News

Four common talking points surrounding China’s ongoing coal-power expansion and how and why the current wave of new projects might end.
There is widespread coverage of the Canyon Fire north of Los Angeles, which forced thousands of people to evacuate at the end of last week.
Wildfires have scorched more than 40,000 hectares of land so far this year across the UK – an area more than twice the size of the Scottish city of Glasgow.
Deadly rainfall and flooding struck across China and the government issued policies on clean-energy “price wars”.
Many people around the world say they are feeling more worried about climate change. Researchers call this growing phenomenon “climate anxiety”.
China’s power sector is both the world’s largest emitter and the largest source of clean-energy growth, making it essential to global climate efforts.
Renewable energy will overtake coal to become the world’s top source of electricity “by 2026 at the latest”, according to new IEA forecasts.
Extreme “wind droughts” that reduce power output from turbines for extended periods could become 15% longer by the end of the century across much of the northern hemisphere under a moderate warming ...
Carbon Brief highlights five charts from the SOFI report which explain the state of food insecurity around the world.
ICJ said “wealthy” nations must cut emissions or risk reparations and around 90% of renewable projects are now cheaper than fossil fuels.
One in three people in informal settlements in the global south live in floodplains and are at risk of a “disastrous flood”.
China’s clean-energy technologies such as solar panels, batteries and electric vehicles are helping to cut emissions in other countries.