Breaking Waves: Ocean News

08/28/2024 - 08:00
Food prices have increased 22% in last four years and people are feeling the pinch. Readers share their strategies to cope Back in 2019, $100 worth of groceries may have lasted a week for a household of two. Today, that same $100 will probably only buy enough groceries to stretch for a couple of days. In the last four years, food prices have increased a whopping 22%, and consumers are feeling the pinch. Continue reading...
08/28/2024 - 07:26
Toymaker hopes to bring down oil-based plastic it uses by paying up to 70% more for certified renewable resin to encourage production Lego plans to make half the plastic in its bricks from renewable or recycled material rather than fossil fuels by 2026, in its latest effort to ensure its toys are more environmentally friendly. The Danish company last year ditched efforts to make bricks entirely from recycled bottles because of cost and production issues. At the moment, 22% of the material in its colourful bricks is not made from fossil fuels. Continue reading...
08/28/2024 - 06:00
We want to hear from people across the US who have been affected by the volatility of the home insurance market We know the industry is in an enormous state of flux amid the climate crisis and increasingly severe wildfires, floods, hurricanes and other natural disasters. Companies have been raising premiums, cancelling or refusing to issue policies, and pulling out of entire markets. The Guardian US has reported on the crippling effects for homeowners in Florida, California, Louisiana and beyond. We want to hear from people from all parts of the country caught up in this. Have you lost your policy, and what did you do? Has the cost of insurance influenced where you chose to live or your decision to buy a home? Have you been forced to recover from a natural disaster without insurance? Tell us your story. Continue reading...
08/28/2024 - 06:00
Records of Kamala Harris and running mate Tim Walz instill hope that progress under Biden could be extended Public health advocates are optimistic that a Kamala Harris win in the November presidential election in the US would lead to further regulation of PFAS toxic “forever chemicals”, on which the Biden administration has already taken unprecedented regulatory action. In part that is based on past actions. Last year, Harris’s running mate, the Minnesota governor, Tim Walz, signed bold legislation prohibiting the use of toxic PFAS across a range of common consumer goods from menstrual products to food packaging – a measure that is considered by public health advocates to be among the “strongest bans in the world”. Continue reading...
08/28/2024 - 05:31
Reusable varieties unlikely to dent environmental impact of e-cigarette waste, even as they curb battery waste UK politics live – latest updates Business live – latest updates Vape products redesigned to avoid a legislative crackdown on single-use devices may do little to dent the environmental scourge of e-cigarette waste, experts have warned. Manufacturers have been evolving their products after the UK government introduced a ban on disposables, due to come into force in April 2025. Continue reading...
08/28/2024 - 05:24
Companies need regulator go-ahead on significant increases or they will not be able to aid plan, says Water UK Labour’s key housebuilding target will not be met if water companies are blocked from significantly increasing bills, the leader of an industry group has said. The government has promised to build 1.5m homes during this parliament as a central pillar to its plans to end the housing crisis. Continue reading...
08/28/2024 - 03:55
Carmaker increases portfolio to 14 and will also launch challenge in large and luxury vehicle sectors Business live – latest updates The carmaker Hyundai has said that it will double the range of its hybrid car models amid a wider slump in consumer demand for “pure” electric vehicles. Hyundai, which is increasing the number of hybrid vehicles in its portfolio to 14, also plans to move beyond making compact and mid-size electric vehicles (EVs) and challenge in the large and luxury vehicle sectors. Continue reading...
08/28/2024 - 03:40
Experts say trend is because of failure by successive governments to approve releases despite promises “Beaver bombing”, covertly releasing beavers into the countryside, is increasing in England because successive governments have not fulfilled promises to permit some planned wild releases, conservationists are warning. Beavers now live freely on river systems across swaths of southern England, and conservationists are calling on Labour to allow official releases of free-living beavers and produce a national strategy to maximise the biodiversity and flood alleviation benefits delivered by the industrious mammals. Continue reading...
08/28/2024 - 00:00
Why have politicians outsourced the most important issue of our time to private agencies and individuals? We can’t do it all - this way lies disaster There are several services and assets I would like to see nationalised. But at the top of my list is neither water, nor trains, nor development land, much as I’d like to see them brought under national or local public ownership. Above all, I want to see the nationalisation of my own business: environmental persuasion. I love my job. But I’m not very good at it. None of us is. We face the greatest predicament humankind has confronted: the erosion and possible collapse of our life-support systems. Its speed and scale have taken even scientists by surprise. The potential impacts are greater than any recent pandemic, or any war we have suffered. Yet the effort to persuade people of the need for action has been left almost entirely to either the private or voluntary sectors. And it simply does not work. Continue reading...
08/27/2024 - 23:00
More than 150 councillors join 15,000 members of the public calling for urban areas to be free of the chemicals The UK should copy Paris and ban pesticides in urban areas, campaigners and local councils have said. Drawing attention to how the capital city of France still looked pristine while hosting the Olympics, the Pesticide Action Network (PAN) has said the same can be true of UK towns and cities. Continue reading...