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The lesson from the Greece wildfires? The climate crisis is coming for us all | Nesrine Malik
The developed world needs to be shocked out of its complacency about our warming world, and the unexpected effects that will follow
A surreal video filmed by a tourist in “the most perfect location in Greece” last week, posted to show how “a weekend trip turned into survival mode in 24 hours”, could easily pass for a TV climate crisis awareness-raising campaign. It brings to mind two harrowing adverts released by Save the Children in 2014 and 2016, showing what life would look like for a British girl if war came to our shores and she became a refugee.
The brief Greece video unwittingly follows the same script of rapid unravelling: an idyllic waterside scene is instantly transformed, overshadowed by looming fire and smoke, then abandoned for boats, buses and waiting holding pens as hundreds of tired and bewildered people seek shelter and fail to secure flights out.
Continue reading...NSW urged to follow Victoria on gas ban, as conservatives rail agains “climate crazies”
Pressure mounts on other state governments to call time on new gas connections in homes, while the fossil fuel lobby and its supporters rail against "climate crazies."
The post NSW urged to follow Victoria on gas ban, as conservatives rail agains “climate crazies” appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Fire in northern Australia’s tropical savanna is a threat to endangered fairy-wrens
Swimmers avoiding the water over fears of raw sewage on UK beaches
Concerns over water quality have discouraged a quarter of summer bathers from taking the plunge
Almost a quarter of the UK’s sea swimmers may not take a dip in the ocean this year because of sewage dumping by water companies, according to a poll.
Sewage was dumped into waters near England’s most celebrated beaches for nearly 8,500 hours last year, analysis shows. A separate review earlier this year found there were 1,504 discharges in 2022 on beaches supposed to be free from such pollution.
Continue reading...South Korea joins Japan in raising concerns over Australia’s Safeguard Mechanism
You see alumina, I see a very big nbattery
Alumina refineries in Queensland can potentially provide the same amount of storage/demand response as a 2GW/8 hour battery.
The post You see alumina, I see a very big nbattery appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Australian utility signs first vanadium flow battery contract for long duration storage
First ever contract with Australian utility will test whether vanadium flow battery can support 100 per cent renewable power in remote and harsh locations.
The post Australian utility signs first vanadium flow battery contract for long duration storage appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Europe weather: How heatwaves could forever change summer holidays abroad
The secret lives of silky sharks: unveiling their whereabouts supports their protection
The Guardian view on a new alliance between Wales and Cornwall: unlocking Celtic energy | Editorial
Offshore wind power could kickstart an economic renaissance in the west of Britain
David Lloyd George would no doubt have approved of the collaboration agreement signed this month by Mark Drakeford, the first minister of Wales, and Linda Taylor, the leader of Cornwall council. In 1910, Britain’s only Welsh prime minister told a Falmouth crowd that Wales and Cornwall shared “the same Celtic passion for liberty”. These days, they also share common challenges and – in the field of renewable energy – transformative new prospects.
Later this year, a bidding process will begin for leases to build enough floating windfarms in the Celtic Sea to power 3m homes by 2035. Longer term, the hope is to generate six times that output from an area off the north Cornwall and south Wales coasts. Investment in wind has hitherto focused on the North Sea, exploiting existing infrastructure associated with oil and gas. But developments in offshore technologies have dramatically expanded the economic horizon at Europe’s western edge. As Mr Drakeford put it in a joint press conference with Ms Taylor: “Where our geography has been against us in many ways for economic development, now suddenly being on the edge is an advantage in terms of wind and marine energy.”
Continue reading...Youth hostels are a muddy, joyful miracle. Losing them to Brexit and the cost of living would be a tragedy | John Harris
They are an antidote to the isolation and smallness of modern life – yet the YHA is being forced to sell off at least 20
Just over a month ago, a news story broke that spoke volumes about our crisis-ridden times, and the great wealth sitting undisturbed while some of our most vital organisations and institutions find themselves in dire financial straits.
It also took its place among a range of developments – from our polluted rivers, to the ongoing controversy about the legality of camping on Dartmoor – which highlight how the opportunity to enjoy green and open spaces is being spoiled, restricted and neglected. In this instance, though, beyond coverage in the Guardian and Telegraph, and a brief flurry of noise on social media, what was afoot seemed to attract very little attention at all.
Continue reading...We bailed out the banks but we’re not prepared to bail out the planet
US and UK must use financial firepower of the state to put economies on a saner course
Like many other politicians, Joe Biden talks a good game about the need to tackle global heating. Climate change is an “existential threat”, the US president said last week, as America sizzled amid record-breaking temperatures.
Biden had to do something in response to what António Guterres, the UN secretary general, described as the boiling of the planet. The White House announced a series of measures – such as improved access to drinking water and planting more trees – in response to what has been the hottest month on record.
