Impacts

Retreating glaciers could disrupt food and water supplies for 2 billion people, as rapid ice loss reshapes ecosystems and agriculture across mountain regions worldwide.

Fiona Harvey reports for The Guardian.

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As rising sea levels and coastal erosion threaten the Egyptian city of Alexandria, many residents of the fishing village El Max refuse to leave, rooted by livelihoods and deep emotional ties to the sea.

Alexander Durie and Heba Khamis report for The Guardian.

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As Greenland rapidly modernizes amid a warming climate and rising global attention, many residents are working to preserve traditional Inuit ways of life alongside economic growth and political shifts.

Jeffrey Gettleman reports for The New York Times.

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Facing unreliable federal support, New York City officials are pushing a new funding strategy to cover the $46.2 billion needed for flood resiliency projects.

Stephen Lee reports for Bloomberg.

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Widespread sewage spills are contaminating Britain’s waters, threatening businesses, biodiversity, and public health, while weak regulations and corporate profits take priority over investment in critical infrastructure.

Kate Holton and Dylan Martinez report for Reuters.

In short:

  • Britain’s largest offshore mussel farm, located to avoid sewage pollution, is still plagued by harmful bacteria like E. coli, blocking exports to Europe and damaging the shellfish industry.
  • Water companies discharged sewage for 3.6 million hours in 2023, contaminating rivers and coastlines, harming tourism, and forcing the government to review the sector. Privatized firms, which have paid billions in dividends, are accused of neglecting infrastructure upgrades.
  • Activists and clean water advocates are fighting back, linking sewage failures to stalled construction projects, biodiversity collapse, and public health risks, forcing officials to confront decades of underinvestment and weak oversight.

Key quote:

“It’s criminal that they’re allowed to dump what they dump in the seas and get away with it. It's affecting all sorts of businesses, including us.

— Sarah Holmyard, sales manager at Offshore Shellfish

Why this matters:

As climate change intensifies rainfall, Britain’s crumbling infrastructure is reaching a breaking point. Regulators, long accused of looking the other way, are under mounting pressure as activists connect the dots between failing water infrastructure, stalled housing projects, and collapsing ecosystems.

Read more:

Embracing rainwater through green infrastructure

Sardines in the Mediterranean, struggling to find nutritious plankton, are inadvertently ingesting more plastic as climate change reshapes their diet.

Rob Hutchins reports for Oceanographic.

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The world experienced 151 record-breaking extreme weather events in 2024, the hottest year ever recorded, displacing hundreds of thousands and causing widespread destruction.

Damian Carrington reports for The Guardian.

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The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's recent move to weaken air pollution and emissions standards could lead to more respiratory illnesses and premature deaths, health experts say.

Keerti Gopal reports for Inside Climate News.

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Spending on flood defenses in the UK is set to drop next year, despite warnings that nearly 2 million people and a third of England’s critical infrastructure are at risk from worsening floods.

Sandra Laville reports for The Guardian.

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A new study analyzing ancient peat layers in the North Sea reveals that sea levels rose by over three feet per century during past warming periods, raising concerns about the pace of modern climate-driven sea level rise.

Bob Berwyn reports for Inside Climate News.

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Editor’s note: This op-ed was written by a group of current and former employees of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), who have asked to remain anonymous due to concerns about retaliation.

The Trump administration ismaking accusations of fraud, waste, and abuse associated with federal environmental justice programs under the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) as justification for firing federal workers and defunding critical environmental programs. But the real waste, fraud, and abuse would be to strip away these funds from the American people.

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As climate change accelerates sea level rise and intensifies droughts, new research reveals that salt contamination from both ocean water and human activities is threatening freshwater resources.

Kiley Price reports for Inside Climate News.

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The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) confirmed that 2024 was the hottest year ever recorded, making the last 10 years the warmest in nearly two centuries of data collection.

Delger Erdenesanaa reports for The New York Times.

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More than 120 tornadoes tore through 11 states over three days, killing at least 40 people, while strong winds fueled dust storms and wildfires across the drought-stricken Plains.

Eric Holthaus reports for The Guardian.

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As temperatures in Coober Pedy, Australia, soar past 100 degrees Fahrenheit, many Indigenous residents suffer in sweltering public housing while wealthier white residents stay cool in underground homes.

Michael E. Miller reports for The Washington Post.

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Five American scientists joined an international climate panel meeting in Japan, continuing their work despite the Trump administration's efforts to distance the U.S. from global climate initiatives.

Bob Berwyn reports for Inside Climate News.

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Countries ramping up military budgets must also strengthen climate efforts or risk more conflict in the future, warns Ana Toni, Brazil’s chief executive of the Cop30 summit.

Fiona Harvey reports for The Guardian.

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More than 750,000 students in Los Angeles missed school due to January’s devastating wildfires, with low-income, Latino, and English-language learners facing the greatest hardships, a new analysis finds.

Liza Gross reports for Inside Climate News.

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