Exclusive: Turkey’s climate minister says country is working on ‘innovative solutions’ as Labor privately downplays expectations impasse can be broken
Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updates
Sign up for climate and environment editor Adam Morton’s free Clear Air newsletter here
Turkey says it is pursuing “innovative solutions” in the race with Australia to host the Cop31 UN climate talks, arguing both countries can win from drawn-out negotiations over next year’s summit.
After talks with the climate change and energy minister, Chris Bowen, on the sidelines of the UN general assembly in New York last week, Turkey’s climate minister, Murat Kurum, said he was optimistic about a resolution.
Sign up to get climate and environment editor Adam Morton’s Clear Air column as a free newsletter
Continue reading...
Turkey argues both countries can win from drawn-out contest with Australia over Cop31 hosting rights
09/29/2025 - 10:00
09/29/2025 - 10:00
In the worst case, entanglements could cause drowning, one expert says, but whales can also suffer long-term effects from the nets
Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updates
Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast
Scientists say a flourishing whale population that is swimming closer to shore and into the path of shark nets is contributing to the 50% increase in entanglements off Queensland’s coast this year.
Nine entanglements involving 12 whales have already occurred this year, compared with six on average, many off the Sunshine Coast. Eight whales were tangled in shark nets in 2024.
Continue reading...
Disasters like wildfires and floods are multiplying. US schools are training students to combat them
09/29/2025 - 06:30
From California to North Carolina, high schools and colleges are offering classes in fire science, search and rescue, and ecological sustainability
This story is from the Hechinger Report
Gavin Abundis watched as firefighter Adrian Chairez demonstrated how he uses pulleys and harnesses to rappel down buildings. “You’ve probably seen it in the movies where they’re going down Mission: Impossible style,” Chairez said with a laugh one day this past winter as he prepared to step off a tower. “We get to do that.”
Continue reading...
09/29/2025 - 06:00
With three years to go, experts agree that the city has set bold goals and faces steep challenges
Hosting the summer Olympics used to be a dream for many global cities, but it is now seen by many as more of a nightmare. There’s the cost of hosting – $10bn and up, in recent years – the displacement of local residents, the environmental toll, and the risk of being left, like Rio de Janeiro or Athens, with major debt and crumbling Olympic stadiums.
In the decade since Los Angeles secured its bid for the summer 2028 games, the city’s leaders have promised they will do it differently, and that Los Angeles is prepared to deliver world-class Olympics and Paralympic games in its “sunny, ideal weather”, all while keeping costs, environmental damage, and community disruption to a minimum.
Continue reading...
09/28/2025 - 23:00
Mercedes-Benz and other big manufacturers want to overturn the EU’s 2035 ban on petrol cars. This would be as disastrous for jobs as for the climate
There is something rather old-fashioned about the way Germany views its car industry. When the prime minister of Bavaria, Markus Söder, calls the car the destiny of Germany and the heart of its economy, and says that “without the car, collapse is imminent”, the vehicle he seems to be describing is one with a combustion engine, running on fossil fuels or their derivatives. This nostalgic attachment to the heavy-duty, polluting industries of the 20th century is now colliding with the urgent realities of the climate crisis.
Earlier this month, heads of European automotive companies gathered in the Berlaymont building, the headquarters of the European Commission in Brussels, for a meeting with its president, Ursula von der Leyen. German car manufacturers came with two demands: to reverse the EU ban on the manufacture of new cars with CO2-emitting combustion engines that is due to come into force in 2035, and to loosen the annual quotas they have to meet for sales of electric vehicles between now and 2035.
Tania Roettger is a journalist based in Berlin
This article was amended on 29 September 2025 to remove a potentially misleading reference to cleaner “fuels” in the final paragraph
Continue reading...
09/28/2025 - 08:09
Vast tract of park that is home to 114 mammal species, including critically endangered black rhino, affected
Namibia has begun deploying hundreds of soldiers to fight a fire that has burned through a third of the vast Etosha national park, one of Africa’s largest game reserves, officials said.
The park in the north of the largely desert country is home to 114 species of mammals, notably the critically endangered black rhinoceros, and is a major tourist attraction.
Continue reading...
09/28/2025 - 02:39
Queensland premier says he won’t protect whales ‘at the expense of one single human’
Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast
Queensland’s premier said the state is “not for turning” on its plan to expand shark netting, and won’t put protecting whales “at the expense of one single human”.
A mother and baby humpback were discovered trapped in shark netting near Rainbow Beach on Saturday, the eighth and ninth whales to become entangled in nine days.
Continue reading...
09/28/2025 - 01:00
Two years after the tree was cut down, the National Trust says it wants to turn a sense of loss ‘into a sense of hope’
Artists are being asked for ideas to create a “nationally important” work from the wood of the illegally felled Sycamore Gap tree which, organisers hope, will be galvanising and inspiring.
The National Trust has revealed details of a huge creative commission, offering the chance for artists, organisations or creative agencies to use half of the tree’s timber to produce something incredible.
Continue reading...
09/27/2025 - 10:00
From supermarkets to restaurants, rising meat costs amid tight supply and strong demand are hitting Americans hard
If beef is what’s for dinner, expect to pay more for it.
The classic combination of tight supply and strong demand has pushed US cattle and beef prices to record highs, and there is little end in sight with farmers reluctant to expand their herds and selling off high-priced heifers to dig them out of debt.
Continue reading...
09/27/2025 - 08:00
Concerns over whether gas generators are making fair profits are prompting fresh proposals to reform the system
Travel 18 miles north of London and the grey bulk of a gas power plant comes into view near Rye House railway station in Hertfordshire.
Rye House power station has generated electricity since 1993, making it Britain’s longest-serving such power plant still in the market. But it also produces some of the most expensive electricity in the country.
Continue reading...