Lützerath: Greta Thunberg joins German coal mine protests
Lützerath: Greta Thunberg joins German coal mine protests
Read MorePioneering offshore solar power design gets 'world-first' stamp of approval from Bureau Veritas
French certification body awards approval in principle to Oceans of Energy's 'high wave' floating PV technology, being piloted at prototype scale in Dutch North Sea
Read MoreChina's Mingyang looks 'beyond 18MW' with 140-metre blade offshore wind turbine giant
Manufacturer claims latest leap in size and power means machine can supply almost 100,000 people and slash build costs
Read MoreOffshore wind boom to spark $26bn vessel spree says world's largest shipbroker Clarksons
Research chief predicts investment bonanza across installation and service vessels as project developers pursue global ambitions
Read MoreNorwegian wind titan to build $3bn gigafactory to supercharge national 'green shift'
Lars Helge Helvig – whose investment house Valinor has the country’s largest private wind developer, Norsk Vind, in its portfolio – aims to build a lithium-ion battery complex with an annual capacity of 40GWh
Read MoreGreta Thunberg calls for protest against expansion of German coalmine
Climate activist also denounced ‘police violence’ against campaigners at the abandoned village of Lützerath
Read MoreGreta Thunberg ends year with one of the greatest tweets in history
Thunberg’s funny exchange is a reminder of the connection between machismo, misogyny and hostility to climate action
Read MoreA hippopotamus: why did I have to be a hippo? Why not a hawk, a hare, a magnificent horse?
I grabbed my friend’s arm, frozen, and imagined my tombstone
Read MoreFossils Should Pay Trillions to Store Carbon through 2050, Ex-Industry Execs Say
A group of former oil and gas executives and academics is calling for the industry to pay tens of trillions of dollars through 2050 to take full responsibility for every tonne of carbon it produces.
Read MoreTrudeau ‘Handcuffs’ Alberta UCP with Carbon Capture Investment Pitch
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau may have “handcuffed” Alberta Premier Danielle Smith by urging her United Conservative Party (UCP) government to invest some of its multi-billion-dollar budget surplus in carbon capture, utilization and storage (CCUS), a Calgary-based political scientist says.
Read MoreScientists Debate Role of Warming Arctic in Winter Deep Freezes
The millions of North Americans who found themselves shivering through late December’s bitter cold snap can surely thank a meandering polar vortex, but whether and how a rapidly warming Arctic might be involved in these intensifying deep freezes remains a subject of fierce scientific debate.
Read MoreNew Policies, Political Shifts Produced Climate ‘Inflection Point’ in 2022
After nearly half a century of delaying the shift off fossil fuels, and “with the climate crisis breaching our front door,” 2022 may have been the moment when humanity finally turned a corner on emission reductions, says U.S. climate analyst Dr. Leah Stokes.
Read MoreUK could face ‘banking crisis worse than 2008’ if City fails to prepare for fossil fuel collapse
Report from climate activist groups says City is unprepared for potential collapse in value of fossil fuel assets
Read MoreThe new-build ‘homes’ where energy scientists play God with the weather
Researchers hope £16m temperature-controlled chamber can stress test green tech to help make houses energy efficient
Read MoreHouseholds in Yorkshire ‘most willing to live near windfarm’
Midlands and north-east of England also show strong demand, says supplier Octopus Energy
Read MoreNet zero possible in 2040s, says outgoing UK climate business expert
Countries that fear losing competitive edge could benefit from bolder climate policies, says Nigel Topping
Read MoreTime tunnel: why an Australian expedition is drilling through 2.6km of Antarctic ice
Ancient air trapped deep below the surface could unlock secrets of the Earth’s past and help understand what lies ahead as CO2 in the atmosphere keeps rising
Read MoreWarm 2022 makes the past eight years hottest ever recorded
World Meteorological Organization data shows last year’s average temperature was 1.15C more than pre-industrial levels
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