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Editors’ picks

  • We need an ecological interest rate

    Andrew Simms
    | 2nd March 2021
    The UK budget must be about pouring enough water on climate fires and irrigating resources to those in need - not about plucking geese and ‘maxed-out’ credit cards.
  • Wakelyns

    We need ecological innovation

    Natalie Bennett
    | 2nd March 2021
    Innovation must mean real ecological transformation and not just new ways for companies to extract value through mining and externalise waste.
  • Climate breakdown fuels violence against women

    Orthalia Kunene
    | 1st March 2021
    Without women’s full participation and freedom from violence, oppression, and discrimination, our efforts to address the climate crises will be an absolute failure.
  • The People's Climate March rally in New York City, 21st September 2014. Photo: Alejandro Alvarez via Wikimedia commons (CC BY-SA).

    Popular outcry for environmental protections

    Sam Russell
    | 1st March 2021
    Nine out of 10 people in all countries - except the USA, where it is three out of four - want governments to do more to protect the environment.
  • Kids from XR Youth hold up placards at the September climate march

    Education when people and planet matter

    Brendan Montague
    | 1st March 2021
    Schumacher College, in partnership Resurgence & Ecologist magazine, is launching a major new essay competition on the topic of 'education as if people and planet matter’.
  • Young activists fight Cumbrian mine

    Anne Harris
    | 26th February 2021
    Young activists have added their voices to the call to stop a controversial new coking coal mine in Cumbria.
  • The four eastern cooling towers at the Drax biomass and coal-fired power station in North Yorkshire.

    Drax: environmental campaigns work

    August Graham
    | 25th February 2021
    Drax abandons plans to build Europe’s biggest gas power plant

Activism

  • Young activists fight Cumbrian mine

    Anne Harris
    | 26th February 2021
    Young activists have added their voices to the call to stop a controversial new coking coal mine in Cumbria.
  • Ban polystyrene chips now!

    Raya Branford
    Kate Leeming
    | 25th February 2021
    Polystyrene chips damage our beautiful planet, and harm innocent animals. Year 6 students Raya and Kate want them banned.
  • The EU should set tougher industrial carbon emissions cuts

    Councils invest £10b in fossil fuels

    Emily Beament
    | 23rd February 2021
    Freedom of Information requests reveal local authority pensions invest £9.9 billion in fossil fuel companies.
  • HS2 protestor

    Railing against HS2

    Steve Melia
    | 2nd February 2021
    The HS2 tunnellers must dig through 30 years of protest history to find the secret to success.
  • Ban bottom trawling

    Emily Beament
    | 2nd February 2021
    Bottom trawling could be prohibited in four English offshore marine protected areas, including Dogger Bank.
  • Remember Mama Ntshangase, and organise

    Hali Healy
    | 28th January 2021
    A vigil for Mama Ntshangase in South Africa reminds us of the impact on communities and the environment from national coal policies.
  • Boris Johnson

    Environmental legislation delay ‘deeply troubling’

    Emily Beament
    | 26th January 2021
    The UK Government delays passage of the The Environment Bill, not expected to become law until autumn.

Climate Breakdown

  • We need an ecological interest rate

    Andrew Simms
    | 2nd March 2021
    The UK budget must be about pouring enough water on climate fires and irrigating resources to those in need - not about plucking geese and ‘maxed-out’ credit cards.
  • Climate breakdown fuels violence against women

    Orthalia Kunene
    | 1st March 2021
    Without women’s full participation and freedom from violence, oppression, and discrimination, our efforts to address the climate crises will be an absolute failure.
  • The four eastern cooling towers at the Drax biomass and coal-fired power station in North Yorkshire.

    Drax: environmental campaigns work

    August Graham
    | 25th February 2021
    Drax abandons plans to build Europe’s biggest gas power plant
  • The Gates of climate hell

    Jonathan Neale
    | 22nd February 2021
    Bill Gates has made billions and understands capitalist markets - from the perspective of an investor. To confront climate breakdown we need to see things as human beings.
  • Air pollution

    UK must steel itself for green transition

    Emily Beament
    | 17th February 2021
    Common Wealth think tank argues steel contributes 15 percent of the UK’s greenhouse gases from industry and must be decarbonised.
  • How to stop climate breakdown

    Brendan Montague
    | 11th February 2021
    Download FIGHT THE FIRE for free. 'The most concise and compelling guide to stopping climate breakdown currently available'.
  • Extinction Rebellion protest

    Newspapers and climate breakdown

    Jonathan N Fuller
    | 10th February 2021
    Britain's national press is finally coming fully behind action on climate breakdown. But why the 'reverse ferret'?

