- Richard Calland
- Read Time: 7 mins
History may in due course record 2019 as the year in which the penny finally dropped about the climate emergency humanity faces.
History may in due course record 2019 as the year in which the penny finally dropped about the climate emergency humanity faces.
The alarming rate of carbon dioxide flowing into our atmosphere is affecting plant life in interesting ways – but perhaps not in the way you’d expect.
We live in a world threatened by numerous existential risks that no country or organization can resolve alone, such as climate change, extreme weather and the coronavirus.
Two European states with a traditional reliance on coal are taking radically different paths as the climate crisis worsens.
Without a radical change of course on climate change, Australians will struggle to survive on this continent
Many firms and organisations are now working hard to reduce their carbon emissions. And it is not just good public relations.
Can your individual behaviour make a real difference to the environment? And should you be expected to voluntarily change your life in the face of our worsening environmental crises?
Here’s something fascinating about stories that recount a major change of heart.
While joint political pledges offer some hope that climate change no longer has to be a partisan issue, a look at the comments below most articles on global warming says otherwise.
After a recent foray into the debate over Australia’s so-called “climate election”, I received plenty of critical replies to my argument that Australians should take climate action more seriously.
It is politicians, not economists, who stand in the way of wider adoption of cheap renewable energies across the world.
The Auditor General of Ontario’s recent report found the province’s current climate change plan is not based on “sound evidence” and will fall well short of Ontario’s 2030 greenhouse gas reduction targets.
Investors are using their shareholdings to force polluting companies to change their ways and cut carbon emissions.
A new study concludes that rail is the industry that's injected the most money into climate change denial propaganda efforts in the last 25 years.
The UK will go to the polls on December 12 for the third time in four years. Climate change didn’t make waves in previous elections, but this one may be different.
A poll shows scientists’ climate gap is shrinking − between their work on climate change and their own response to it.
When the Brazilian city of São Paulo abruptly went dark at midday on Aug. 19, there was talk of the Apocalypse – not all of it in jest.
On Nov. 4, the Trump administration formally notified the United Nations that it planned to withdraw the U.S. from the Paris Agreement on climate change, which 196 countries adopted in 2015.
Britain’s general election campaign is squarely focused on the UK leaving the EU. But persuasive voices say the climate “is the election priority”
Labor MP Clare O'Neil says Anthony Albanese’s vision statement in Perth on Tuesday gave “so much encouragement about the direction that Labor is going to take coming into this term of parliament”.
As California recovers from devastating wildfires, President Trump lashed out at California Governor Newsom and threatened to pull federal funding.
Howey Ou is China's first climate striker. She joined the worldwide "Fridays for Future" climate protests four months ago.
The character of Greta Thunberg is part of a polarised global confrontation regarding climate change. Despite what her critics may say, her speeches have contributed to social mobilisation and awareness of the climate crisis and the future of the planet.
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