Breaking News & Articles
2 percent of the world’s rarest zebras wiped out in Kenya’s relentless drought A grueling two-year drought in Kenya has wiped out 2% of the world’s rarest zebra species and increased elephant deaths as well, as the climate crisis takes its toll on the east African nation’s wildlife. [Read More] | |
Australia vows new plan to stop extinction crisis Australia plans to halt the loss of any more species and end its status as "the mammal extinction capital of the world", its government says. [Read More] | |
Thousands call for ‘climate reparations and justice’ in global protests Fridays for Future ‘strikes’ in about 450 places demanded rich countries pay for damage from global heating [Read More] | |
Dugongs functionally extinct in Chinese waters, study finds The dugong, a gentle marine mammal that has frequented China's southern waters for hundreds of years, has become functionally extinct in the country, a new study said on Wednesday. [Read More] | |
Spanish Stonehenge emerges from drought-hit dam A brutal summer has caused havoc for many in rural Spain, but one unexpected side-effect of the country's worst drought in decades has delighted archaeologists - the emergence of a prehistoric stone circle in a dam whose waterline has receded. [Read More] | |
Lakes are drying up everywhere. Israel will pump water from the Med as a solution Climate change and unsustainable water management are leaving lakes dried up all over the Middle East and beyond, but the Israeli government is hopeful it has a solution: It plans to pump water from the Mediterranean sea, take the salt out of it and send it across the country to top up the lake when needed. [Read More] | |
China is seeding clouds to replenish its shrinking Yangtze River Chinese planes are firing rods into the sky to bring more rainfall to its crucial Yangtze River, which has dried up in parts, as swaths of the nation fall into drought and grapple with the worst heat wave on record. [Read More] | |
France battles 'monster' wildfire as heatwaves scorch Europe A "monster" wildfire raged for a third day in southwestern France on Thursday, ravaging forests and forcing 10,000 people to evacuate their homes. [Read More] | |
World's largest ice sheet crumbling faster than previously thought - satellite imagery shows Antarctica's coastal glaciers are shedding icebergs more rapidly than nature can replenish the crumbling ice, doubling previous estimates of losses from the world's largest ice sheet over the past 25 years, a satellite analysis showed on Wednesday. [Read More] | |
Climate change is stressing lizards out, ageing them before they are even born Scientists in France found that the stress of increasing temperatures prematurely aged the DNA of lizards [Read More] | |
Rare hummingbird last seen in 2010 rediscovered in Colombia Birdwatcher ‘overcome with emotion’ on spotting the Santa Marta sabrewing, only third time it has been documented [Read More] | |
Plastic pollution: Birds all over the world are living in our rubbish Birds from every continent except Antarctica have been photographed nesting or tangled in our rubbish. [Read More] | |
Oil permits up for auction in Congo's Virunga park, putting endangered gorillas at risk Despite growing pleas from climate change activists, the Democratic Republic of Congo says it is moving forward with its plans to auction off a vast majority of oil and gas drilling blocks located in the country's rainforest and peatland. [Read More] | |
UK Just Smashed a Heat Record That Was not Supposed to Happen Until 2050 The record-breaking temperature, recorded around 1 p.m. local time, was not expected to arrive until July 2050, according to climate scientists. [Read More] | |
Europe heatwave: Thousands escape wildfires in France, Spain and Greece Residents and holidaymakers have fled towns and villages in France as fires are whipped up by high winds and tinder-dry conditions in several countries in Europe. [Read More] | |
New Zealand to embark on world’s largest feral predator eradication Ambitious $2.8m scheme hopes to eliminate damaging species from ecologically significant Rakiura/Stewart Island [Read More] | |
Tokyo heatwave breaks nearly 150 year old records Tokyo June heatwave worst since 1875 as power supply creaks under strain [Read More] | |
They’re being cooked: baby swifts die leaving nests as heatwave hits Spain Ecologists raise concern over chicks’ attempts to escape high temperatures during one of earliest heatwaves on record [Read More] | |
