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In Japan, an Iceless Lake and an Absent God Sound an Ancient Warning

NYT Global Warming Climate Change - March 28, 2025 - 00:46
For centuries, residents in central Japan have chronicled a mysterious natural phenomenon in winter. They see its disappearance as a bad omen.
Categories: Climate

Global Sea Ice Hits a New Low

NYT Global Warming Climate Change - March 27, 2025 - 19:11
The data comes after researchers reported that the past 10 years have been the 10 hottest on record.
Categories: Climate

The Guardian view on Trump and reality: from promoting alternative facts to erasing truths | Editorial

The Guardian Climate Change - March 27, 2025 - 14:40

The decision to put documents on the assassination of John F Kennedy into the public domain comes alongside a ‘digital book burning’ of data

What does the public need to know? The Trump White House boasts of being the most transparent administration in history – though commentators have suggested that the inadvertent leak of military plans to a journalist may have happened because senior figures were using messaging apps such as Signal to avoid oversight. Last week, it released thousands of pages of documents on John F Kennedy’s assassination. Donald Trump has declared that Kennedy’s family and the American people “deserve transparency and truth”.

Strikingly, this stated commitment to sharing information comes as his administration defunds data collection and erases existing troves of knowledge from government websites. The main drivers appear to be the desire to remove “woke” content and global heating data, and the slashing of federal spending. Information resources are both the target and collateral damage. Other political factors may be affecting federal records too. Last month, Mr Trump sacked the head of the National Archives without explanation, after grumbling about the body’s involvement in the justice department’s investigation into his handling of classified documents.

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Categories: Climate

A New Series in The Times, Inspired by You

NYT Global Warming Climate Change - March 27, 2025 - 14:00
Across the country, in red and blue states, everyday people, local groups and government officials are making creative plans that protect the environment. This year, we’ll be telling you about them.
Categories: Climate

¿Bolsas de plástico o de papel? ¿Cuál debo usar para las compras?

NYT Global Warming Climate Change - March 27, 2025 - 13:18
No todas las bolsas tienen el mismo impacto en el medioambiente. Y las de papel podrían no ser tan ecológicas como parecen.
Categories: Climate

E.P.A. Offers a Way to Avoid Clean-Air Rules: Send an Email

NYT Global Warming Climate Change - March 27, 2025 - 11:24
Referring to a little-known provision, it said power plants and others could write to seek exemptions to mercury and other restrictions and that “the president will make a decision.”
Categories: Climate

Trump National Security Officials: Add NOAA to the Chat for Climate Literacy

Growl. Sigh. Rinse. Repeat.

Yet another resource that belongs to us, the US public, has disappeared down the Trump administration’s memory hole. I just learned from the valiant Environmental Data and Government Initiative that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has removed the 2024 Climate Literacy Guide from its website (though a data savior has preserved it here). Now, no one can access a fundamental federal resource that helps the public understand climate change via its proper home at https://www.climate.gov/.

Who needs the Climate Literacy Guide? Trump’s Signal crew, that’s who

Anyone who wishes to understand what’s happening to our world—why we keep stacking hottest year on hottest year, why wildfires are so intense, why some hurricanes strengthen so rapidly—can learn from the Climate Literacy Guide.

But some key national security officials could use a new Signal chat, this time discussing the literacy guide to better understand essential principles of climate change science, impacts, and solutions. Bonus: None of this information is classified! And if an accidental invitation is available, I’d love to join officials who notably do use Signal:

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who has just ordered the “elimination of climate defense planning,” scrapping years of Pentagon policy that identified climate as a major and mounting threat to national security.

Vice President JD Vance, who does not acknowledge human-caused climate change.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who again can’t quite figure out where he’s supposed to be in the (climate) conversation.

Director of National Security Tulsi Gabbard, who apparently okayed the omission of climate change from the US intelligence community’s annual threat assessment report for the first time in 11 years.

Homeland Security Advisor Stephen Miller, who during the previous Trump administration wasn’t “interested in climate change” even after an internal report showed it was a driver of migration to the US (along with driving enormous human suffering). At the moment, Miller “is more powerful [on immigration] than ever.”

No one seems to understand why Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent was included in the Yemen military attack Signal chat, so I propose swapping him out for Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, who promised in his confirmation hearing that he would not dismantle NOAA.

Literacy versus lies

It so happened that NOAA disappeared the guide while I’m at the Climate Information Integrity Summit in Brasília, Brazil. The summit, organized by members of the Climate Action Against Disinformation (CAAD) coalition, was a next step in the Brazilian government’s work with the UN and other member states to further progress on the Global Initiative for Information Integrity on Climate Change.

More than 120 key actors from governments, multilateral organizations, and local and international non-profit organizations discussed concrete steps towards safeguarding the integrity of climate information in the lead-up to the next round of international climate negotiations, COP30.

CAAD members (including UCS) clearly see that climate disinformation undermines elections, renewable energy, science, and human rights. That’s why other nations are already taking action to limit the harm disinformation can do, whether the lies for profit come from fossil fuel companies, agribusiness, and Big Tech companies that run social media platforms or search engines. Climate denial and deception in turn lead to a delay in climate action that we simply cannot afford.

Climate literacy is fundamental to climate information integrity. A public armed with that science, plus an understanding of the disinformation playbook that corporate actors keep on running, is a key pillar of defense against the corporations who profit as people suffer.

No wonder the Trump administration, intent on enacting the fossil fuel agenda, doesn’t want us to know and understand what they’re doing to our climate. Authoritarians prefer an uncritical public that lives in ignorance. Heads up—we’re paying attention and we know.

