Keep it in the Ground – the Guardian’s climate campaign
- Join our ‘180,000 reasons to lead on climate change’ tweetstorm
- The climate denier’s guide to getting rich from fossil fuel divestment
- BP dropped green energy projects worth billions to focus on fossil fuels
- Scrap fossil fuel subsidies now and bring in carbon tax, says World Bank chief
- Edward Norton and Caroline Lucas back Guardian climate campaign
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
- World Bank fossil fuel financing leapt in 2014 despite its calls to end subsidies
- Abbott government gives $4m to help climate contrarian set up Australian centre
- Mary Robinson: Developing nations must move rapidly beyond fossil fuels
- Al Gore: Coal industry campaign on energy poverty is extremely misleading
- Dolphin sightings off the Hebrides leapt over last decade, research shows
- Experts reject Japan’s new whaling plan
- Out of plaice: popular UK fish at risk from rising temperatures
- Norway approves mine’s controversial plan to dump waste into fjord
- Green groups accuse EU shale gas panel of fracking lobby takeover
On the blogs
- Which party’s manifesto is strongest on cycling?
- Engage centre-right voters to put climate change on the political platform
- Ask the real experts about ocean acidification, not climate science deniers
- Price on carbon key to Canada tackling global warming, say researchers
Multimedia
- The week in wildlife – in pictures
- 50ft sperm whale washes up in California – video
- In bloom: readers’ photos on the signs of spring
- Robot reveals inside Fukushima nuclear reactor – video
Features and comment
- Can Japan’s climate policy get back on track after Fukushima?
- Is the Green party’s climate change plan realistic?
- Jeremy Farrar: Fossil fuel investments are an issue on which fair-minded people will disagree
And finally ...
The new record holder is at least 200 years old and stands tall above the South Downs landscape in the National Trust’s Devil’s Dyke Estate. It beat the former champion by a clear 3ft