Breaking Waves: Ocean News

11/13/2024 - 20:36
Tiny isopod is dubbed Pentaceration forkandbrewer in push to engage community with climate-threatened life in local waters New Zealand scientists have named a tiny snowflake-like crustacean after a Wellington brewery, in an attempt to boost the public’s interest in local marine life. The roughly 1.5mm marine isopod was found in the silty depths off New Zealand’s southern east coast. It helps decompose organic material that drifts to the seabed. Continue reading...
11/13/2024 - 18:30
One expert says climate targets can seem abstract but matter because they serve as an ‘investment signal’ to cashed up investors Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast The UK’s announcement of an 81% emissions cut below 1990 levels by 2035 shows the Australian government should set an ambitious climate target that will quickly drive investment and create clean industries, experts say. The UK prime minister, Keir Starmer, was praised by campaigners and experts after confirming the pledge at the Cop29 UN climate summit in Azerbaijan, though they said it would need to be backed by clear plans. The UK is one of the first larger countries to announce a 2035 target before a UN deadline next February. Continue reading...
11/13/2024 - 13:45
California researchers found ‘mystery mollusc’ in deep-sea midnight zone after initially observing it 20 years ago Researchers in California have discovered a new species of sea slug off the Pacific coast in an area of deep sea known as the midnight zone. A team with the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute first came across the creature, which they dubbed the “mystery mollusc” in 2000 at 8,576ft (2,613 meters), and spent years documenting the sea slug in order to “prepare the most comprehensive description of a deep-sea animal ever made”. Continue reading...
11/13/2024 - 13:00
Exclusive: Mia Mottley, who has championed climate action, says she would seek common ground with US president-elect Mia Mottley, the climate-championing prime minister of Barbados, has invited Donald Trump to a face-to-face meeting where she would seek “common ground” and persuade him that climate action was in his own interests. “Let us find a common purpose in saving the planet and saving livelihoods,” she told the Guardian at the UN’s Cop29 climate summit in Azerbaijan. “We are human beings and we have the capacity to meet face-to-face, in spite of our differences. We want humanity to survive. And the evidence [of the climate crisis] we are seeing almost weekly now.” Continue reading...
11/13/2024 - 12:04
Move adds to concerns about the stability of the Paris agreement after the election in the US of Donald Trump Cop29 climate summit – live updates Argentinian negotiators representing the government of the climate science denier Javier Milei have been ordered to withdraw from the Cop29 summit after only three days, adding to concerns about the stability of the Paris agreement. More than 80 representatives from the South American country are in Baku, Azerbaijan, for two weeks of negotiations about climate finance for the energy transition. Argentina’s far-right leader has previously called the climate crisis a “socialist lie”, and threatened to withdraw from the Paris agreement during his election campaign last year, but has since backed down. Continue reading...
11/13/2024 - 11:51
Royalties earned from The Golden Mole, published in the US this week as Vanishing Treasures, will be given towards counteracting ‘the election of a climate-change denier’ British author Katherine Rundell will give all the royalties from one of her books to climate charities in response to the re-election of Donald Trump. The author of bestsellers for children and adults has said she will donate 100% of author royalties earned from sales of The Golden Mole, her 2022 book on endangered species, “in perpetuity”. The book was published in the US on Tuesday under the title Vanishing Treasures. Continue reading...
11/13/2024 - 09:44
German energy firm shaves €3bn from spending plans for next financial year to €7bn A German energy firm has said that Donald Trump’s election victory has increased the risks of investing in offshore wind projects – but his return to the White House could help bolster Britain’s renewables sector, according to UK developer SSE. Germany’s RWE has cut its spending plans and warned that, as a result of the US election, “the risks for offshore wind projects have increased”. Continue reading...
11/13/2024 - 09:39
Large parts of east and south under alerts as schools are shut and riverside neighbourhoods evacuated in Andalucía Authorities in eastern and southern Spain have closed schools and begun evacuating some residents as the country is pounded by further torrential rains two weeks after the catastrophic floods that killed at least 215 people and unleashed a bitter political blame game. On Wednesday morning, the state meteorological agency, Aemet, put large parts of eastern and southern Spain on amber alert and issued the highest level of warning for the provinces Tarragona in Catalonia and Málaga in Andalucía. Continue reading...
11/13/2024 - 07:00
Of 140 million people in the US who draw water from US aquifers via private or public wells, 70% at risk PFAS may be contaminating drinking water for up to 70% of about 140 million people in the US who draw water from the nation’s aquifers via private or public wells, a new federal government study estimates. The findings show a potential impact on about 95 million people, or 27% of the nation’s population. The US Geological Survey sampling and modeling of groundwater contamination found readings up to 37,000 times higher than the EPA’s new drinking water limits. In some regions virtually all of those using public systems that draw from groundwater may be drinking contaminated water. Continue reading...
11/13/2024 - 07:00
From olive oil to butter, extreme weather is pushing up the cost of living and having a dramatic political impact. Economists need a solution In the US, where Donald Trump swept the board last week, it was the experience of sharply increasing essentials prices, from food to energy, that glued together the Republicans’ new electoral coalition. About 75% of those voting Republican reported that they had faced “hardship” or “severe hardship” as a result of price rises; only 25% of Democrats said the same. When Trump asked if Americans felt better now than they did four years ago, the answer for most was a clear no. Price surges are having political impacts. In elections this year in three of the world’s largest economies, incumbent parties were hammered by voters angry about their helplessness in the face of the steeply rising cost of essentials. James Meadway is the host of the podcast Macrodose Continue reading...