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Sea levels are increasing around Britain at a far faster rate than a century ago while the country is warming slightly more than the global average, leading meteorologists have said.
The annual study, published on Wednesday and titled "State of the UK Climate 2021", found recent decades have been "warmer, wetter and sunnier" than the 20th century.
"This year's report continues to show the impact of global temperature rises on the climate in the UK," the Met Office, the country's meteorological authority, said in a summary on Thursday.
The report comes hot on the heels of temperatures topping 40 degrees Celsius in England last week for the first time, setting a record at 40.3C.
It added the findings were "reaffirming that climate crisis is not just a problem for the future and that it is already influencing the conditions we experience here at home".
Meteorologists noted in the report that sea levels over the last three decades had increased in some places at more than double the rate recorded at the start of the 1900s.
They have risen by around 16.5cm since 1990 — approximately three to 5.2mm each year, compared to 1.5mm annually in the early part of last century.
This is exposing more areas of coastal land to larger and more frequent storm surges and "wind driven wave impacts", the Met Office said.
Record temperatures
Svetlana Jevrejeva, of the National Oceanographic Centre, said there was evidence that the rises were due to the increased rate of ice loss from the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets.
Glacier melting around the world and warming of the ocean were also responsible, she noted.
"As sea levels rise there can be greater impacts from storm surges," Jevrejeva warned.
The annual study also found that Britain has warmed at a broadly consistent but "slightly higher" rate than global mean temperature rises.
The Met Office's Mike Kendon, lead author of the report, said record temperatures, such as last week's unprecedented heatwave, were "becoming routine rather than the exception".
The UK hosted the COP26 summit last November, when scores of countries agreed to collective measures to try to prevent a catastrophic climate crisis.
But fears are growing that many could stall on delivering pledges, including on ending financing fossil fuel projects abroad.
Source: AFP
EU member states agreed to cut gas consumption by 15 percent by March next year in an attempt to show a unified front against Russia. But implementing the deal won’t be easy.
European leaders announced this week that sanctions on Russia will extend until January 2023 over its incursion into Ukraine. Russia announced further cuts to its gas flows to Europe, particularly through the Nord Stream 1 pipeline, connected to Germany.
In order to protect the bloc against shortages, European Union governments have committed to rationing natural gas this winter. Energy ministers on Tuesday agreed to set a voluntary target for EU countries to cut down gas consumption by 15 percent by next March - compared with the average use for the last five years.
EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen called it a “decisive step” against further disruption to gas supply, which European countries claim is blackmail from the Kremlin.
The proposal for coordinated rationing, put forward by the European Commission last Wednesday, was quickly approved as the EU attempts to show a unified response. But a provision that would have given the Commission the power to impose mandatory targets if individual countries failed to achieve their own end of the bargain was scrapped.
The decision on any mandatory action will be in the hands of member states as it will be down to the European Council – which includes the heads of state of the EU 27– to approve any proposal.
The plan was approved by all countries with the exception of Hungary.
Why would countries lectured about ‘frugality’ during the debt crisis now step in?
Germany, which is heavily reliant on Russian gas through the Nord Stream 1 pipeline, is set to face shortages this winter, alongside some countries in Eastern Europe.
But critics are already pointing out that during the 2010-12 sovereign debt crisis, southern European countries received no sympathy from Germany and other northern neighbours, forcing governments to implement austerity measures and cuts to public spending with huge consequences for society and the economy.
Germany, on the other hand, made a political decision to rely on a cheap and steady supply of Russian gas. Before the war in Ukraine began, it has been building another pipeline, the Nord Stream 2, connecting it directly to Russia without cutting through Ukraine territory. Permissions to operate the pipeline were halted in February.
Teresa Ribera Rodriguez, Spain’s minister for the ecological transition, voiced her opposition to the rationing plan in an open letter to the European Commission last week.
“We share the final goal of the commission’s proposals: solidarity must be at the core of the EU response in order to ensure security of supply. However, the response cannot rely on imposing unfair sacrifices,” she wrote.
