The Guardian

Subscribe to The Guardian feed The Guardian
Latest Environment news, comment and analysis from the Guardian, the world's leading liberal voice
Updated: 2 hours 12 min ago

Asian hornet outbreak contained, says Defra

Sat, 2016-11-05 02:36

Officials have destroyed an Asian hornet nest in Gloucestershire after the invasive species was spotted there, posing a threat to the UK’s honeybees

An Asian hornet outbreak has been contained, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) has said. The first sightings of the pest in the mainland UK were reported in Tetbury, Gloucestershire, in September.

Inspectors from the National Bee Unit destroyed the nest and although two dead hornets were found in North Somerset no further sightings have been reported.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Paris agreement, air pollution and your carbon footprint – green news roundup

Sat, 2016-11-05 01:37

The week’s top environment news stories and green events. If you are not already receiving this roundup, sign up here to get the briefing delivered to your inbox

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

The week in wildlife – in pictures

Sat, 2016-11-05 00:00

A sleeping dormouse, baby marine iguana and a frilled dragon are among this week’s pick of images from the natural world

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Oil firms announce $1bn green fund as Paris climate deal comes into force

Fri, 2016-11-04 22:10

Analysts criticise fund – which focuses on cutting the impact of fossil fuels but will not support renewable energy - calling it a ‘drop in the ocean’

A $1bn fund to invest in cutting the climate change impact of fossil fuels has been announced by 10 of the world’s biggest oil companies, on the day the global Paris climate change agreement comes into force.

But analysts called the sum a “drop in the ocean” which showed the companies were not serious in tackling global warming.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Dakota Access: women on frontlines tell of violent arrests and police abuse – video

Fri, 2016-11-04 21:30

The Native American women leading the Standing Rock protests against the Dakota Access oil pipeline say they have faced police abuse and mistreatment in jail. North Dakota’s militarized law enforcement has left many of them traumatized. ‘They came with their guns, their weapons and violence and put it on a peaceful people,’ says Lauren Howland, a member of the San Carlos and Jicarilla Apache tribes and Navajo Nation

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Measuring Arctic ice melt from from the sky – in pictures

Fri, 2016-11-04 21:07

Since 2010, Dr Thomas Krumpen from Germany’s Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research has been flying above northern Greenland towards North Pole to measure ice thickness. By lowering a small torpedo from the aircraft towards the sea ice scientists are able to to obtain data from inaccessible areas helping to build a clearer picture ice health

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

The Paris climate agreement is now official

Fri, 2016-11-04 19:31

Environment groups hail ‘momentous occasion’ but warn governments need to cut carbon emissions more steeply to avoid dangerous global warming

The significance of the Paris agreement coming into force today is easy to miss: it may seem like an anti-climax, given the travails that led up to its signing last December.

But the moment is of huge importance. This is the first time that a legally-binding agreement, signed by all of the world’s functioning governments, has laid down a commitment to limit the growth of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere with the goal of preventing global warming exceeding 2C above pre-industrial levels.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Few geese graze the murky marsh edge

Fri, 2016-11-04 15:30

Dyfi estuary, Wales A single egret, starkly white against the muted greys and browns of the saltings, flapped slowly up from the bed of a creek

From my vantage point on the southern side of the Dyfi estuary it was clear that my plan for the day had been compromised. The salt marsh, with its almost fractally complex pattern of creeks, pools and drains, is often host in late autumn to large groups of geese grazing contentedly within easy reach of the seawall.

On this visit those few geese visible through the pervasive anticyclonic murk were strung out along the seaward edge of the marsh, distant and difficult to approach. As if by compensation a single egret, starkly white against the muted greys and browns of the saltings, flapped slowly up from the bed of a creek just in front of me.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Paris climate change agreement enters into force

Fri, 2016-11-04 12:35

Environment groups hail ‘momentous occasion’ but warn governments need to cut carbon emissions more steeply to avoid dangerous global warming

The Paris agreement on climate change enters into force on Friday, marking the first time that governments have agreed legally binding limits to global temperature rises.

The passage of the accord – the fruit of more than two decades of often tortuous international negotiations on combating climate change – was hailed by nations and observers around the world.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

'The heat is there': is there a future for geothermal energy in Australia?

Fri, 2016-11-04 07:57

Despite millions of dollars invested, the Australian geothermal energy industry remains in its infancy. Will Arena’s cautious optimism be rewarded?

In July 2010, the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (Arena) took a $32m gamble on geothermal energy, investing in Australia’s first demonstration of geothermal electricity generation.

Six years later, the wells in South Australia’s Cooper Basin have been filled with concrete and abandoned, and the geothermal exploration company involved – Geodynamics Limited – has announced it is rebranding and pivoting to biogas, solar photovoltaic, battery storage and hybrid solutions.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Your carbon footprint destroys 30 square metres of Arctic sea ice a year

Fri, 2016-11-04 05:00

New research calculates the impact of the average westerner’s carbon emissions to help people understand their own contribution to climate change

The average westerner’s carbon emissions destroy 30 square metres of Arctic sea ice every year, according to new research.

