Global warming?

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Any coronavirus bailout for airlines ‘should come with strict climate conditions’


Former E.U. climate chief Miguel Arias Cañete fears the end of COVID-19 will bring higher carbon emissions.



Farmworkers are risking their lives to feed a nation on lockdown


“You can’t pick strawberries over Zoom.”


A mom’s coronavirus coping strategy: Use your anger, mind your actions


Fixating on our environmental shortcomings can feel ridiculous in this pandemic. But our actions aren’t insignificant.


The 2020 census can help us fight climate change — if coronavirus doesn’t get in the way


A flawed census count would have ripple effects on environmental justice and plans to tackle climate change.


Be prepared: Key lessons from the coronavirus pandemic and climate change


Lessons from Bangladesh and Ethiopia.
 

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How One Frog Species’ Struggle for Survival Warns about the Consequences of Climate Chang


Inside Clean Energy: 7 Questions (and Answers) About How Covid-19 is Affecting the Clean Energy Transition
BY: DAN GEARINO
From EV sales to the solar market to states’ commitments to clean energy, the coronavirus pandemic is turning everything on its head.
Read More

In the Mountains and Deserts of Utah, Columbia Spotted Frogs Are Sentinels of Climate Change
BY: JUDY FAHYS
Mormon pioneers saw the frogs as messengers of clean water. Now, their survival is jeopardized by habitat loss, drought and soaring heat.
Read More

Trump’s Move to Suspend Enforcement of Environmental Laws is a Lifeline to the Oil Industry
BY: ICN STAFF
The American Petroleum Institute sought the EPA’s help for companies hurt by COVID-19. One former EPA official called the suspension “an open license to pollute."
Read More

COP’s Postponement Until 2021 Gives World Leaders Time to Respond to U.S. Election
BY: GEORGINA GUSTIN
The annual United Nations climate meeting in Glasgow had been scheduled for six days after the presidential contest in early November.
Read More

On Baffin Island in the Fragile Canadian Arctic, an Iron Ore Mine Spews Black Carbon
BY: KRISTOFFER TIGUE
The Mary River facility wants to quadruple its output by 2025, producing 65.3 metric tons of the super-pollutant.
Read More
Polluting Industries Cash-In on COVID, Harming Climate in the Process
BY: ICN STAFF
Airlines, farmers and plastic bag makers look for relief amid the pandemic. But the coal industry, and wind and solar energy concerns, lose out in the relief bill. Read More
Trump’s Fuel Efficiency Reduction Would Be Largest Anti-Climate Rollback Ever
BY: MARIANNE LAVELLE AND PHIL MCKENNA
The more stringent standard for passenger vehicles passed under the Obama administration would have saved 6 billion tons of greenhouse gases. Read More

American Climate Video: She Thought She Could Ride Out the Storm, Her Daughter Said. It Was a Fatal Mistake
BY: KATELYN WEISBROD
When Hurricane Michael hit, Gina Vicari left town, not knowing her mother had stayed. When she returned, the house was gone. It took days to find her mother’s body. Read More
Coronavirus: When Meeting a National Emissions-Reduction Goal May Not Be a Good Thing
BY: DAN GEARINO
Scientists caution that the shorter-term fluctuations in emissions linked to Covid-19 can be misleading. Read More
ICYMI

Locust Swarms, Some 3 Times the Size of New York City, Are Eating Their Way Across Two Continents
BY: BOB BERWYN
Climate change is worsening the largest plague of the crop-killing insects in 50 years, threatening famine in Africa, the Middle East and the Indian subcontinent.
Read More
 

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no wonder our world is pretty fucked


What Happens to Unsold 2018 and 2019 Auto Inventory?
If you’ve been thinking about getting a new car lately, you’re in luck. Current market conditions have made new autos more affordable than ever. Dealerships are desperate to offload unsold 2018 and 2019 inventory to make space for the 2020 models. This allows smart online users to benefit and secure an incredible deal on a new vehicle.