“Unlike other countries, we Spaniards have not lived beyond our means from an energy perspective,” she said in a not-so-veiled scold, referring to northern countries’ attitude towards their southern neighbours during the debt crisis. Other southern European countries and the island nations also voiced their opposition.
Can the plan work without making it mandatory and with all the exceptions that exist?
Due to this opposition, the deal fell short of making the 15 percent cuts mandatory in case of an emergency, as originally proposed last week.
While the move has been broadly welcomed as a positive step, analysts have pointed out that the many exceptions contained in the deal make it unlikely to succeed.
Countries exempt from it include the island states - Ireland, Greek Cypriot Adminstration and Malta - not connected to the EU’s pipelines and therefore unable to seek alternative supplies. The Baltic nations, not hooked to the EU’s electricity system and heavily reliant on gas for electricity, are also exempt from the target. Countries that exceed gas storage filling targets will also be among the exemptions.
Can the EU win the gas war with Russia?
The agreement to ration supplies is an attempt to show the Europeans’ resolve to act in unison. However, critics say, it does not show real unity, and this is likely to be exploited by Russia.
Russia has denied attempting to exert pressure on the EU by using gas as leverage over its sanctions on Ukraine. However, the European Energy Agency (EEA) reports that due to the increase in gas prices, Russia’s revenue from European gas alone has increased by two times the average over the past several years, reaching $95 billion. The additional revenue could make it easier for Russia to shut the supply entirely – or severely limit it - to put pressure on the bloc.
Current gas storage levels across the bloc stand at 67 percent, with only three countries – Poland, Denmark and Sweden – above the 80 percent target.
As part of its sanctions package against Russia, the EU has agreed to embargo Russia’s oil and coal starting later this year. It has also set targets to wean itself off Russia’s natural gas, while refraining from cutting gas imports on which some member states are heavily reliant.
But the last package of sanctions against Russia, approved last week, saw the removal of a ban on transactions between Russian state-owned and European companies, particularly insurance companies needed by Russia to sell its oil to third countries.
In addition, Canada decided last week to return a turbine belonging to the Nord Stream 1 pipeline it had received for maintenance from Gazprom – despite a ban on providing technical equipment to Russia.
Meanwhile, the cost of gas continues to skyrocket, compounding galloping inflation and a cost- of-living crisis across the continent and beyond.
Source: TRT World
Europe's border agency Frontex has routinely covered up illegal "pushbacks" of migrants by the Greek coastguard, media reports said, citing a leaked internal review.
A 129-page investigation by the European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) found that Frontex, under former executive director Fabrice Leggeri, was complicit in Greek efforts to force migrants and asylum-seekers crossing the Aegean Sea to return to Türkiye, German magazine Der Spiegel wrote on Thursday.
The confidential report was also seen by France's Le Monde newspaper and investigative outfit Lighthouse Reports. It follows repeated allegations by aid groups that Frontex was turning a blind eye to Greek human rights violations at sea.
"Instead of preventing the pushbacks, Leggeri and his people covered them up. They lied to the EU Parliament and concealed the fact that the agency even supported some pushbacks with European taxpayers' money," Spiegel wrote.
The OLAF review found that at least six pushback incidents involved Greek coastguard ships that had been co-financed by Frontex, the magazine said.
Air patrolling stopped
In one incident in August 2020, Frontex Surveillance Aircraft filmed Greek coastguard towing a dinghy with around 30 migrants on board towards Turkish waters – when they should have been taken to Greece.
Instead of confronting Greek authorities, Frontex stopped patrolling the Aegean by air, saying the planes were needed elsewhere, Spiegel wrote.
A hand-written note found later by OLAF investigators said that Frontex management withdrew the aircraft "so as not to become a witness" to Greece's illegal actions.
The Greek government has consistently denied the allegations of pushbacks.
The OLAF investigation paints a damning picture of Leggeri's leadership, Spiegel said, adding that the report's revelations played a role in his resignation last April.
