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New
on Carbon Brief
•
Introducing Carbon Brief’s
2026 cohort of contributing
editors
•
Analysis: How Chinese media is
covering the Iran energy
crisis
News
•
Oil prices plunge and stocks
jump after Trump announces
conditional ceasefire with
Iran | Guardian
•
UK opening new oil and gas
fields would imperil global
climate goals, experts say | Guardian
•
Solar energy, cheap battery
storage can meet 90% of
India’s power demand at
affordable costs: Ember | Hindustan
Times
•
Australia, China discuss
regional energy security,
Albanese says | Reuters
•
BP chair faces re-election
battle after board blocks
climate resolution | Financial
Times
Comment
•
A new economic superpower
could spark a global retreat
from fossil fuels | Mark
Hertsgaard and Kyle Pope,
Guardian
•
Europe’s fossil fuel
dependence poses risks to
price stability | Frank
Elderson, Financial Times
Research
•
New research on global
exposure to hot-dry extremes,
Tanzania’s climate under
future stratospheric aerosol
injection and the impacts of
sea level rise on septic
systems in the Chesapeake Bay
region
Other
stories
•
Brussels confirms first CBAM
certificate price for Q1 2026
at €75.36/mtCO2e | S&P
Global
•
Extreme weather leaves 22 dead
over past 24 hours in
Afghanistan | Associated
Press
•
Somalia’s first offshore
drilling project underway | Semafor
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Leo
Hickman
Carbon
Brief has a new cohort of
climate-focused academics who
will serve a two-year term as
contributing editors.
Anika
Patel
Carbon
Brief looks at how Chinese
news outlets have covered the
implications of the US and
Israel war with Iran on energy
use.
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Mark
Saunokonoko, The Guardian
Oil
prices plunged by “almost 15%”
last night after US president
Donald Trump postponed his
threat of
“civilisation-ending” attacks
on Iran, reports the Guardian,
while Iran’s foreign minister
said passage through the
strait of Hormuz would be
allowed for the next two weeks
under the management of its
military. The newspaper notes
that news of the two-week
ceasefire was “embraced by
markets”. The price of Brent
crude – the international
standard – dropped 14.4% to
$93.48 and futures for US
crude oil fell by 14.7% to
$96.27 a barrel, it says.
However, it adds that “prices
remain well above” where they
were at the start of the war.
Reuters
reports that the heads of the
International Energy Agency
(IEA), the International
Monetary Fund and the World
Bank will discuss the energy
crisis triggered by the war
next Monday.
Meanwhile,
Reuters is
among the outlets covering
comments made by the IEA’s
Fatih Birol to Le Figaro
where he said the current
energy crisis is worse than
those of “1973, 1979 and 2022
combined”. The newswire
reports that Birol said the
“world has never experienced
a disruption to energy supply
of such magnitude”. According
to the Guardian,
Birol added that developing
nations would suffer the most
from higher oil and gas
prices, higher food prices and
an acceleration of inflation,
while European nations would
also feel an impact. The Financial Times’s
Energy Source newsletter
covers Birol’s six predictions
for how the energy crisis will
shape the future. These
include an acceleration of
nuclear power, an increase in
coal use and an uptick in
renewable power installations
in Europe, according to the
outlet. Separately, the Financial Times
asks whether the Iran war will
“derail” the energy
transition. And the Times
reports that “Shell’s oil
traders have cashed in on the
chaos caused by the Iran war
even as the energy giant’s gas
business was hit by disruption
to its facilities in Qatar”.
MORE
ON ENERGY CRISIS
-
Madagascar
has declared a “nationwide
state of energy
emergency” for 15 days,
reports Reuters.
-
Reuters:
“Malaysia announces
measures to address supply
disruptions amid energy
crunch.”
-
Four
airports in Italy have
introduced jet fuel
restrictions amid “limited
fuel availability”,
according to the Independent.
-
Euractiv
covers a report which
finds European households
could suffer “devastating”
additional energy costs of
“close to €1,900 per
year”.
-
Nearly
a fifth of French petrol
stations are currently
facing fuel supply
shortages, prompting
protests from some
truckers, according to Reuters.
-
Reuters:
“High fuel costs forcing
Philippine farmers to
abandon harvests.”