Related Topics (Ads):

shutterstock_1480098239.jpg


What Happens to Unsold 2018 and 2019 Auto Inventory? - SaverDaily
 

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PALM OIL
currebt scourge of our forests WW


Palm oil gains ground in Chiapas, Mexico
by Mongabay Latam on 3 April 2020 | Translated by Jeannette Westwood

  • Mexico’s Lacandon Jungle has been whittled away as farmers clear land for cattle and crops.
  • Sources say palm oil expansion in the region is exacerbating the threat. In 2017, the Secretariat for the Countryside of Chiapas estimated that there were around 64,000 hectares of oil palm planted in the state (approximately 158,000 acres), with a goal of 100,000 hectares (approximately 247,000 acres).
  • While the Chiapas state government maintains oil palm plantations may only be grown on degraded land, farmers and researchers say this is not always the case.
  • The processed oil is sold both domestically and exported to other countries where it’s used in the manufacture of food, cosmetics, biofuel and a host of other products.
In the small community of Boca de Chajul just over the Guatemalan border in the Mexican state of Chiapas, Rafael Lombera recounts how he has seen large expanses of Lacandon Jungle disappear. He says that in the past, deforestation was driven primarily by ranching and the exploitation of natural resources. But now there’s another industry whose impacts are growing: palm oil.

Stretching from southern Mexico into Guatemala and Belize, the Lacandon Jungle is the largest area of tropical rainforest in Mesoamerica. However, it’s but a remnant of its former self. Between 1970 and 1990 it shrank more than 30% as its land was razed for agriculture, and it continues to be whittled away bit by bit as ranches, farms, and plantations expand.

Montes Azules Biosphere Reserve protects the largest surviving tract of Lacandon Jungle in Chiapas. But right across the Lacantun River at its southern extent sits Boca de Chajul – and the agricultural morass that surrounds it.

palma-deforestacion-bosques-tala-mexico-6.jpg

Montes Azules Biosphere Reserve across the Lacantun River. Image by Moysés Zúñiga Santiago.
According to a study by Mexico’s National Institute of Ecology, the municipality of


palma-deforestacion-bosques-tala-mexico-1.jpg



Palm oil gains ground in Chiapas, Mexico
 

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Brought to you by the New York Post Free Mobile App


Inside the luxurious underground bunkers where the rich bug out

Suddenly, heading six feet under doesn't sound so bad, especially when the new digs often include pre-stocked food and blast-proof doors.

Hospital stalls on allowing potentially lifesaving treatment for coronavirus patient

The family of a New York City schoolteacher in critical condition with COVID-19 says they have lined up a potentially lifesaving therapy for him...

So many to blame for coronavirus crisis, so don’t bother: Goodwin

As a deadly virus sweeps across America, it was inevitable that we would also suffer an outbreak of the blame game. With the body...



Coronavirus death toll slows in Italy as number of ICU patients declines

The number of coronavirus patients in intensive care dropped for the first time in Italy on Saturday, as the country also welcomed its lowest...

Emily Ratajkowski shows off her posh pandemic gear on a dog walk in NYC

Pandemic, but make it fashion.

Researchers may have found coronavirus' Achilles' heel

The research shows a specific area of the virus could be “targeted with drugs and other therapies, a finding that also could help with...
Meghan Markle's real name and title revealed on Archie's birth certificate
Royal family fanatics were left scratching their heads when baby Archie’s birth certificate was finally made public this week.
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Broken window turns family's carwash into Splash Mountain

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Arnold Schwarzenegger is living in a pet paradise under quarantine
 

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Thank you for supporting InsideClimate News!

In the 04/05/2020 edition:

American Climate Video: Fighting a Fire That Wouldn’t Be Corralled
Brian Alderman battled the Camp Fire for 30 hours straight in November 2018. Then he discovered his home was gone.
By Katelyn Weisbrod

The sixth of 21 stories from the American Climate Project, an InsideClimate News documentary series by videographer Anna Belle Peevey and reporter Neela Banerjee.

