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Episode 99: The Energy Permitting Reform Act and the Sound of Climate Change


In this episode, you will learn about the Energy Permitting Reform Act in the U.S. Congress, and how a music class led a college student to discover fresh insights about climate change. We also share how listening will enhance and improve your ability as a climate communicator. 

Barbara Wankollie’s Soundscape: Climate and Colonization Through Sound

Barbara Wankollie

We highlight the work of Barbara Wankollie, a political science student from Liberia studying at Bucknell University. As part of a class combining music theory and climate change, Barbara created a powerful soundscape reflecting on colonization and Africa’s place in the Anthropocene. She was inspired by Gabrielle Hecht’s essay The African Anthropocene. “The Anthropocene feels different depending on where you are – too often, the ‘we’ of the world is white and Western…If the Anthropocene is to have real value as a category of thought and a call to action, it must federate people and places, not just disciplines. It requires thinking from, and with, Africa. ‘They’ are ‘us,’ and there is no planetary ‘we’ without them.”

Barbara created original music through Bandlab and mixed in field recordings. Her piece begins with rain and drums, symbolizing how African communities lived harmoniously with the land. This harmony is disrupted by industrial sounds, representing the extractivism brought by colonization. Barbara’s composition vividly captures the ongoing tension between natural balance and exploitation.

One poignant moment in the work came from an accidental recording during a trip to Baltimore. Barbara and her friends, all international students, reflected on seeing a vibrant Black community for the first time after attending a predominantly white university. This unplanned audio became a fitting conclusion to her soundscape, illustrating the deep personal connections between climate change, culture, and identity.

Barbara’s composition offers a unique and emotional perspective on the intersection of climate and colonization, showing how art can reveal these challenges’ personal and global dimensions.

(Disclaimer: This program includes terminology that may be offensive to some listeners. Rather than remove this content, and to respect the artist’s intent in incorporating it, we want to acknowledge its harmful impact, learn from it, and spark conversation to create a more inclusive future together. For more background and historical perspective on the word used, visit this explainer.) 

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The Nerd Corner: The Energy Permitting Reform Act

Dana Nuccitelli

CCL Research Coordinator Dana Nuccitelli unpacks the bipartisan Energy Permitting Reform Act. While the bill aims to streamline permitting for clean energy infrastructure, it also includes provisions to boost fossil fuel extraction. But which will have a more significant impact on climate pollution—clean energy or fossil fuels?

Dana discusses research conducted by a “super team” of energy modeling experts from Princeton, Rocky Mountain Institute (RMI), Resources for the Future (RFF), and Third Way. Their models estimate that, despite conservative assumptions, the bill could reduce U.S. climate pollution by up to 25% by 2050. This makes the Energy Permitting Reform Act a potential game-changer in transitioning to a cleaner energy future.

Learn more about energy permitting at www.cclusa.org/permittingreform, and read Dana’s other analysis at The Nerd Corner.

Resilience Corner: The Power of Listening in Life and Climate Conversations

In this episode’s Resilience Corner, CCL’s Education and Resilience Coordinator Tamara Staton explores the profound impact of listening, both in climate work and for building personal resilience. Tamara highlights how deep listening—creating space for others to express themselves fully—fosters collaboration, reduces stress, and strengthens emotional resilience, which are essential for sustaining long-term climate action.

She explains that listening is not just about hearing words; it’s about truly understanding someone’s perspective. In climate communication, this practice can lead to more productive conversations and the discovery of creative solutions. By listening deeply, we can build trust, allow new ideas to flourish, and better support those working alongside us in the movement.

Tamara also connects the practice of listening to personal resilience, noting that when we slow down and listen—whether to ourselves, others, or the world around us—we can better manage stress and remain grounded in our climate work. This intentional act of listening helps us recharge emotionally, making us more effective and resilient in the long run.

Learn more at The Resilience Hub.

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We Want to Hear from You

  • Email: radio @ citizensclimate.org
  • Text/Voicemail: 619-512-9646 (+1 if calling from outside the USA.)

Production Team:

  • Written and produced by Peterson Toscano, Dana Nuccitelli, and Tamara Staton.
  • Technical Support: Ricky Bradley, and Brett Cease
  • Editing and Social Media Assistance: Flannery Winchester
  • Other assistance from Karina Ramirez, Steffanie Munguía, and Elise Silvestri.

Music is provided by epidemicsound.com

Read the Transcript

SPEAKERS

Tamara Staton, Peterson Toscano, Barbara Wankollie, Dana Nuccitelli

Peterson Toscano  00:00

Welcome to Citizens’ Climate Radio, your climate change podcast. We highlight people’s stories, celebrate your successes, and share strategies for effective climate communications. I’m your host, Peterson Toscano, and this is episode 99. 

Peterson Toscano  00:18

You may already notice that things sound different here, and you will hear even more changes. We received feedback from listeners who told us they want more frequent episodes and shorter ones. Ask, and you shall receive. Starting today, you will have a new episode of Citizens’ Climate Radio every two weeks. they will be of varying lengths, but almost always under 30 minutes. 

