UK, the Met Office confirmed 2022 was the UK's hottest year on record, with the average annual temperature exceeding 10C for the first time. The record-breaking heat was made 160 times more likely by the climate crisis, indicating the dominant influence of human-caused global heating on Britain
- UK’s record hot 2022 made 160 times more likely by climate crisis
- Record warm winter in parts of Europe forces closure of ski slopes