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New
on Carbon Brief
•
Prof Philippe Ciais: The
world’s most highly cited
climate scientist
•
Prof Detlef van Vuuren: The
climate scientist most cited
by the IPCC
•
CCC: Faster electrification of
UK will ‘put money back into
people’s pockets’
•
Cited: Project Cosmos launch |
Science ‘under attack’ at Bonn
| Emissions inequality
News
•
France records hottest day
ever as 40 people drown across
country | Guardian
•
British households not
electrifying fast enough, says
government climate adviser | Financial
Times
•
China: Extreme weather to
remain frequent during this
year’s flood season, with
droughts and floods both
significant | Jiemian
•
US: Former NOAA employees
revive climate site shut by
Trump administration | New
York Times
Comment
•
The Guardian view on extreme
heat: as risks escalate,
adaptation plans are
dangerously lagging | Editorial,
Guardian
•
UK: How Keir Starmer forgot
his DNA | James Murray,
BusinessGreen
Research
•
New research on marine
heatwaves in New Caledonia,
the welfare impacts of China’s
clean coal policy and bird
abundance declines in the
western US
Other
stories
•
China's coal power on the rise
again in 2026, reversing
first-in-a-decade decline | Reuters
•
UN chief says fossil fuel
industry must cut methane for
warming ‘relief’ | Climate
Home News
•
Climate-vulnerable countries
push for global funding
framework | Reuters
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Leo
Hickman, Joe Goodman and Tom
Prater
Carbon
Brief interviews Prof Philippe
Ciais, the most highly cited
climate scientist in the
world.
Leo
Hickman, Joe Goodman and Tom
Prater
Carbon
Brief interviews Prof Detlef
van Vuuren, the author most
cited within all the reports
published by the
Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change since 1990.
Daisy
Dunne, Josh Gabbatiss, Molly
Lempriere, Orla Dwyer and
Simon Evans
A
new UK Climate Change
Committee report says that
faster electrification is the
best way to secure lower
energy bills and stronger
energy security.
Ayesha
Tandon
The
latest edition of Carbon
Brief’s brand-new Cited
newsletter, your essential
guide to the latest climate
research. Sign up for
free.
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Ashifa
Kassam, The Guardian
There
is widespread coverage of
ongoing extreme heat in
western Europe. The Guardian
reports that France’s national
heat index – an average of the
day and night-time highs –
reached a record-high 29.8C
yesterday. Since 18 June, 40
people have drowned while
swimming amid daytime
temperatures of above 40C that
have “left parts of western
France suffering”, the
newspaper reports. A liveblog
from the Libération
contained accounts of the heat
from across France, including
on worker strikes. French
farmers are “seeing livestock
die and are racing against
time to harvest cereals
without sparking fires in the
tinder-dry crops”, reports Agence
France-Presse. Le Monde
says the heatwave “spells
uncertainty” for some nuclear
reactors, but that the wider
power grid is “secure”.
Climatologists tell Le Monde
that they are weary, angry and
disappointed that their
repeated messages about the
harms of human-caused climate
change “have not been taken
more seriously” by
politicians. Another Le Monde
article looks at the impacts
for older people. The Louvre
and the Eiffel Tower are
shutting earlier than usual in
the heat, reports Bloomberg.
BBC News
says that “France, Spain and
Italy have been hardest hit by
the heatwave so far”.
In
the UK, “searing heat” has
left schools, hospitals,
transport networks and water
companies “struggling to
cope”, the Guardian
reports on its frontpage.
The newspaper says
temperatures reached highs of
34.6C in Surrey and could rise
to 38C today and 39C tomorrow.
Northern Ireland and Scotland
reported their hottest days of
the year so far, reports BBC News.
The Independent
lists the hundreds of schools
in England and Wales closing
or finishing early due to the
heat. Parents are “buying air
conditioning units for
schools”, reports the Financial Times.
Businesses and the government
pushed back against calls to
introduce a “maximum working
temperature”, says the Financial Times.
The climate-sceptic Daily Mail
describes workers and
schoolchildren staying home in
the heat as the “great British
bunk off”. BBC News
discusses different ways of
“coping” with the heat and the
Guardian
covers “innovative” ways to
cool your home. A number of UK
newspapers cover the extreme
heat on their frontpages
including the Times, i newspaper
and Daily Telegraph.
A
climate science professor
tells BBC News:
“We expect increasing
temperatures and the breaking
of temperature records due to
climate change…What is so
extraordinary, however, is the
margin by which the record
will be broken.” Reuters
explains the “omega block”
weather pattern sustaining the
heat in western Europe. The
heat is a “stark reminder that
[Europe] is the world's
fastest-warming continent”,
says Agence
France-Presse. The Associated
Press explains the “heat
dome”, which is also driving
temperatures. The New York Times
says scientists are assessing
the “upper limits of what the
warming climate can dish out”
in current heatwaves. Reuters
looks at the health risks of
extreme heat.
MORE
ON EXTREME WEATHER
-
The
Guardian
says scientists are
“alarmed” after two
wildfires were reported in
Greenland in one week.
