|
Ajit
Niranjan and Ashifa Kassam,
The Guardian
The
UK has broken its temperature
record for June while France
has recorded its hottest day
ever for the second day
running, reports the Guardian.
The newspaper notes that
temperatures “bolstered by
climate breakdown” hit 36.1C
in the southern English town
of Gosport, amid a wider
heatwave affecting more than
90 million people across parts
of Europe. The Press
Association explains
that the UK temperature beats
a previous record that had
stood since 1976. BBC News
reports that the UK Health
Security Agency has extended a
“red heat health” warning from
Thursday through to Friday. Inside Climate
News looks at how
climate change is driving this
extreme heat. The Economist
cites an assessment by
scientist consortium
ClimaMeter concluding climate
change has made the heat “2-4C
worse”. The New York Times
explains “why Europe is the
fastest-warming continent”.
The
Financial Times
reports on Britain’s grid
operator calling for more
electricity supplies as
“extreme heat pushes up demand
for power and reduces the
efficiency of solar panels and
gas-fired power stations”. The
Times has
an article titled: “From
trains to hospitals, how the
heatwave is crippling the UK.”
ITV News
says a “critical incident” has
been declared at the Queen
Alexandra Hospital in
Portsmouth after extreme heat
caused some of their cooling
units to fail. The Guardian
says a failure to plan for
heatwaves “has left UK’s
schools sweltering”. The Times
reports on record-breaking
heat in Scotland. Another Times
article considers potential
“heatwave health dangers”. The
Daily Telegraph
reports that heatwaves could
trigger blackouts this summer
as the “rising numbers of
wildfires damage power lines”.
The Guardian
reports on new research
showing how “one in every six
babies” in England are living
in overheated homes.
BBC News
reports on new analysis
showing that one million
homes, more than 1,300
schools, 60 hospitals and 350
care homes in London are at
risk of overheating. London
mayor Sadiq Khan tells LBC that he
thinks there should be
“maximum temperatures” for
classrooms and workplaces,
before they close. Khan has
also told bus drivers to stop
working if they feel their
buses are too hot, according
to the Daily Express.
Temperatures on the London
tube have reached around 40C,
reports the Independent.
Meanwhile, Wired
reports on how London Climate
Action Week has been “foiled
by climate change”, with many
events moved online to avoid
the heat.
The
Associated
Press reports that in
some locations across France,
including Paris, temperatures
surpassed 40C. The news outlet
notes that the “heat dome”
affecting western Europe
“could endanger lives across
countries, many of which have
limited air conditioning”.
French newspaper Libération
says that temperatures have
reached as high as 44.3C in
the south-western commune of
Pissos. BBC News
reports on political debate in
France around the use of air
conditioning (AC), with
“Marine Le Pen on the populist
right urging a mass subsidised
roll-out” while “traditionally
hostile” Greens concede some
AC may be necessary. Le Pen’s
“far-right Rassemblement
National” has touted a “major”
AC plan, while planning to
“cut budgets” for measures to
cut emissions, according to Le Monde.
Left-wing candidates for next
year’s French presidential
election have “seized on” the
heatwave to put forward energy
and climate proposals, reports
E&E News.
Sky News
covers the growing death toll
linked to drowning amid the
heatwave in France, which has
now reached “at least 48”
people. Le Monde
says the heat has led to a
“worrying rise in emergency
hospital visits”. Libération
reports on the dangers facing
people in French prisons
during the heatwave. Reuters
says extreme heat in France
has killed hundreds of
thousands of poultry. CNBC says
parts of the country have
suffered a major power outage
due to the heat. Le Monde
reports that France is now “on
track for a severe summer
drought”.
MORE
ON HEAT
-
A
group of leading UK
climate scientists have
written a letter to
broadcast editors from the
BBC, ITV and others to
express “concern” about
the lack of references to
climate change in UK
heatwave coverage. The
letter is printed in full
in the Press Gazette.