Governance issue
Responding to the OLAF report leak, a European Commission spokeswoman said "a set of measures" had already been introduced "to address the governance issue of Frontex", which has been headed by interim executive director Aija Kalnaja since the start of July.
"In terms of our work with the Greek authorities, there is progress also on the ground," Anitta Hipper told reporters, pointing to a new legislative proposal "to ensure that there is a robust monitoring system" for arriving migrants.
Former boss Leggeri's seven years as Frontex chief, marked by repeated political scares over migrant arrivals in Europe, coincided with a major increase in resources for the agency.
Frontex is set to grow to 10,000 staff watching the EU's external borders by 2027.
Source: AFP
The tribunal, set up in 2009, has been criticised by international rights groups for not following fair trial standards.
A court in Bangladesh has sentenced six men to death for committing alleged crimes against humanity during the country’s independence war in 1971.
Five of the convicts were present for the sentencing on Thursday in the capital Dhaka, while one is absconding.
A seventh accused has died since the case was launched in November 2015.
A three-member International Crimes Tribunal convicted the defendants on charges of committing murders and engaging in looting, kidnapping and arson in the southwestern city of Khulna in 1971.
All six were said to be supporters of the now-defunct Convention Muslim League and opposition Jamaat-e-Islami during a months-long war that led to Bangladesh gaining independence from Pakistan in 1971.
The tribunal, set up in 2009, has been criticised by international rights groups for not following fair trial standards.
Abdus Sattar Palwan, the convicts’ lawyer, told reporters that his clients “did not get justice” and that they will challenge the verdict in a higher court.
Source: AA
An Australian and a Canadian mountain climber died last week in northern Pakistan while attempting to scale K2, the world’s second-highest mountain.
The death of Matthew Eakin was announced on Thursday by the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, which expressed its “condolences to his family and friends.” His body was found through drone video.
A Pakistani mountaineering official and the Canadian Press said the body of Richard Cartier, who went missing in a separate incident on the same mountain on July 19, had finally also been spotted by a search team on K2.
Cartier was 60 and an experienced climber.
The Dawn, one of Pakistan's English-language newspapers, reported earlier this week that the two climbers had been spotted between Camp 1 and Camp 2 on K2 after they both went missing on July 19 in separate incidents.
Deadly record
Eakin’s devastated friends posted tributes on social media to honour him, saying his death was a huge loss to the mountaineering community.
Karrar Haidri, the deputy chief of the Pakistan Alpine Club, which coordinates search and rescue missions with Pakistan's government and military, confirmed the deaths of Eakin and Cartier.
“We extend our condolences to the friends and family members of the Australian and Canadian climbers who died on K2,” Haidri said.
Also last week, a third climber, Ali Akbar Sakki from Afghanistan, suffered a heart attack and died while trying to scale K2, Haidri said.
K2, on the Chinese-Pakistani border in the Karakorum Range, has one of the deadliest records, with most climbers dying on the descent, where the slightest mistake can trigger an avalanche and become fatal.
K2 is also among the coldest and windiest of climbs. At places along the route, climbers must navigate nearly sheer rock faces rising 80 degrees, while avoiding frequent and unpredictable avalanches.
Until this year, it had been scaled just 425 times, whereas Everest – the world's highest – had been conquered by more than 6,000 people since Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay first reached the top in 1953.
Source: agencies
KUWAIT: A group of MPs yesterday called on the new Prime Minister Sheikh Ahmad Al-Nawaf Al-Sabah to embrace a package of reforms that includes a list of legislation proposed by experts and youth activists. Sheikh Ahmad was on Sunday named by the Amir to form the new Cabinet following the resignation of the outgoing prime minister Sheikh Sabah Al-Khaled Al-Sabah over lingering disputes with opposition MPs.
The new Cabinet will supervise a plan to dissolve the National Assembly and call for fresh polls as promised by the Amir a few weeks ago. In a joint statement, MPs also called on all sections of the society to cooperate and coordinate to create a common platform to jointly build the future Kuwait.
