The COVID-19 crisis revealed that there was an alternative to business as usual all along
To reduce agricultural emissions, consider the humble plant
Enhanced nationally determined contributions can forge the way towards a more inclusive, resilient and sustainable world after COVID-19 – and the world’s major emitters should lead the way
The level of ambition formulated by current climate policies as part of the Paris Climate process falls woefully short of what is required to put us on a 1.5°C or 2°C pathway. However, the technology exists and many of the societal transformations are already taking place. Rather than fatalism, we can scale up our ambition both inside and outside the Paris process
The Coronavirus crisis has taught us a number of lessons on how we should approach climate change
Eliminating carbon from the building and construction sector by mid-century will require radical transformation
Science-based targets take companies beyond good intentions and towards concrete commitments to operate within a 2°C pathway. With early adopters showing the clear benefits for both business and planet, we must encourage rapid widespread take-up to reduce GHGs
Thinking must start now about the kind of sustainable economic recovery needed after the pandemic
Despite financial pledges and rhetoric on the importance of climate adaptation for vulnerable nations, the lack of tangible finance flows tells a different story. If the most at-risk communities are to adapt before it’s too late, we must unblock adaptation finance now
Will nuclear energy, in the form of fusion, be the answer to the world’s demand for abundant, clean energy?