Carbon Brief is offering an exciting opportunity for students, or recent graduates, to work with the team for three weeks this summer. This journalism internship will be paid the London Living Wage, with an additional travel bursary.
Job description
Carbon Brief’s award-winning journalism and analysis is respected by scientists, journalists, policymakers and campaigners around the world. We write articles and create data visualisations, infographics and videos to explain the latest climate science and related policy issues.
You’ll spend time shadowing members of staff and helping out with the different tasks carried out by each part of the team. This includes journalists working on topics ranging from climate science to China’s emissions, as well as specialists working on multimedia and social media.
If you’re interested in whether carbon offsets are a viable climate solution, or how climate change is driving human migration, then this is the placement for you.
What you will do
- Have the opportunity to research, write and publish an article for Carbon Brief.
- Promote your article using multimedia and social media.
- Assist with the research and writing of Carbon Brief’s award-winning newsletters.
- Help decide how Carbon Brief covers the latest developments in climate change, by helping to find stories in scientific papers and policy documents.
- Create and discuss content for social media.
What you will learn
- Experience how a small, independent but global journalism team works in practice.
- See how Carbon Brief puts together articles step by step.
- Learn how we interrogate news, data and reports.
- Pick up skills on how to make best use of multimedia in your journalism.
Your skills
- Interest in climate change.
- Some experience of writing on a technical topic for a general audience, which can include self-publishing.
- Interest in journalism and a commitment to the integrity of journalism.
- Competency in word processing and spreadsheet packages, such as MS Word/Excel or Google Docs/Sheets.
- Excellent spoken and written English.
- Experience with social media, such as Twitter/X and Facebook, would be a benefit.
Location: The internship will take place at our offices near Borough station in central London.
Reporting to: Our Special Correspondent Daisy Dunne.
Hours/Duration: This is a three-week-long placement which will take place in the summer months from 15 July to 2 August. Our office hours are 9am to 5pm Monday to Friday, with an hour for lunch.
Salary: London Living Wage (£13.50/hour), plus £100 towards travel expenses.
How to apply
To apply, please send:
- Your CV.
- A short covering letter of no more than 300 words, explaining why you would be a good fit for the internship and how you would benefit from it. Please include a paragraph explaining how Carbon Brief first caught your attention and pitch one idea for a Carbon Brief article.
- A link or attachment for an article you have published. This can either be in traditional or student media, or on a personal blog.
To: jobs@carbonbrief.org (please use “Internship application” in subject line of email).
Applications must be submitted by 9am UK time on 3 June. Interviews will likely be held on the week beginning 10 June.
Applicants must already have the right to work permanently in the UK and be over 18 years of age.
Carbon Brief is committed to encouraging equality, diversity and inclusion among our workforce. Our aim is to be truly representative of all sections of society and for each employee to feel respected and able to give their best. We strongly encourage applications from those who feel underrepresented in climate journalism, including ethnic and social minorities.
The post Vacancy: Three-week summer journalism internship at Carbon Brief appeared first on Carbon Brief.
Vacancy: Three-week summer journalism internship at Carbon Brief
Climate Change
Asheboro, North Carolina, Is Under Pressure to Control Discharges of a Toxic Chemical Into Drinking Water Supply
The EPA wants the city of 28,000 to rein in an industrial solvent, 1,4-Dioxane, from its wastewater discharges. So far, Asheboro has refused.
ASHEBORO, N.C.—Some members of the public in attendance at the Environmental Protection Agency hearing last week called the City of Asheboro’s actions “despicable.” Others said they were “shameless.” And still another remarked that those who pollute the water—which data show Asheboro is doing—await “a special circle of hell.”
Climate Change
Can COP30 mark a turning point for climate adaptation?
Cristina Rumbaitis del Rio is a senior advisor on adaptation and resilience and Pan Ei Ei Phyoe is a climate adaptation and resilience consultant with the United Nations Foundation.
COP 30 compels the world to make a decision. Already 3.6 billion people are highly vulnerable to rapidly worsening climate impacts such as droughts, floods, and heat stress. Meanwhile, Glasgow-era climate finance commitments are expiring, and elements of the Global Goal on Adaptation (GGA) are yet to be finalized.
This November provides the opportunity to elevate the issue of adaptation and resilience – and for countries to demonstrate they grasp the urgency and are prepared to act.
