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New
on Carbon Brief
•
Media reaction: How climate
change intensified Europe’s
record-breaking June heat
•
Q&A: What change of power
in Colombia could mean for
world’s fossil-fuel transition
•
Guest post: Climate change has
caused one-fifth of Pine
Island glacier retreat
•
DeBriefed: Heat records broken
across Europe | London climate
action week | Introducing
‘Project Cosmos'
News
•
Europe's heatwave linked to
1,300 deaths, WHO says, as
Germany hits record 41.7C | BBC
News
•
UK sets hottest June day
record again as temperatures
to fall | BBC News
•
Germany urges EU to suspend
methane rules after US
pressure | Financial
Times
•
US court rejects EPA bid to
ease regulations for
coal-fired power plants | Reuters
•
UK: Hydropower among energy
storage projects given Ofgem
green light | Times
•
China targets more than
2,800GW of wind and solar
capacity, over 20tn yuan in
energy investment during 15th
‘five-year plan’ | International
Energy Net
Comment
•
France heatwave: Why
adaptation and mitigation must
go hand in hand | Editorial,
Le Monde
•
Britain was built for a
climate that no longer exists
| Editorial, Times
Research
•
New research on heat
inequalities in sub-Saharan
Africa, carbon storage in
boreal forests and tropical
sea surface temperatures
Other
stories
•
Ireland aims to have EUETS
overhaul wrapped up by
Christmas | Euractiv
•
Airlines brace for up to
$127bn in extra costs from
carbon credit shortage | Financial
Times
•
Philippines leads the world in
rush to solar as power prices
soar | Reuters
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Cecilia
Keating, Ayesha Tandon,
Giuliana Viglione, Robert
McSweeney and Josh Gabbatiss
How
the media has covered Europe’s
latest heatwave and the role
of climate change.
Daisy
Dunne
Carbon
Brief looks at the
implications of Colombia’s
presidential election result.
Dr
Alex Bradley
An
author of a new study explains
how human-caused warming has
contributed to the retreat of
Antarctica’s vast Pine Island
glacier since pre-industrial
times.
Ayesha
Tandon and Daisy Dunne
The
online version of Carbon
Brief’s weekly DeBriefed email
newsletter. Subscribe for
free.
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Neil
Murphy, BBC News
Europe’s
“unprecedented early summer
heatwave” has been linked to
“more than 1,300 excess
deaths”, reports BBC News,
picking up comments from the
head of the World Health
Organization. The broadcaster
adds: “On Sunday morning,
France's national health
ministry said there had been
around 1,000 more deaths than
expected in the country since
Wednesday.” It says that
temperature records were
“broken across the continent
again on Sunday – including in
Germany, Poland and Czechia –
as the extreme heat continued
to move east”. The Guardian
says Germany, Czechia, Poland
and Hungary have all seen
record temperatures above 40C.
Deutsche Welle
reports on the German heat
record being broken for the
third day in a row, hitting
41.7C. The Associated
Press also reports on
France’s “1,000 excess
deaths”.
Reuters
reports: “Scientists have said
the heatwave, which began on
20 June, was the worst
recorded in Europe, and the
blistering conditions have
disrupted power generation,
damaged infrastructure and
overwhelmed healthcare
systems.” Le Monde
says the heatwave is “in line
with that of 2003, which was
much more intense than that of
1976”. CNBC says
“red-alert heatwaves are
becoming Europe’s new normal”.
The New York Times
says Europe’s “trains, nuclear
plants and factories can’t
take the heat either”. Agence
France-Presse says Swiss
glaciers are “facing drastic
loss from the heatwave”. The Guardian
reports that a “fourth toddler
dies in France” amid the heat.
The
Financial Times
asks what the heatwave will
cost, saying: “A growing body
of research points to economic
damage from extreme heat.” Politico
reports on attempts by US
energy secretary Chris Wright
to downplay the impact of
Europe’s deadly heatwave,
saying: “More people die in
the winter.” It says the
comments were made at a
conference attended by Nigel
Farage, leader of the UK’s
hard-right Reform UK. It adds:
“Mathias Döpfner, CEO of Axel
Springer, the owner of
Politico, also spoke at the
conference.” DeSmog also
covers the “far-right” event.
