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New
on Carbon Brief
•
Mapped: How climate change
affects extreme weather around
the world
•
Guest post: How changes to
coal mining have affected
China’s methane emissions
•
China Briefing: China joins
nuclear pledge | Energy
approach ‘vindicated’ | New
ecological code
News
•
Iran says it will show ‘zero
restraint’ if energy
infrastructure is targeted
again | Guardian
•
‘Extremely rare’ heatwave
shatters records across
south-west US | Scripps
News
•
US: Two dozen states, 10
cities sue EPA over repeal of
'endangerment' finding central
to climate fight | Associated
Press
•
China presses EV makers to end
price war and focus on
innovation as demand cools | South
China Morning Post
•
Rightwing narrative fuelling
false belief UK public oppose
net-zero, study finds | Guardian
Comment
•
Europe needs to prepare now
for an extended energy shock |
Michael Stoppard,
Financial Times
Research
•
New research on adaptation by
maize producers in sub-Saharan
Africa, a record-breaking
“global temperature jump” in
2023 and attributing dengue
cases to extreme rainfall in
Peru.
Other
stories
•
Cyclone Narelle: Severe
flooding expected as storm
hits Queensland | BBC
News
•
Net-zero expectations slip to
2070 for some energy
executives | Financial
Times
•
UK climate aid cuts
'short-sighted' and leave
'fossil fuel profits
untouched', campaigners say |
Independent
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Robert
McSweeney, Ayesha Tandon,
Kerry Cleaver, Tom Pearson
and Tom Prater
Carbon
Brief has published the latest
annual update to its map of
every published study on how
climate change has influenced
extreme weather.
Bobing
Qiu
A
researcher explains how
China’s coal production has
shifted towards provinces with
lower-emission mines.
Anika
Patel
The
online version of Carbon
Brief’s China Briefing email
newsletter, capturing the most
important climate and energy
stories from China over the
past fortnight. Sign up for
free.
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Peter
Beaumont, Lorenzo Tondo and
Hannah Ellis-Petersen, The
Guardian
There
is continuing widespread
coverage of the Iran war and
its impact on energy, with a frontpage
story in the Guardian
reporting that Iran has said
it will show “zero restraint”
if its energy infrastructure
is targeted again. The
newspaper says that Iran’s
message came after “Israel’s
attack on Iran’s massive South
Pars gasfield – which it
shares with Qatar – which
triggered Iranian retaliatory
strikes on Qatar’s Ras Laffan
gas complex and other Gulf
neighbours, sending stock
markets tumbling globally and
triggering sharp increases in
gas prices”. The outlet adds
that “Ras Laffan supplies
about 20% of the world’s
liquefied natural gas”. Reuters
says the “strikes are the
biggest escalation yet in the
US-Israeli war on Iran”. A frontpage
story in the Daily Telegraph
says that the damage to Ras
Laffan will “take years to
repair”. It continues that
Saudi Arabia has threatened to
strike back at Iran after its
attacks on oil and gas sites
across the Gulf. The deepening
crisis could affect the UK,
which sources 35% of its
energy from gas, with 2%
coming from Qatar, says the
newspaper. It adds that
“Donald Trump raced to
reassure Americans and prevent
a global energy crisis as oil
prices jumped 8% to $116 a
barrel”. A frontpage
report in the i newspaper
says that “families across
Europe could face a
cost-of-living hit”, with bill
increases “last[ing] for
years”. The New York Times
says oil prices have
“retreated” today from
yesterday’s highs.
MORE
ON ENERGY CRISIS
-
The
International Energy
Agency has advised its
member countries to take
10 steps to prepare for
energy market disruption,
including reducing highway
speeds and encouraging
people to work from home,
says the Guardian.
-
Spain’s
prime minister Pedro
Sánchez has attacked other
European leaders for using
the energy crisis as an
excuse to “gut climate
policies”, says the EU Observer.
-
A
Financial Times
newsletter says that
European leaders have
asked the European
Commission to overhaul its
flagship emissions
trading system (ETS)
by summer in response to
the energy crisis.