How heat damages the DNA of endangered purple-crowned fairy wrens Shortening of telomeres accelerates ageing process, research shows – a ‘pernicious silent threat’ [Read More] | |
Paris protesters celebrate saving trees around the Eiffel Tower City abandons €72m scheme to develop area and create huge garden in time for 2024 Olympics [Read More] | |
Record low wild salmon catch in Scotland alarms ecologists Calls for action as decline is seen as evidence of harm caused by climate crisis, pollution and fish farming [Read More] | |
Two critically endangered Amur leopard cubs were born at the Saint Louis Zoo The Saint Louis Zoo has welcomed two adorable -- and incredibly rare -- bundles of joy: Anya and Irina, critically endangered Amur leopard cubs. [Read More] | |
Oceans are hotter higher and more acidic climate report warns The ocean is also now its most acidic in at least 26,000 years as it absorbs and reacts with more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. [Read More] | |
Crucial tropical forests were destroyed at a rate of 10 soccer fields a minute last year The area of tropical forest destroyed in 2021 was enough to cover the entire island of Cuba, and sent more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere as India does in an entire year from burning fossil fuels, according to an analysis published Thursday. [Read More] | |
Climate activist dies after setting himself on fire outside US Supreme Court on Earth Day A climate activist who lit himself on fire on Earth Day outside the United States Supreme Court Building has died, according to reports. [Read More] | |
Climate change protesters block central Paris square to protest election choices Climate change activists forced the closure of a main square in central Paris on Saturday to protest against the environmental programmes put forward by France's remaining presidential candidates. [Read More] | |
Iraq’s ancient buildings are being destroyed by climate change Water shortages leading to rising salt concentrations and sandstorms are eroding world’s ancient sites [Read More] | |
Thieving sea lions break into salmon farm and gorge on feast of fish Conservationists say the farms are a danger to sea lions and other marine mammals, who can become entangled in their nets [Read More] | |
Birds are laying eggs earlier, a new study shows. Scientists blame the climate crisis Egg-collecting enthusiasts in the late 1880s knew the hobby was crucial for understanding the natural world, but likely never imagined that their research would help scientists more than 100 years later understand how birds are affected by the changing environment. [Read More] | |
Wolves shot in Norway after court overturns stay of execution Nine endangered animals killed after injunction lifted on cull of 25 wolves living in conservation zone [Read More] | |
Amazon deforestation: Record high destruction of trees in January The number of trees cut down in the Brazilian Amazon in January far exceeded deforestation for the same month last year, according to government satellite data. [Read More] | |
Ice that took roughly 2,000 years to form on Mt. Everest has melted in around 25 The highest glacier on the world's tallest mountain is losing decades worth of ice every year because of human-induced climate change, a new study shows. [Read More] | |
Scientists step up hunt for Asian unicorn - one of world’s rarest animals “We stand at a moment of conservation history,” says Robichaud, who is president of the Saola Foundation. “We know how to find and save this magnificent animal, which has been on planet Earth for perhaps 8m years. We just need the world to come together and support the effort. It won’t cost much, and the reward, for saola, for the Annamite mountains, and for ourselves, will be huge.” [Read More] | |
Greenland permanently bans all oil and gas exploration In exciting news for the planet and environmentalists, Greenland has announced it is permanently halting all new oil and gas exploration in the country. [Read More] | |
Trash for rice: Bali recycling scheme gives families pandemic lifeline For Balinese souvenir shop owner I Kadek Rai Nama Rupat, the past two years during the COVID-19 pandemic have been a fight for survival. [Read More] | |
How a centuries-old tradition in the Maldives could safeguard tuna for the future "Pole and line fishing is very different from casting nets or catching fish by nets," says Hamid Abdallah, a Maldivian fisherman. "We catch fish by pole and line because we want to be able to keep doing it for as long as we can." [Read More] | |