See Also:
Wildfires and Climate Change
The Common Language of Loss
American Climate Video: She Thought She Could Ride Out the Storm, Her Daughter Said. It Was a Fatal Mistake
read more




'Essential' but Unprotected, Farmworkers Live in Fear of Covid-19 but Keep Working
Already at high risk of disease and early death, workers are especially prone to respiratory illnesses, setting them up for the worst ravages of the coronavirus.
By Evelyn Nieves

SAN FRANCISCO—Sixteen men tending budding grapes on a farm in the Sacramento Delta hit the fields by sunrise, arriving in packed cars and vans.

As Americans shelter in place across much of the country, washing their hands and making sure to stay six feet away from others, the farmworkers carpool on grocery runs. At day's end, most retreat to cramped, crowded quarters, sleeping several to a room.

They are not coronavirus deniers: The pandemic terrifies them.

See Also:
Our Growing Food Demands Will Lead to More Corona-like Viruses
These Candidates See Farming as a Climate Solution. Here’s What They're Proposing.
Trump’s EPA Fast-Tracks a Controversial Rule That Would Restrict the Use of Health Science
Billions of Acres of Cropland Lie Within a New Frontier. So Do 100 Years of Carbon Emissions
read more
 

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again DESMOG one of the better/informatives
I reckon
happy Sunday USA
citizens, not oil corporates



But the requests from oil and gas firms vary widely, depending on whether they’re a big oil and gas corporation like ExxonMobil or a smaller, deeply indebted shale company, and that’s spurring industry infighting, reports Nick Cunningham.

As Justin Mikulka writes, Exxon may use its size and political clout to crush the bailout hopes for struggling frackers and then swoop in to pick up the pieces. And considering the sorry financial state of the shale industry, there may be a lot of pieces.

Have a story tip or feedback? Get in touch: even $5 or $10 helps.






Under Cover of Pandemic, Fossil Fuel Interests Unleash Lobbying Frenzy
— By Dana Drugmand (7 min. read) —
Thousands of Americans are dying, millions have filed for unemployment, and frontline health care workers are risking their lives as the coronavirus pandemic sweeps across the U.S. In the midst of this crisis, the fossil fuel industry, particularly the oil and gas sector, has been actively seeking both financial relief and deregulation or dismantling of environmental protection measures.

A new briefing by U.K.-based think tank InfluenceMap summarizes this fossil fuel lobbying during the time of the pandemic, pointing to specific examples of how fossil fuel interests around the world are using the cover of the coronavirus crisis to advance their agenda.


READ MORE




Industry Infighting as Oil and Gas Seek Government Help
— By Nick Cunningham (7 min. read) —
The $2 trillion stimulus bill that the U.S. Congress rushed to pass in order to respond to millions of job losses provided a once-in-a-generation opportunity for corporate lobbying. The oil and gas industry has been no exception, but some of the proposed initiatives are dividing the industry.

Crude oil prices went into a freefall in early March following the one-two punch of an OPEC price war and the meltdown of financial markets because of the coronavirus pandemic. In less than two weeks, prices of the oil benchmark Western Texas Intermediate (WTI) dropped from $45 to the low-$20s per barrel, plunging the global oil industry into a state of deep crisis. A tenth of global oil supply could become uneconomic to produce.


READ MORE




Exxon May Crush Bailout Hopes for Suffering Fracking Companies
— By Justin Mikulka (10 min. read) —
The Washington Post reported March 10 that the Trump administration was considering some type of financial help for the failing U.S. shale oil and gas industry, “as industry officials close to the administration clamor for help.” Those officials — billionaire shale CEO Harold Hamm was likely among them — seemed desperate for government assistance because, as DeSmog has documented, their deeply indebted businesses have lost billions of dollars during the fracking boom. Even before the recent oil price war and COVID-19 pandemic, these companies could hardly stay afloat, making cries for some type of corporate welfare likely unavoidable.