MORE
ON CONTINENTAL EUROPE
HEATWAVE
-
Financial Times:
“Parisians seek refuge
from heatwave in
air-conditioned hotels.”
-
The
Times:
“Sweltering French say
it’s better to be cool
than green.”
-
The
Economist:
“Berlin is even worse
equipped than Paris for
Europe’s heatwave.”
-
E&E News:
“France’s record heatwave
burns Le Pen’s National
Rally.”
-
The
New York Times:
“As Europe sweats, some
politicians talk of
air-conditioning, not
climate action.”
-
Politico:
“Why Europe’s heatwaves
are still so deadly.”
Zahra
Fatima and Elizabeth
Rizzini, BBC News
The
UK saw its hottest June day on
record for the third day in a
row on Friday, reports BBC
News. It says the heatwave
“resulted in travel
disruption, hundreds of
schools closing and six NHS
trusts declaring critical
incidents after being
overwhelmed with patients”. It
adds: “While it is hard to
link climate change to
individual extreme weather
events, scientists say climate
change is making heatwaves
more frequent and intense.” [A
rapid attribution study found
last week’s heat would have
been “virtually
impossible” without
climate change.]
The
Guardian
says the third day in a row of
broken records had triggered
“increasingly urgent calls for
action to protect people
against the intensifying
effects of the climate
crisis”. A frontpage
story in the Independent
says the heatwave “must be [a]
‘wake-up call’ for Britain to
prepare for Mediterranean
climate, experts warn”. The Observer
looks at how Europe is
“heating up at nearly twice
the global average”. The Guardian
asks: “[A]fter decades of
climate warnings, why is
Europe so unprepared for
rising heat?” The Times says
the heatwave saw “refrigerated
warehouses…pushed to their
limits”.
The
Times
reports on a moorland wildfire
in Derbyshire that came “after
June heat record smashed
again”. The climate-sceptic Daily Mail
attempts to link the fire to
“Labour’s ‘woke’ rewilding
drive”. It says: “While the
cause of [the fire] remains
unknown, the government was
warned its rewilding policies
may have added fuel to the
flames.” A frontpage
story in the Sunday
Telegraph reports on
plans to trial a “cooling
drive” in London homes, which
it criticises for not
prioritising air conditioning.
The Guardian
reports on “emerging research”
that it says “suggests
datacentres create a heat
island effect, pushing up
temperatures in the immediate
vicinity by as much as 9C”. BBC News:
“Why some trees might fall
during extreme heat.”
MORE
ON UK HEATWAVE
-
BBC News:
“Record temperatures
drives up home air
conditioning sales.”
-
The
Times:
“Britons embrace air con
units, the pricey way to
beat the heatwave.”
-
Financial Times:
“Extreme heat elevates
national security risk at
London climate week.”
Ian
Johnston, Financial Times
Germany
has called on the EU to
suspend implementation of new
rules on methane imports,
reports the Financial Times,
“after the US warned that the
proposed crackdown on leaks
and flares puts Europe’s gas
supplies at risk”. It says the
Germany intervention “came
ahead of a meeting of energy
ministers in Luxembourg on
Friday, where 12 member states
including Italy, the
Netherlands and Poland called
for a three-year suspension of
the legislation. Germany had
not signed the declaration,
but had previously called for
the regulation to be
implemented with
‘pragmatism’.” The newspaper
adds: “On Friday, EU energy
commissioner Dan Jørgensen
told ministers the Commission
would not amend the
legislation as this ‘would
only increase insecurity and
uncertainty in the market’.
But he said the Commission was
working on further guidance to
help industries and member
states to demonstrate they
comply with the rules.” Reuters and
Bloomberg
also have the story. E&E News:
“Big Oil's campaign to stop EU
methane restrictions is
working.”