-
The
current heatwave in
Germany is the “longest
ever recorded in June
since the beginning of
weather records” – and is
costing the economy
billions, according to Deutsche Welle.
-
Spain's
state meteorological
agency says Monday and
Tuesday were the hottest
June days on record in
mainland Spain since at
least 1950, reports Euronews.
-
Temperatures
are forecast to exceed
40C in several parts of
Vietnam on Thursday and
the state utility has
called on firms and
households to conserve
electricity, according to
Reuters.
-
New
York City mayor Zohran
Mamdani has signed an
executive order to protect
the city’s 1.4 million
outdoor workers from
extreme heat, reports E&E News.
-
Irish
housing minister James
Browne has requested a
delay to “elective” water
works, to avoid water
being cut off amid
“extreme heat”, reports
the Press
Association.
-
The
Financial Times
reports on how investors
have been “piling into
stocks of air conditioning
companies”, amid
successive heatwaves and
the “spread of vast data
centres drives demand for
industrial cooling
systems”.
Jim
Pickard and George Parker,
Financial Times
Two
of the nation’s biggest trade
unions are increasing pressure
on likely incoming UK prime
minister Andy Burnham not to
pick energy secretary Ed
Miliband as the next finance
minister, “arguing that his
North Sea oil policy has
damaged jobs in the sector”,
reports the Financial Times.
The newspaper says Miliband
has faced pushback from Unite
the Union and the GMB, both
major Labour donors. It says
the priority for the unions is
to choose another candidate
other than Miliband “because
of his relentless focus on the
net-zero agenda”. The Times
reports that Miliband is
“playing an integral role in
developing economic policies
for Burnham’s government as
part of his transition to No
10”, despite criticism of his
opposition to new drilling in
the North Sea. The newspaper
says Burnham himself is “open
to” new drilling. The Daily Mail
reports that “senior figures
from the world of business
joined forces with even
Burnham-backing Labour MPs to
warn that the energy
secretary would wreak havoc
if he was put in charge of the
economy”. The Daily Telegraph
claims: “Burnham cools on
Miliband as chancellor.”
The
Guardian
reports that the director of
the British Chambers of
Commerce (BCC), Shevaun
Haviland, has said Burnham
should be ready to drill for
more North Sea oil and gas to
avoid “mass job losses in
Scotland and the north-east”.
MORE
ON UK
-
BusinessGreen
reports on MPs preparing
to vote on the seventh
carbon budget, which would
commit the UK to reducing
its emissions by 87% by
2040. [They have since passed the
budget, committing the UK
to the target.]
-
The
Press
Association reports
on a new government
“roadmap” for farming in
England that “sets out how
farmers can cope with
climate change-driven
extremes and cut reliance
on expensive fertilisers”.
-
Under
new plans submitted to the
government, four mini
nuclear plants would be
built at the site of a
former coal power station
in Nottinghamshire,
reports the Daily Telegraph.
-
There
has been a "significant"
cut to Wales' emissions,
mainly due to the closure
of the blast furnaces at
Port Talbot steelworks,
according to BBC News.
-
The
Independent
asks if the hard-right
Reform UK is “heading for
its own climate crisis”,
as the climate-sceptic
party faces rising climate
impacts.
Kate
Abnett and Nichola Groom,
Reuters
The
US, Qatar and other major
energy exporters have urged
the EU to “rewrite planned
methane emissions” rules for
oil and gas imports, warning
that the policy could disrupt
fuel supplies to Europe,
according to Reuters. The
newswire says the EU’s new
rules, which aim to curb leaks
of the potent greenhouse gas,
have “drawn strong opposition
from industry and overseas
suppliers”. The article
quotes an open letter to EU
leaders from the energy
ministers of the US, Qatar,
Nigeria and Algeria calling on
the EU to introduce "targeted
amendments” to the law. US
energy secretary Chris Wright
tells Bloomberg
that US gas supplies will
“head elsewhere” if the bloc
keeps its rules.