Last seen in … birdwatchers asked to join hunt for world’s 10 rarest birds Search for Lost Birds project is asking birdwatchers everywhere to help track down species sometimes not seen for centuries [Read More] | |
Rain to replace snow in the Arctic as climate heats, study finds Climate models show switch will happen decades faster than previously thought, with ‘profound’ implications [Read More] | |
Nurdles: the worst toxic waste you’ve probably never heard of Billions of these tiny plastic pellets are floating in the ocean, causing as much damage as oil spills, yet they are still not classified as hazardous [Read More] | |
Hope rabbit hotels can help Britain’s decimated population bounce back Brash piles provide safety from predators and place to breed for animal now hailed as ecosystem engineer [Read More] | |
Great Barrier Reef gives birth in massive coral spawning event Ecologists hopeful after climate-related bleaching during heat waves in 2016, 2017 [Read More] | |
Picture of the Day [25Nov2021] 1400 dolphins, including pregnant ones and calves where killed in the grinds on the Faroe islands. [Read More] | |
Meat and dairy giants feed climate crisis by dragging their heels on methane World’s biggest livestock corporations ‘given free pass by governments’ over lack of clear targets to reduce emissions, say campaigners [Read More] | |
Your green credentials may be linked to your genes scientists say Identical twins have more similar views on environmental issues than non-identical ones, study finds [Read More] | |
The fight against climate change goes beyond reducing CO2 emissions An insider talks about efforts to cut methane, one of the most prevalent greenhouse gases but which has had little attention [Read More] | |
Toilet of Europe: Spain’s pig farms blamed for mass fish die-offs Pork industry’s role in pollution of one of Europe’s largest saltwater lagoons may be greater than publicly acknowledged, investigation reveals [Read More] | |
Pope and other religious leaders issue pre-COP26 appeal on climate change Pope Francis and other religious leaders made a joint appeal on Monday for next month's U.N. Climate Change Conference (COP26) to offer concrete solutions to save the planet from "an unprecedented ecological crisis". [Read More] | |
Kowbucha seaweed vaccines: the race to reduce methane emissions of cows Agriculture is the largest anthropogenic source of this gas, accounting for about 40%, leading innovators to offer new solutions to tackle its bovine source [Read More] | |
Cop26 climate talks will not fulfil aims of Paris agreement, key players warn Major figures privately admit summit will fail to result in pledges that could limit global heating to 1.5C [Read More] | |
Earth looks fragile from space: Jeff Bezos pledges 1bn dollars to conservation Donation from $10bn Bezos Earth Fund will go towards biodiversity hotspots in Congo Basin and Andes [Read More] | |
Guardians of the Sea: Cape Verde’s ‘fish detectives’ try to keep extinction at bay As boats from bigger islands flock to fish off Maio, locals take turns to safeguard their pristine waters [Read More] | |
3 critically endangered B.C. killer whales are pregnant : scientists say 3 pregnancies discovered in the southern resident orcas' J pod could help save the species [Read More] | |
The largest tree in the world wrapped in fire-resistant blanket as California blaze creeps closer Efforts underway to protect General Sherman and other giant trees from wildfires threatening Sequoia national park [Read More] | |
Ocean Cleanup struggles to fulfill promise to scoop up plastic at sea Docked at a Canadian port, crew members returned from a test run of the Ocean Cleanup's system to rid the Pacific of plastic trash were thrilled by the meager results — even as marine scientists and other ocean experts doubted the effort could succeed. [Read More] | |
Climate action cannot wait for pandemic to end- medical journals warn Global warming is already affecting people's health so much that emergency action on climate change cannot be put on hold while the world deals with the Covid-19 pandemic, medical journals across the globe warned on Monday. [Read More] | |
Paris slams on the brakes and sets 30 kph speed limit to reduce pollution Authorities in the French capital of Paris are forcing drivers to slow down, setting a speed limit on almost all the city's roads, in a bid to reduce pollution and improve road safety. [Read More] | |
It is now or never: Scientists warn time of reckoning has come for the planet Indeed, by the end of the century they could become threatening to civilisation if emissions are allowed to continue at their present rate. [Read More] | |
