Silicon Valley loudly criticized President Donald Trump when he quit the climate accord in his first term. This time? Crickets.
With Donald Trump back in the White House, advocates for the Amazon worry about what his second term will mean for the rainforest
Brazil sees an opportunity to amplify the voices of developing nations in upcoming climate finance talks, according to comments on Thursday from the head of the global COP30 summit set to be hosted by the South American nation later this year.
At a time when international collaboration is essential to tackling the climate crisis, this move isolates the US and risks undermining the collective progress made thus far
“You have to remember that to be able to benefit from the EU-Mercosur agreement, you have to be a member of the Paris Agreement ... COP30 to be held in the Amazon port of Belém in November.
The Brazilian diplomat who will chair the next UN climate summit on Thursday praised China as an example in the fight against climate change while admonishing rich countries for shirking their responsibilities.
Andre Correa do Lago, who will preside over the first climate conference in the Amazon rainforest in November, praised China’s “extraordinary progress” on combatting climate change
The Brazilian diplomat who will chair the next UN climate summit on Thursday praised China as an example in the fight against climate change.
Carbon markets investor Silvania, backed by Swiss-trading house Mercuria and two non-profits, announced a $1.5 billion fund on Wednesday.
On President Trump’s first day in office, he pulled out of the Paris Agreement, a pact among nearly all nations to fight climate change. Reporting from Davos, Switzerland, David Gelles, a climate journalist for The New York Times,
“Their silence now is cowardly, complicit in reinforcing the status quo fossil fuel economy, and shows that they care more about their own profits than the American people,” Bill Weihl, Facebook’s former director of sustainability, told Corbin and me.
Have Been the Hottest on Record In recent history, the earth has been experiencing unprecedented heat levels. It hasn't just been hotter; it's been record-breakingly hot. For eight consecutive years,