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News Headlines
#122619
2019-10-10

“Window of Opportunity to Avoid Catastrophic Climate Change is Fast Shrinking”

INCHEON, South Korea, Oct 9 2019 (IPS) - “The window of opportunity to avoid catastrophic climate change is fast shrinking,” executive director of the Green Climate Fund (GCF), Yannick Glemarec, tells IPS.

News Headlines
#129444
2021-07-07

“The sea is changing so much”: Climate change and lives of Mumbai’s fishermen

On May 18, the morning after Cyclone Tauktae thundered through Mumbai, Janardhan Koli and other fishermen from Madh Koliwada trooped towards the shore to assess the damage to their boats. The cyclone was fiercer than any storm he had seen before, and Koli had braced himself for the worst.

News Headlines
#126180
2020-12-11

“It’s clear climate change is moving faster than we are—but there is hope”—a chat with the UN chief

AHEAD OF A weekend meeting to assess and bolster the Paris Agreement, our correspondent speaks with Antonio Guterres about his reasons for cautious optimism.

News Headlines
#131085
2021-10-22

‘Worst thing in lifetime’: South Sudan floods affecting 700,000

He feels like a man who has drowned. The worst flooding that parts of South Sudan have seen in 60 years now surrounds his home of mud and grass. His field of sorghum, which fed his family, is under water. Surrounding mud dykes have collapsed.

News Headlines
#119590
2019-01-25

‘Worrying’ rise in global CO2 forecast for 2019

The level of climate-warming carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere is forecast to rise by a near-record amount in 2019, according to the Met Office.

News Headlines
#134530
2022-05-18

‘World is at boiling point’: humanity must redefine relationship with nature, says report

The world is at “boiling point” and humanity needs to redefine its relationship with nature if it is to address a web of crises, from rising prices to extreme heat and floods, according to a report released ahead of a landmark UN conference.

News Headlines
#128075
2021-04-20

‘Within minutes I was weeping’: the US pastor using scripture to mobilize climate action

Religious leaders, who know how to relate to communities on an emotional level, may be best positioned to convince people to support climate activism, experts say

News Headlines
#120190
2019-03-04

‘Weather wars’ in times of climate change

In the summer, when heat waves scorch cities or heavy rains flood the coasts, some climate scientists and environmentalists will point out any plausible connections to global warming, hoping today’s weather will help people understand tomorrow’s danger from climate change.

News Headlines
#132841
2022-02-01

‘We relied on the lake. Now it’s killing us’: climate crisis threatens future of Kenya’s El Molo people

Mombasa Lenapir briefly strokes the waters of Kenya’s Lake Turkana with his hand as he boards the rickety canoe. A piece of hippo tooth or kalate, dangles from his right earlobe, evidence that he once killed a hippo in his younger years, a rite of passage.

News Headlines
#130258
2021-09-02

‘We are moving into uncharted territory with climate change’: scientist

Hurricane Ida’s remnants, which killed dozens of people and triggered flash floods across the tri-state area, marked the latest extreme weather event in a summer filled with climate-related disasters.

News Headlines
#133692
2022-03-03

‘We are doing our best’: rescuers fear for animals injured in NSW and Queensland floods

The flood disaster in New South Wales and Queensland has prompted concerns for ground-dwelling animals that can become trapped in their habitat or swept into other environments.

News Headlines
#134870
2022-06-02

‘Vicious cycle’: Storms intensify in the Gulf as climate changes

Ecologically disastrous conditions in the Gulf are the latest sign of the dangers that climate change and other related factors pose to the Middle East.

News Headlines
#123750
2020-01-16

‘Urgent’ need for businesses to adapt to growing threat from climate change, McKinsey says

As the climate crisis intensifies, and as the wide-ranging economic impacts are felt up and down supply chains across continents, leaders from companies, governments and financial institutions cannot ignore the mounting economic risks, a report from McKinsey published Thursday says.

News Headlines
#118991
2018-12-12

‘Unabated climate change will cause more conflict and hunger’

Graziano da Silva made the remarks at the Nobel Peace Prize Forum 2018 panel discussion on how to solve the climate crisis, with 2007 Nobel Peace Prize laureate and former US Vice-President Al Gore as keynote speaker.

News Headlines
#120453
2019-03-22

‘The trees say F you’: Why teens are cursing about climate change

Young people in Germany, Argentina, the United States, and basically everywhere walked out of school last Friday as part of the Youth Climate Strike, voicing their frustration and anger that older generations have failed to act on climate change. And their raised voices included f-bombs — lots a ...

News Headlines
#121544
2019-07-11

‘The trees are dying’: Climate change affecting a Mi’kmaq tradition says canoe maker

Todd Labrador, a canoe maker in Nova Scotia says climate change is affecting his family’s traditional practice.

News Headlines
#132335
2022-01-06

‘The ducklings might not survive’: readers’ concerns over early spring

I saw this young palmate newt emerging on the evening of 1 January. Newts should be overwintering in leaf and log piles, compost heaps and other suitable refugia from November until late February or early March, when they start moving toward breeding pools.

