Take a deep dive into the illegal trade in climate-harming gases with our Global Crime Tracker
Refrigerant gases have now been added to EIA’s first-of-its-kind Global Environmental Crime Tracker
Refrigerant gases have now been added to EIA’s first-of-its-kind Global Environmental Crime Tracker
Proposed new rules unveiled yesterday (5 April) by the European Commission to restrict climate-damaging gases fall short of what is needed
A new report launched today (4 April) makes clear that humankind has a choice about how bad we let climate change get – the sooner and faster we cut emissions, the more chance we have of avoiding catastrophe
The UN CoP26 climate change summit threw an international focus on global warming and what needs to be done to mitigate its worst potential impacts – but was the conference a success or a failure? And what needs to happen next to avert catastrophe?
Methane is going to be CoP26’s main talking point and for a very good reason – methane emissions are responsible for 25 per cent of the warming experienced today
Climate-damaging refrigerant gases – hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) – are illegally entering the EU inside cooling equipment, according to Dutch Customs