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New
on Carbon Brief
•
Factcheck: Trump’s false
claims about the IPCC and
‘RCP8.5’ climate scenario
•
CCC: Investing in ‘urgent’ UK
adaptation action ‘cheaper
than climate damages'
News
•
Iran energy shock supports
boom in renewables and
electrification | Bloomberg
•
UK should set maximum working
temperature rules, advisers
say | BBC News
•
‘Foolish’ CSIRO job cuts will
mean Australia unable to
provide climate projections to
global reports, scientists
warn | Guardian
•
At least 21 killed as heavy
rains drench southern, central
China | Reuters
•
India’s peak power demand hits
record 260.5GW | Economic
Times
•
UK: MPs reject Tory bid to
issue new oil and gas licences
| Press Association
Comment
•
Britain must think like a hot
country – otherwise
inequalities will only grow |
Fiona Harvey, Guardian
Research
•
New research on respiratory
deaths in Brazil, seabird
ranges and European wheat
losses
Other
stories
•
Protests spread in Africa as
fuel crisis deepens | Financial
Times
•
EU's fertiliser plan keeps
carbon border tax amid rising
costs | Euronews
•
Brazil proposes three-phase
carbon market rollout starting
2027 | Reuters
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Robert
McSweeney, Cecilia Keating
and Zeke Hausfather
Josh
Gabbatiss, Molly Lempriere
and Giuliana Viglione
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Akshat
Rathi, Bloomberg
Data
centres, population growth,
rising incomes and electric
vehicles are all playing a
role in “surging” demand for
electricity, according to a
new energy outlook report from
BNEF covered by Bloomberg. The
report shows that, in an
“economic transition scenario”
– where “green” policies
exist, but are not prioritised
by governments – solar will
become the largest contributor
in 2032 and wind the second
largest in 2034, both
displacing coal, it says.
However, Bloomberg continues,
“the planet [is] projected to
heat up 2.4C by 2050” under
this scenario, with emissions
from two of the three biggest
polluters – India, south-east
Asia and Latin America –
“continuing to rise”.
Bloomberg says the BNEF report
states that “successive energy
market shocks could be a boon
for the energy transition, as
some countries look to
decouple from imported fossil
fuels and bolster their energy
security”. The Financial Times
also covers the report,
explaining that solar is
expected to supply 21% of
global electricity by 2032 and
reach 30% by 2047. Semafor and
BusinessGreen
also cover the findings.
MORE
ON ENERGY TRANSITION:
-
Euractiv:
“Record demand for
electric cars worldwide,
Europe growing fastest.”
-
Shell
CEO Wael Sawan has said
that the current energy
shock shows that oil is
“essential for decades to
come”, as a shareholder
vote defeated a resolution
by climate activists,
reports the Times.
-
Axios
reports that US
corporations are “on
track” to buy more clean
energy this year than
“ever before”.
-
One
of the world’s “largest
energy storage plants” has
launched in South Dakota,
according to the Associated
Press. Meanwhile,
the US’s largest wind
project is on track to
come online next month,
says Bloomberg.
-
The
New York Times
covers plans being drawn
up in the US to require
owners of electric cars to
pay $130 to cover the cost
of road repairs – a fee
that experts have warned
is “substantially higher”
than average fuel prices
paid by fossil-fuel car
drivers and could “depress
sales”.
Mark
Poynting and Justin Rowlatt,
BBC News
There
is widespread UK media
coverage of a report from the
Climate Change Committee (CCC)
which examines how the UK can
adapt to climate change. BBC
News says the government's
climate advisors recommend
that the “UK should introduce
a maximum temperature for
workplaces to protect people
as heatwaves intensify due to
climate change”. Sky News
says the CCC has warned that
“air conditioning will soon be
‘unavoidable’ to protect many
Britons from unbearable summer
heat”. The report, it says,
identified more frequent
heatwaves as the “single
greatest climate threat to
public health” and has “called
for maximum temperature
regulations at work, cooling
in hospitals and care homes by
2035 and in schools by 2050”.
