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Climate Change

Al Gore and UN win Nobel prize

Published: 12 October 2007

Former US vice president Al Gore has shared the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize with the UN's climate panel, it was announced today

Shipping pollution 'far more damaging than flying'

Published: 10 October 2007

New research suggests that the impact of shipping on climate change has been seriously underestimated and that the industry is currently churning out greenhouse gases at nearly twice the rate of aviation.

Record 22C temperatures in Arctic heatwave

Published: 03 October 2007

Parts of the Arctic have experienced an unprecedented heatwave this summer, with one research station in the Canadian High Arctic recording temperatures above 20C

From the air, the evidence of climate change is striking

Published: 03 October 2007

The airport in Greenland's capital, Nuuk, doesn't look like any other airport. Outside, the tiny runway accommodates a lone helicopter. Inside the waiting room, the chairs are upholstered in seal skin.

Pipes hung in the sea could help planet to 'heal itself'

Published: 27 September 2007

Pipes hanging in the ocean might bring global warming under control, two of Britain's most distinguished scientists suggest today.

Bush prepares for 'greenwashing' climate summit

Published: 27 September 2007

For the first time in 16 years, a major environmental conference opens in Washington, hosted by the Bush administration. But no concrete results are expected, and that – say European participants – is the point of this high-level meeting.

Timetable set to phase out high-energy light bulbs

Published: 27 September 2007

A bid to phase out all high-energy light bulbs on sale in British shops was announced by the Government today.

Antarctic: The bugs that came in from the cold

Published: 26 September 2007

Locked in ice for millions of years, Antarctic bacteria are thawing – and they're alive. So will a prehistoric plague be swimming in a sea near you? Rob Sharp finds out

US criticised over climate forum

Published: 25 September 2007

The Bush administration was criticised yesterday for organising an alternative climate change forum, as the United Nations secretary general and Britain stressed that the UN is the best place to discuss global measures.

Bush takes lead on global warming action

Published: 23 September 2007

Better than Kyoto: for the first time ever, rich and poor nations – even the US – agree to pollution cuts

Arctic sea ice melts to its lowest level ever

Published: 22 September 2007

The sea ice of the Arctic shrank to its lowest-ever level this week, shattering the previous record.

'Too late to avoid global warming,' say scientists

Published: 19 September 2007

A rise of two degrees centigrade in global temperatures – the point considered to be the threshold for catastrophic climate change which will expose millions to drought, hunger and flooding – is now "very unlikely" to be avoided, the world's leading climate scientists said yesterday.

Greenland: the emerging nation

Published: 17 September 2007

The arctic ice is melting to reveal a very different Greenland. Daniel Howden finds a large island with a small population that is dreaming of independence

Bush pushes for plan to protect ozone layer

Published: 16 September 2007

George Bush is this week to press for international action that will do more to combat global warming than the Kyoto Protocol.

Bangladesh: Life on the edge

Published: 15 September 2007

For centuries, the farmers of Bangladesh's sandy chars have eked out an existence at the mercy of South Asia's great rivers. But as temperatures rise, time is running out for them

US states win right to set carbon target

Published: 14 September 2007

The US state of Vermont has won a landmark victory in the battle against global warming being waged at local level across America in defiance of the Bush Administration.

Climate change will harm life on the deep ocean floor, study finds

Published: 10 September 2007

A study of the most remote forms of life on Earth has found that their splendid isolation on the deep seabed will not protect them from environmental catastrophes on the surface.

Shockwaves from melting icecaps are triggering earthquakes, say scientists

Published: 08 September 2007

High up inside the Arctic circle the melting of Greenland's ice sheet has accelerated so dramatically that it is triggering earthquakes for the first time.

The Big Question: Will APEC's climate-change deal amount to anything more than hot air?

Published: 07 September 2007

Why are we asking this now?

Global warming: Too hot to handle for the BBC

Published: 06 September 2007

Green groups protest after corpora- tion calls off day of programming dedicated to climate change

Lessons to be learnt from Channel 4 blunder

Published: 06 September 2007

The BBC's decision to drop its climate change event is not the first time a major broadcaster has been accused of skewing the debate in favour of global warming deniers.

The green provocateur: Cornering the corporates

Published: 04 September 2007

They may talk a good green game, but do Britain's corporate giants really pay more than lip service to climate change? Eco-warrior Donnachadh McCarthy hit the streets on a one-man crusade against waste. Could our pedal-powered hero save the world in a single day? Pictures by Helen Atkinson

More 'megafires' to come, say scientists

Published: 02 September 2007

Fires of unprecedented ferocity are sweeping around the world, fuelled by global warming and misguided environmentalism.

The summer that was every bit as bad for wildlife as the coldest winter

Published: 01 September 2007

Some of Britain's most endangered creatures were dealt devastating blows by the monsoon summer which ended yesterday.

Get ready for the next weather phenomenon: fog

Published: 01 September 2007

Spring was glorious. Summer was the wettest ever. So, in the record year of British weather ups and downs that is 2007, what phenomenon can we expect from autumn, which begins today? The answer is fog.

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