-
BBC News
looks at what a “super” El
Niño would mean for North America.
-
“Extreme
heat in London has led to
the cancellation of a
climate event on the topic
of extreme heat”,
according to the Independent.
-
The
Guardian:
“Majority of datacenters
are vulnerable to climate
threats like floods and
fires, study finds.”
-
JPMorgan
executives believe that
“more frequent heatwaves
come with profound
implications for energy
demand”, reports Bloomberg.
Attracta
Mooney, Financial Times
UK
homes face “higher energy
bills because the country is
not moving to heat pumps and
electric cars fast enough”,
says a new report from the
Climate Change Committee (CCC)
covered by the Financial
Times. The newspaper reports:
“A typical household could
save around £1,200 a year on
their energy bills by using an
EV, a heat pump, solar panels
and a time-of-use tariff, with
this rising to £1,900 for some
rural houses.” Bloomberg
says the report adds that the
decarbonisation focus needs to
“shift to electrifying demand
to absorb growing volumes of
renewable power”. The coverage
in BBC News
focuses on heat pump figures
in the report, noting that
installations “grew just 7%
last year – down from a bumper
56% in 2024”. The broadcaster
adds that the drop came “after
the government withdrew a
controversial grant scheme to
help poorer households install
the technology”. The Guardian
reports that CCC chair Nigel
Topping says weakening
net-zero policy would disrupt
business and damage the
economy. Reuters, BusinessGreen
and the Daily Telegraph
also cover the report. [Read Carbon Brief’s
coverage here.]
MORE
ON UK
-
Andy
Burnham has faced “demands
to rule out” appointing
energy secretary Ed
Miliband as chancellor, if
Burnham becomes the next
prime minister, according
to the Daily Mail.
In a frontpage
story, the i newspaper
quotes Miliband “allies”
who say he is “prepared to
soften his stance on North
Sea gas drilling in a move
that would smooth his path
to becoming chancellor”.
-
Miliband
and UK net-zero policies
were criticised at a
conference described as
the “anti-woke Davos”,
reports the Guardian. A
separate Guardian
article notes that dozens
of economists have written
to the leader of trade
union Unite to “reject”
her claim that Miliband
would “destroy jobs” as
chancellor.
-
Campaigners
who claimed the UK
government “had not
properly assessed [the]
climate impact” of
expansion at Gatwick
Airport have lost two high
court challenges, reports
BBC News.
-
The
government is planning
rules to ensure certain
goods sold in the UK, such
as coffee and cocoa, have
not been produced on
illegally deforested land,
says Reuters.
-
The
climate-sceptic Daily Telegraph
says: “The boss of
Britain’s biggest garden
centre chain has warned
that Ed Miliband’s rush to
hit net-zero risks
saddling it with millions
of pounds in extra costs.”
-
A
retired gamekeeper told
MPs that “Labour’s
rewilding drive risks
fuelling deadly fires in
the countryside”, reports
the Daily Telegraph.
Zhang
Xu, Jiemian
China’s
Ministry of Emergency
Management said yesterday that
China is likely to experience
an “above-average number of
extreme weather events during
this year’s main flood
season”, with both droughts
and floods occurring, reports
business news outlet Jiemian.
Shen Zhanli, a spokesperson
for the ministry, said five
major rivers could face
“severe flooding”, adding that
the number and intensity of
typhoons may also be above
average, says the outlet.
State-run newspaper Guangming Daily
quotes Chen Lijuan, a
forecaster at China’s National
Climate Centre, saying extreme
weather events will become
more “frequent, intense and
widespread”, with the “primary
driver” being climate change.
Meanwhile, China’s AI weather
agent, MAZU, is being deployed
across developing countries to
combat severe “climate risks”,
according to state-run
newspaper China Daily.
It adds that the software is a
“critical component” of
China’s contribution to the
UN's “early warnings for all”
initiative, which “aims to
protect every person on Earth
from hazardous climate events
by the end of 2027”.
MORE
ON CHINA
-
Chinese
premier Li Qiang said
advanced nuclear power
equipment is of “great
significance to national
energy security” and can
better support low-carbon
development, reports Xinhua.
-
China’s
NEA has
released a notice
supporting the issuance of
“green certificates” for
renewable energy
generation projects
connected to “non-public
power grids”, reports BJX News.
-
As
“summer Davos” starts in
Dalian, the World Economic
Forum’s Roberto Bocca
writes an opinion article
in Yicai that
China “offers an example”
of how the energy
transition is also about
“security and economic
resilience”.
-
Financial Times:
“Renewable energy group to
raise $3.6bn in China’s
biggest IPO for four
years.”
-
Climate Home
News reports that
China’s new
coal-to-chemical projects
are “threatening China’s
climate goals” and
“reputation as a global
clean energy leader”.
-
The
South China
Morning Post says
that China’s exports of
“green” products,
including batteries and
solar cells, to the US
have accelerated in May. A
Global Times
editorial says that BRICS
members can forge a
pathway that balances the
economy with carbon
reduction.