Biodiversity

  • Beaver

    Rewilding Britain's waterways

    Marianne Brown
    | 25th February 2021
    Beavers, Europe’s largest rodent, are a keystone species who transform the landscape around them, creating new habitats.
  • Invertebrates living on plastic bags

    Brendan Montague
    | 25th January 2021
    Findings have important implications for management of urban rivers - including how river clean-ups are conducted. 
  • 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.

Coronavirus

  • Permanent pandemic?

    Neil Faulkner
    | 19th February 2021
    Covid capitalism has entered its second year. It is global, and chronic. How long before we identify a solution of similar magnitude?
  • Renewable energy

    A green Covid-19 recovery

    Sophie Johnson
    | 15th February 2021
    Building sustainability into the UK exit strategy from the pandemic is a win-win-win for the climate, public health and the economy.
  • Oil Palm Saplings on Burned Land in Central Kalimantan

    Our system of work is broken

    Katy Wiese
    | 11th February 2021
    The COVID-19 pandemic and the climate emergency made one thing clear: we have to radically rethink the way we work.
  • Inside the pig farm. Photo: Farms Not Factories.

    Covid, climate, and 'dual metabolic rupture'

    Neil Faulkner
    | 1st February 2021
    We thought climate catastrophe the main danger. Now we know there is another. A double-whammy ecological crisis threatens collapse into dystopian chaos.
  • Donald Trump

    Anti-maskers, anti-vaxxers and the racist right

    Jonathan Neale
    | 27th January 2021
    As we approach the anniversary of the first Covid-19 infections in the UK and US we look at Donald Trumps big lie, and failure to protect the people.
  • 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.

Food and Farming

  • Ban bottom trawling

    Emily Beament
    | 2nd February 2021
    Bottom trawling could be prohibited in four English offshore marine protected areas, including Dogger Bank.
  • Can the UK's countryside and those who farm it survive the twin assaults of Brexit and a trade deal with the USA? Photo: KayYen via Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND).

    The great re-think

    Colin Tudge
    | 1st February 2021
    To reform farming, we have to look at the bigger picture.
  • Fenced in

    Colin Tudge
    | 21st January 2021
    To reform farming, we have to look at the bigger picture.
  • Welsh Badgers at Dinefwr Park, Llandeilo. Photo: Neil Schofield via Flickr (CC BY-NC).

    Modelling killed the badgers

    Tom Langton
    | 18th January 2021
    The public has this year become more literate about disease control. It is time for better scrutiny of the UK badger culling strategy.
  • 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.

Conservation

  • HS2 protestor

    Railing against HS2

    Steve Melia
    | 2nd February 2021
    The HS2 tunnellers must dig through 30 years of protest history to find the secret to success.
  • 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.

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

  • The four eastern cooling towers at the Drax biomass and coal-fired power station in North Yorkshire.

    Drax: environmental campaigns work

    August Graham
    | 25th February 2021
    Drax abandons plans to build Europe’s biggest gas power plant
  • The EU should set tougher industrial carbon emissions cuts

    Councils invest £10b in fossil fuels

    Emily Beament
    | 23rd February 2021
    Freedom of Information requests reveal local authority pensions invest £9.9 billion in fossil fuel companies.
  • Texas: grids, blackouts, and green new deals

    Jonathan Neale
    | 17th February 2021
    The Texas blackouts are the latest deadly consequence of climate breakdown. And a Green New Deal and climate jobs are the solution.
  • Tax cuts and renewable energy

    Emily Folk
    | 4th February 2021
    Federal tax cuts are one way governments can help renewable energy grow in both the residential and business sectors.
  • China coal stokes climate fire

    Gabriel Levy
    | 22nd January 2021
    China’s national and provincial post-Covid recovery packages will put three times as much cash into fossil fuel projects as into renewable energy.
  • 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.

Mining

  • Young activists fight Cumbrian mine

    Anne Harris
    | 26th February 2021
    Young activists have added their voices to the call to stop a controversial new coking coal mine in Cumbria.
  • Aerial view of Rio Tinto's QMM mine in Madagascar. Photo: via Andrew Lees Trust.