The lawmakers also stressed their commitment to a package of reforms proposed by a parliamentary bloc several months ago which calls for extensive legal, legislative, economic, election and political reforms and urged the new premier to adopt it. A large number of MPs have welcomed the appointment of Sheikh Ahmad, the son of HH the Amir, as the new prime minister and urged him to fight corruption and adopt reforms.
Meanwhile, lawmakers expressed optimism that the new PM will be able to take Kuwait out of ongoing political disputes that stalled reforms and development and vowed to lend him all cooperation needed. Opposition lawmakers, who were at loggerheads with the outgoing prime minister, were overjoyed by the appointment of Sheikh Ahmad.MP Saud Al-Mutairi expressed the hope that the new head of government will succeed to “build a new Kuwait”.
AIMIM leader Asaduddin Owaisi hit out at the BJP on Wednesday over the showering of flower petals on Kanwariyas in Uttar Pradesh, saying this warmth is not for Muslims, whose houses are bulldozed.
Talking to reporters in the Parliament complex, the Hyderabad MP said all communities should be treated equally.
''The BJP-led Uttar Pradesh government is showering flower petals on Kanwariyas using public money. We want them to treat everyone equally. They do not shower flowers on us (Muslims). Instead, they bulldoze our houses.
''If you love one community, you cannot hate another.... If you have faith, then others also have faith,'' the All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) chief said.
Sharing several news reports on Twitter on Tuesday about the Kanwar Yatra, Owaisi said, ''If a Muslim offers prayers in an open place even for a few minutes, it leads to a row. Muslims are facing police bullets, custodial clashes, NSA, UAPA, lynchings, bulldozers just for being Muslims.'' Earlier this month, senior officials showered flower petals on Kanwariyas in Uttar Pradesh's Meerut.
Kanwariyas (devotees of Lord Shiva) collect water from the Ganga at Haridwar in Uttarakhand to offer at Shiva temples in their areas as part of the Kanwar Yatra.
As crises multiply and the devastating conflict in Ukraine drags on, its global effects are being felt hard in the Sahel and West Africa, a region with more than 32 million people facing acute food insecurity. The war’s impacts risk pushing an additional 9 million people in the region into food insecurity.
In the face of the crisis, the World Bank is deploying short- and long-term responses to boost food and nutrition security, reduce risks, and strengthen food systems.
These actions form part of the institution’s global response to the ongoing food security crisis, with up to $30 billion in existing and new projects in areas spanning agriculture, nutrition, social protection, water, and irrigation. This financing will include efforts to encourage food and fertilizer production, enhance food systems, facilitate greater trade, and support vulnerable households and producers.
Soaring prices
The shockwaves of the conflict are expected to have complex, long-lasting impacts for the world. Global prices are forecast to remain at historically high levels through the end of 2024, and the war is altering patterns of trade and production in ways that will aggravate food insecurity and inflation. These jolts come after two years of COVID-19 pandemic disruption, dealing a fresh blow to an already fragile global food system grappling with climate extremes.
« Today, with soaring inflation, unfortunately many people in Africa are struggling to have access to basics such as food products, » says Ousmane Diagana, World Bank Vice President for Western and Central Africa.
World bank Vice-president Ousmane Diagana © world bank
Markets in the Sahel and West Africa are experiencing stark price rises of oil, rice, wheat and other commodities on the international market, and poorer households spend disproportionately more on food than those better off. The price of wheat, a food staple for many households, stood 60% higher at the start of June 2022 compared to January 2021, according to World Bank data.
The price of fertilisers too, essential for productive agriculture, has surged since the war and now stands almost three times higher than a year ago. The knock-on effect is expected to reduce food production over the coming years as soaring prices force many farmers to use less fertiliser.
Tackling root causes
The World Bank is mobilising support for emergency responses in the Sahel and West Africa to help countries at risk of food insecurity respond faster. It is also working with its humanitarian partners to monitor regional food insecurity and draw up Food Security Preparedness Plans.
