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Editors’ picks

  • Artist's impression of Woodhouse Colliery, Cumbria

    Coal mine opponents threaten legal action

    Catherine Early
    | 15th January 2021
    Campaigners are infuriated that a deep coal mine in Cumbria has been permitted, and are fighting back.
  • Air pollution

    Net zero jobs disruption 'to hit poor areas'

    Catherine Early
    | 12th January 2021
    A new report highlights the importance of a just transition, as a major cross-party programme to understand the challenges of delivering net zero by 2050 is launched.
  • Frog

    If the frogs should win

    Carlos Zorrilla
    | 11th January 2021
    The fate of some of Ecuador's last remaining cloud forests and hundreds of livelihoods rests on the outcome of a trailblazing Rights of Nature case concerning two tiny amphibians.
  • We need a London School of Ecology and Economics

    Satish Kumar
    | 11th January 2021
    'The LSE would become a world leader and show other universities teaching economics is incomplete without teaching ecology.'
  • The paradox of India’s energy transition

    Brototi Roy
    | 6th January 2021
    India is unable to shake off its ties to coal despite its commitment to renewable energy, giving rise to enormous social and environmental costs.
  • Young calf in a field

    Climate, animal suffering, antibiotic resistance

    Andrew Taylor-Dawson
    | 6th January 2021
    These are just some of the reasons to stop eating animals. Yes, it’s Veganuary once again.
  • Pipeline protest

    Blowing up pipelines

    Elias Koenig
    | 4th January 2021
    Andreas Malm’s new book draws explosive conclusions for the struggle for climate justice.

Activism

  • Pipeline protest

    Blowing up pipelines

    Elias Koenig
    | 4th January 2021
    Andreas Malm’s new book draws explosive conclusions for the struggle for climate justice.
  • End opencast mining

    Tom Wilkinson
    | 22nd December 2020
    Newcastle City Council has rejected Banks Mining’s application to extract 800,000 tonnes of coal from a site at Dewley Hill near Throckley.
  • Turkeys suffer at Christmas factory farms

    Brendan Montague
    | 21st December 2020
    Farms supplying supermarkets Tesco, Sainsbury’s and ASDA accused of keeping birds in appalling conditions.
  • Heathrow Airport. Photo: Sergio Y Adeline via Flickr (CC BY-NC).

    Heathrow expansion 'far from certain'

    Staff Reporter
    | 16th December 2020
    Friends of the Earth reacts as Supreme Court rules on policy allowing third runway.
  • North Sea oil platforms

    Let’s talk about public ownership

    Gabriel Levy
    | 15th December 2020
    A just transition to a low carbon economy should involve oil companies paying more tax and energy workers having more say.
  • Meet Jag-Wah

    Louisianna Waring
    | 2nd December 2020
    Jag-Wah, the new environmental hero from Greenpeace, comes alive in bold animations to expose the truth about industrial animal farming and rainforest annihilation.
  • Prison

    America's toxic prisons

    Kimberly M. S. Cartier
    | 13th November 2020
    'The water is bad, the air is bad, and the ground is bad. The soil is just sitting on top of … an excess of 50 million tons of toxic waste.'

Climate Breakdown

  • Artist's impression of Woodhouse Colliery, Cumbria

    Coal mine opponents threaten legal action

    Catherine Early
    | 15th January 2021
    Campaigners are infuriated that a deep coal mine in Cumbria has been permitted, and are fighting back.
  • Air pollution

    Net zero jobs disruption 'to hit poor areas'

    Catherine Early
    | 12th January 2021
    A new report highlights the importance of a just transition, as a major cross-party programme to understand the challenges of delivering net zero by 2050 is launched.
  • Young calf in a field

    Climate, animal suffering, antibiotic resistance

    Andrew Taylor-Dawson
    | 6th January 2021
    These are just some of the reasons to stop eating animals. Yes, it’s Veganuary once again.
  • Emerald Ash Borer

    Pests and climate breakdown

    Emily Folk
    | 4th January 2021
    Climate breakdown provides a more habitable environment for many types of insects - resulting in pests, crop damage and increased diseases.
  • End opencast mining