Valerie
Volcovici and David
Shepardson, Reuters
A
US federal appeals court has
“rejected the Environmental
Protection Agency's bid to
withdraw Biden-era limits on
soot pollution from
coal-fired power plants and
factories”, reports Reuters.
The Associated
Press says: “The
unanimous ruling by a
three-judge panel is a setback
for the Trump administration’s
deregulatory agenda and its
repeated efforts to boost
coal, a reliable but polluting
energy source.” Another Reuters
story says the Trump
administration “issued an
emergency order to keep a
coal-fired power unit in
Colorado operational to
ensure reliable electricity
supply, the US Department of
Energy said on Friday”.
MORE
ON US
-
Euronews
reports: “Why Trump is
losing the war on
renewables.”
-
The
Daily Telegraph:
“Shine, baby, shine:
Trump’s White House
oversees golden age of
solar.”
-
BBC News:
“Three firefighters die
battling huge wildfires in
Colorado.”
-
The
Associated
Press: “Winds hamper
crews as fast-moving fire
in Utah, the largest in
the US, burns through
forests.”
-
Bloomberg:
“America’s biggest
windfarm arrives just as
industry heads for
declines.”
-
The
New York Times:
“Oil industry lawyers
fight a $50bn climate case
in Oregon.”
Charlotte
Bend, The Times
Energy
regulator Ofgem has
provisionally “given the green
light to 16 long-duration
electricity storage projects
under a scheme aimed at
strengthening domestic power
supply and lowering costs”,
reports the Times. It says the
projects, including three
large pumped hydro schemes
making up 4 gigawatts (GW) of
the 7.6GW total, are set to
receive support under a
“cap-and-floor” scheme that
offers minimum income and a
limit on profits. The Guardian
says the hydro projects are
the first major schemes of the
type in 40 years. It adds that
“most” of the remaining
projects are lithium-ion
batteries. The Financial Times,
BusinessGreen
and the Daily Telegraph
all have the story.
MORE
ON UK
-
The
Times says
that a mooted £400m pledge
for rainforest protection
was “shelved…during a
bitter row over defence
spending”.
-
BBC News:
“Reform UK climate debate
delayed over extreme
heat.”
-
The
Daily Mail
calls the UK’s emissions
trading system a
“controversial emissions
tax”, in an article that
sums revenues over several
years to make them seem
bigger.
-
The
Daily Telegraph continues
its climate-sceptic
reporting with articles on
the heatwave “melt[ing]
Britain’s power network”,
net-zero “putting
[bricks]…at risk”
and “pro-union rules”
in the wind industry.
-
Briefing
continues against energy
secretary Ed Miliband’s
bid to become chancellor
under incoming prime
minister Andy Burnham,
with articles in the two articles in
the Daily Telegraph and
more from the Daily Express
and the Times. The
Guardian
reports Labour’s deputy
leader saying Miliband
would make a “good”
chancellor.
-
The
Times
reports calls from Labour
donor, renewable energy
entrepreneur and serial
campaigner against climate
policy Dale Vince for
Burnham to “ditch
net-zero”.
International
Energy Net
Head
of China’s National Energy
Administration (NEA),
Wang Hongzhi, has said at a
press conference that China’s
investment in “key energy
projects and new business
models” over the next five
years will exceed 20tn yuan
($2.9tn), according to
International Energy Net. Wang
said investment in
strengthening energy security
will rise 10% than during the
“14th five-year
plan”, grid investment
will rise 30% and investment
in projects including “green
hydrogen” and “direct green
power connections” will exceed
2tn yuan. Shanghai-based
outlet the Paper
quotes NEA’s Ren Yuzhi, saying
China aims to reduce carbon
emissions per unit of
electricity generated by more
than 10%. Ren also said China
will save more than 150m
tonnes of coal equivalent in
key industries, reports the Beijing News.