Categories: Climate

UK carbon emissions fell by 4% in 2024, official figures show

The Guardian Climate Change - March 27, 2025 - 10:51

Less use of gas and coal in electricity supply and industry sectors drove reduction, Department for Energy Security and Net Zero says

The UK’s carbon emissions fell by 4% last year, according to official figures.

Provisional statistics published on Thursday by the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) show UK territorial greenhouse gas emissions were 371m tonnes carbon equivalent (MtCO2e) in 2024, down from 385 MtCO2e in 2023.

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Categories: Climate

She Inspired Laws to Hold the Fossil Fuel Industry Accountable. Now She’s a Target.

NYT Global Warming Climate Change - March 27, 2025 - 09:09
A conservative group is suing for emails of a law professor who helped create legislation to force oil, gas and coal companies to pay for climate damage.
Categories: Climate

How countries cheat their net zero carbon targets – video

The Guardian Climate Change - March 27, 2025 - 07:54

Net zero is a target that countries should be striving for to stop the climate crisis. But beyond the buzzword, it is a complex scientific concept – and if we get it wrong, the planet will keep heating.

Biodiversity and environment reporter Patrick Greenfield explains how a loophole in the 2015 Paris climate agreement allows countries to cheat their net zero targets through creative accounting, and how scientists want us to fix it

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Categories: Climate

US could see return of acid rain due to Trump’s rollbacks, says scientist who discovered it

The Guardian Climate Change - March 27, 2025 - 07:30

Gene Likens, who first identified acidic rainwater in 1960s, said the Trump administration’s ‘rollbacks are alarming’

The US could be plunged back into an era of toxic acid rain, an environmental problem thought to have been solved decades ago, due to the Donald Trump administration’s rollback of pollution protections, the scientist who discovered the existence of acid rain in North America has warned.

A blitzkrieg launched by Trump’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on clean air and water regulations could revert the US to a time when cities were routinely shrouded in smog and even help usher back acid rain, according to Gene Likens, whose experiments helped identify acidic rainwater in the 1960s.

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Categories: Climate

Expert says climate change behind South Korea's worst wildfires on record – video

The Guardian Climate Change - March 27, 2025 - 05:10

The biggest forest fire on record in South Korea has displaced thousands, charred large areas and killed at least 26 people in the south-eastern province of North Gyeongsang, authorities say. The affected areas have had only half the average rainfall this season, while the country has experienced more than double the number of fires this year than last.

Woo-Kyun Lee, a climatic environment professor, said a rapid increase in temperatures, prolonged dryness and stronger winds had exacerbated the fires. 'For this reason, wildfires in our country are bound to become more frequent, spread on a larger scale,' he said

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Categories: Climate

¿Bolsas de plástico o de papel? ¿Cuál debo usar para las compras?

NYT Global Warming Climate Change - March 27, 2025 - 03:01
No todas las bolsas tienen el mismo impacto en el medioambiente. Y las de papel podrían no ser tan ecológicas como parecen.
Categories: Climate

Weatherwatch: Could global heating wreak havoc on Earth’s satellites?

The Guardian Climate Change - March 27, 2025 - 02:00

Changes to the thermosphere caused by climate crisis could lead to increase in collisions

Chicken Licken warned that the sky was falling down, and now the climate crisis might be making that come true. Carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases are cooling and contracting the upper atmosphere, even though these same gases warm the lower atmosphere.

A new concern is now up in the thermosphere at around 125-620 miles (200-1,000km) above Earth, where the International Space Station and about 11,900 satellites are in low Earth orbit, with the number of satellites rapidly increasing.

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Categories: Climate

Biodiversity loss in all species and every ecosystem linked to humans – report

The Guardian Climate Change - March 26, 2025 - 12:00

Sweeping synthesis of 2,000 global studies leaves no doubt about scale of problem and role of humans, say experts

Humans are driving biodiversity loss among all species across the planet, according to a synthesis of more than 2,000 studies.

The exhaustive global analysis leaves no doubt about the devastating impact humans are having on Earth, according to researchers from the Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology (Eawag) and the University of Zurich. The study – which accounted for nearly 100,000 sites across all continents – found that human activities had resulted in “unprecedented effects on biodiversity”, according to the paper, published in Nature.

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Categories: Climate

Tackling climate crisis will increase economic growth, OECD research finds

The Guardian Climate Change - March 26, 2025 - 05:00

Third of global GDP could be lost this century if climate crisis runs unchecked, says report

Taking strong action to tackle the climate crisis will increase countries’ economic growth, rather than damage their finances as critics of net zero policies have claimed, research from the world’s economic watchdog has found.

Setting ambitious targets on cutting greenhouse gas emissions, and setting out the policies to achieve them, would result in a net gain to global GDP by the end of the next decade, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), in a joint report with the UN Development Programme.

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Categories: Climate

Why These Islanders Hunt Dolphins

NYT Global Warming Climate Change - March 26, 2025 - 00:01
The residents of Fanalei Island, in the Solomon Islands, say the lucrative hunts will help them buy land elsewhere and move off their sinking home.
Categories: Climate

Care About Food Waste? In Massachusetts, You Can Be a Compost Consultant.

NYT Global Warming Climate Change - March 25, 2025 - 21:17
It’s a dirty job, and someone gets to do it.
Categories: Climate

At This Clinic in Hawaii, Nature Is the Medicine

NYT Global Warming Climate Change - March 25, 2025 - 21:15
A neglected parcel of land was restored by volunteers and patients at a community medical center. Along the way, their health also improved.
Categories: Climate

Bridges and Tunnels in Colorado Are Helping Animals Commute

NYT Global Warming Climate Change - March 25, 2025 - 20:57
The state has emerged as a leader in building wildlife crossings, which can save animals, money and human lives.
Categories: Climate