    Tom Wilkinson
    | 22nd December 2020
    Newcastle City Council has rejected Banks Mining’s application to extract 800,000 tonnes of coal from a site at Dewley Hill near Throckley.
  • The hydrogen hoax

    Gabriel Levy
    | 18th December 2020
    Low carbon? Hydrogen greenhouse emissions globally are more than twice that of the entire UK economy.
  • XR

    XR promises wave of action for COP26

    Catherine Early
    | 17th December 2020
    Extinction Rebellion (XR) announces strategy to put pressure on the government in the run-up to next November’s UN climate talks.

Biodiversity

  • A pair of green munias

    The green munias

    Sahil Zutshi
    | 7th January 2021
    Father and son team up to protect India's 'green ones', long threatened by habitat destruction and the export market.
  • Young calf in a field

    Climate, animal suffering, antibiotic resistance

    Andrew Taylor-Dawson
    | 6th January 2021
    These are just some of the reasons to stop eating animals. Yes, it’s Veganuary once again.
  • A fungi to be with

    Victor Anderson
    | 26th November 2020
    A review of Entangled Life by Merlin Sheldrake (Bodley Head 2020).
  • Hazelnut crisis in Tuscia

    James P Graham
    | 25th November 2020
    Since 2018 almost 1000 hectares of land around lake Bolsena, Italy, has been appropriated by the chemically-grown hazelnuts industry.
  • Music makers journey to Colombia rainforest

    Catherine Early
    | 17th November 2020
    Documentary makers collaborate with renowned Colombian band Bomba Estereo and actor Joaquin Phoenix to record indigenous environmental projects.
  • Covid-19 and the fur industry

    Sophie Johnson
    | 13th November 2020
    The cull in Denmark will have implications for the global fur industry - where China is still the global leader. So is this the end?
  • Nature is a source of life

    Satish Kumar
    | 12th November 2020
    We need a new economy that supports humans as part of nature rather than profits and investments.

Coronavirus

  • Regent Street is empty

    Pandemic drop in climate emissions

    Emily Beament
    | 14th December 2020
    The UK saw one of the biggest drops in greenhouse emissions as a result of measures to slow the coronavirus pandemic at 13 percent, new analysis suggests.
  • Factory farmed pig

    Go vegan to slash Covid-19 risk

    Justine Butler
    | 8th December 2020
    Going vegan could not only lower your risk of severe Covid-19, if enough of us do it, it could lower the risk of future pandemics.
  • Forestry

    Natural solutions to pandemics

    Jennifer Stevens
    | 7th December 2020
    Coronavirus is a crisis of our natural world and we need solutions where giving back to nature becomes the ‘new normal’.
  • Good food must be a right for everyone

    Tom Andrews
    | 3rd December 2020
    The Covid-19 pandemic reminded us of the role food plays in our daily lives.
  • International Nurses Day

    Isolation: the support people need

    Mike Downham
    | 24th November 2020
    A retired doctor explores the many ways people isolating need to be supported.
  • Scotland needs zero covid

    Leslie Cunningham
    | 20th November 2020
    The Scottish Government has claimed to follow a Zero Covid strategy, yet has failed so far to protect the population sufficiently.
  • Covid-19 and the fur industry

    Sophie Johnson
    | 13th November 2020
    The cull in Denmark will have implications for the global fur industry - where China is still the global leader. So is this the end?