-
Reuters
says that European leaders
are considering
“short-term fixes” to
address soaring energy
prices, including
“electricity tax cuts,
lower grid fees and state
support”.
-
Pacific
island nations reliant on
oil imports have appealed
for help amid escalating
costs and possible fuel
shortages, reports the Guardian.
-
Australia
is weighing a liquified
natural gas (LNG) windfall
tax as global prices soar,
says Bloomberg.
Justin
Boggs, Scripps News
The
south-west US is facing
record-breaking heat in what
should be winter, reports
Scripps News. The broadcaster
says that nearly 20 million
people in the region are under
“excessive heat warnings”,
with another 20 million facing
heat advisories. It continues
that temperatures in Phoenix,
Arizona hit 40.5C yesterday,
breaking the city’s March heat
record by around 5C. Las Vegas
and parts of inland Los
Angeles also experienced
record-setting heat, says the
outlet. The Guardian
reports on a rapid scientific
analysis finding that the
current record-breaking heat
would have been “virtually
impossible” without
fossil-fuelled climate change.
According to the newspaper,
analysis author Ben Clarke,
who is an extreme weather and
climate change researcher at
Imperial College London, said:
“These temperatures are
completely off the scale for
March.”
Matthew
Daly, The Associated Press
Two
dozen US states and more than
10 cities filed a lawsuit
yesterday suing against the
Trump administration’s
decision to repeal the
“endangerment finding”
underpinning greenhouse gas
regulation, reports the
Associated Press. It
continues: “The lawsuit, filed
in the US Court of Appeals for
the District of Columbia
Circuit, is the second major
challenge to the endangerment
repeal, following a suit filed
last month by public health
and environmental groups.” The
Los Angeles
Times says that
California is leading the
multi-state lawsuit, which
will argue that the repeal
“violates the Clean Air Act
and contradicts decades of
scientific consensus on
climate change’s impacts”.
According to USA Today,
California governor Gavin
Newsom announced the new legal
effort by saying: “Since 2009,
we have recognised the
obvious. Greenhouse gases,
carbon dioxide [and] methane
are contributing in a
deleterious way to our public
health and economic prosperity
of this nation. Only Donald
Trump and his big donors can
see it differently."
Themis
Qi and Julie Zhang, South
China Morning Post
China
has tightened oversight of its
electric vehicle (EV) sector,
urging automakers to “move
away from aggressive
discounting and focus instead
on technological innovation”,
reports the Hong Kong-based
South China Morning Post. The
latest attempt to stabilise
the industry came at a
“high-level meeting” between
17 major carmakers and
government departments,
including the Ministry of
Industry and Information
Technology, adds the outlet.
State news agency Xinhua says
that the Chinese government
will “strengthen price
monitoring and cost
investigations” to regulate
competition. China will also
advance vehicle trade-in
programs and promote the
“large-scale adoption of new
energy heavy-duty trucks”,
according to a separate Xinhua
article. Meanwhile, China Energy
Net reports that China’s
annual sales of “new energy”
heavy-duty trucks surged 182%
year-on-year in 2025, reaching
231,100 units, with market
penetration exceeding 29% for
the first time.
MORE
ON CHINA
-
Since
2025, 147 coal-fired units
have been shut or planned
for closure in China,
including 13 above 200MW,
reports BJX News.
-
China’s
gas consumption rose by
more than 2% year-on-year
during the past heating
season, reports China News
Network.
-
China Daily:
“China issues guideline to
accelerate green
transformation of small
hydropower sector.”
-
China’s
finance ministry has
issued new rules extending
energy-saving and
emissions-reduction
subsidy funds from 2025 to
2030, reports BJX News.
-
Jiemian
reports that Yunnan
province has issued the
first local policy to
implement the NEA’s rules
on “green certificate
management”.
-
China
said it is ready to work
with Southeast Asia to
“address energy shortages
as oil markets reel from
supply shocks”, reports Reuters.
Taiwan has rejected an
offer by China to support
its energy security
following a reunification,
according to Reuters.
