Keep it in the Ground – the Guardian’s climate campaign
- Join the 180,000 people who’ve called on the Wellcome Trust and Gates Foundation to divest from fossil fuels
- Nobel prize winners join call for charities to divest from fossil fuels
- Investing in fossil fuels goes against health charities’ aims, says Porritt
- The biggest story in the world: Episode 4 - Risks
- Can the world economy survive without fossil fuels?
- How much fossil fuel has been used in your lifetime?
We’re calling on the world’s two biggest charitable funds, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Wellcome Trust, to shift their money out of fossil fuels. Please join us and sign the petition here.
Environment news
- Vancouver commits to run on 100% renewable energy
- Air pollution spike across England sparks warning from health charities
- New energy storage plant could ‘revolutionise’ renewable sector
- North sea cod stocks bounce back, analysis shows
- Obama emphasises threat to public health as part of climate change push
- Canada glaciers to shrink 70% by 2100
- Half of India’s rivers are polluted, says government report
On the blogs
- Is the end of ‘house of horror’ bear bile factories in sight?
- Daily Express weather warning: beware a shower of extreme inaccuracy
- A revealing interview with top contrarian climate scientists
- Controversial mine threatens Indonesian dive mecca
Multimedia
- The week in wildlife – in pictures
- Satellite Eye on Earth: March 2015 – in pictures
- Rare black flamingo spotted in Cyprus - video
- Greenpeace activists scale Arctic-bound Shell oil rig – video
Features and comment
- Lenore Taylor: Australia’s climate change ‘debate’ all talk and no action
- Europe’s carbon capture dream beset by delays, fears and doubt
- Can ‘Speedo diplomacy’ save one of the world’s last pristine oceans?
- May Boeve: the new face of the climate change movement
- John Sulston: The Wellcome Trust’s polite business chats won’t save the Earth
And finally ...
They’ve marched tirelessly across the UK for the last century, a 90,000-strong army of steel sentinels carrying electricity across hill and vale, gracefully suspended from their spindly frames. But now, the classic British pylon is facing extinction, thanks to a newcomer on the block: the whiter-than-white T-pylon, unveiled this week by the National Grid.