MORE
ON FOSSIL FUELS
-
The
price of Brent crude oil
has fallen back to below
its pre-Iran war level as
“a wave of pent-up oil
started to flow from the
Gulf, leading traders to
shrug off the risk of any
aftershocks from the
crisis”, according to the
Financial Times.
-
The
Wall Street
Journal reports that
US president Donald Trump
has instructed the Justice
Department to look into
major oil companies,
accusing them of “gouging”
customers by not lowering
pump prices in line with
falling oil costs.
-
The
head of Brazil’s state-run
oil giant Petrobras has
said the country must
decide between
transitioning away from
fossil fuels and
preserving tax revenue,
according to the Associated
Press.
-
Colombia
and the Netherlands, which
co-hosted the first
conference on
transitioning away from
fossil fuels this year,
say they have held
"constructive" discussions
on bringing those outcomes
to the COP31 climate
summit, according to Climate Home
News.
Matteo
Civillini, Climate Home News
Dozens
of governments, led by the EU
and the UK, have committed to
throwing “their political
weight” behind a rapid
electrification of the world's
economy, according to Climate
Home News. The high-level
summit in London's Mansion
House saw energy ministers and
business leaders joined by UN
secretary-general António
Guterres in “calling for
faster action to curb demand
for oil, coal and gas by
powering homes, industry and
transport with clean
electricity”.
In
a separate event at London
Climate Action Week, Guterres
said climate adaptation must
be treated as a core priority
for governments and properly
valued by the financial
system, according to Reuters.
The newswire said Guterres
told attendees: “Finance
ministers, central banks,
planning ministries and public
investment authorities must
treat climate risk as core
economic policy in order to
mobilise greater domestic
resources."
MORE
ON EU
-
The
Financial Times
reports that French
aviation company Dassault
Aviation has won a legal
claim that private planes
should be able to qualify
as sustainable under EU
rules.
-
Politico:
“EU countries want oil
exploration to be classed
as a green investment.”
Bloomberg
China’s
special envoy for climate
change, Liu Zhenmin, has said
at the World Economic Forum
that energy shortages
triggered by the Iran war
should be a “lesson to
countries to accelerate their
energy transitions”, reports
Bloomberg. Chinese premier Li
Qiang said China’s
competitiveness is “not a
result of state subsidies”,
adding that the country
maintained “steady growth”
amid “energy shortages”,
reports the Hong Kong-based South China
Morning Post. Li also
said China’s new energy
vehicle (NEV) industry
was driven by “technological
breakthroughs” and China will
accelerate the construction of
new power grids, according to
state news agency Xinhua.
Peking University’s Huang
Yiping tells the South China
Morning Post that the
reason behind China’s trade
imbalance is that the world is
struggling to adjust its
“economic structure”. Xinhua says
representatives at Summer
Davos believe China’s “growing
influence” in “green
development” could “add
impetus to the sluggish world
economy”. The South China
Morning Post: “China,
Kazakhstan target deeper ties
in minerals and energy at
Summer Davos.”
MORE
ON CHINA
-
China’s
coal power generation is
expected to “rebound” this
year from its first fall
in a decade, according to
analysts, reports Reuters.
-
China’s
new policy to boost
consumption of clean
energy marks the entry of
“mandatory renewable
energy integration”, says
Jiemian.
-
China’s
“independent oil refiners
have slashed operating
rates to a nine-year low”
amid high costs and “weak”
domestic demand, reports Bloomberg.
-
Chinese
automakers “continued
their rapid expansion” in
Europe in May, according
to the South China
Morning Post. Reuters
reports that China’s EV
technology is “starting to
make inroads” in India,
despite New Delhi’s blocks
on Chinese brands since
2020.
-
A
Global Times
editorial says that the
claim of China’s domestic
vehicle sales decline
“leading to overseas
surge” is wrong because
overseas sales are EVs and
the domestic drop is due
to fuel vehicle sales.
-
Alan
Beattie has a comment
article in the Financial Times
arguing that China is
“dumping green tech” while
the US’s war on Iran is
“creating demand” for it.
|