Damien
Gayle, The Guardian
The
Guardian covers a new analysis
showing that “media coverage
of net-zero is more than twice
as likely to be negative than
public attitudes and is
driving a false perception
that net-zero policies are
unpopular with voters”. The
research, from the Institute
for Public Policy Research
thinktank and the non-profit
Persuasion UK, finds that the
“echo chamber of elite
opinion” has “led to a
situation where MPs
significantly underestimate
public support for climate
policies and overestimate
public opposition to local
clean energy infrastructure
projects”, according to the
Guardian. Becca Massey-Chase,
the head of citizen engagement
at the Institute for Public
Policy Research, tells the
Guardian that the research
shows claims of a voter
backlash against net-zero were
“largely a political myth”.Carbon Brief
analysis has found that a
record number of newspaper
editorials opposed climate
action in 2025.
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Michael
Stoppard, Financial Times
There
is a continuing wave of
editorials and reaction in
response to the global energy
crisis fuelled by war in Iran.
In the Financial Times,
Michael Stoppard, an energy
commentator and former chief
strategist on global gas at
S&P Global, says that the
impact of the crisis is “still
being underestimated”. He
continues: “Analyst estimates
of disruption horizons are
morphing from days to weeks to
months. A two-month period of
resumption is no longer the
worst-case scenario, it is the
best-case scenario…Europe now
needs to prepare for extended
disruption, learning from the
mistakes of the 2022 gas
crisis.” It comes as Daily Telegraph
world economy editor Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard argues that
the 2022 energy crisis was a
“picnic compared to this
global energy disaster”. He is
contradicted by a Lex column
in the Financial Times:
“This gas crisis is bad, but
not as bad as the last one.”
Elsewhere, a Daily Telegraph
column by Omran Al-Kuwari, a
fellow at the Atlantic Council
Global Energy Centre,
describes the war as a
“nightmare scenario for energy
markets”. An Financial Times
comment article by Takeshi
Hashimoto, CEO of the Japanese
transport company Mitsui OSK
Lines, says the crisis
illustrates how “maritime
security is key to global
energy supplies”.
A
number of newspaper editorials
make reference to the energy
crisis. A Guardian
editorial says the effects of
energy infrastructure
destruction in the Middle East
are “being felt across Asia
and Europe”. An editorial in
the climate-sceptic Sun,
meanwhile, claims that “[UK
energy secretary] Ed
Miliband’s dangerous green
ideology should not be allowed
to trump common sense amid
escalating Iran conflict”. An
editorial in the
climate-sceptic Daily Express
claims that the UK’s “refusal
to make the most of oil and
gas reserves is an
ideologically driven act of
self-destruction”. The
Economist runs a number of
articles about the crisis,
including on how people in India are
“panic buying” gas, how energy
shocks are hitting the US, how “gas will
not be killed off by
renewables anytime soon” and
an article
looking at “which country is
the biggest loser from the
energy shock”. Elsewhere, the
Financial Times
has an editorial on efforts to
achieve nuclear fusion.
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-
While
adaptation is
well-documented in studies
of maize producers in
sub-Saharan Africa,
evidence quantifying
climate impacts on
productivity, income and
awareness “remains scarce”
| Frontiers in
Climate
-
The
“uniqueness” of a
record-breaking “global
temperature jump” in early
Autumn 2023 arose from the
La Niña-like
ocean-atmosphere state on
which it developed | Communications
Earth & Environment
-
An
estimated 60% of dengue
cases in northwestern Peru
during Cyclone Yaku in
March 2023 were
attributable to extreme
precipitation, exacerbated
by climate change | One Earth
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Simon
Atkinson, BBC News
Alexandra
White, Financial Times
Stuti
Mishra, The Independent
Kirsty
Howey, The Guardian
Jessica
Elgot, The Guardian
Louise
Cullen, BBC News
Editorial,
The Wall Street Journal
Emily
Atkin, Heated
Rebecca
Boyle, The Atlantic
Akshat
Rathi and Oscar Boyd,
Bloomberg
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