In its coverage of the report
recommendations, the Guardian
explains that air conditioning
will need to be installed in
“all care homes and hospitals
within the next 10 years, and
in all schools within 25
years”. Reuters
says the UK will need to
invest £11bn annually to make
homes and public buildings
“more resilient to the
escalating threats of drought,
flooding and extreme heat
waves, according to the
report. For more, read Carbon Brief's
in-depth summary of the CCC’s
recommendations.
MORE
ON UK
-
Financial Times:
“Power from Sizewell C
will be more expensive
than Hinkley Point, says
UK watchdog.”
-
Reform
UK’s climate-sceptic
spokesperson Richard Tice
has said the hard-right
party could use “judicial
reviews to delay new
[electricity] transmission
projects”, reports Bloomberg.
(See Comment below for
Bloomberg’s separate
in-depth interview with
Tice where he makes a wide
range of false and
misleading claims about
climate change and
net-zero policies.)
-
The
average price of unleaded
petrol has risen to
158.52p a litre, its
highest level since the
start of the Iran war,
according to motoring body
RAC, said BBC News.
-
Sky News
says that the UK
government has “watered
down” sanctions on Russia
amid the jet fuel crisis,
allowing diesel and jet
fuel from Russian crude
oil to enter the UK, if it
is refined in other
countries.
-
There
is continuing coverage in
the Financial Times,
Guardian, Independent,
Reuters and
Bloomberg
of a Cornwall Insight
forecast that UK energy
bills rising by £209 a
year from July.
-
Daily Telegraph:
“UK electric car market
growing faster than
China”.
Adam
Morton, The Guardian
“Multiple
sources” have reportedly told
the Guardian that Australia’s
national science agency –
CSIRO – is gearing up to
“sack” a third of the team
working on the national
climate model that provides
future climate projections
relied on by governments,
councils, industry and
farmers. The newspaper reports
that senior scientists said it
would result in Australia “no
longer having an
international-standard climate
model” that would contribute
projections to the UN
climate-science body, the
Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC). The
Guardian adds that CSIRO
management is expected to
confirm it is making 100
scientists redundant at a
staff meeting tomorrow. “About
five” of the 15 CSIRO
scientists who work on the
model known as the Australian
Community Climate and Earth
System Simulator have been
told they will lose their job,
it reports.
Meanwhile,
there is continuing coverage
of inaccurate claims made by
US president Donald Trump on
social media last week that
the IPCC has “admitted” the
very-high emissions “RCP8.5”
climate scenario was “wrong”.
Carbon Brief
has factchecked the
president’s false assertions,
in a article that unpacks
Trump’s comments, the debate
around RCP8.5 and the “good”
and “bad” news within the
latest scenarios. Bloomberg
explains: “Scientists, not the
UN, are retiring RCP8.5 from
use in future climate
research; over the past decade
it was a mainstay in landmark
UN climate reports. But the
end of the RCP8.5 era is the
result not of errors,
according to scientists, but
of recent research on
emissions pathways that have
made the old worst-case
scenario irrelevant.” The Associated
Press notes that both
the “worst” and “best” case
scenarios previously used in
modelling have been deemed “no
longer plausible by
scientists”. The Washington Post,
Daily Express,
Euronews
and CNN also
cover the story.
MORE
ON SCIENCE
Reuters
“Widespread
flooding” triggered by
torrential rain across
southern and central China on
Tuesday has killed at least 21
people, according to Chinese
authorities, reports Reuters.
The newswire adds that eight
provinces have been warned of
a “high risk” of “landslides,
flash floods and severe urban
flooding and waterlogging”.