Food and Farming

  • A forgotten classic of agroecological science

    Tara Pinheiro Gibsone
    | 12th January 2021
    Francis Chabboussou's Healthy Crops is a forgotten classic of organic science, with wide-reaching implications for global agriculture.
  • Turkeys suffer at Christmas factory farms

    Brendan Montague
    | 21st December 2020
    Farms supplying supermarkets Tesco, Sainsbury’s and ASDA accused of keeping birds in appalling conditions.
  • The future of palm oil

    Sophie Johnson
    | 9th December 2020
    To boycott or not to boycott? That is the question.
  • Factory farmed pig

    Go vegan to slash Covid-19 risk

    Justine Butler
    | 8th December 2020
    Going vegan could not only lower your risk of severe Covid-19, if enough of us do it, it could lower the risk of future pandemics.
  • The vegans’ dilemma

    Jordi Casamitjana
    | 4th December 2020
    How to deal with the suffering of wild animals living outside of direct human control is something vegans have not agreed yet.
  • Meet Jag-Wah

    Louisianna Waring
    | 2nd December 2020
    Jag-Wah, the new environmental hero from Greenpeace, comes alive in bold animations to expose the truth about industrial animal farming and rainforest annihilation.
  • Farming

    Farmers' post-Brexit environmental payments

    Emily Beament
    | 30th November 2020
    The multi-billion European Common Agricultural Policy will be replaced post-Brexit with some payments linked to environmental stewardship.

Conservation

  • A pair of green munias

    The green munias

    Sahil Zutshi
    | 7th January 2021
    Father and son team up to protect India's 'green ones', long threatened by habitat destruction and the export market.
  • Boxing Day Hunt and Hounds in Chiddingstone, Kent, England. Photo: Kentish Plumber via Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND).

    'Trail hunting is just a smokescreen'

    Staff Reporter
    | 27th November 2020
    United Utilities suspends trail hunting on its land.
  • Los Cedros Forest Reserve. Photo: Rainforest Information Centre

    Saving Los Cedros is 'case of the century'

    Rebekah Hayden
    | 26th November 2020
    The struggle to save the Los Cedros Forest Reserve in Ecuador from mining will set huge precedent for biodiversity protections.
  • Humpback whales

    It's the whales, darling

    Michael Drummond
    | 6th November 2020
    Actress Joanna Lumley, charities concerned about unexploded war munitions being detonated at sea.
  • Rewilding: transforming conservation methods

    Sophie Johnson
    | 4th November 2020
    We can transform the British landscape, and the longevity of our economy, if we let nature take the driving seat.
  • HS2 fells 'tree of the year'

    Emily Beament
    | 21st October 2020
    The Woodland Trust 'shocked and upset' at the felling of the Cubbington Pear, near South Cubbington Wood, Warwickshire, for the HS2 railway.
  • Planting 50 million trees to fight climate crisis

    Emily Beament
    | 19th October 2020
    The Woodland Trust is urging millions of people to join its 'big climate fightback' by planting trees this November.

Deforestation

  • Young calf in a field

    Climate, animal suffering, antibiotic resistance

    Andrew Taylor-Dawson
    | 6th January 2021
    These are just some of the reasons to stop eating animals. Yes, it’s Veganuary once again.
  • Meet Jag-Wah

    Louisianna Waring
    | 2nd December 2020
    Jag-Wah, the new environmental hero from Greenpeace, comes alive in bold animations to expose the truth about industrial animal farming and rainforest annihilation.
  • Los Cedros Forest Reserve. Photo: Rainforest Information Centre

    Saving Los Cedros is 'case of the century'

    Rebekah Hayden
    | 26th November 2020
    The struggle to save the Los Cedros Forest Reserve in Ecuador from mining will set huge precedent for biodiversity protections.
  • Logging

    Rainforest protection is 'too weak'

    Catherine Early
    | 12th November 2020
    Legislation will ban products that breach local laws to protect natural areas, and businesses that do not conduct due diligence on their supply chain will be fined.
  • Rights of Nature in Ecuador

    Rebekah Hayden
    | 6th November 2020
    The outcome of a case to protect the Los Cedros Reserve from mining will set a precedent for all future Rights of Nature cases in Ecuador.
  • Sequoia National Park

    Climate and US national forests and parks

    Emily Folk
    | 5th October 2020
    Some of Earth's most beautiful and vulnerable landscapes are being impacted by climate breakdown, despite their protected status.
  • The Harlequin Frog (Atelopus longirostris). Photo: Carlos Zorilla

    Sanctuary for life in Ecuador

    Rebekah Hayden
    | 25th September 2020
    A Constitutional Protection Action could protect the Rights of Nature over the economic rights of transnational companies in Ecuador's Intag Valley.