Fiona
Harvey, the Guardian
The
Guardian speaks to climate
experts – economist Nick
Stern, Paris Agreement
architect Christiana Figueres,
Power Shift Africa’s Mohamed
Adow and an anonymous African
climate negotiator – about the
impact of the UK opening up
new oil and gas fields in the
North Sea. They warn that new
UK fields would “send shock
waves around the world,
imperilling international
climate targets, undermining
the UK’s climate leadership
and encouraging developing
countries to exploit their own
fossil fuel reserves”. Their
warnings come as the UK
government faces pressure from
the “oil industry, the
Conservatives, Nigel Farage’s
Reform UK party, some trade
unions and parts of the
Treasury” to give the green
light to new oil and gas
fields, despite “clear
evidence that doing so would
not cut prices and would have
almost no effect on imports”,
it reports. [See Carbon
Brief’s factcheck
of various false and
misleading claims around North
Sea drilling.]
The
hard-right, climate-sceptic
Reform UK party said yesterday
that it would approve the
Jackdaw and Rosebank fields in
the North Sea, reports the Daily Mail.
The party claims, adds the
newspaper, that it would, if
elected, “increase UK oil and
gas production by at least
half”. Richard Tice, the
party’s energy spokesperson,
claims inaccurately that the
“Tories and Labour have
deliberately made us poorer
with their net-zero
obsession”. [See Carbon
Brief’s factcheck
about why gas – not net-zero –
is behind the UK’s high
electricity prices.]
MORE
ON UK
-
Politico
reports that Drax is
“walking away” from its
plans to install “vast”
carbon capture facilities
at its Yorkshire biomass
plant due to “lack of
policy certainty on the
required levels of
support”.
-
The
Daily Mail
and Daily Express
cover calls for the
government to allow more
North Sea drilling from
Sharon Graham, general
secretary of the Unite
trade union.
-
Oil
and gas companies have
accused chancellor Rachel
Reeves of “blocking”
£17.5bn of investment in
the North Sea after she
“shelved” plans to scrap
the windfall tax on the
industry, reports the Times. The
paper claims that Reeves
was “supportive” of a plan
to end the tax early last
month, before oil and gas
prices “soared”.
-
The
Press
Association, Times, Daily Telegraph
and BusinessGreen
report that UK electric
car sales saw their “best
month ever” in March amid
rising oil prices.
Jayashree
Nandi, Hindustan Times
According
to a new report by energy
thinktank Ember, battery
storage is now “cheap enough
in India that solar power can
meet 90% of the country’s
power demand at lower lifetime
costs”, reports the Hindustan
Times. Seven of the 10 largest
states in India could meet “at
least 83% of their electricity
demand” from solar plus
batteries at “costs lower than
current average power purchase
costs”, adds the Economic Times.
While “the shift is being
driven by a sharp fall in
battery costs” – declining 40%
in 2024 and 31% in 2025 – Down to Earth
notes that the “transition is
not without challenges”, from
low solar output in the
monsoon to “structural
hurdles” in India’s power
system, such as “transmission
constraints and inadequate
storage deployment”. Writing
in the Business
Standard, India’s former
G20 sherpa Amitabh Kant wants
the country to triple its
renewable energy target “from
500GW to 1500GW” by 2030,
emphasising that “every
renewable tender should
include battery storage”.
Meanwhile,
a nuclear reactor “two decades
in the making” attained “first
criticality” on Monday,
reports the Telegraph India,
“marking India’s entry into
the second stage” of its
nuclear energy strategy. The
country’s prime minister
Narendra Modi called it a
"decisive step towards
harnessing [India’s] vast
thorium reserves”, the Economic Times
reports, with Al Jazeera
adding it “takes [India] a
step closer to cutting
dependence on uranium”.
MORE
ON INDIA
-
A
two-week ceasefire in the
Iran war “could ease
pressure on India’s
economy by stabilising
energy prices and supply
chains", but “durable
recovery” would need a
longer truce, writes Moneycontrol.
-
Private
forecaster Skymet predicts
India will receive
“below-normal monsoon
rainfall” in 2026 as “El
Niño is set to reduce
precipitation”, reports Reuters.
-
Writing
for Mint,
Soumya Sarkar argues that
India’s companies need to
“redirect about a quarter”
of all corporate social
responsibility budgets to
cutting emissions and “tie
executive pay to emission
reduction targets”.
Reuters
Australian
prime minister Anthony
Albanese has said he discussed
“regional energy security”
with Chinese premier Li Qiang
by phone yesterday, reports
Reuters. However, the readout
from China's state news agency
Xinhua on the call did not
mention “energy security or
fuel”, adds the newswire.
Meanwhile, China has once
again limited petrol and
diesel price hikes to around
half the “typical increase
under its pricing mechanism”
amid the closure of the Strait
of Hormuz, reports Reuters. A
third Reuters
report said that China has
plenty of urea stock thanks to
the country’s “rather unique
reliance on coal” as the world
struggles with the supply.