Another Reuters
report says that Hubei
province has experienced
“record-breaking rainfall”,
with 337 townships seeing
“over 40% of Hubei’s average
annual precipitation” from
last Saturday afternoon to
Monday. State broadcaster CGTN
reports that southwestern
China’s Chongqing has also
seen heavy rain recently.
State news agency Xinhua
reports rainfall during this
year’s “wheat maturation and
harvest period” in Henan,
China’s wheat production hub,
will be above normal. [The
articles do not mention
climate change in their
reporting.] China is focusing
on building its resilience to
“growing health risks linked
to climate change, Shen
Hongbing, vice minister of the
National Health Commission and
head of the National Disease
Control and Prevention
Administration, tells the
state-run newspaper China Daily.
MORE
ON CHINA
-
Vladimir
Putin is looking to
advance talks on the
planned Power of Siberia 2
gas pipeline project with
Xi Jinping during his
visit to Beijing, reports
Bloomberg.
A Xinhua
“commentary” says energy
is a “cornerstone of
China-Russia ties”.
-
China’s
electricity consumption in
April rose 6%
year-on-year, reports CEPN.
China’s wind power
generation fell 5% while
solar rose 7.1%
year-on-year, says International
Energy Net.
-
Chinese
vice premier Ding Xuexiang
has called for
“strengthening the green
foundation” of China’s
computing infrastructure,
reports People’s Daily.
-
China
plans to build the world’s
largest plant for
converting “coal to
ethylene glycol”, a “key
chemical”, reports Nikkei Asia.
-
Environmental
inspectors have criticised
officials in Heilongjiang
province for “destruction”
of wetlands and
“unauthorised
encroachment” into
protected areas, reports Xinhua.
-
Global Times
says that, for India,
importing Chinese clean
technology will reduce the
cost of new-energy
projects and accelerate
its energy transition.
Shilpa
Samant, The Economic Times
India's
peak power demand “smashed all
records” to reach 260.5
gigawatts (GW) on Tuesday
afternoon, as heatwave
conditions…”continued across
large parts of the country,
driving a sharp rise in
electricity consumption”,
reports the Economic Times.
The latest peak beat Monday’s
all-time high of 257.37GW,
adds the outlet, with “growing
evening demand bringing
renewed focus on the need for
storage systems and flexible
generation capacity”.
Coal-based power accounted for
69% of generation to meet
Monday’s peak, followed by 28%
from renewable energy sources,
reports the Hindu
Businessline. The “new
records” arrive as India’s
meteorological authorities
forecast “intense to severe
heatwave conditions” over
large parts of northwest and
central India over the next
two days, Business
Standard writes, with
daytime temperatures in New
Delhi expected to hit 45C.
As
power demand “surged” to
record highs, Reuters
reports that a solar industry
group has asked India's
power-market regulator to
increase the cap on
electricity prices at power
exchanges. According to the
newswire, the group told
India’s Central Electricity
Authority that the country’s
power producers are “often
forced to sell electricity at
low prices during periods of
weak demand, but cannot make
up for those losses when
demand rises” because of the
price cap, “discouraging
investment in areas such as
energy storage”. Meanwhile,
new analysis by energy
thinktank Ember covered by Down to Earth
estimates that India “lost”
300GWh of renewable power
because of “transmission
constraints”.
Separately,
a CarbonCopy
investigation finds that
India’s liquefied petroleum
gas (LPG) market “is beginning
to shed the poorest people in
India”, who are now paying
“some of the highest rates
anywhere in the world” for
cooking gas. At the same time,
unnamed sources tell Bloomberg
that India is considering
rolling out more than $1bn in
incentives to “spur
private-sector adoption of
electric buses and trucks, in
an attempt to cut fossil-fuel
use in the segment amid a
deepening energy crisis”.
Finally, another Bloomberg
story reports that India’s
airline operators have asked
state-run oil refiners to
“hold off on hiking jet fuel
prices for domestic flights
until the conflict in the
Middle East ends”, with
India’s oil and gas ministry
also included in the
discussions.