Energy

  • Artist's impression of Woodhouse Colliery, Cumbria

    Coal mine opponents threaten legal action

    Catherine Early
    | 15th January 2021
    Campaigners are infuriated that a deep coal mine in Cumbria has been permitted, and are fighting back.
  • The paradox of India’s energy transition

    Brototi Roy
    | 6th January 2021
    India is unable to shake off its ties to coal despite its commitment to renewable energy, giving rise to enormous social and environmental costs.
  • Pipeline protest

    Blowing up pipelines

    Elias Koenig
    | 4th January 2021
    Andreas Malm’s new book draws explosive conclusions for the struggle for climate justice.
  • End opencast mining

    Tom Wilkinson
    | 22nd December 2020
    Newcastle City Council has rejected Banks Mining’s application to extract 800,000 tonnes of coal from a site at Dewley Hill near Throckley.
  • More fossil fuels in the pipeline

    Daniel Willis
    | 16th December 2020
    The announcement that UK will end public investments in overseas fossil fuels is welcome, but campaigners cannot take their foot off the gas.
  • North Sea oil platforms

    Let’s talk about public ownership

    Gabriel Levy
    | 15th December 2020
    A just transition to a low carbon economy should involve oil companies paying more tax and energy workers having more say.
  • Making green come true

    Alexa Waud
    | 2nd December 2020
    What’s keeping the green promise of housing retrofit from becoming a reality?

Mining

  • Frog

    If the frogs should win

    Carlos Zorrilla
    | 11th January 2021
    The fate of some of Ecuador's last remaining cloud forests and hundreds of livelihoods rests on the outcome of a trailblazing Rights of Nature case concerning two tiny amphibians.
  • Los Cedros Forest Reserve. Photo: Rainforest Information Centre

    Saving Los Cedros is 'case of the century'

    Rebekah Hayden
    | 26th November 2020
    The struggle to save the Los Cedros Forest Reserve in Ecuador from mining will set huge precedent for biodiversity protections.
  • Rights of Nature in Ecuador

    Rebekah Hayden
    | 6th November 2020
    The outcome of a case to protect the Los Cedros Reserve from mining will set a precedent for all future Rights of Nature cases in Ecuador.
  • Ntshangase’s voice rings louder than gunshots

    Dalena Tran
    | 5th November 2020
    Activist Fikile Ntshangase’s death is another case of the injustice that environmental defenders endure.
  • BHP: don’t believe its hype

    Saul Jones
    | 21st October 2020
    Meet the mining giant that talks big on responsibility, but has a long way to go to meet its own hype.
  • A photo of the San Finx mine site, taken in the 1990s. Photo: Vida e Ría

    We can't mine our way out of the climate crisis

    Marianne Brooker
    | 29th September 2020
    Global upswell of civil society organisations, communities and academics tells EC to align raw materials sourcing plans with the interests of people and planet.
  • The Harlequin Frog (Atelopus longirostris). Photo: Carlos Zorilla

    Sanctuary for life in Ecuador

    Rebekah Hayden
    | 25th September 2020
    A Constitutional Protection Action could protect the Rights of Nature over the economic rights of transnational companies in Ecuador's Intag Valley.

Pollution

  • A forgotten classic of agroecological science

    Tara Pinheiro Gibsone
    | 12th January 2021
    Francis Chabboussou's Healthy Crops is a forgotten classic of organic science, with wide-reaching implications for global agriculture.
  • Emerald Ash Borer

    Pests and climate breakdown

    Emily Folk
    | 4th January 2021
    Climate breakdown provides a more habitable environment for many types of insects - resulting in pests, crop damage and increased diseases.
  • Pesticide takeover spells trouble for bees

    Phil Carter
    | 3rd December 2020
    Pollinators and farmers likely to bear the brunt of the acquisition of Bharat Insecticides by a consortium led by Mitsui.
  • Did air pollution kill Ella Adoo-Kissi-Debrah?