Global food supplies will suffer as temperatures rise – climate crisis report Politicians around world continue to respond to report from Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [Read More] | |
Climate crisis: Scientists spot warning signs of Gulf Stream collapse A shutdown would have devastating global impacts and must not be allowed to happen, researchers say [Read More] | |
Mediterranean has become a wildfire hotspot : EU scientists say Wildfires are raging in countries including Greece and Turkey, where thousands of people have been evacuated from their homes and on Tuesday a fire threatened to reach a coal-fired power plant. [Read More] | |
Beyond Meat boss backs tax on meat consumption The founder of the world's biggest plant-based meat firm says a tax on meat could get people to cut their consumption of animal-based products [Read More] | |
Critical measures of global heating reaching tipping point - study finds Carbon emissions, ocean acidification, Amazon clearing all hurtling toward new records [Read More] | |
The insect apocalypse: Our world will grind to a halt without them Insects have declined by 75% in the past 50 years – and the consequences may soon be catastrophic. Biologist Dave Goulson reveals the vital services they perform [Read More] | |
Hitting global climate target could create 8m energy jobs, study says Researchers suggest net increase would mostly occur in renewables sector, with decline in fossil fuels [Read More] | |
Scientists are worried by how fast the climate crisis has amplified extreme weather Until recently, climate change had been talked about as a future threat. Its frontlines were portrayed as remote places like the Arctic, where polar bears are running out of sea ice to hunt from. Sea level rise and extreme drought was a problem for the developing world. [Read More] | |
Amazon rainforest now emitting more CO2 than it absorbs Cutting emissions more urgent than ever, say scientists, with forest producing more than a billion tonnes of carbon dioxide a year [Read More] | |
Goldfish dumped in lakes grow to monstrous size threatening ecosystems Minnesota pet owners warned not to release fish into wild, where they wreak havoc on native species [Read More] | |
Killing spree: Wisconsin’s wolf population plunges after protections removed study finds Researchers blame poaching and hunting far beyond quotas after species dropped from endangered list [Read More] | |
Poo overload: Northern Ireland could be forced to export a third of its animal waste Country looks to export excess manure from intensive pig and poultry farms to combat rising pollution and emissions [Read More] | |
Pangolins are the world's most trafficked mammal. This man wants to save them Pangolins -- four-legged mammals with sloth-like claws, anteater-like snouts, and armour of diamond-shaped scales -- are thought to be the most trafficked mammal in the world. Some species are on the brink of extinction. [Read More] | |
Tech firms use remote monitoring to help honey bees Beekeeping is one of the oldest industries in existence, but it faces numerous threats. A number of tech firms hope to help the honey bee have a brighter future. [Read More] | |
We are causing our own misery - oceanographer Sylvia Earle on the need for sea conservation With that unprecedented level of knowledge came responsibility, she said – the oceans were in the poorest health since humans started exploiting them, denuded of fish, filled with plastic debris, tainted with chemical pollution and acidified by the carbon dioxide still being poured into the air. [Read More] | |
A Bubble Barrier is trapping plastic waste before it can get into the sea "The Bubble Barrier" was developed as a simple way to stop plastic pollution flowing from waterways into the ocean. An air compressor sends air through a perforated tube running diagonally across the bottom of the canal, creating a stream of bubbles that traps waste and guides it to a catchment system. [Read More] | |
Climate crisis to shrink G7 economies twice as much as Covid 19 - says research G7 countries will lose $5tn a year by 2050 if temperatures rise by 2.6C [Read More] | |
100 richest UK families urged to commit 1bn pounds to tackle climate crisis As UK prepares for environment push at G7 summit, letter asks richest to make climate charitable focus [Read More] | |
Donkeys to help re establish rare wild flower in Devon Animals will be used to tread in seeds of small-flowered catchfly at Donkey Sanctuary rewilding project [Read More] | |
Hair waste from salons recycled to mop up oil spills on sea shores Hairdressers from UK and Ireland sign up to initiative to protect environment and power National Grid [Read More] | |