MORE
ON INDIA
-
The
India Meteorological
Department is considering
revising the criteria for
declaring heatwaves “amid
growing concerns that
climate change is making
extreme heat events more
frequent, intense and
prolonged”, reports News18.
-
A
Down to Earth
comment argues India’s
heatwaves are a “gendered
disaster”, observing that
the “climate catastrophe
is no longer an abstract
scientific projection”,
but is happening “in
overcrowded homes,
hospital wards,
agricultural fields and
city streets, where women
are paying the hidden cost
of rising heat”.
-
A
Mongabay
long-read looks at how
heat and climate change
are affecting bovine
health and the livelihoods
of the country’s cattle
owners.
-
Bloomberg
looks at how the central
Indian city of Nagpur –
“one of the hottest cities
in the world – has “some
of the costliest power in
the country”, making
cooling unaffordable for
low-income families.
Rhiannon
James, Press Association
A
majority of 215 MPs have voted
to reject a Conservative
opposition proposal which
pressed ministers to approve
oil-and-gas drilling at the
Rosebank and Jackdaw fields in
the North Sea, reports the
Press Association. Energy
secretary Ed Miliband told MPs
the UK remains “deeply
vulnerable” while it is
exposed to the “fossil-fuel
rollercoaster”, according to
the newswire. He continued:
“Our sovereignty, our security
and the British people’s
living standards are
undermined by this dependence
and exposure because – for a
simple reason – we do not
control the price of oil and
gas, which is set on
international markets.” Claire
Coutinho, shadow energy
secretary, described the
government’s position on oil
and gas as “the single
greatest act of industrial
self-harm…seen in a
generation”, according to the
newswire. She also reportedly
said that “only a complete
whacko” would respond to a
supply shortage by “shutting
down” a country’s oil and gas
industry. [Carbon Brief
analysis has shown how the
price of gas, which is set on
international markets, is the
main driver of the UK’s high
electricity bills.]
Separately, the Daily Telegraph
covers calls on Labour from
Shell CEO Wael Sawan to
“approve” the two fields.
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Fiona
Harvey, The Guardian
In
an “analysis” reflecting on
the latest warnings (see News
above) from the UK’s Climate
Change Committee (CCC), the
Guardian's environment editor
Fiona Harvey writes that
“Britons are going to have to
get used to living in a hot
country”. She continues:
“Without strong preventive
action, a hotter Britain will
also be a far more unequal
country.” Harvey quotes Cath
Smith from the Green Alliance
thinktank, who says: “Impacts
such as heat and flooding
intersect with inequalities in
income, health, housing and
place, leaving some
communities facing greater
harm with fewer resources to
adapt or recover. If policy
doesn’t acknowledge the
growing and unequal impacts of
climate change, then there is
a real risk that rising
temperatures will exacerbate
inequalities.” The
climate-sceptic Sun has a
different take on the report,
noting in an editorial that
the CCC’s “latest great
wheeze” is to “force mandatory
working from home” during
heatwaves. It continues: “How
letting workers bask in the
garden will help to fix
Britain’s productivity crisis
remains a mystery.”
In
other UK comment, Conservative
opposition leader Kemi
Badenoch writes in the
climate-sceptic Daily Express
that Keir Starmer’s pledge to
cut energy bills amounts to
“another failed promise” in
light of the recent forecast
that energy bills are set to
rise by more than £200 per
year in July. The comment
piece – reported on the Daily
Express’ frontpage –
claims that the
Conservatives are working
on “serious plans to bring
down bills”. The Tory plan,
she adds, would cut household
bills by an “average of £200,
remove VAT on bills and cut
business electricity costs by
20%”. She continues that her
party would “axe the carbon
tax to save industry” and “get
Britain drilling our own oil
and gas in the North Sea”.
