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Young climate leader Leena in India is using art to help people understand the climate crisis. If you have eco-anxiety, here's how you can volunteer to help her mission: #ChannelKindness#BeKind365 https://t.co/xj21WJfPvg
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Scotland is banning the sale of wet wipes containing plastic from 11 August 2027. The move targets marine litter and microplastic pollution, with exemptions for medical and industrial uses. Authorities urge people to follow the 3Ps rule: flush only pee, poo, and toilet paper.
The US abandons the endangerment finding, trading science for short-term profit. Billions of tonnes of greenhouse gases loom, thousands of lives at risk, and the global renewable race accelerates without us. Denial today becomes catastrophe tomorrow.
The Colorado River now holds the rights of a living entity. A river with voice challenges us to see water not as resource but as kin. Legal recognition is only the first step: to honor it, we must reshape consumption, policy, and conscience.
When local authorities abandon carbon neutrality under the guise of “financial burden,” they gamble with the only currency that truly matters: our future. Climate inaction is no longer political expedience, it is moral failure.
Capitalism regards the biosphere as indifference incarnate, valuing profit over survival. Yet democracy offers a horizon of possibility: reclaim our economy, redistribute power, and the climate can still be salvaged. Inaction is complicity, courage is imperative.
Seventy years of ecological decline on the Yangtze have met with an improbable reversal: fish biomass doubles, endangered species resurge. When policy aligns with ecological insight, resilience emerges. Let this be a blueprint: humans can restore what they once imperiled.
The Arctic ice does not negotiate, the forests do not plead, and yet humanity hesitates. We are witnessing the slow unraveling of planetary equilibrium. To stand idle is to inherit catastrophe: knowledge demands action, and action demands courage.
Wikie and Keijo, the last mother-and-son orcas at Marineland Antibes in France, remain in stagnant pools since the park’s closure, with authorities and animal welfare groups struggling to agree on a sanctuary in Canada for their rehoming.
Heat records fall, hospitals fill, power grids strain, and still our leaders treat climate breakdown as a communications problem. At what temperature does accountability begin? The physics is settled. The politics is the emergency.
Rewilding begins with a frog pond and ends with a question: what do we want our gardens to sound like? Lawnmowers, or bees and birdsong? In an age of ecological collapse, even a suburban patch can become an act of restoration, a quiet refusal of extinction.
In central Australia, families endure nearly 40 days above 40 degrees while prepaid power runs out in three days. When heat becomes lethal, electricity is not a luxury, it is survival. Climate justice means no child chooses between cooling and food.