Climate – live reporting every day on climate change

1701071176 Climate live reporting every day on climate change
  • Floods made the British food box 8,000 kroner more expensive

    An earlier flood in the UK. (Archive image) Photo: AP

    Floods in Great Britain have put several crops with grain under water, among other things potatoes have rotted, writes British The Independent. In Spain, the problem has been the opposite in its olive groves: drought and heatwave. This has caused the price of olive oil to rise by 50 percent. Sugar, rice and tomatoes have also been affected by extreme weather, where the price has risen by around 20 percent.

    Now a new British study shows that the cost of food for a family in the country has increased by 605 pounds, almost 8,000 kroner, in two years. The reason is climate change, according to the researchers.

    – Climate change is an increasingly prominent element that is one of the driving forces behind food inflation. In 2022, energy costs dominated the headlines. Now that energy prices have fallen, climate change has emerged as a bigger driver of food inflation in the past two years, Professor Wyn Morgan of the University of Sheffield told the paper.

  • Latest news

  • Agneta Elmegård

    yesterday14.38

    Challenges for sea turtles in the wake of climate change

    Sea turtles have been adapting to climate change for millions of years, but today’s rapid changes may be happening too quickly for them to evolve. Photo: Archive image: Gustav Sjöholm/TT

    The number of turtle nests is breaking records on American beaches. But global warming threatens their survival. This is reported by AP.

    In Florida, preliminary statistics show more than 133,840 hawksbill nests breaking the record from 2016. The same is true for the green turtle, where 76,500 nests are well above the previous record from 2017.

    But climate change poses challenges for the newborn turtles to survive the first year. Beaches are shrinking as sea levels rise and more powerful tropical storms are expected. According to Oceana, an international conservation group, warmer air is changing the ocean current corridors in the oceans that turtles use to migrate and increasing the odds of survival.

    The sand temperature also plays a decisive role in determining the sex of sea sk Show more

  • Christina Nordh

    25 Nov 23.42

    Small water monster threatened with extinction

    An axolotl in an aquarium. Photo: WIKIPEDIA

    Pollution has caused Mexico’s axolotl population to decline by 99.5 percent in just two decades. Now ecologists from Mexico’s National Autonomous University are launching a campaign to save the fish-like salamander. For 600 pesos, you can virtually adopt the little water monster.

    There used to be an average of 6,000 axolotls per square kilometer in Mexico, today there are only 36, according to the National Autonomous University’s latest count.

    – Time is running out for xochimilco. The “invasion” of pollution is strong: football pitches, floating dens. It’s so sad. What I do know is that we have to work quickly, says researcher Luis Zambrano Gonzalez at the university to the AP.

    An axolotl lives in wetlands and small watercourses on the outskirts of Mexico City. It grows between 15 and 45 cm long and weighs 55 to 225 g, but today it rarely grows more than 22 cm long.

    Axolotl means water god.

  • Christina Nordh

    25 Nov14.38

    Activists stopped the loading of coal in Australia

    The Australian activist group Rising Tide on Saturday stopped the loading of coal in the port of Newcastle in eastern Australia, writes Reuters.

    About 1,500 protesters were on site, 300 of them in the loading tunnel, during the 30-hour blockade which is scheduled to end at 4pm Australian time on Sunday.

    – Right now, due to the number of people in the loading tunnel, all loading has been stopped for safety reasons, said a spokesman for the port in a press release on Saturday.

    Australia is the world’s second largest coal exporter after Indonesia.

  • Christina Nordh

    24 Nov10.23

    Convicted activist escapes punishment: “Climate emergency”

    The climate activist escaped punishment when the case was brought up in the Stockholm District Court. Photo: Anna Tärnhuvud

    A climate activist is sentenced for disobedience to law enforcement after a car blockade in Stockholm earlier this year. However, the Stockholm district court decides that he will not receive any punishment, because he acted to protect the climate, reports P4 Seven-way.

    “It is a matter of acute emergency and therefore it is clearly unreasonable to impose a penalty,” writes the district court.

    The verdict is a so-called jury verdict, where two of the three jurors in the case voted down the legal judge. At 2–2, the mildest results for the defendant must be sentenced, which is why the man now escapes punishment.

    – As a legal judge and the third member of the jury, I wanted to convict and did not consider that there were conditions for a remission of penalties, says chief councilor Axel Peterson to P4.

    – It is clear that the outcome stands out, he says further.

    So-called jury verdicts are often changed on appeal in a higher instance, TT writes.

  • Show more posts

    Ask us

    check Ask your questions to the editors here!

  • I wonder if you can provide some facts about the water level rise. I doubt that is correct as it will take several hundred years before it is really felt. It is not erosion or that sand has been mined in the area. I’m not a climate change skeptic, because the climate has always changed, but good if we can get some facts. The country rises most in Sweden, and we know that, so we are on the safe side.

    Greetings

    Peter

    Petersburg

    Hello! According to the geologists I spoke to, there is no longer any land uplift in the southern and central regions of Sweden. The Authority for Community Protection and Preparedness has made technical calculations for what the rise in sea levels could mean for coastal cities in the future. You can find it here.

  • As long as politicians and money rule our world, it’s over.

    We have to back off and live more in the countryside and get the opportunity to do that too. Industry, politics, power, money ?? Which person is worth more than 1 million kroner in salary?

    Today they are grabbing billions, sick world.

    GG

  • Is it possible to follow Klimat-live as a “subject”?

    Nicholas

    Thanks for reading! We are looking into it and trying to resolve this!

  • I think climate live is very right. But can’t you make it even easier to find, higher up in the flow on the website?

    Theresa

    Hi, we will take it further and see if it is possible.

  • I think climate live is very right. But can’t you make it even easier to find, higher up in the flow on the website?

    Theresa

  • Show more posts

    fullscreen Heads with large rock piles have been constructed at Löderup beach in southern Skåne to combat the worst erosion, but the problems remain. Photo: Agneta Elmegård

    The Skåne coast is identified as a national risk area for flooding and erosion – Löderup’s beach is particularly vulnerable.

    – Climate change means that we have to abandon the view of what the coasts look like today, says Per Danielsson at the Norwegian Geotechnical Institute.

    Kristianstad is Sweden’s lowest situated city.

    New and higher dikes are now being built.

    – We are doing this to protect the city against high tides and future sea level rises, says Karl Erik Svensson, project manager for the dike construction.

    afbl-general-01