The challenge of boosting the region’s food and nutrition security is also demanding long-term responses. And, as many root causes—and consequences—of food insecurity defy national borders, regional approaches are being adopted to build food systems resilience across Western and Central African countries.
The $716 million Food System Resilience Program (FSRP) is one such approach. It aims to benefit some four million people in West Africa by increasing agricultural productivity through climate-smart agriculture, promoting intraregional value chains, and building regional capacity to manage agricultural risks.
The Great Green Wall
As food systems in the Sahel and West Africa face exceptional stress, there is also a growing demand for more climate-smart investments to support countries where communities face the compounded effects of climate change, conflict, and unprecedented environmental degradation.
The African-led Great Green Wall is a major regional initiative that promises such climate-smart solutions to transform both the region’s economies and ecosystems. By 2030, it seeks to restore some 100 million hectares of degraded land and generate 10 million jobs in rural areas, supporting people’s ability to respond and adapt to climate risks. The World Bank has committed to invest $5.6 billion between 2020 and 2025 in 11 countries taking part. Over 60 projects are focused on transforming livelihoods in the Great Green Wall through landscape restoration, improved food systems, and access to climate-resilient infrastructure.
Tangible results
“Before, I used chemical fertiliser every year and I could go through 20 or 30 bags of it,” says farmer Nama Boureima in Sapouy, Burkina Faso, one of hundreds benefiting from biodigesters installed in the country.
By adding a mix of cow manure and water to biodigesters, farmers can generate renewable biogas for cooking and organic fertiliser for their fields. This reduces CO2 emissions by capturing methane emitted by the manure, while lowering pressure on forest resources previously used for household fuel.
“Now I don't worry anymore about the fertiliser problem,” Boureima says.
His farm illustrates some of the sweeping changes in progress under the Great Green Wall. Some 270,000 hectares of land have been brought under sustainable management in Burkina Faso; more than 2,500 micro-projects have been financed; 1.5 million people have seen their monetary benefits from forest products increase; and 10 million tons of CO2 have been reduced or avoided.
About 2.6 million people benefited from the US$900 million Nigeria Erosion and Watershed Project (NEWMAP) that reinforced the country’s ability to fight erosion, natural hazards and disasters, while creating 20,000 direct and 32,000 indirect jobs through Sovereign Green Bonds — a first for Africa.
In Niger, additional yields of as much as 58% have been achieved by agro-sylvo-pastoral communities thanks to training on climate-smart strategies.
Green future
As global food security challenges mount, tapping the potential of these ambitious climate-smart investments is seen as essential for making the region’s economy more resilient, achieving inclusive growth, and combating food insecurity.
“When these elements are put together, not only does it transform the economy, but jobs are created too. That allows young Africans to stay in Africa and make a living from their work by being in Africa,” says the World Bank’s Diagana.
In 1998, as nations around the world agreed to cut carbon emissions through the Kyoto Protocol, America’s fossil fuel companies plotted their response, including an aggressive strategy to inject doubt into the public debate.
“Victory,” according to the American Petroleum Institute’s memo, “will be achieved when average citizens ‘understand’ (recognize) uncertainties in climate science... Unless ‘climate change’ becomes a non-issue... there may be no moment when we can declare victory.”
The memo, later leaked to The New York Times that year, went on to outline how fossil fuel companies could manipulate journalists and the broader public by muddying the evidence, by playing up “both sides” of the debate and by portraying those seeking to reduce emissions as “out of touch with reality.”
Nearly 25 years later, the reality of a changing climate is now clear to most Americans, as heatwaves and wildfires, rising sea levels and extreme storms become more common.
Last week, President Joe Biden announced moves intended to expand offshore wind, though he stopped short of declaring a national climate emergency. A Supreme Court ruling last month limited the federal government’s ability to regulate carbon emissions from power plants, meaning it will be up to a divided Congress to pass any meaningful limits on emissions.
Even as surveys show the public generally has become more concerned about climate change, a sizeable number of Americans have become even more distrustful of the scientific consensus.
