Labour ditched its plans in February but has announced a new net zero transition policy – it isn’t enough
The Uni is allowing invasive ground investigation surveys which critics say could disturb or even destroy active birds’ nests protected under the 1981 Wildlife and Countryside Act
Report exposes over 100,000 cases of corporate wrongdoing since 2010, with rule-breakers often given just a slap on the wrist
News that a Russian polar survey vessel found a vast oil field off the coast of the British Antarctic Territory has caused significant alarm
Climate leadership is not the vote loser its opponents like to portray it as – but the danger for the climate movement is assuming public support will endure forever, argues Russell Warfield
This General Election will be “pivotal for people and the planet” as ‘MP Watch’ election campaign targeting climate action ‘delayers’ launched
The people and companies behind the controversial hydrogen lobby winning tens of millions in funding – including one key player also making huge donations to Conservatives
Matt Gallagher watched Guardian columnist George Monbiot make the case for a ‘politics of belonging’ – but how to get there?
The Conservatives’ domestic extremism adviser Lord John Walney is accused of conflicts of interest over a proposed ban of groups such as Palestine Action and Just Stop Oil
The latest episode of the hit Media Storm podcast focuses on how journalists have covered ULEZ, often politicising the issue rather than exploring it through a health lens
To sit and listen to a nightingale is to be transported to somewhere that is both quintessentially English but also impossibly rich and exotic, writes John Mitchinson
The Labour leader’s new six ‘first steps’ for Government reveal a lot about the kind of administration he plans to lead
New research blames the UK’s reliance on self-regulation for the issues and found that US regulators are doing significantly better
Through its expensive and harmful bioenergy with carbon capture scheme (BECCS), Drax will impose a triple cost on taxpayers in the form of public money for subsidies, higher energy bills, and more extreme weather, the CEO of the Environmental Justice Foundation argues
Regulators are failing to stop the media from encouraging vigilante action against activists – the law must step in to keep them safe, argues Tom Hardy
Susan Hall is plastering London with leaflets falsely claiming voters are about to be hit by a new charge to drive their cars
Fewer than one-in-five Brits would be willing to take the risk of swimming in British waters, amid surging levels of sewage
The Conservatives are seeking to overturn the London Mayor’s flagship clean air scheme, despite being more than 20 points behind him in the race for City Hall.
Labour is set to unveil details of its plans to devolve more powers away from Westminster
Nick Davies shared a post featuring London Mayor Sadiq Khan and Adolf Hitler
A National Audit Office report shows government pledges to decarbonise domestic heating has failed to meet half its target
The Chair of a cross-party committee condemned the Prime Minister’s plans for a new wave of fossil fuel power plants
The High Seas Treaty is seen as vital to meeting an international target to protect a third of oceans by 2030
Despite making commitments to actively engage with efforts to tackle climate change, a new study found many providers to be failing in multiple areas
The Environment Agency vowed that its pension fund would be going green – Byline Times’ analysis suggests this has not been the case
The £1.2 billion tunnel is arguably the biggest infrastructure project Khan has approved – but he rarely brings it up
The Government appears keen to limit climate protestors’ legal justifications for direct action
Ten years on from the death of Zane Gbangbola, in circumstances that have still not been properly explained, the risk from contaminated waste dumps continues to grow
Ministers’ failure to properly monitor nitrogen pollution in our waterways is effectively encouraging further breaches of environmental law by farmers and big business, reports Thomas Perrett
As a community book seller loses her unique shop in Shepherd’s Bush Market, Iain Overton looks at the broader struggles facing London’s historic markets, facing the juggernaut of modern development.
Sunak’s freshly minted Business Council, tasked with boosting the UK’s economy, includes corporations fined for offences from bribery to money laundering and environmental violations
Several serving MPs work for oil and gas firms, while many more accept gifts or take jobs for big-polluting sectors after leaving Parliament
The UN’s spokesman on ‘climate defenders’ hit out at the Conservatives’ suite of anti-protest laws – and media rhetoric against green activists.
John Mitchinson explores why the dark and mysterious yew tree is a symbol of both life and death
As Chancellor, Rishi Sunak reduced the budget for flood protection
Ollie Newham, of the Rewilding Britain charity, argues that a more focused approach is vital to delivering nature’s recovery in the UK’s national parks
Dr Gail Bradbrook is among the most high-profile climate activists to be sentenced over protests
The difference between ‘transitioning away’ and ‘phasing-out’ fossil fuels is significant, writes Stuart Spray
Nafeez Ahmed argues that, despite mixed feelings about the COP28 agreement, it marks a real step forward
Western hypocrisy nearly scuppered global climate negotiations. But now the direction of travel is clear. Byline Times’ columnist sums up his conclusions after addressing the Dubai summit
Gulf states pushing fossil fuels at COP have hired Philip Hammond, Tony Blair, Francis Maude and other former leading politicians as ‘consultants’
Chris Stark of the Climate Change Committee says the ‘acid test’ of COP28 is how it deals with fossil fuels