But that's not the same message across the entire oil and gas industry.


READ MORE




The Oil War in the Permian May Not Have Any Winners
— By Justin Mikulka (9 min. read) —
At the same time a price war is raging in the global oil markets, a regional price war is playing out in the shale fields of Texas. The Texas oil war is between the major oil companies ExxonMobil and Chevron and the many independent shale oil producers.

In an unusual move this week, the CEOs of the shale oil companies Pioneer and Parsley sent a letter to the Texas Railroad Commission, asking the state oil and gas regulator to take an active role in limiting Texas oil production — a move Commissioner Ryan Sitton recently has endorsed.


READ MORE




‘No Time for Requirements’: Aviation Industry Lobbying Against Green Strings in Coronavirus Bailouts
— By Jocelyn Timperley (5 min. read) —
Aviation has been one of the sectors worst hit by the fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic. With revenues expected to drop by 44 percent this year, many airlines will go bankrupt without government aid, airline trade body the International Air Transport Association (IATA) has warned.

Across the world, the industry is now asking for huge sums of government money to help it get through. IATA says $200 billion is needed globally. Many consider bailouts of some kind are essential to support those working in the airline industry and avoid throwing them into economic insecurity.


READ MORE




Court Rules EPA Can't Keep Secret Key Model Used in Clean Car Rule Rollback
— By Dana Drugmand (3 min. read) —
A federal appeals court ruled April 1 that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) had no basis to withhold one key part of a computer model used by the agency to develop its less stringent greenhouse gas emission standards for new vehicles. The ruling came just one day after EPA and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) released a final rule rolling back clean car standards set under the Obama administration.

The new Safer Affordable Fuel Efficient (SAFE) Vehicles rule, which requires vehicle fuel economy improvements of 1.5 percent annually rather than 5 percent, is expected to increase air pollution, greenhouse gas emissions, and consumer fuel spending.


READ MORE




Trump Admin Weakens Clean Car Standards Despite Its Analyses Showing Rule Favors Big Oil Over Health, Climate
— By Dana Drugmand (9 min. read) —
The Trump administration today announced the final rule that rolls back Obama-era clean vehicle standards, a move that, according to the government’s own analyses, is expected to benefit the oil industry and harm consumers, public health, and the climate.

Experts also warn it will result in litigation and global market inconsistency to the detriment of automakers.


READ MORE




Oil Refineries Face Shutdowns as Demand Collapses
— By Nick Cunningham (6 min. read) —
A growing number of refineries around the world are either curtailing operations or shutting down entirely as the oil market collapses.

Oil prices have fallen precipitously to their lowest levels in nearly two decades. Typically, falling oil prices are a good thing for refiners because they buy crude oil on the cheap and process it into gasoline, jet fuel, and diesel, selling those products at higher prices. The end consumer also tends to consume more when fuel is less expensive. As a result, the profit margin for refiners tends to widen when crude oil becomes oversupplied.


READ MORE




$3 Billion 'Bailout' for Oil Producers Dropped From Economic Stimulus Package
— By Dana Drugmand (6 min. read) —
Bucking President Trump’s directive for buying oil to fill up the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR), Senate Democrats last week nixed what they say was a $3 billion bailout for oil producers from the coronavirus economic stimulus bill that passed the Senate on March 25. An earlier version of the $2 trillion relief bill favored by Senate Republicans allocated $3 billion for filling up the SPR to aid a struggling oil sector.

With oil prices crashing, Trump announced a few weeks ago he planned to have the government purchase “large quantities” of crude oil to add to the emergency stockpile. “We’re going to fill it right up to the top,” he said. The Strategic Petroleum Reserve was created in the 1970s to reduce disruptions in oil supply and it currently holds 635 million barrels of crude.