Success at COP30 will hinge on how three key questions are answered:
- Will countries agree on a new adaptation finance target backed with real commitments?
- Will countries finalize architecture to track progress toward the Global Goal on Adaptation and implement the UAE Targets for Global Climate Resilience?
- Will adaptation receive elevated political attention at COP30?
A new adaptation finance target backed with real commitments
Belém will test whether negotiators can agree on a new adaptation finance goal that is anchored in clear targets, timelines, and accountability. The Glasgow Climate Pact’s goal to double adaptation finance is set to reach its deadline at the end of this year and countries are facing the question of what, if anything, comes next.
The form of the finance goal also matters: will it be a provision-based target ensuring measurable public contributions, or a mobilization target dependent on less transparent private leverage?
After two consecutive years of falling short, all eyes will be on whether the Adaptation Fund can finally meet its mobilization target and secure a multi-year replenishment to deliver predictable support.
Multilateral development banks (MDBs) are under pressure to demonstrate how to integrate adaptation into country-platform approaches including aligning finance for accelerated country-driven action and providing fast-start financing for implementation of National Adaptation Plans. NAPs have been completed by 67 developing countries and are underway in another 77 countries.
Climate adaptation can’t be just for the rich, COP30 president says
Vulnerable countries currently need an estimated $215 billion-$387 billion annually to adapt to climate change, far exceeding available funding. And developed countries face growing expectations to renew or grow their bilateral commitments beyond Glasgow-era pledges that are expiring this year or next.
Without tangible new finance commitments, the ambition of the Global Goal on Adaptation risks remaining rhetorical.
System to track progress on the Global Goal on Adaptation
The GGA still has no mechanism to measure progress, despite being established under the Paris Agreement in 2015, shaped through multiple work programs since 2021, and further expanded by the UAE Framework for Global Climate Resilience of COP28 which set 11 targets and launched the UAE-Belém Work Programme.
Agreeing on a robust, streamlined indicator set that is both scientifically sound and usable by countries with differing capacities will be one of the hardest tasks at COP 30. These outcomes will be a test of whether we can move from measuring resilience to building it.
Foreign aid cuts put adaptation finance pledge at risk, NGOs warn
Negotiators must settle the inclusion of equitable means-of-implementation indicators covering finance, technology, and capacity building. Finally, they must decide what comes next under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change to ensure the UAE targets are acted upon within the next two to five years.
Those targets include seven that set resilience priorities for water and sanitation, food and agriculture, health, ecosystems, infrastructure, livelihoods and cultural heritage.
Adaptation needs greater political attention at COP30
Last week, COP30 President Corrêa do Lago released the first-ever COP presidency letter focused on elevating adaptation, calling for solutions that will make Belém the “COP of adaptation implementation”. His task now is to embed that principle across every strand of COP30’s delivery architecture.
One test lies in how realistically adaptation is integrated into the Baku-to-Belém Roadmap to $1.3 trillion to be released by the presidency. The implementation of the COP 30 Action Agenda, which provides a blueprint for collective climate action and solutions, could become the bridge between political vision and practical delivery on adaptation.
Questions remain on whether Brazil’s leadership on adaptation thus far will position adaptation as a political priority that will be reflected in leaders’ statements at the opening of COP30. The inaugural High-level Dialogue on Adaptation – hosted by the outgoing COP President Azerbaijan and Brazil – is another opportunity where countries can reaffirm and institutionalize adaptation as a permanent pillar of climate action.
In the role as the host and president of COP30, Brazil has repeatedly stressed the importance of matching adaptation with actual resources and accountability, highlighting adaptation as one of the five guiding stars of the Paris Agreement alongside mitigation, finance, technology, and capacity building.
With the right outcomes in Belém on finance targets, measurement systems, and political commitments, COP30 could be remembered as the moment adaptation financing and implementation finally matched the scale of the challenge.
The post Can COP30 mark a turning point for climate adaptation? appeared first on Climate Home News.
Climate Change
Cranberry Farmers Consider Turning Bogs into Wetlands in Massachusetts As Temperatures Rise
The state is helping to transform cranberry bogs to into habitats that broaden conservation and climate change resilience.
What happens when a region no longer has the ideal climate for its star crop?
Cranberry Farmers Consider Turning Bogs into Wetlands in Massachusetts As Temperatures Rise
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