    Catherine Early
    | 30th November 2020
    A second inquest scrutinising the role of air pollution in the death of a nine-year old from Lewisham in London begins today.
  • Hazelnut crisis in Tuscia

    James P Graham
    | 25th November 2020
    Since 2018 almost 1000 hectares of land around lake Bolsena, Italy, has been appropriated by the chemically-grown hazelnuts industry.
  • Beijing smog

    Air pollution harms most vulnerable

    Emily Folk
    | 9th November 2020
    Air pollution is a rising concern with climate change and wildfires having a growing impact on every day life. It's worst impacts hurt vulnerable populations.
  • Trump clapping

    Trump backs fracking over science

    Shashikant Yadav
    | 2nd November 2020
    Trump's nationalist, populist and anti-science rhetoric on fracking has shifted the debate to the right, endangering the environment and public health.

Economics and policy

  • We need a London School of Ecology and Economics

    Satish Kumar
    | 11th January 2021
    'The LSE would become a world leader and show other universities teaching economics is incomplete without teaching ecology.'
  • Making green come true

    Alexa Waud
    | 2nd December 2020
    What’s keeping the green promise of housing retrofit from becoming a reality?
  • Black Friday and the climate emergency

    Andrew Simms
    Tim Kasser
    | 26th November 2020
    Black Friday could easily refer to today’s carbon footprint driven by the spree of overconsumption, fuelled by advertising.
  • Melbourne Global Climate Strike, 20 Sep 2019.

    Politics in a time of consequences

    Laurie Laybourn-Langton
    | 23rd November 2020
    We need more inclusive, empowering political narratives that drive systemic change.
  • Boris Johnson

    We need a real Green Industrial Revolution

    Chris Saltmarsh
    | 20th November 2020
    Labour and the Tories aren't prepared for a real green industrial revolution. Here's what it should include.
  • CDC

    Polluting investments not in our name

    Daniel Willis
    | 19th November 2020
    Parliamentarians and NGOs across Europe have signed joint statements calling for public development banks to respect human rights and stop funding fossil fuels.
  • Biden’s environmental proposals

    Emily Folk
    | 13th November 2020
    Climate breakdown concerns voters like never before - so was this reflected in the 2020 US presidential election results?

Indigenous Peoples

  • Tribal children assemble at Kalinga Institute of Social Sciences (KISS)

    Lessons in destruction

    Gladson Dungdung
    | 17th November 2020
    Factory schools threaten the survival of Indigenous culture.
  • Coming back to life in Tharaka, Kenya

    Simon Mitambo
    | 7th October 2020
    Community leader shares how the Indigenous Tharakan people are pursuing decolonisation and building resilience to COVID-19 and climate change.
  • Salween Peace Park: for all living things

    Karen Environmental and Social Action Network (KESAN)
    | 8th September 2020
    The Karen Indigenous People in Myanmar founded the Salween Peace Park to protect their mega-diverse territory and their culture from extractivism and conflict.
  • Stories of resilience

    Million Belay
    Liz Hosken
    | 8th September 2020
    A new Ecologist series explores grassroots stories of resilience and hope in a time of multiple crises.
  • Loggin in Manu national park

    Voices on the road

    Brendan Montague
    | 14th August 2020
    New documentary on indigenous rights and the future of the Amazon launches online.
  • Extinction Rebellion pour blood on the steps of Trafalgar Square to highlight the crisis in Brazil

    Scientists raise the alarm on Amazon fires

    Catherine Early
    | 13th August 2020
    Worsening fires and deforestation in the Amazon are exacerbating the situation for indigenous people, who are already more vulnerable to Covid-19, scientists say.
  • Park Narodowy Manú

    Indigenous knowledge and global food systems

    Dr Agnes Kalibata
    | 12th August 2020
    Indigenous peoples can inspire future global food systems towards more sustainable and just societies

Systems

  • CRISPR

    Nobel Prize for a gene bomb

    Silvia Ribeiro
    | 22nd October 2020
    CRISPR and new forms of gene manipulation must not be allowed anywhere near our food systems or into the wider environment.
  • Carbon capture

    Hacking the earth?