Chinese coal companies are
“turning to chemicals
manufacturing for growth” amid
a shortage of oil supplies,
according to Bloomberg.
A solar industry insider tells
financial news outlet Caixin that
geopolitical conflicts
“reinforce the importance of
renewable energy”, but the
solar sector’s overcapacity
problem remains difficult to
improve in the short term.
MORE
ON CHINA
-
The
South China
Morning Post reports
that China has broken
ground on the world’s
highest-altitude
concentrated solar power
plant.
-
China’s
electric-arc furnace
steelmakers “boosted
weekly capacity
utilisation to the
highest” levels since
January 2024, reports Bloomberg,
citing Mysteel.
-
China
plans to upgrade or phase
out “outdated”
petrochemical plants by
2029, reports Reuters.
-
People’s Daily
says China’s offshore wind
sector is building
competitive advantages
globally in “scale,
technology and industrial
clustering”. Xinhua
reports that China’s
deepest offshore wind
project, with 504MW of
installed capacity, has
achieved grid connection
and power generation.
-
South China
Morning Post: “China
to help Cuba with solar
energy amid US oil
blockade and total power
outage.”
-
The
Associated
Press discusses the
challenges China’s mining
workers face as the
country shifts away from
coal.
Camilla
Hodgson, Financial Times
Proxy
advisor Glass Lewis has
recommended that BP
shareholders vote against the
re-election of Albert Manifold
as the fossil-fuel company’s
chair over concerns about
climate-related reporting, in
a move backed by investment
group Legal & General,
reports the Financial Times.
Both groups said a decision by
BP’s board to exclude a
climate-related shareholder
resolution from green investor
group Follow This at its
annual meeting later this
month raised concerns about
transparency, according to the
paper. The proposal in
question asked BP to set out
strategies for maintaining
shareholder value if oil and
gas demand declines. The Guardian
reports that the intervention
comes as BP is in “the process
of pivoting its focus back to
oil and gas after an
ill-received foray into
renewables”.
Meanwhile,
the Times
reports on a poll of 200 fund
managers from brokerage
Berenberg which found that
“ESG investors” were starting
to “focus less on global
warming and fossil fuels and
more on other areas of concern
including health, artificial
intelligence ethics and
corruption”.
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Mark
Hertsgaard and Kyle Pope,
The Guardian
Mark
Hertsgaard and Kyle Pope,
co-founders of the journalism
collaboration Covering Climate
Now, argue the upcoming
“just-transition” conference
in Colombia “underscores a
point often missed in the
usual narrative about climate
change”, namely, that the
“overwhelming majority of the
world’s people – 80-89% of
them – want their governments
to take stronger climate
action”. The conference, they
write, aims to begin drawing
up the roadmap “blocked at
COP30” in Belem, with
energy and environment
ministers that have agreed to
form a “coalition of the
willing”. One area of focus,
they say, will be how to phase
out the $7tn a year
governments spend subsidising
fossil fuels – “but to do so
without punishing communities,
workers and tax bases”. They
continue: “The secret weapon
of the ‘coalition of the
willing’ gathering in Colombia
is its potential to function
as an economic superpower”.
Meanwhile,
in an editorial about the
Artemis moon mission, the Guardian
says there is risk that the
“programme is a dangerous
distraction from the urgency
of finding ways to live within
the ecological limits of the
world we already have”. It
points out that the US has
undertaken its first moon
voyage in half a century in
the same year that the country
has withdrawn from the Paris
Agreement for the second time.
The Guardian continues:
“Space-focused techno-optimism
shades into moral nihilism
when it opts for fantasies of
colonising new worlds in
preference to policies aimed
at protecting the one we
already have”. The human
curiosity and science that
underpins space travel should
not be “dismissed out of
distaste for its darker
implications”, the newspaper
says, adding that Trump’s
“murderous bellicosity in
recent days has been a
horrifying contrast to the
wonder of the astronauts”.
MORE
COMMENT
-
For
the Backchannel
substack, Powering Past
Coal Alliance’s Julia
Skorupska says fossil-fuel
roadmaps can help
countries transition away
from coal in the wake of
the energy crisis.
-
In
the Guardian,
Christiana Figueres –
executive secretary of the
UN Framework Convention on
Climate Change (UNFCCC)
over 2010-16 – writes
that sea level rise is a
health crisis that
"polluters" should be held
accountable for.
-
In
a companion piece, the Guardian
covers comments made by
Figueres as she is
announced as co-chair of a
Lancet Commission
examining how sea-level
rise is reshaping health,
wellbeing and inequality.