READ MORE




Chamber of Commerce’s Energy Members Silent After Group Opposed Using Wartime Law to Produce Medical Supplies
— By Dave Anderson, Energy and Policy Institute (6 min. read) —
Major electric utilities and fossil fuel producers that are members of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce remained silent when asked whether they supported the lobbying group’s controversial opposition to using the Defense Production Act to address a shortage of medical supplies and equipment crucial to fighting the coronavirus.

Some of those same energy companies, and their trade associations, have for years lobbied for the use of the Defense Production Act to bail out struggling coal plants.


READ MORE




Will Pandemic Relief Become a Petroleum Industry Slush Fund?
— By Amy Westervelt, with additional reporting from Emily Gertz, Drilled News (14 min. read) —
Recently, President Trump and Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin both made clear their intentions to include some sort of bailout for the oil and gas industry as part of the federal government’s emergency economic response to the coronavirus pandemic.

At this writing Congress isn’t playing along, at least not directly. Republican-supported provisions to pump $3 billion in oil purchases into the nation’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve (to fill it “right up to the top,” as Trump termed it in mid-March) were struck from the $2 trillion emergency stimulus bill that the Senate passed late Wednesday night, and just hours before that vote, reports Politico, they vanished from the House’s companion bill as well. Neither bill targets the fossil fuel industry by name for any other bailout, either.


READ MORE



From the Climate Disinformation Database: Scaife Family Foundations


The Scaife Family Foundations are made up of the Sarah Mellon Scaife Foundation, the Carthage Foundation, the Allegheny Foundation, and the Scaife Family Foundation. The foundations, financed by the Mellon industrial, oil, and banking fortune, were managed originally by Sarah Mellon Scaife. The foundations are a major funder of conservative causes and organizations, including those disputing the scientific consensus on climate change, such as the Heartland Institute, the Hoover Institution, the Heritage Foundation, the Competitive Enterprise Institute, and the Atlas Economic Research Foundation.
 

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hY_usy0Lx4nvuuH5zWYOzvSaQCI4MbhNjLt-XdpE7aK-TO6tr_cFabjo_N8D2WrcVU9SCzGsVlkZY8p2mcRqQr3rKuskidNVkWbTdVeWbfpq2Tschvp3kw=s0-d-e1-ft


Imagine you’re living your life in a small rural town in Western Pennsylvania, surrounded by green rolling hills, forests, and streams — and then a company comes along and gets a permit to inject fracked wastewater under your feet. That’s the situation the community of Grant Township found itself in seven years ago. But after a long battle, the state Department of Environmental Protection has decided to revoke the company’s permit.

The agency’s decision came after a group of environmentalists persuaded the town to adopt a new charter in 2015 giving the town the power to develop its own local laws. The township banned the injection of oil and gas waste fluids on the grounds that it violated the community’s right to clean air and water under the Pennsylvania Constitution, but it also did something revolutionary: It granted those same rights to the town’s plants, animals, and soil. The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection sued the town over the charter change in 2017, making its decision to abide by the local law all the more surprising.

The decision is bigger than the small town of Grant — other towns in Pennsylvania may be able to follow Grant’s lead and use local laws to protect nature and resist the encroachment of the oil and gas industry.

Emily Pontecorvo


Trumpalike HATE FRACKING


uzTBe6xbygpMMuCNBh7c3yiZO9BUPCzmi4TlT_XqOoxVnugdIol_M0p-xOSK3_xFxWgMWZR0SSCj1q-2z9YkYxmNXoPuMDsKDSuRH-wTv4C6WA=s0-d-e1-ft



Green transportation, from electric cars to walkable cities

How can we make transportation better for the planet?


Why is climate change so unfair?


Climate change is not fair. But here’s why it’s more unfair for some than others.


America’s heartland is expected to flood again — but this time amid coronavirus


FEMA isn’t prepared for the extreme weather ahead. But our food system is already adapting.


Scientists say ocean life could rebound in 30 years — if we act now


“We have a narrow window of opportunity to deliver a healthy ocean to our grandchildren, and we have the knowledge and tools to do so.”


