Strong stomachs required for climate waters
The best way to describe the Glasgow climate outcome is haggis, a Scottish dish of minced offal stuffed into a dead sheep’s stomach, not to everybody’s taste.
The best way to describe the Glasgow climate outcome is haggis, a Scottish dish of minced offal stuffed into a dead sheep’s stomach, not to everybody’s taste.
Developing nations and opportunist executives went to Glasgow with dollar signs in their eyes.
The joint announcement is a big relief for COP26 organisers and a diplomatic coup for China. But it has big consequences for our livestock industry and natural gas producers.
The format of the Glasgow talks means serious progress past this point is unlikely.
It is worth looking at the geopolitical implications of the net-zero agenda through a different lens: how events are playing into China’s hands.
Australian drivers risk being stuck in the slow lane unless our leaders get ready for an electric future.
Smoke from the 2019-20 bushfires in Australia caused an explosion of life in the Southern Ocean that was equivalent to turning the entire Sahara desert green.
Ninety-five per cent of Australia’s coal must stay in the ground by 2050 to have a 50/50 chance of keeping future global warming to 1.5C, new modelling concludes.
Australia has fewer than 10 years to shut the coalmining industry and find new jobs for workers under a UN timetable to be outlined on Monday.
The Energy Security Board has pulled no punches detailing the highwire act being performed as Australia makes the rapid transition to renewable energy.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/graham-lloyd/page/9