The Climate Edit newsletter this week considers what the future holds for Costa Rica's cloud forests in a changing climate. It discusses Dubai's purchase of electric buses, and reports on high-value grants for research into cloud seeding.
@climatechange
https://t.co/DswrAIfkeG
An attack on Iran could further destabilise the Middle East, the Qatari prime minister has warned at the World Economic Forum in Davos.
https://t.co/8MoRNutzI2
The Climate Edit this week looks at how the UAE is supporting Emirati scientists who are researching the world's polar regions. The newsletter also looks at the pressure sea turtles are under in the Gulf and considers the UAE's new laws on plastics.
https://t.co/DswrAIfS4e
This week The Climate Edit newsletter looks at the devastating floods that have killed more than 1,300 people in South and South-East Asia. We also consider whether outdoor spaces can be made comfortable for eight months a year.
https://t.co/DswrAIfS4e
Stormy days in the UAE are becoming more common because of climate change, a forthcoming study has found. This increases the risk of severe flooding of the kind Dubai, Sharjah and some other places experienced in 2024.
#globalwarming#climatechange
https://t.co/yCbJsrHLkB
This week The Climate Edit looks at the outcome of Cop30, which many campaigners have said was disappointing. Also, severe flooding has hit South-East Asia.
#climatechange#globalwarming
https://t.co/DswrAIfkeG
Meet the Sharjah ant: Newly discovered insect named in honour of emirate
Thanks to Gary Feulner of Dubai Natural History Group and Prof Walter Tschinkel of @FloridaState for the comments.
https://t.co/g0JcwOAbSi
This week The Climate Edit highlights how adaptation is high on the Cop30 agenda. It also discusses how a villa being built in Lebanon could harm a breeding site for a threatened seal, just one of thousands of cases where development and nature conflict.
https://t.co/DswrAIfS4e
This week The Climate Edit newsletter discusses how indigenous communities are taking centre stage at Cop30. It also highlights how global oil demand is forecast to grow until 2050 and looks at Tehran's once-in-a-century drought.
#climatechange#COP30
https://t.co/DswrAIfkeG
“Overall there’s irreversible progress in climate action, [although] it’s not as fast as we want and it’s not as deep as we want.” - Asher Minns, Tyndall Centre's executive director⬇️
UAE deserts help scientists to better understand Mars - and may indicate that the Red Planet remained suitable for life for longer.
#Mars#RedPlanet
https://t.co/7stIgr0rjo