“The tragedy of this is that all over social media, you can see tens of millions of Americans who think scientists are lying, even about things that have been proven for decades,” said Naomi Oreskes, a historian of science at Harvard University who has written about the history of climate change disinformation. “They’ve been persuaded by decades of disinformation. The denial is really, really deep.”
And persistent. Just last month, even with record heat in London, raging wildfires in Alaska and historic flooding in Australia, the Science and Environmental Policy Project, a pro-fossil fuel thank tank, said all the scientists had it wrong.
“There is no climate crisis,” the group wrote in its newsletter.
Years before COVID-19 set off a wave of misinformation, or former President Donald Trump’s lies about the 2020 election helped spur an insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, fossil fuel companies spent big in an effort to undermine support for emissions reductions.
Now, even as those same companies promote investments in renewable energy, the legacy of all that climate disinformation remains.
It’s also contributed to a broader skepticism of scientists, scientific institutions and the media that report on them, a distrust reflected by doubts about vaccines or pandemic-era public health measures like masks and quarantines.
“It was the opening of a Pandora’s Box of disinformation that has proven hard to control,” said Dave Anderson of the Energy and Policy Institute, an organization that has criticized oil and coal companies for withholding what they knew about the risks of climate change.
Starting in the 1980s and 1990s, as public awareness of climate change grew, fossil fuel companies poured millions of dollars into public relations campaigns denouncing the accumulating evidence supporting the idea of climate change. They funded supposedly independent think tanks that cherrypicked the science and promoted fringe views designed to make it look like there were two legitimate sides to the dispute.
Since then, the approach has softened as the impact of climate change has become more apparent. Now, fossil fuel companies are more likely to play up their supposedly pro-environmental record, touting renewables like solar and wind or initiatives designed to improve energy efficiency or offset carbon emissions.
Aggressive approaches to address climate change are now dismissed not on scientific grounds but on economic ones. Fossil fuel companies talk about lost jobs or higher energy prices — without mentioning the cost of doing nothing, said Ben Franta, an attorney, author and Stanford University researcher who tracks fossil fuel disinformation.
“We are living within an extended multi-decade campaign executed by the fossil fuel industry,” Franta said. “The debate (over climate change) was manufactured by the fossil fuel industry in the 1990s, and we are living with that history right now.”
The impact of that history is reflected in public opinion surveys that show a growing gap between Republicans and other Americans when it comes to views on climate change.
While the percentage of overall Americans who say they’re concerned about climate change has risen, Republicans are increasingly skeptical. Last year, Gallup found that 32% of self-identified Republicans said they accepted the scientific consensus that pollution from humans is driving climate change, down from 52% in 2003.
By comparison, the percentage of self-identified Democrats that say they accept that human activities are leading to climate change increased from 68 to 88 over the same time period.
Fossil fuel companies deny any intent to mislead the American public and point to investments in renewable energy as evidence that they take climate change seriously.
ExxonMobil CEO Darren Woods told members of Congress last fall that his company “has long acknowledged the reality and risks of climate change, and it has devoted significant resources to addressing those risks.” ExxonMobil’s public claims about climate change, he said, “are and have always been truthful, fact-based ... and consistent” with mainstream science.
Asked about its role in spreading climate misinformation, a spokesman for the Southern Company pointed to recent expansions in renewable energy and initiatives meant to offset carbon emissions.
The 1998 “victory memo” laying out the industry’s strategy was created by the American Petroleum Institute. In a statement emailed to The Associated Press, API spokesperson Christina Noel said the oil industry is working to reduce emissions while also ensuring access to reliable, affordable energy.
“That’s exactly what our industry has been focused on for decades,” Noel said. “Any suggestion to the contrary is false.”
The 1998 memo is one of several documents cited by climate activists and some Democratic lawmakers who say they could be used to hold them legally responsible for misleading ratepayers, investors or the general public.
“It’s time for these companies to answer for the harm they have caused,” said Rep. Ro Khanna, D-California.
Republicans, however, have said Democrats want to focus on climate misinformation to distract from failed environmental policies that are driving up gas and energy costs./AP