The work indicates that, even with current efforts to cut emissions, the Arctic will lose all its ice in summer within about 20 years.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Australia being 'left behind' by global momentum on climate change

Fri, 2016-11-04 03:30

Climate Institute says the speed with which the Paris agreement has come into force has caught the country by surprise

Australia’s lack of progress on climate change policy is increasingly at odds with global momentum and risks leaving Australia’s economy behind, according to a new report.

The Climate Institute has released a report called “COP 22 – Getting to Zero” in the lead-up to an international climate conference next week.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Greece set to win €1.75bn from EU climate scheme to build two coal plants

Fri, 2016-11-04 01:43

Public funds from Europe’s carbon trading programme – set up to help poorer countries reduce emissions – will help build two plants that will emit about 7m tonnes of CO2 a year

Greece appears on track to win access to a controversial EU programme that could earmark up to €1.75bn (£1.56bn) in free carbon allowances for the building of two massive coal-fired power plants.

The 1100MW coal stations will cost an estimated €2.4bn, and emit around 7m tonnes of CO2 a year, casting doubt on their viability without a cash injection from an exemption under Europe’s carbon trading market.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Environmental activist gears up for 6,000-mile bamboo bike ride

Fri, 2016-11-04 01:30

Kate Rawles will ride a bike made from bamboo grown in Cornwall to raise awareness about the loss of biodiversity

A bicycle made out of bamboo grown in Cornwall, UK will be ridden the length of South America by an environmental activist and adventurer raising awareness about the loss of biodiversity.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Zoology news: October's animal antics from round the globe – in pictures

Thu, 2016-11-03 23:46

A collection of this month’s zoological wonders, featuring string-pulling bees, industrious echidnas and a geriatric panda

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

UK climate targets at risk without government support for windfarms, says energy boss

Thu, 2016-11-03 23:12

Government should restore subsidies for onshore wind power as a cost-effective way of reducing the country’s emissions, says head of ScottishPower

The UK’s climate targets are at risk if the government does not reverse its decision to end support for windfarms, the head of one of the Big Six energy companies has warned.

Keith Anderson of ScottishPower said onshore wind power should be opened up to the government’s new subsidy regime because the technology could be deployed quickly, help energy bills and cut carbon emissions.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

World on track for 3C of warming under current global climate pledges, warns UN

Thu, 2016-11-03 21:00

Current climate commitments are insufficient to reduce emissions by the amounts needed to avoid dangerous levels of global warming, says Unep report

The commitments made by governments on climate change will lead to dangerous levels of global warming because they are incommensurate with the growth of greenhouse gas emissions, according to a new report.

The United Nations Environment Programme (Unep) said that pledges put forward to cut emissions would see temperatures rise by 3C above pre-industrial levels, far above the the 2C of the Paris climate agreement, which comes into force on Friday.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Energy security not about 'locking in status quo', says chief scientist

Thu, 2016-11-03 18:00

Alan Finkel challenges renewables alarmism, saying they provide ‘many viable technology paths to cutting emissions’

Australia’s chief scientist has challenged the resurgent political alarmism about renewable energy, saying energy security isn’t about locking in the status quo, it’s about ensuring the successful decarbonisation of electricity generation.

In his first public comments since being asked to lead an energy security review for federal and state governments, Alan Finkel delivered an upbeat assessment of renewable energy technologies, saying they provide “many viable technology paths to cutting emissions”.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Warning over invasive flatworm posing threat to UK wildlife

Thu, 2016-11-03 16:01

Brazilian worm arrived in a pot plant from Europe and preys on snails and earthworms that are essential for soil health

An invasive flatworm from Brazil that poses a threat to soil health and wildlife has made its way to mainland Britain.

A 4.5cm Obama flatworm (Obama nungara) – not linked to the US president but named after the Brazilian Tupi words for leaf (oba) and animal (ma) – was discovered this summer crawling out of a Heuchera plant imported from the Netherlands at a garden centre in Oxfordshire.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

The kind of morning that turns landscape into theatre

Thu, 2016-11-03 15:30

Stanhope Dene, Weardale For a few moments the falling rain became a silver sunlit curtain as it swept across the canopy

We knew we were going to get wet, probably very wet, but it was the kind of morning that turns landscape into dramatic theatre; dark clouds unleashing torrential showers, then sunshine breaking through gaps in the clouds, sweeping across fields and fell side.

The first downpour arrived just as we made our way along the footpath that skirts the edge of the dene, a steep-sided cleft in the hillside cut by Stanhope burn, clothed with ash, Scots pine, oak and beech. The impact of heavy raindrops loosened leaves from the canopy above, sending them spinning down to join a carpet of wet beech autumn foliage, as shiny as polished copper, under our feet.

Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Pages