Quinn
Glabicki, The New York Times
Former
US government workers have
“recreated a valuable
climate-science website” shut
down under the Trump
administration last year,
reports the New York Times.
The newspaper says: “The new
site, climate.us,
is an effort by former staff
members at the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration to present
climate science previously
housed at climate.gov,
including data, reports,
articles and congressionally
mandated national climate
assessments.” The information,
which includes “data and
reports on
climate-change-related
disasters like hurricanes,
wildfires and drought”, is now
available to the public for
free.
MORE
ON US
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Editorial,
The Guardian
The
ongoing extreme heat in
western Europe “should focus
minds on the UK’s lack of
preparedness for the climate
dangers ahead”, says an
editorial in the Guardian. The
article focuses on a recent
climate adaptation report from
the UK’s Climate Change
Committee, which found that
adaptation plans in all parts
of the UK “lag behind where
they need to be”. The report
received a “muted initial
response from ministers”, the
newspaper says, but adds that
the “hope must be that this
week’s heat will focus minds –
including Andy Burnham’s”. It
adds that the UK’s next
national adaptation plan is
due in two years and Burnham,
along with any other potential
candidates looking to replace
Keir Starmer as prime
minister, “must decide whether
to accept the committee’s
proposal for around £11bn in
annual spending…and if not,
why not”.
MORE
UK HEAT COMMENT
-
Science
commentator Anjana Ahuja
says in the Financial Times
that the current extreme
heat shows that “political
inaction in the battle
against climate change is
costly and getting
costlier”.
-
Analysis
by journalists Richard
Adams and Fiona Harvey in
the Guardian
says: “Failure to plan for
rising temperatures has
left UK’s schools
sweltering.”
-
In
the Conversation,
professors Ed Hawkins and
Hayley Fowler write about
their work recreating a
major 1976 heatwave in
“today’s climate”, finding
that a comparable event
would be several degrees
higher in the current
warmer world.
-
Writer
Ysenda Maxtone Graham says
in the climate-sceptic Daily Telegraph
that “heatwave hysterics
wouldn’t have lasted a day
in 1976”.
-
An
editorial in the Daily Express
tells readers to “stay
safe” and check on
vulnerable neighbours in
the extreme heat.
-
The
climate-sceptic Daily Express
and Sun carry
comment articles
criticising concern about
heat extremes.
James
Murray, BusinessGreen
James
Murray, editor-in-chief of
BusinessGreen, argues that
Keir Starmer’s resignation
speech “continued one of the
flaws that defined his
premiership – a refusal to
promote the bold climate
policies his government has
enacted”. Murray says that
Keir Starmer “did not see fit
to mention climate change
once” in his speech on Monday.
He continues: “He made no
claim to the agenda that has
arguably been one of the few
unalloyed successes of his
government and which poll
after poll shows plays well
with Labour's base and the
voters it is losing to the
Greens and Lib Dems. In so
doing, he actively encouraged
the idea that these
achievements belong to Ed
Miliband and not the prime
minister who backed them.”
MORE
COMMENT
-
Terry
Garcia, former deputy
administrator of the
National Oceanic and
Atmospheric
Administration, writes in
the Guardian:
“A super El Niño threatens
disaster. Trump is
handling it recklessly.”
-
The
world must “electrify” to
“avoid climate peril”, the
president-designate of
COP31, Turkey’s
environment minister Murat
Kurum, writes in Project
Syndicate.
-
In
the Financial Times,
writer Alan Beattie says
that the EU’s carbon
pricing model is “being
supplanted by Beijing’s
green tech spending and
Donald Trump’s oil price
shock”.
-
In
ProPublica,
journalist Alex Cuadros
details his experience
calling Donald Trump to
discuss the oil industry.
-
A
Sun
editorial describes the
prospect of UK energy
secretary Ed Miliband
becoming the next
chancellor as
“terrifying”.
-
Deputy
head of visual journalism
at the Daily Telegraph,
David Stevenson, writes:
“How climate change and
the extreme hot weather
could reshape the global
economy.”
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-
Marine
heatwaves in New Caledonia
in the south Pacific can
be successfully predicted
up to seven months in
advance during the cold
season | Ocean Science
-
China’s
“clean coal substitution”
policy may lead to
decreased welfare for
rural residents, due to
increased energy costs,
but this can be mitigated
through subsidisation | Energy Policy
-
Desert-dwelling
bird species in the
western US that had
previously been exposed to
drought experience smaller
population declines than
species with less previous
exposure | Conservation
Biology
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Colleen
Howe and Sam Li, Reuters
Megan
Rowling, Climate Home News
Marc
Jones, Reuters
Ben
Elgin, Bloomberg
Ruma
Paul, Reuters
Jamie
Smyth, Alexandra White and
Ian Johnston, Financial
Times
Adam
Wentworth, Climate Home News
Brenda
Strohmaier, EurActiv
Alexa
St John, The Associated
Press
Jessica
Kim and Erik Hertzberg,
Bloomberg
Kiley
Price, Inside Climate News
Mason
WC Bunting, The Guardian
Reuters
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