She warns that countries
are being “held hostage”
by their reliance on
fossil fuels.
-
In
his The Crucial
Years substack,
headlined “Oil and gas =
peril and poverty; solar
and wind = prosperity and
protection”, veteran
campaigner and author Bill
McKibben argues that 2026
has “changed the
psychological meaning of
energy forever”.
-
Forbes’
chairman and
editor-in-chief Steve
Forbes claims that the
“massive push in this
century for alternatives
to fossil fuels” as “one
of the greatest follies in
human history”.
-
In
a separate piece for Forbes,
contributor Ariel Cohen
says the war has
“highlighted the need to
accelerate transportation
electrification, expand
nuclear energy use and
bolster strategic energy
reserves”.
Frank
Elderson, Financial Times
Frank
Elderson, an executive board
member of the European Central
Bank and vice-chair of the
supervisory board of the
central bank, argues that
Europe’s energy dependence has
“become one of the critical
vulnerabilities” of its
economy. He explains: “Recent
energy price shocks have
transferred vast resources out
of Europe, prompted emergency
interventions and strained
public finances”. Europe’s
energy dependence has
“profound implications” for
the European Central Bank,
whose “primary mandate” is
price stability. Elderson says
“repeated price shocks make
achieving this objective
increasingly difficult”. He
continues that the “most
effective way” that Europe can
reduce its exposure” to
geopolitical risk is by
“cutting reliance on imported
fossil fuels and accelerating
an orderly shift to homegrown
clean energy”. BusinessGreen
and Bloomberg
cover the comments.
MORE
UK COMMENT
-
The
climate-sceptic Sun has an
editorial entitled: “We're
in an energy
crisis…Starmer must cut
fuel duty and utilise the
North Sea now.”
-
The
Independent’s
political commentator John
Rentoul explores why
chancellor Rachel Reeves
and energy secretary Ed
Miliband are “locked in a
dispute” around the
response to the energy
crisis.
-
In
Conservative
Home, shadow energy
secretary Claire Coutinho
claims the UK’s “carbon
tax” – its emissions
trading scheme (ETS) – has
“placed an immense burden
on the shoulders of
British industry”.
-
In
the climate-sceptic Daily Express,
chief political
commentator Robert Taylor
says the Green party’s
agenda is a “mixture of
the hilarious and
mortifying” – and singles
out the party’s plan to
bring the “absurd”
net-zero target from 2050
to an even more “ludicrous
2040 or 2030”.
-
The
Daily Express
dedicates a double-page
spread to a piece
promoting the use of coal
and the work of coal lobby
group FutureCoal.
-
Also
in the Daily Express,
climate-sceptic
commentator Tim Newark
says “one man” stands in
the way of Reeves’ growth
agenda.
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Under
current climate policies,
more than one-quarter of
the world’s population
will face more frequent
and severe hot-and-dry
extreme events by the end
of the century, with
low-income countries
“projected to suffer more
frequently” than
high-income ones | Geophysical
Research Letters
-
If
stratospheric aerosol
injection is deployed as a
geoengineering method
under a
very-high-emissions
scenario, it could reverse
up to 4C of warming in
Tanzania, but would also
reverse
climate-change-induced
increases in annual
rainfall there | Environmental
Research: Climate
- Increasing flood frequency
and extent due to sea level
rise will more than double
the number of septic systems
exposed to flooding – and,
therefore, vulnerable to
failure and groundwater
contamination – in
Maryland’s Chesapeake Bay
region by 2060 | Climatic Change
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Eklavya
Gupte, S&P Global
The
Associated Press
Tom
Chivers, Semafor
Kenza
Bryan, Financial Times
Anwesha
Pattanaik, Energy Monitor
Ajit
Niranjan, The Guardian
Tyler
Katzenberger, Politico
Gabriela
Sá Pessoa, The Associated
Press
Claire
Brown, The New York Times
Brendan
Rascius, The Independent
Eva
Corlett, The Guardian
Nayla
Razzouk, Bloomberg
Zeeshan
Nasir, Al Jazeera
Richard
Ashmore, Daily Express
Joseph
Gedeon and Dharna Noor, The
Guardian
Amber
Rolt, BusinessGreen
Patrick
Galbraith, The Daily
Telegraph
Sarah
Taaffe-Maguire, Sky News
Melissa
Davey, The Guardian
Nikolaus
J Kurmayer, Euractiv
Natasha
Bracken, Semafor
Kiley
Price, Inside Climate News
Paul
Simons, The Times
James
Gallagher, BBC News
Lars
Paulsson, Kari Lundgren and
Joe Wertz, Los Angeles Times
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