    Can Rio Tinto be trusted?

    Yvonne Orengo
    | 18th February 2021
    Communities in southern Madagascar impacted by water pollution are still waiting for basic public health information from mining giant Rio Tinto.
  • Vale’s crime in Brumadinho

    Saul Jones
    | 28th January 2021
    Brazilian activists continue to campaign for justice two years on from the Brumadinho mining disaster in Brazil.
  • 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.
  • 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.

Pollution

  • Ban polystyrene chips now!

    Raya Branford
    Kate Leeming
    | 25th February 2021
    Polystyrene chips damage our beautiful planet, and harm innocent animals. Year 6 students Raya and Kate want them banned.
  • Ava Roberts with plastic waste

    PM must set legally binding plastic pollution targets

    Brendan Montague
    | 26th January 2021
    Academics and campaigners write to Boris Johnson as MPs discuss Environment Bill.
  • 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.

Economics and policy

  • We need an ecological interest rate

    Andrew Simms
    | 2nd March 2021
    The UK budget must be about pouring enough water on climate fires and irrigating resources to those in need - not about plucking geese and ‘maxed-out’ credit cards.
  • Wakelyns

    We need ecological innovation

    Natalie Bennett
    | 2nd March 2021
    Innovation must mean real ecological transformation and not just new ways for companies to extract value through mining and externalise waste.
  • Texas: grids, blackouts, and green new deals

    Jonathan Neale
    | 17th February 2021
    The Texas blackouts are the latest deadly consequence of climate breakdown. And a Green New Deal and climate jobs are the solution.
  • Renewable energy

    A green Covid-19 recovery

    Sophie Johnson
    | 15th February 2021
    Building sustainability into the UK exit strategy from the pandemic is a win-win-win for the climate, public health and the economy.
  • Even though most of China's industrial production is exported to the UK and other countries, we take no responsibility for the emissions in its power plants and factories, like this one in Chonqing. Photo: Jonathan Kos-Read via Flickr (CC BY-ND).

    The circularity gap and climate emissions

    Laxmi Haigh
    | 10th February 2021
    We cannot treat climate breakdown without understanding the full picture: emissions and resource use are inextricably enmeshed. 
  • Can the UK's countryside and those who farm it survive the twin assaults of Brexit and a trade deal with the USA? Photo: KayYen via Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND).

    The great re-think

    Colin Tudge
    | 1st February 2021
    To reform farming, we have to look at the bigger picture.
  • Circular economies 'can slash global emissions'

    Brendan Montague
    | 26th January 2021
    Efficient resource consumption can save 22.8 billion tonnes of carbon and help avoid climate breakdown.

Indigenous Peoples

  • Survival of the kindest

    Julian Abel
    | 24th February 2021
    More experts are arguing in favour of human compassion.
  • Aerial view of Rio Tinto's QMM mine in Madagascar. Photo: via Andrew Lees Trust.

    Can Rio Tinto be trusted?

    Yvonne Orengo
    | 18th February 2021
    Communities in southern Madagascar impacted by water pollution are still waiting for basic public health information from mining giant Rio Tinto.
  • 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.

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

  • Kids from XR Youth hold up placards at the September climate march

    Education when people and planet matter

    Brendan Montague
    | 1st March 2021
    Schumacher College, in partnership Resurgence & Ecologist magazine, is launching a major new essay competition on the topic of 'education as if people and planet matter’.
  • Beaver

    Rewilding Britain's waterways

    Marianne Brown
    | 25th February 2021
    Beavers, Europe’s largest rodent, are a keystone species who transform the landscape around them, creating new habitats.
  • Survival of the kindest

    Julian Abel
    | 24th February 2021
    More experts are arguing in favour of human compassion.
  • Can the UK's countryside and those who farm it survive the twin assaults of Brexit and a trade deal with the USA? Photo: KayYen via Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND).

    The great re-think

    Colin Tudge
    | 1st February 2021
    To reform farming, we have to look at the bigger picture.
  • Dee Woods

    Nourishing the community

    Dee Woods
    | 22nd January 2021
    Resurgence & Ecologist magazine spoke to Dee Woods about what resilience means to her and the Granville Community Kitchen.
  • Fenced in

    Colin Tudge
    | 21st January 2021
    To reform farming, we have to look at the bigger picture.
  • 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.

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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