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Why 2021 will be turning point for tackling climate change
Five new speculators among 18 WCI accounts registered in Q4
How should I treat insect bites? Do home remedies work? | Cameron Webb
There is surprisingly little formal research into how best to deal with bug bites and stings but there are some things that might help
It’s the holidays and we’re spending more time outdoors. This means we’re exposed to the more annoying and painful aspects of summer – insect bites and stings.
There are plenty of products at the local pharmacy to treat these. Some treat the initial bite or sting, others the itchy aftermath.
Continue reading...New York sets $125/tonne social cost of carbon
Butterflies, bushfires and bears: Age of Extinction's year in photography
In a year like no other, our photographers – and readers – captured images reflecting the beauty and diversity that could all too easily be lost in our fragile world
Continue reading...'It's awakened me': UK climate assembly participants hail a life-changing event
From buying an electric car to starting a secondhand clothes business, attendees talk of the unexpected delights of the first UK citizens’ assembly
At the start of 2020, Sue Peachey could never have predicted how her life would change over the next 12 months. She was one of 108 people to take part in the UK’s first climate assembly earlier in the year, spending four weekends learning about a range of environmental issues before producing a final report of recommendations.
“The first weekend changed me really. I thought, ‘Oh my God, [climate change] is really going to happen,’ she said. “It made me want to learn and to live my life greener.”
Continue reading...Amid 2020's gloom, there are reasons to be hopeful about the climate in 2021 | John Sauven
The concerted global response to the pandemic could be replicated for the fight against the climate crisis
In a world rife with disputes and divisions, there will be one emotion likely to unite most people at the stroke of midnight on 31 December: sheer relief that 2020 is finally over.
There’s no risk of overstating it: this past year has pushed our world right to the edge. A single virus leaping from animals to humans was enough to kill 1.6 million people, bring major economies to their knees, and cause untold anguish and suffering all over the world.
Continue reading...One photograph a day, whatever the weather – in pictures
Blipfoto members, or ‘blippers’, record a single photo from their day. Between them they have built up a fascinating archive of dramatic weather images taken during the daily recording of their lives.
Here we look back at a selection of photos and snippets of day-to-day reflections from some of their 2020 journals. The gallery was put together at Blipfoto by Rebecca Cole and Richard Hunt-Smith
Continue reading...South Korea releases 2021 carbon auction schedule
South Korea to cut coal consumption, energy sector CO2 emissions
Partying dolphins and rare sea slug among 2020 highlights in UK seas
The Wildlife Trusts and Sir David Attenborough call on public to help protect marine life
Sir David Attenborough has called for a halt to activities that damage the UK’s seas, as the Wildlife Trusts revealed the highs and lows of marine life around the British Isles during 2020.
Highlights included thousands of Atlantic bluefin tuna in a rare run up the Channel from Cornwall to Kent, at some points accompanied by porpoises, minke whale and dolphins in a feeding frenzy, the trusts’ living seas marine review reported.
Continue reading...Lookahead 2021: What's happening in the world of science?
Woolly rhino from Ice Age unearthed in Russian Arctic
New Year Honours 2021: 'Green' economist recognised
Germany releases preliminary ‘ranking’ of coal plants at risk of forced closure
China releases final 2019-20 ETS allocation plan
'We don't sleep when it's raining': the mental health impact of flooding
Research show flood victims in UK nine times more likely to experience long-term mental health issues
When Julie Blackburn was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder in 2016 she was told to avoid her triggers, scenarios which cause upsetting flashbacks. “But when your trigger is rain, there is no getting over it,” she said. “My husband and I don’t sleep when it’s raining, we take it in turns to stand at the window watching the rain – it’s just living in constant fear.”
Blackburn’s house in Old Coulsdon, Croydon, has been flooded several times, first in 2000 when heavy rain overwhelmed the Victorian sewer system and filled her home with toxic waste. Rapid development and poor infrastructure led the south London borough to be rated the fourth worst area in England and Wales for surface water flooding in 2011.
Continue reading...The best science long reads of 2020
Moths to monkeys: 503 new species identified by UK scientists
Spectacular discovery of monkey in Myanmar among new species described this year by Natural History Museum scientists
Scarab beetles from New Guinea, seaweed from the Falklands and a new species of monkey found on an extinct volcano in Myanmar are among 503 species newly identified by scientists at the Natural History Museum.
The museum’s work in 2020 describing species previously unknown to science includes naming new lichens, wasps, barnacles, miniature tarantulas and a lungless worm salamander.
Continue reading...Iceland's innovations to reach net-zero – in pictures
Isolated and challenged by a harsh climate and battered by the financial crisis of 2008, Iceland has successfully moved away from fossil fuels and shifted to 100% electricity production from renewable sources. The island nation has developed high-tech greenhouses to grow organic vegetables and embraced sustainable fish farming, ecotourism, breakthrough processes for carbon capture and disposal, and efforts to restore the forests that were lost in earlier centuries