Farmworkers are risking their lives to feed a nation on lockdown


“You can’t pick strawberries over Zoom.”
 

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Best in Environment


Trump and His Generation Have Declared War on the Planet’s Youth

Greed alone can’t explain obstructionism toward climate change. It’s an annihilating wish to take everything…
Timothy Kreider in GEN
BWQxaNTf44teTKkE9ppQVJU1-ezz0siU-vkhe332KMMVV_AFWxcaYWMZT_Sk3HPOcIJ5FoB1GsbsW35FXrLA8KomJ2MAlcwUeZzQ67Fe4IH1aQS-wQ=s0-d-e1-ft
8 min read

Assessing the Impact of the Coronavirus Lockdown on our Environment through…

The lockdown and its implications on our environment.
Mayukh Bhattacharyya in Towards Data Science5 min read

Organizations Fighting Climate Change: A quick guide

“Climate Change in no longer some far-off problem; it is happening here, it is happening now.” — Barack Obama
Thales Dantas7 min read



Thank you for supporting InsideClimate News!

In the 04/06/2020 edition:

Alberta’s $5.3 Billion Backing of Keystone XL Signals Vulnerability of Canadian Oil
The province’ announcement comes after the private sector has shown little appetite for a pipeline project critical to the country’s tar sands industry.

BY NICHOLAS KUSNETZ

Alberta's recent announcement that it was investing more than $1 billion to build the Keystone XL pipeline gave a boost to a project that has faced more than a decade of delays and uncertainty.

But by dedicating government money to a pipeline the private sector has been reluctant to fund, the decision highlights how vulnerable Canada's oil sands industry has become, even before the coronavirus pandemic crashed global oil demand.

SEE ALSO:
Mining Company’s Decision Lets Trudeau Off Hook, But Doesn’t Resolve Canada’s Climate Debate
Exxon and Oil Sands Go on Trial in New York Climate Fraud Case
What’s Behind Big Oil’s Promises of Emissions Cuts? Lots of Wiggle Room.
2 Key U.S. Pipelines for Canadian Oil Run Into Trouble in the Midwest
read more
 

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Today's Climate
04/06/2020

'Essential' but Unprotected, Farmworkers Live in Fear of Covid-19 but Keep Working

As Americans shelter in place across much of the country, washing their hands and making sure to stay six feet away from others, American farmworkers who are already prone to respiratory illnesses continue to work. It sets them up for the worst ravages of the coronavirus.

(InsideClimate News)

Already Braced for Covid-19, Towns Watch the Rising Mississippi With Fear

Louisiana, along with the rest of the Mississippi Valley region, is in the middle of its annual wet season, which usually peaks in April. But with the coronavirus already stretching supplies and budgets, local leaders worry that a flood could overwhelm them.

(Bloomberg)

FEMA, Racing to Provide Virus Relief, Is Running Short on Front-Line Staff

FEMA, which is leading the federal government's coronavirus response nationwide, is running short of employees who are trained for some of its most important front-line jobs, The New York Times reports. With wildfire season looming and hurricane season starting in less than two months, that could complicate federal response to disasters nationwide.

(The New York Times)

Several Great Lakes May Reach Highest Water Levels Ever in Modern Records

The high end predicted in six-month water level forecasts could surpass all other modern water volumes for some of the Great Lakes. Such high water would be devastating for cities and beaches along the Lake Michigan and Lake Huron shorelines.

(Syracuse.com)

Interior Extends Tenure of Controversial Land Management Director

The Interior Department on Friday extended the appointment of William Perry Pendley, known for his controversial position on selling off federally owned land to development, to lead the Bureau of Land Management in an acting capacity until May 5. Critics argue the temporary appointments allow controversial figures to stay in power.

(The Hill)

Oil Giants Meet at White House Amid Talk of Buying Strategic Reserves

Oil giants met with President Trump on Friday at the White House in the hopes of securing aid as crude prices plummeted in the face of coronavirus and a price war between Russia and Saudi Arabia. The move comes among growing calls from Republicans to assist oil producers after a proposal to spend $3 billion filling the nation's oil reserves was left out of the federal relief package.