News Headlines
#126632
2021-01-15

‘The New Climate War’ Exposes Tactics Of Climate Change ‘Inactivists’

Sometime around the fifth century B.C., the Chinese general and military strategist Sun Tzu wrote in his highly quotable treatise The Art of War, “If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles.”

News Headlines
#131299
2021-10-29

‘Not trying to mislead’: airlines chief defends industry’s net zero pledge

For the airline industry it was as “momentous decision”; for environment campaigners it was “essentially meaningless”. Earlier this month, the global airline trade body Iata passed a resolution, approved by almost 300 of the world’s biggest carriers, to achieve net zero carbon emissions by 2050.

News Headlines
#129636
2021-07-23

‘No sport can escape’: Tackling climate change at the Tokyo Olympics

No sport can escape the impacts of a changing climate. Less snow and ice, higher temperatures, and extreme weather events such as storms and heatwaves, all affect competitors and spectators alike.

News Headlines
#123703
2020-01-14

‘No doubt whatsoever’: Experts claim climate change causing Australia to burn

There is “no doubt” that climate change is increasing the risk of wild fires around the world, researchers said on Tuesday, as Australia’s government faces criticism for denying devastating bush fires are definitively linked to global warming.

News Headlines
#128076
2021-04-20

‘No action on anything’: Australia increasingly isolated as US and others ramp up climate ambition

Australia will not be able to “fly under the radar” when it comes to the climate crisis with the US and other major countries preparing to make new pledges to cut greenhouse gas emissions over the next 10 years, experts say.

News Headlines
#120043
2019-02-21

‘No Way to Defend Ourselves Against the Onslaught of Climate Change’

PARAMARIBO, Feb 21 2019 (IPS) - Two of the most prominent women in the Caribbean nation of Suriname are speaking out about developed countries that release large volumes of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.

News Headlines
#131674
2021-11-15

‘It’s like hunting aliens’: inside the town besieged by armadillos

Thanks to climate change, armadillos, native to southern America, are making their way up north. And there’s no sign of them stopping their relentless march

News Headlines
#127238
2021-02-22

‘It's in our DNA’: tiny Costa Rica wants the world to take giant climate step

When it comes to the environment, few countries rival Costa Rica in terms of action and ambition. The tiny Central American nation is aiming for total decarbonisation by 2050, not just a “net zero” target. It has regrown large areas of tropical rainforest after suffering some of the highest rate ...

News Headlines
#129163
2021-06-08

‘It was sad having to leave’: Climate crisis splits Alaskan town in half

Two years ago, Lisa Charles and her family moved from their lifelong home in the town of Newtok, Alaska, to Mertarvik, a 30-minute trip by boat or snow machine depending on the season.

News Headlines
#134678
2022-05-25

‘It seems this heat will take our lives’: Pakistan city fearful after hitting 51C

Muhammad Akbar, 40, sells dried chickpeas on a wheelbarrow in Jacobabad, and has suffered heatstroke three times in his life. But now, he says, the heat is getting worse. “In those days there were many trees in the whole city and there was no shortage of water and we had other facilities so we c ...

News Headlines
#134468
2022-05-13

‘Is it all worth it?’: farmers left heartbroken as Queensland floods ruin crops

A “gut-wrenching” clean up and recovery is under way across Queensland as the flood waters slowly subside from the second major rain event this year.

News Headlines
#123827
2020-01-21

‘I am horrified’: Scientist who linked climate change with bushfires in 1987 says it’s not too late

A scientist who predicted our current bushfire crisis four decades ago is ‘horrified’ we did not listen to his warnings on climate change. In 1987 then-CSIRO scientist Dr Tom Beer pioneered the world’s first research into the link between climate change and worsening fire seasons.

News Headlines
#133581
2022-02-28

‘Fossil fuels are choking humanity’: Major UN report sounds the alarm on climate impacts

The world’s leading climate scientists on Monday warned human-induced climate change is causing dangerous and widespread disruption in nature, with people and ecosystems least able to cope being the hardest hit.

News Headlines
#130612
2021-10-06

‘Eye-watering’: climate change disasters will cost Australia billions each year, study finds

Climate change-related disasters will cost Australia $73bn a year by 2060, even if action to curb emissions is taken now, a report has found.

News Headlines
#132430
2022-01-12

‘Extraordinarily warm’: winter is fastest-heating season in most of US

American winters are rapidly warming and December 2021 was no exception. In New York, last month’s average temperature was 43.8F (6.5C) – 4.7F above the 1991-to-2020 average according to a recent analysis by Climate Central. The American south had an especially warm December, with Shreveport, Lo ...

News Headlines
#133480
2022-02-24

‘Everything is on fire’: Flames rip through Iberá National Park in Argentina

The fires were still several miles away, but Talía Zamboni and her colleagues wanted to work fast. Early in the morning on Feb. 23, they traveled to San Alonso Island in Argentina’s Iberá National Park, where several giant river otters were being housed in a large enclosure, awaiting their relea ...