The NEA’s vice head, Wan
Jinsong, said fossil fuels
should be kept “limited but
stable” to safeguard China’s
energy security, reports state
broadcaster CCTV. Bloomberg
cites Wang saying that China
will “always prioritise energy
security”, which shows that
the “stability” of China’s
energy market “continues to
outweigh climate concerns”.
Meanwhile, there is ongoing
coverage of the details of the
plan in state news agency Xinhua,
power news outlet BJX News
and Reuters.
MORE
ON CHINA
-
China
and Europe have
established a cooperation
consortium for “green
electricity
certification” to
promote the connection of
“renewable energy
standards, rules, and
resources”, reports Yicai.
-
Chinese
president Xi Jinping has
said that China and
Bangladesh will expand
cooperation in “green and
low-carbon development”,
reports Xinhua.
-
A Global Times
editorial says China’s
“green production
capacity” has “bridged the
global supply-demand gap
in green development” and
“promoted the world’s
energy transition”.
-
China Daily
reports the EU “failed” to
address China’s concerns,
casting a “dim outlook”
over their first meeting
under a consultation
mechanism. China has urged
Austria to respect each
other’s “core interests”
and work to improve
China-EU ties, reports Reuters.
-
Chinese
scientists have found that
thawing permafrost can
form a “previously
overlooked natural carbon
sink” by absorbing some
CO2, says Shangguan News.
-
China Daily:
“Adapting to climate
change vital for
agriculture.”
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Editorial,
Le Monde
An
editorial in France’s Le Monde
reacts to the record-breaking
heatwave that has gripped
France over the past couple of
weeks: “With heatwaves
becoming more frequent and
intense, this presidential
campaign year should be an
opportunity to move beyond the
opposition between
‘adaptation’ and ‘mitigation”,
it argues, adding: “These two
approaches, which are
complementary, require
policies with different
timeframes. Adaptation is
urgent, especially for the
most vulnerable populations.
Expanding air conditioning,
particularly in hospitals and
schools, is one necessary
response. The second, which
takes longer to implement, is
essential: nothing will be
solved without addressing the
root causes of climate change
and greenhouse gas emissions.”
Separately,
deputy editor Ellen Halliday
writes in Prospect
magazine that, in response to
the deadly heatwave, ”many
usually sensible people seemed
to approach the heat with a
kind of scepticism”. Halliday
concludes: “Net-zero isn’t a
slogan. It is a goal based on
incontrovertible scientific
evidence, and it is under
attack from parties not just
on the hard right but also on
the centre right…When we
choose…not to feel the heat,
or to acknowledge its
dangers – we are not being
brave. We’re seeking comfort
in denial.” News analysis from
Nature
looks at “whether scorching
summers are the new norm” for
Europe. Analysis from CBC News is
titled: “Why Europe can't air
condition its way out of
extreme heat.” Trailed on the
Observer
frontpage, climate editor
Jeevan Vasagar says: “Access
to cooling should be a right
for all.”
MORE
HEATWAVE COMMENT
-
Jonathan
Freedland in the Guardian:
“Climate sceptics cheering
as they melt in record
temperatures? This
heatwave is where satire
has come to die.”
-
Phineas
Harper in the Guardian:
“Not just for rich people:
the progressive case for
air conditioning.”
-
In
the Sunday Times,
columnist Robert Colville
writes on the “air-con
wars”.
-
A
Lex column in the Financial Times
says: “Why keeping Europe
cool need not be a
luxury.”
-
The
Times
science writer Tom Whipple
says record temperatures
make the idea of solar
geoengineering seem less
“far-fetched”.
-
A
Sunday Times
“weekend essay” by AN
Wilson is headlined:
“We’ll muddle through this
heat – but it will change
us.”
-
Climate-sceptic
William Sitwell in the Daily Telegraph
claims: “Shutting schools
because of heat teaches
kids to give up.”
Editorial,
The Times
Many
UK outlets continue to publish
commentary reacting to last
week’s recording-break
heatwave. An editorial in the
Times argues that “Britain is
not prepared for the effects
of extreme heat, and it must
become so at speed”. It adds:
“More far-sighted, ingenious
solutions are needed to tackle
the effects of climate change
as well as to slow it down.