(The Hill)

American Climate Video: Fighting a Fire That Wouldn’t Be Corralled

Three decades fighting fires could not have prepared Chico Fire Department Captain Brian Alderman for the 2018 Camp Fire, which moved at a rate of a football field per second. "There was really no thought of being able to stop and contain or corral or redirect the fire," Alderman said.

(InsideClimate News)

Volkswagen Installed Thousands of Unlawful 'Defeat Devices', UK High Court Finds

Volkswagen installed unlawful "defeat devices" in thousands of its diesel vehicles, the UK high court has found in the first major ruling on mass litigation brought in England and Wales over the "dieselgate" emissions scandal.

(The Guardian)
 

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20 secs min,please matey



4XEorFdQ5xfGHkIE0MCZyL1OaaTDH4KJe5NUdP3F94HjkXLc2H6DH0NONC50BtOZoaC_3cq-PJLq1qMJZyaivckqO825Q8gg_cPpmPDxKk0xzycdzg=s0-d-e1-ft

Kenya's push to harvest rainwater has a new payoff: battling coronavirus

Improved water storage to cope with climate change and drought is helping Kenyans wash their hands - but will it last?

Featured in: Water and climate change


Brazil indigenous community banishes miners to cut coronavirus risk
Amazon community reaches an agreement with forest invaders to pause operations, protecting the health of both

Featured in: Amazon forest and climate change



Climate stress and coronavirus gang up on world's vulnerable
As risks converge in a complex world, the resilience of small-scale farmers and families living in poverty is being tested to its limits

Featured in: Coronavirus and climate change



Health experts call virus pandemic a window into future climate threats
The coronavirus threat - and the responses to it - suggest the kind of challenges dealing with global warming may bring

Featured in: Health and climate change



Armed with good data, engineers wage quiet battle for cleaner air
As countries wage war on climate change and pollution from vehicles, a little-known transport group is providing the ammunition

Featured in: Sustainable transport



Governments urged not to shirk climate action after summit delay
Coronavirus forces postponement of COP26 conference but efforts to tackle global warming remain urgent - especially for the poor

Featured in: Coronavirus and climate change



Climate experts look ahead as coronavirus forces delay of COP26 summit
U.N. agencies, governments and green groups respond to the decision to delay this year’s climate talks in Glasgow to 2021

Featured in: Setting the stage for COP26



What coronavirus can teach us about tackling climate change
The shutdowns imposed in response to the pandemic are a crash course in a greener future for the world's richer inhabitants

Featured in: Coronavirus and climate change



Climate disasters seen increasing conflict risk in large countries
Extreme weather bring greater risk of conflict in underdeveloped countries with large populations and ethnic tensions

Featured in: Conflict and climate change



Bottling it? Plastic pollution from Coca-Cola, PepsiCo fuels emissions
60% of waste packaging from big brands is burned in developing nations, producing climate-heating emissions, report finds

Featured in: Cutting plastic waste



Indigenous leader from threatened tribe killed in Brazil
Indigenous teacher feared latest casualty in violence over Amazon resources in Brazil


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Coronavirus could trigger biggest fall in carbon emissions since World War Two
But experts warn that without structural change, emissions declines caused by coronavirus could be short-lived as economies get back to normal


Cyclone pounds Vanuatu, levelling buildings, amid virus shutdown
Travel restrictions to prevent the spread of the coronavirus - yet to be reported in Vanuatu - are hampering aid after the powerful storm


Climate summit in Glasgow postponed to 2021 because of coronavirus pandemic
Hopes that 2020 would prove a pivotal year for climate diplomacy and action to protect biodiversity have rapidly faded due to the virus

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EU presses on with tighter 2030 climate target despite pandemic
EU executive has suggested it will heed calls from campaigners and investors that economic recovery measures should also accelerate the low-carbon transition