Badenoch argues that Starmer
could “do all this immediately
and save everyone money”, but
he “doesn’t dare” because he
is “now in a battle with
energy secretary Ed Miliband
for his survival”. [As noted
above – and in this Carbon
Brief factcheck –
it is the price of gas, which
is set on electricity markets,
that is responsible for the
UK’s high electricity prices.
Meanwhile, UK energy trade
body Energy UK has forecast
that scrapping carbon pricing
in the UK would increase
bills.]
Separately,
Bloomberg
has an in-depth podcast
interview with Reform UK
energy spokesperson Richard
Tice where he says: “I'm
saying very clearly and any
investors listening to this,
don't invest in AR7, AR8
[upcoming renewables auctions]
and beyond. We put people on
notice. Invest in nuclear.
Invest in gas. Invest in oil.
Don’t invest in renewables.”
Amid a slew of false and
misleading claims, Tice says
he “fundamentally disagreed”
with the research presented by
the IPCC, but declines to name
advisers who convinced him the
scientific consensus was
wrong. He also threatens to
storm out of the interview
when presented with evidence
challenging his views.
MORE
COMMENT
-
In
the climate-sceptic Daily Telegraph,
business editor Ben Marlow
claims chancellor Rachel
Reeves’ plan to scrap fuel
duty is an “attempt to
gaslight the entire
nation”.
-
In
the Times,
climate-sceptic columnist
Melanie Phillips argues –
without evidence – that
the BBC presents a raft of
issues – including climate
change – through a
“left-wing prism”, which
includes “falsehoods,
distortions and selective
reporting, as well as a
skewed choice of
interviewees, a
tendentious way of framing
questions and the ruthless
exclusion of those who see
the world in a different
way”.
-
An
editorial in the
climate-sceptic New York Post
says the retirement of the
RCP8.5 scenario means that
“lefties” won’t be able to
“credibly cite the IPCC to
support their case”. [For
more on false claims made
by Trump and various media
outlets about the climate
scenario, see Carbon Brief’s
factcheck.]
-
The
Financial Times’
science commentator Anjana
Ahuja asks if
“geoengineering can avert
a climate catastrophe”.
-
In
Forbes,
energy columnist Anna
Demeo says it is “ironic”
that the rapid
redeployment of AI could
result in widespread
adoption of distributed
solar and batteries for
homes and businesses.
-
The
Financial
Times’ chief
economics commentator
Martin Wolf says that, “if
things don’t change soon”,
the IEA’s warning that the
world is entering the
biggest energy crisis in
history will “prove
correct”.
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-
Around
6% of respiratory deaths
in Brazil from 2010-20
were attributable to
“non-optimal
temperatures”, accounting
for more than 66,000
excess deaths during that
time | PLOS Climate
-
Historical
data shows that seabirds
respond to climate change
by contracting their
geographical ranges | Nature Climate
Change
- Environmental stressors
caused average annual wheat
losses of 111.4m tonnes in
Europe over 1985-2014, with
water limitation dominating
these losses | Environmental
Research Letters
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Leslie
Hook, Joseph Coterill,
Monica Mark, William Wallis
and David Pilling, Financial
Times
Marta
Pacheco, Euronews
Fernando
Cardoso, Reuters
Francesca
Landini and Marwa Rashad,
Reuters
Oliver
Crook, Mark Schroers and
Jana Randow, Bloomberg
Francesca
Piscioneri, Reuters
Dana
Drugmand, Inside Climate
News
Daniela
Sirtori, Bloomberg
Riley
Hoffman, Associated Press
Ivan
Penn, The New York Times
Michael
J Coren, The Washington Post
Todd
Woody, Bloomberg
Ian
James, Los Angeles Times
Will
Dunham, Reuters
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This
edition of the Daily
Briefing was written by
Cecilia Keating, with
contributions from Henry
Zhang, Aruna Chandrasekhar
and Anika Patel. It was
edited by Leo Hickman.
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