Continue reading...Europe burns while the Tories’ net zero plans are set to go up in smoke | Stewart Lee
Rishi Sunak needs to understand that investing in green initiatives is a lot cheaper than flying all his hedge fund manager mates to Mars
It’s 2am on Thursday. Wildfires are burning in Greece, Italy, Tunisia, Portugal, Croatia and Algeria. British tourist climate refugees are, ironically, being rescued by friendly locals in small boats. Stop the boats! No! Not those boats! The other ones! The ones with brown people in them!
But the main environmental news in the past few weeks has not been about the Giveaway Package Holiday Dante’s Inferno Supa-Deals. Instead, we learn that British political parties are rethinking their commitment to green policies. And all because Labour somehow lost Uxbridge, by a narrow margin, to a Conservative party so corrupt that it is considering setting up an amnesty bucket at the entrance to parliament, where those on the right of the house can vomit out their consciences before taking their seats.
Basic Lee tour dates are here. A fun-size ™ ® version of the show is at the Stand’s New Town theatre, Edinburgh, from 11 to 20 August
Continue reading...AfDB, UNEP team up to boost biodiversity finance for Africa
Rishi Sunak and Keir Starmer should take courage from Joe Biden – green energy for all is the only way forward | Joss Garman
This was always going to happen. There was always going to be a moment when the seemingly dry question of decarbonisation became a dominant – the dominant – question in British politics; a moment when the government and opposition would have to genuinely address a question that was no longer abstract, no longer about measures to take in distant decades to prevent climate impacts in distant lands. Are we actually going to clean up our economy, and if we are, then who’s going to pay for it?
Some world leaders understand the moment we’re in and are acting accordingly – to defend a global climate that allows humans to prosper, but also to ensure their economies prosper this century. President Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act is the biggest single investment of money into decarbonisation ever attempted, and the consequences are scaring European policymakers witless. The White House has made a huge intervention in the US economy in an effort to ensure America, not China, dominates technologies this century.
Continue reading...Joyce hopes to ambush Albanese on renewables at Rinehart-sponsored Bush Summit
Joyce calls on farmers to protest against "onslaught" of wind, solar and transmission lines at the Murdoch and Rinehart sponsored Bush Summit.
The post Joyce hopes to ambush Albanese on renewables at Rinehart-sponsored Bush Summit appeared first on RenewEconomy.
Energy security: Rishi Sunak to meet leaders over energy security plans
Rishi Sunak warned that Tories’ key green pledges are ‘unachievable’
Whitehall watchdog gives red rating to set of measures aimed to bring net-zero goals, amid backlash over retreat on climate policy
Rishi Sunak has been accused of showing disregard for the climate crisis after Whitehall officials warned that some of his key green pledges were already unachievable.
With the prime minister facing a backlash within his own party after appearing to row back from his commitment to green policies, an internal government audit found that a series of measures designed to help meet Britain’s net-zero goals had been allowed to run off course.
Continue reading...The cost of living crisis can only be beaten by tackling the climate crisis | Ed Miliband
Investing in green jobs and energy is the best long-term way to tackle soaring bills
- Ed Miliband is the climate change and net zero shadow minister
This summer has been defined by two crises: the continuing, painful cost of living crisis afflicting millions in our country and the climate crisis, which is playing out in horrifying ways across the world. The Conservative party is saying we can’t tackle both these crises together – and is, in fact, tackling neither. The Conservatives are wrong. Tackling both these crises goes hand in hand. That’s what Labour’s green prosperity plan will do – cutting energy bills, creating good jobs, delivering energy security and providing climate leadership for our country.
To listen to the Conservatives, you might think the status quo is serving us well. It isn’t. Putin’s strangulation of international fossil fuel markets has sent energy bills soaring, plunged countries like ours into the deepest cost of living crisis in memory and stoked inflation to further pile the pain on to families and businesses. The UK has been the worst affected country in western Europe. We have been so exposed because 13 years of failed Conservative energy policy has left us so dependent on fossil fuel markets.
Ed Miliband is shadow secretary of state for climate change and net zero
Continue reading...International talks end without go-ahead for deep-sea mining
Eleventh-hour agreement reached at ISA meeting in Jamaica to discuss moratorium at next year’s talks
An international meeting in Jamaica to negotiate rules over deep-sea mining has ended with no green light to start industrial-scale mining and with an eleventh-hour agreement to hold formal discussions next year on the protection of the marine environment.
The agreement ended intense week-long negotiations at the International Seabed Authority (ISA), an intergovernmental body based in Kingston that regulates sea-bed extraction, over a proposal spearheaded by Chile, France and Costa Rica and backed by a dozen countries to discuss a precautionary pause on deep-sea mining in order to ensure the protection of the marine environment.
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