    Bill McGuire
    | 20th October 2020
    Geo-engineering 'turns hearts and minds away from the cause of the climate crisis and inevitably dilutes the urgency with which it must be addressed'.
  • Seagrass. Photo: Richard Unsworth.

    Restoring seagrass meadows in England

    Emma Nolan
    | 23rd September 2020
    Seagrass meadows support marine life, human livelihoods and the fight against climate breakdown.
  • Glacier

    Study of 66 million years of climate

    Staff Reporter
    | 14th September 2020
    'Window into the past provides context for the ongoing anthropogenic change and how exceptional it is.'
  • Stop Golden Rice

    Golden Rice is 'trojan horse'

    Stop Golden Rice Network
    | 19th August 2020
    Golden Rice will only strengthen the grip of corporations over rice and agriculture, endangering agrobiodiversity and human health.
  • Vaccine

    UK deal threatens 'vaccine nationalism'

    Brendan Montague
    | 18th August 2020
    UK's Covid-19 vaccine deals with Novavax and Janssen threaten fair global distribution, campaigners warn.
  • Bee

    Air pollution making honey bees sick

    Barbara Smith
    Mark Brown
    | 11th August 2020
    The combined impacts of pesticides and air pollution on bees could have severe consequences.

Resurgence & Ecologist

  • A pair of green munias

    The green munias

    Sahil Zutshi
    | 7th January 2021
    Father and son team up to protect India's 'green ones', long threatened by habitat destruction and the export market.
  • Fridays for Future Berlin

    New year cheer

    Marianne Brown
    | 5th January 2021
    People across the world are building resilience amid uncertainty.
  • Tribal children assemble at Kalinga Institute of Social Sciences (KISS)

    Lessons in destruction

    Gladson Dungdung
    | 17th November 2020
    Factory schools threaten the survival of Indigenous culture.
  • Night sky

    Night life

    Marianne Brown
    | 4th November 2020
    The current issue of Resurgence & Ecologist magazine offers a celebration of the night sky.
  • Daisy

    Hope in the extreme

    Marianne Brown
    | 25th August 2020
    People around the world are nurturing life - and hope - in the extreme.
  • Sculpture by Walter Bailey

    Home is where the art is

    PL Henderson
    | 3rd August 2020
    PL Henderson meets the sculptor Walter Bailey.
  • Women at allotment

    Digging a hole for ourselves

    Nicky Scott
    | 28th July 2020
    Industrial practices are making their way into home-growers' gardens and compounding the damage of peat extraction.

Ecologist recycled

  • A virus is haunting Europe - the vector is capitalism

    Brendan Montague
    | 18th March 2020
    The decision to defend capital has led to governments taking too little action too late to stop the spread of novel coronavirus.
  • Burning sloth

    The sloth and the bonfire

    Pablo Solon
    | 28th August 2019
    Nature should not be burned at the stake, legally or illegally.
  • Water vole

    The ecology of victory

    Ian Rappel
    | 9th July 2019
    What lessons can environmental activists learn from the dismissal of the M4 Black Route?
  • London

    Reimagining London

    Samuel Hayward
    | 1st July 2019
    We can make London work for everyone, but we need to have a brave, grassroots vision.
  • Strike before the planet gets hot

    Jonathan Neale
    | 30th May 2019
    Greta Thunberg has called for a world-wide strike on Friday September 20 - for children and adults. Here's how to make this a reality.
  • Biapo Brisu

    The oil spills of Ogoniland

    Amelia Collins
    | 17th May 2019
    Oil still contaminates the Niger Delta, over two decades after Shell was first called out for its destruction of the land.
  • Protesters spill fake blood outside Downing Street

    Social collapse and climate breakdown

    Jonathan Neale
    | 8th May 2019
    Wisdom only begins when we let in the grief and rage of understanding climate breakdown. Can we find radical hope in the face of social collapse around the world?

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