Food giants accused of links to illegal Amazon deforestation Cargill, Bunge and Cofco sourced beans from companies allegedly supplied by a farmer fined for destroying swathes of rainforest [Read More] | |
Third of global food production at risk from climate crisis Food-growing areas will see drastic changes to rainfall and temperatures if global heating continues at current rate [Read More] | |
Idaho is going to kill 90 percent of the wolves in the State Why exterminate the wolves? To make the country safe for cattle and sheep; more productive for deer, elk, caribou and moose. To better fill hunters’ freezers with winter meat. To sell the pelts. [Read More] | |
The young people taking their countries to court over climate inaction Children and young adults around the world are demanding action from governments on global heating and the ecological crisis [Read More] | |
Glacial lakes threaten millions with flooding as planet heats up More than 12,000 deaths have already been attributed to glacial lake outburst floods worldwide [Read More] | |
Tonnes of dead fish wash up on shore of polluted Lebanese lake Tonnes of dead fish have washed up on the banks of a lake on Lebanon's Litani river, engulfing a nearby village in a pungent smell, in a disaster blamed on polluted waters. [Read More] | |
Scientists find way to remove polluting microplastics with bacteria Sticky property of bacteria used to create microbe nets that can capture microplastics in water to form a recyclable blob [Read More] | |
Breaking! Bill To Ban The Trade Of Shark Fins In The United States Is Reintroduced In Congress A bill that would ban the buying and selling of shark fins in the United States was reintroduced in the U.S. House of Representatives by Reps. Gregoria Kilili Sablan (I-MP) and Michael McCaul (R-TX). Similar legislation was introduced in the last Congress, passing the House with widespread bipartisan support with a vote of (310-107), as well as clearing the Senate Commerce Committee and garnering the support of 47 Senate cosponsors. [Read More] | |
Why Climate Change is Driving Some to Skip Having Kids A new study finds that overconsumption, overpopulation and uncertainty about the future are among the top concerns of those who say climate change is affecting their reproductive decision-making. [Read More] | |
Marks and Spencer faces backlash over plan to release 30m honeybees An attempt by Marks & Spencer to “do good for the environment” by releasing 30 million honeybees into the British countryside has backfired, with conservationists warning the initiative could damage ecosystems and deprive wild pollinators of valuable food sources. [Read More] | |
Torres Strait 8: Australian Islanders in landmark climate fight A group of indigenous islanders from Australia’s Torres Strait has launched a world-first legal battle in a bid to protect their homes. [Read More] | |
Nasa scientists find unlikely tool as rising temperatures bleach corals: a phone app Without the app, mapping reefs usually involves high amounts of data and low-quality photos, which leads to slow analysis [Read More] | |
Scientists are racing to track what is left of Shrinking sea meadows Shrinking sea meadows store more carbon than forests. Seagrasses play a large role in regulating ocean environments, storing more than twice as much carbon from planet-warming carbon dioxide (CO2) per square mile as forests do on land, according to a 2012 study in the journal Nature Geoscience. [Read More] | |
Wildlife charities raise 8m pounds to boost nature schemes across England and Wales Projects to transform a former golf course for nature, rewild a village and restore ice age “ghost” ponds are among schemes being launched to boost wildlife across England and Wales. [Read More] | |
Destruction of world forests increased sharply in 2020 According to data from the University of Maryland and the online monitoring platform Global Forest Watch, the loss was well above the average for the last 20 years, with 2020 the third worst year for forest destruction since 2002 when comparable monitoring began. [Read More] | |
Annual Earth Hour - marked by Global landmarks turning off the lights Cities around the world were turning off their lights on Saturday for Earth Hour, with this year’s event highlighting the link between the destruction of nature and increasing outbreaks of diseases like Covid-19. [Read More] | |
Russia hails rare sighting of Amur leopard mother with cubs Sighting in Primorye region said to show success of fight against poachers and steps to boost species population [Read More] | |