News Headlines
#135227
2022-07-05

‘Every year it gets worse’: on the frontline of the climate crisis in Bangladesh

Ever since she was a little girl, Amina Ahmed has been afraid of the water. Growing up in Sylhet, north-east of Bangladesh, the heavy rainfall that typically occurs during monsoon season would make her anxious.

News Headlines
#130104
2021-08-24

‘Cool pavements’ could cool cities and mitigate climate change

Cities around the world continue to warm and it isn’t just because of a changing climate. Massive volumes of concrete built into large blocks of buildings trap the heat generated by the sun, to which heavy traffic on roads adds yet more heat.

News Headlines
#129881
2021-08-10

‘Code red’: United Nations scientists warn of worsening global warming

Earth is getting so hot that temperatures in about a decade will probably blow past a level of warming that world leaders have sought to prevent, according to a report released Monday that the United Nations called a code red for humanity.

News Headlines
#129771
2021-07-29

‘Climate change has become real’: extreme weather sinks prime US tourism site

At Lake Powell on the Arizona-Utah border, the water line has dropped to a historic low, taking a heavy toll on the local industry. Chaos erupted at Bill West’s business in Page, Arizona, last week when he was forced to tell dozens of paid clients their summer vacations were either canceled or o ...

News Headlines
#132991
2022-02-08

‘Big Oil’ board members face hot seat over climate ‘deception’

In 1977, an internal memo at Exxon, the United States oil giant, made clear that carbon emissions from its product were causing climate change. But not only that – time was running out to act.

News Headlines
#129633
2021-07-22

s climate change happening faster than expected? A climate scientist explains.

Climate scientists have long warned that global warming would lead to extreme heat in many parts of the world. But the 120 degree Fahrenheit temperatures brought on by the heatwave in the Pacific Northwest in June were more in line with what researchers had imagined would occur later this century.

News Headlines
#134878
2022-06-07

https://africa.cgtn.com/2022/06/07/talk-africa-seychelles-facing-climate-change/

Solar panels need to be deployed over vast areas worldwide to decarbonize electricity. By 2050, the United States might need up to 61,000 square kilometres of solar panels — an area larger than the Netherlands1. Land-scarce nations such as Japan and South Korea might have to devote 5% of their l ...

News Headlines
#134825
2022-06-02

he UN Climate Change reconvenes next week in Bonn: what will be discussed?

The midyear UN climate conference “56th session of the Subsidiary Bodies” will take place from 6 to 16 June 2022, in Bonn. These sessions focus on means of implementation and policy requirements in preparation of the COP in November. This triangulation is hoped to act as a catalyst to ensure no ...

News Headlines
#121719
2019-07-26

[Interview] “Addressing climate change and biodiversity loss is in India’s best economic and developmental interests”

A landmark report released earlier this year by the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services, or IPBES, was a stark reminder that life on this planet, in all its wide diversity, is disappearing more quickly now than it has at any time in human history.

News Headlines
#135195
2022-07-05

[Explainer] Can planting trees mitigate climate change?

As the world is struggling to combat climate change, one idea – planting trees – seems to be taking hold as a panacea for curing the ills of pollution, soaring carbon emissions, and degrading soil health.

News Headlines
#128306
2021-04-28

[Contribution] Climate change: considering history and future challenges

What year did Korea have the most rain? The answer is 1821, in the 21st year of the reign of King Sunjo of the Joseon Dynasty. How did we know this? Korea invented a rain gauge called Cheugugi to measure and record rainfall from 1441, in the 23rd year of the reign of King Sejong.

News Headlines
#128540
2021-05-11

[ANALYSIS] What the world must do about climate change

Combating climate change can be compared to a tug of war between countries with different interests. And right now, we are losing the fight and are now faced with a global climate emergency that threatens global stability and prosperity. To defeat this threat, the world must come together and co ...

News Headlines
#128564
2021-05-12

[ANALYSIS] What must the Philippines do about climate change?

'Fortunately, there is still a window to examine and revisit the existing NDC prior to the global stocktake in 2023 to fill in the gaps, make it as clear and progressive as possible, and attract the international support being sought for implementation'

News Headlines
#129567
2021-07-13

Zimbabwe: Youths Must Participate in Climate Change Issues

One of the key climate governance processes in Zimbabwe is the adoption and implementation of the revised Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs).

News Headlines
#125906
2020-11-27

Zimbabwe: Climate Change Sensitive Modelling a Must for Businesses

The private sector has been called to collaborate with the Government in scaling up adoption of environment-sensitive production models that build national resilience against climate change-induced vulnerabilities.

News Headlines
#124915
2020-03-30

Zero Hour: There’s No Stopping Climate Change, But How Bad It Gets Is Still Up To Us

When people you love are sick and dying, it’s hard to think about anything else. In the course of just a few short weeks, the coronavirus has upended our daily lives, causing immense suffering and economic chaos around the world.

News Headlines
#126756
2021-01-29

Zambian climate resilient project wins water award

A climate resilient project in Zambia supported by the African Development Bank (AfDB) and Climate Investment Funds (CIF) has won the Water ChangeMaker People’s Choice Award-Africa.

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