Every pound wisely spent on
the former, the CCC argues,
will result in five more being
saved down the line. Along
with heatwaves, the government
must also consider the
increase in winter floods and
summer droughts…short-term
thinking is no longer an
option. The future is already
here.” An editorial in the Sunday Mirror
says the heatwave shows the
world is “clearly getting
hotter” and that things will
“only get worse…unless climate
change targets are met”. It
says this is “why we must not
let up on net-zero goals”. An
editorial in the Sunday Times
complains about a “hotter,
drier climate” that “suits
less welcome species” in UK
gardens.
Meanwhile,
an editorial in the Observer,
trailed on the frontpage
and titled “It’s the climate,
stupid,” says that the
heatwave “exposed a national
tendency to discuss weather,
not climate, and effects, not
causes”. Arguing that it is
“time for a serious strategy”,
it says that energy secretary
Ed Miliband “has the
misfortune of becoming a
political outlier by thinking
straight and doing the right
thing on net-zero while the
world shifted around him”. It
calls on incoming prime
minister Andy Burnham to
approve the Jackdaw gas field,
but also to “show that he sees
the big picture as clearly as
Miliband by committing at the
same time to the grid upgrades
and energy storage needed for
full low-carbon
electrification”. The Scotsman
also calls for “both net-zero
and North Sea oil”. An
editorial in the Independent
is headlined: “Heatwave
Britain must do more to
prepare for this scorching new
normal.”
MORE
UK COMMENT
-
Mariana
Mazzucato, an economics
professor at University
College London, makes her
case in the Guardian
for a new “economic
vision” under Andy
Burnham: “Every £1 of
public money spent on
net-zero delivers between
£2.20 and £4.10 in
return.”
-
Josh
Ryan-Collins, another
professor of economics at
UCL, writes in the Guardian:
“Ed Miliband as chancellor
would benefit every part
of the UK – and the bond
markets”
-
An
editorial in the
climate-sceptic Sun,
fearing Ed Miliband could
become chancellor under
Burnham, claims
misleadingly that he has
“already sacrificed
thousands of jobs on the
altar of net-zero”.
-
Climate-sceptic
columnist Stephen Pollard
also rages in the Daily Mail
against Miliband’s
“obsession with net-zero”.
Two comment articles in
the Daily Express also
attack Miliband.
-
Heather
Stewart in the Guardian:
“Rising cost of insuring
against climate crisis
will have wider knock-on
effects for UK economy.”
-
In
the Times,
weather columnist Paul
Simons writes: “UK can set
an example with net-zero
progress.” Also in the Times,
contributor Jessica Cook
says there is a “hidden
cost of net-zero”, adding:
“The climate benefits may
yet arrive. The
opportunity cost already
has.”
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-
Agricultural
plots of land in
sub-Saharan Africa owned
by women are face heat
impacts 2-2.5 times higher
than those owned by men |
Nature
Sustainability
-
Boreal
forests in northern
Eurasia absorbed 0.47bn
tonnes of carbon each year
over 2001-15, accounting
for around one third of
the total global land
carbon sink | Global
Biogeochemical Cycles
-
“Tropical
interannual sea surface
temperature variability”
could start to weaken in
the next few decades | Nature Climate
Change
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Euractiv
Kenza
Bryan, Financial Times
Sudarshan
Varadhan, Ruth Chai and
Adrian Portugal, Reuters
Lucy
Craymer, Reuters
Jeremy
Hart, The Times
Charlie
Cooper and Nicholas Earl,
Politico
Peter
Campbell, Financial Times
Jake
Horton, Tom Shiel, Ciaran
Varley and Katie Gornall,
BBC News
Simon
Freeman, The Times
Jude
Webber, Ilya Gridneff and
Kana Inagaki, Financial
Times
Mark
Chediak, Bloomberg
Vivian
Chime, Climate Home News
Editorial,
Dagsavisen (Norway)
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