Covid vaccine used on apes at San Diego zoo trialled on mink Experimental animal jabs could stop spillover back to humans, says firm behind vaccines for primates [Read More] | |
Climate fight is undermined by social media's toxic reports Scientists warn that Nobel summit and long-term decisions to save the planet are at risk from targeted attacks online [Read More] | |
New UN Report: urges a radical shift in the way we think about nature The United Nations released a report Thursday on the health of the planet that proposes a radical shift in the way mankind thinks about it. [Read More] | |
Seafood fraud happening on a vast global scale Guardian analysis of 44 studies finds nearly 40% of 9,000 products from restaurants, markets and fishmongers were mislabelled [Read More] | |
Chinese hotel with polar bear enclosure opens to outrage Harbin hotel keeping threatened species in pen overlooked by bedrooms angers animal welfare groups [Read More] | |
France has underrated the impact of nuclear tests in French Polynesia Groundbreaking new analysis could allow more than 100,000 people to claim compensation [Read More] | |
UN report: People waste nearly 1bn tonnes of food a year Food discarded in homes is 74kg per person each year, with problem affecting rich and poor countries [Read More] | |
Scientists found Giant luminous shark that glow in the dark Discovery off New Zealand includes kitefin shark, which at up to 180cm is now biggest-known luminous vertebrate [Read More] | |
Baarack from the brink: Wild sheep rescued in Australia shorn of 35 kg fleece A wild and ailing sheep found in a forest in Australia, named Baarack by rescuers, has yielded a fleece weighing more than 35 kilogrammes - nearly half the weight of an adult kangaroo - after being shorn for the first time in many a year. [Read More] | |
Arctic drilling plan in Alaska hits roadblock Plans for seismic surveys to help find oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge have fizzled due to a lack of protection for polar bears, according to a brief statement Saturday from the Department of the Interior. [Read More] | |
Global green recovery plans fail to match 2008 stimulus: report shows Efforts by governments around the world to forge a green recovery from the coronavirus pandemic are so far failing even to reach the levels of green spending seen in the stimulus that followed the 2008 financial crisis, new analysis has shown. [Read More] | |
Global salmon farming harming marine life and costing billions in damage Report says pollution, parasites and fish mortality rates cost an estimated $50bn globally from 2013 to 2019 [Read More] | |
Climate action could save millions of lives through clean air diet and exercise Meeting Paris goals would bring health benefits aside from tackling global heating, research says [Read More] | |
Shark and ray populations have dropped 70 percent and are nearing point of no return: study warns Some species of sharks and rays could disappear from our seas altogether after a sharp drop in their numbers due to overfishing in the past 50 years. [Read More] | |
Officials hail encouraging number of north Atlantic right whale births Wildlife officials in Florida have reported an “encouraging” number of sightings of critically endangered North Atlantic right whales off the south-eastern US, including at least 14 new calves, three born to first-time mothers. [Read More] | |
NGOs demand actioN as EU accused of failing to protect seas Environmental groups propose urgent plan to stop overfishing and safeguard marine life, as existing laws go unenforced [Read More] | |
Left stranded: Scientists say that the US military sonar linked to whale beachings in the Pacific Islands surrounded by US military study area, including Guam and Saipan, call for activity that harms the whales to stop [Read More] | |
The worlds top environmental organizations are still predominantly White : a new report finds The movement for a cleaner, greener world has grown increasingly popular as the climate crisis has worsened, and organizations such as Greenpeace and World Wildlife Fund, now household names, have raised millions to save species, cut down on pollution and slow the effects of climate change. [Read More] | |
Top scientists warn of 'ghastly future of mass extinction' and climate disruption Sobering new report says world is failing to grasp the extent of threats posed by biodiversity loss and the climate crisis [Read More] | |
