Feed aggregator
Extreme weather expected to cause food price volatility in 2025 after cost of cocoa and coffee doubles
Trend towards more extreme-weather events will continue to hit crop yields and create price spikes, Inverto says
Extreme weather events are expected to lead to volatile food prices throughout 2025, supply chain analysts have said, after cocoa and coffee prices more than doubled over the past year.
In an apparent confirmation of warnings that climate breakdown could lead to food shortages, research by the consultancy Inverto found steep rises in the prices of a number of food commodities in the year to January that correlated with unexpected weather.
Continue reading...‘I closed my eyes to brace for impact’: the man who escaped a whale’s mouth
Adrián Simancas encountered a humpback off Chile’s coast – but scientists say he was never at risk of being swallowed
Adrián Simancas had been paddling for two hours in the calm but icy seas of the Strait of Magellan, off the coast of Chilean Patagonia, when something massive emerged from the water and dragged him under.
“I saw dark blue and white colours before feeling a slimy texture brush against my face,” the 24-year-old told the Guardian. “I closed my eyes to brace for impact, but it was soft, like being hit by a wave.”
Continue reading...WWF helping facilitate trade in polar bear fur, investigation reveals
Wildlife charity backs policy of exploitation of small number of some endangered species for economic purposes – such as trophy hunting
The wildlife charity WWF has been working to support the trade in polar bear fur at the same time as using images of the bears to raise money, it can be revealed.
Polar bears are severely affected by the loss of Arctic sea ice, which makes seeking prey harder and forces the bears to use more energy. In some regions, polar bears are showing signs of declining physical condition, having fewer cubs, and dying younger.
Continue reading...CFTC: CCA price slump draws in investors, RGAs shelved
World's sea-ice falls to record low
World's sea-ice falls to record low
Washington state lawmakers propose ETS amendments to enable linkage with California-Quebec
Bipartisan US senators reintroduce nationwide E15 sales year-round legislation
Brazilian NBS group urges govt to engage private sector, follow recommendations for new ETS
Pennsylvania sues federal agencies as over $3 bln in funds for climate projects still frozen
CAR poaches next president from Verra senior leadership
DATA DIVE: Article 6 project interest jumps 30% in past month as PACM momentum builds
WWF calls for separate EU target on carbon removals, with strict green criteria
Kenya grassland project may receive carbon credit issuances, despite uncertain future
Listen to Stewart Copeland of the Police's new track mixing animal sounds and music – audio
The former Police drummer Stewart Copeland, with the help of the British naturalist Martyn Stewart, has produced Wild Concerto, a ‘collaboration between nature and music’. The album fuses sounds of nature, such as the call of Arctic terns and the howling of wolves, with traditional instruments. Stewart hailed the environmental theme of the work, explaining that most of the species represented were endangered
Continue reading...BRIEFING: Budget strains elevate concerns for California ARB’s environmental justice advisors
Lack of updated NDC climate targets to slow Article 6 progress, warns rating agency
Ocean CDR could remove millions of tonnes of CO2 in Germany, but challenges remain -report
Habitat banks: how law to boost wildlife in England is faring one year in
Developers must now offset damage to nature by achieving a 10% biodiversity net gain – but is buying up pockets of land and rewilding them the answer?
To most people driving through the waterlogged fields of West Sussex, a patch of muddy land dotted with scrubby trees would not warrant a second glance. But this former farmland is being given a new lease of life as part of a government scheme to boost wildlife.
Ardingly habitat bank is one of the pilot sites for the biodiversity net gain (BNG) scheme. Under legislation that came into force in February 2024, new roads, houses and other building projects must achieve a 10% net gain in biodiversity if nature is damaged on a site. So if a forest is bulldozed to make way for a block of flats, the developer must recreate a similar habitat, plus 10%.
Continue reading...