Bali beaches buried in tide of plastic rubbish during monsoon season Tourist drawcards Kuta and Legian beaches are being overwhelmed by up to 60 tonnes of plastic rubbish every day [Read More] | |
Coca-Cola named world’s worst plastic polluter for third straight year.. Coca-Cola has been branded the world’s worst plastic polluter for the third year in a row, in a damning report that further reveals the scale of the global plastic crisis. [Read More] | |
Jeff Bezos Announces Nearly $800 Million In Donations To Climate Change Organizations Jeff Bezos announced on Monday morning in an Instagram post that he has given $791 million to 16 organizations working on fighting climate change. The donations are the first gifts he’s making as part of his Bezos Earth Fund, a pledge he made in February to give $10 billion to fight climate change. [Read More] | |
Chinese glaciers melting at shocking pace: scientists say Meltwater flows over the Laohugou No. 12 glacier in the Qilian mountains, Subei Mongol Autonomous County, in Gansu province, China, on September 27, 2020. [Read More] | |
Pakistan stops bid to smuggle endangered falcons Pakistani authorities have thwarted a bid to smuggle endangered birds out of the country. [Read More] | |
Total destruction: why fires are tearing across South America Wildfires, mostly caused by land clearing for cattle grazing and soya production, have set four nations ablaze [Read More] | |
Real and imminent extinction risk to whales More than 350 scientists and conservationists from 40 countries have signed a letter calling for global action to protect whales, dolphins and porpoises from extinction. [Read More] | |
The city digging a million wells One of Asia’s fastest-growing cities has no major river and its deep groundwater is running out, but an age-old practice could help the city find water. [Read More] | |
Can nature heal itself : What the pandemic has shown us In the dark early days of the coronavirus pandemic, when a death toll of 1 million was still unimaginable, there was one bright spot: nature appeared to be healing. With humans under lockdown, stories circulated about unusual animal sightings, like wild goats taking over a town in Wales -- and then became a joke about the public's thirst for signs of regeneration: New Yorkers claimed the return of Elmo to Times Square as proof of a great earthly rebalancing. [Read More] | |
Two-fifths of plants at risk of extinction: says report Researchers say they are racing against time to name and describe new species, before they disappear. [Read More] | |
If Coronavirus Doesnt Kill Us Climate Change Will: World Leaders Warn of Environmental Armageddon During the recent UN meeting, several world leaders from small island nations and Africa tried to focus on climate change issues which are more threatening than COVID-19 [Read More] | |
Rising temperatures shrink Arctic sea ice to second-lowest level on record Sea ice minimum has fallen below 4m sq km for the second time in 40 years as the climate crisis rapidly transforms the region [Read More] | |
World top companies urge action on nature loss ahead of U.N. talks Some of the world’s biggest companies on Monday backed growing calls for governments to do more to reverse the accelerating destruction of the natural world and support broader efforts to fight climate change. [Read More] | |
World's richest 1 percent cause double CO2 emissions of poorest 50 percent, says Oxfam Charity says world’s fast-shrinking carbon budget should be used to improve lot of poorest [Read More] | |
Forest fires devastate Brazil's Pantanal tropical wetlands There have been more than 15,000 fires in Brazil's Pantanal wetlands so far this year, causing widespread devastation. That is triple the number recorded in the same period in 2019, according to data collected by Brazil's National Institute for Space Research. [Read More] | |
Wildlife in catastrophic decline due to human destruction, scientists warn Wildlife populations have fallen by more than two-thirds in less than 50 years, according to a major report by the conservation group WWF. [Read More] | |
Future design: What living clothes can do to absorb carbon emissions Canadian-Iranian designer Roya Aghighi wants you to imagine that your shirt is alive. [Read More] | |
The plan to turn half the world into a reserve for nature Scientists and conservationists are proposing that up to half of Earth’s land and oceans be protected for nature. Is it a necessary step or a pipe dream? [Read More] | |
Earth Lost a Staggering 28 Trillion Tonnes of Ice in Just 23 Years Describing the ice loss as "staggering," the group found that melting glaciers and ice sheets could cause sea levels to rise dramatically, possibly reaching a metre (3 feet) by the end of the century. [Read More] | |
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge: The animals at risk from Alaska oil drilling The US government is pushing forward with controversial plans to allow drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, by laying out the terms of a leasing programme that would give oil companies access to the area. [Read More] | |
Tonnes of dead fish cleaned from French river after Nestle spill: A spectacle of desolation Thousands of fish were found dead on the banks and in the Aisne river near Brécy-Brières in northeastern France on August 10. Local fishermen place the blame on waste runoff from a Nestlé factory in Challerange less than three kilometres away. Volunteers, firefighters and fishermen spent three days clearing the remains of the fish from the river. [Read More] | |
Chemical signal for locust swarming identified in step toward curbing plagues Scientists have identified a chemical compound released by locusts that causes them to swarm, opening the door to possible new ways to prevent these insects from devouring crops vital to human sustenance as they have for millennia. [Read More] | |
Last decade was Earth's hottest on record exposing grim reality of climate change A new report released Wednesday details how 2019 was another year of extremes for Earth's climate, adding to a litany of evidence exposing the grim reality of our warming world. [Read More] | |
Threatened beluga whales transported 6,000 miles from captivity in China to new ocean refuge Meet the whales with plenty to smile about! Two belugas are transported from captivity in China to a new ocean refuge 6,000 miles away thanks to British charity [Read More] | |
Cost of preventing next pandemic equal to just 2 percent of Covid 19 economic damage World must act now to protect wildlife in order to stop future virus crises, say scientists [Read More] | |
The Search Engine That Plants Trees With Every Search Has Just Planted its 100-Millionth Tree Only ten years ago, a search engine that uses its profits to plant trees, restore landscapes and empower rural communities was an improbable idea. Ecosia is now planting a new tree every second across the planet and today users have reached the planting of 100 million trees. [Read More] | |
New warnings over rapid melting at Antarctica Scientists have issued new warnings over a glacier in Antarctica that is described as “the doomsday glacier” because its collapse could lead to rapid sea-level rise. [Read More] | |
Taiwan’s Green Island to go bottled water free Government teams up with accommodation businesses to cut island’s plastic waste [Read More] | |
Pakistan hired 63000 people unemployed by COVID-19 to help plant 10 billion trees Pakistan has found a great way to help its laborers who've lost their jobs due to the health crisis by hiring them to plant saplings as part of the country's 10 Billion Trees program. [Read More] | |
The largest Arctic ozone hole ever recorded is now closed Just as suddenly as it first formed, a record-breaking ozone hole has healed. The largest ozone hole to ever open up over the Arctic is now closed, after first opening up earlier this spring. [Read More] | |
The Turning Point a must watch animation on pollution 'The Turning Point' by Steve Cutts explores the destruction of the environment, climate change and species extinction from different perspective. Music by Wantaways. [Read More] | |
As air gets clearer mountain range in Himachal Pradesh visible from Jalandhar in Punjab. In a hard-to-believe moment, residents of Jalandhar, Punjab woke up to an incredible sight – a mountain range peeking from behind the clouds. The only thing is that this magnificent creation of nature is not located in the land of five rivers but is over 200 kms away from the state. What people saw is the mighty Dhauladhar range in Himachal Pradesh. [Read More] | |
Oceans can be restored to former glory within 30 years say scientists The glory of the world’s oceans could be restored within a generation, according to a major new scientific review. It reports rebounding sea life, from humpback whales off Australia to elephant seals in the US and green turtles in Japan. [Read More] | |
Activists slam China's use of bear bile for Covid-19 China has approved the use of bear bile to treat coronavirus patients, angering activists and raising fears it could undermine efforts to stop the illegal animal trade which is blamed for the emergence of the new disease sweeping the globe. [Read More] | |