Peterson Toscano  00:50

In this episode, Dana Nuccitelli joins us for the nerd corner. He tells us about the Energy Permitting Reform Act. This Act includes provisions that promote clean energy along with oil and gas extraction. So, will it help reduce climate pollution? Dana breaks it down for us. Tamara Staton provides expert tips about listening. These techniques will help you stay focused, and also are effective in climate change conversations. And get ready for the release of our limited series Hot Mess: How Climate Consensus Turned into Political Chaos. 

Peterson Toscano  01:32

But first we hear from a student in Pennsylvania, USA. She took a music class that used music theory and sound to help students better understand climate change. Earlier this year, from a side room at a sustainability symposium at Bucknell University in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, I heard strange sounds and music. I ventured over to the room and met Tyler Yamin, a visiting assistant professor of music. Tyler designed the class Global Pop and Global Warming. And I was hearing musical compositions his students had created.

Peterson Toscano  02:15

Each student wrote an essay describing their soundscapes, origins, and inspirations; Tyler put me in contact with Barbara Wankollie, an international student from Liberia studying political science with a focus on foreign policy.

Barbara Wankollie  02:33

We had to read different scholarly articles and watch different videos and then create our own project. It was actually not what I expected. I thought it was just going to be, you know, just instrumentalizing music. But the climate part was, was the one that hit very close to home because me being from Liberia, there are so many, especially when we, when we started the class talking about the Anthropocene, there were so many things that I felt were missing.

Peterson Toscano  03:05

One of the articles captured Barbara’s attention, the African Anthropocene by Gabrielle Hecht.

03:12

Barbara Wankollie When it comes to Africa, it started from colonization, like we had extractivism, like our bodies were taken, our land, our resources, and it left us with nothing up to this point that some some countries in Africa still struggling due to, like, you know, the effects on, like, colonization. So when I read this article, I was like, I wish we had more articles about this. That article inspired music project,

Peterson Toscano  03:43

Barbara created a musical composition that included music she created through the BandLab website and sound she recorded in the field.

Barbara Wankollie  03:52

The first step was we had to make a recording about somewhere on campus. It could be anywhere that kind of show a natural part of Bucknell. I decided to record at the beginning of March. It was a rainy night, and I decided to go out and record this sound of the rain and water rushing through the boxes, basically at the beginning of the piece, I added the quiet night in drum sound, because how I imagined Africans, how they interacted with the land before colonization. They were still farming. They were still doing stuff to the land, but for me, it was kind of insane. They took from the land, but they also replenished the land. They knew when to farm and when not to. They knew when to stop. They knew when to leave a particular lane, to go to another land to farm because you know that landing is like recovering everything. 

Barbara Wankollie  04:58

And then the second. In part, is basically like an eruption. When colonization came in, new ideas were closed upon Africans in the land, in their culture, and in their body. The sounds are still there. One was kind of higher over the other. So if you listen to the piece, you can still kind of hear the drum sound, but it’s just like, at the back, there’s so many mining going on. People are like, extracting things. So it’s like, it’s crazy in that particular part of the piece,

Peterson Toscano  05:31

Barbara’s ending fell right into her lap. This is her favorite part of the composition, and it comes from an accidental recording. Barbara took a spring break field trip to Baltimore, Maryland, with another class. She used the opportunity to make more recordings, and although far from Liberia, after living on a predominantly white campus in central Pennsylvania, Barbara suddenly felt much more at home

Peterson Toscano  05:58

Barbara Wankollie agreed to let us air her recording on our show. To get the full effect, I recommend listening with earphones or headphones and now Africacene by Barbara Wankollie. 

Barbara Wankollie  05:58

While recording, my friends, they’re very funny. We have crazy conversations. Most of my friends are international students like me. So while recording, we started, you know, talking about Baltimore and how this is the first time we’ve seen lots of Black people in one setting. Because, yeah, because it was a great experience for us. It was a new experience for us. We felt welcome, even though we did not know anyone in, like that little town, we were intrigued by, like the graffitis, people listening to loud music, how they tried to, like, you know, preserve their culture. That particular, uh, recording was basically, as you know, you know, talking about how many black people we’ve seen and laughing about it. It’s a sad thing, because it’s not how it’s supposed to be, but the fact that, you know, we’re able to laugh in moments like this is kind of like a hope, you know. So when I listened to recording, I was like, I don’t want to change this. I feel like people need to hear about it, so it made me think about Africa. 

Peterson Toscano  10:50

Thank you, Barbara, that was awesome. Thanks for sharing your composition and the creation process also. Thank you to her professor, Tyler Yamin. 

Peterson Toscano  11:04

In a moment, Dana Nuccitelli will tell us about a study that reveals the possible impacts of the Energy Permitting Reform Act. Will provisions for fossil fuel extraction get support from Republicans? More importantly, will those provisions undermine the effectiveness of the Act’s ability to reduce gas emissions? But first, here is Tamara Staton with the Resilience Corner.

Tamara Staton  11:30

Hi, I’m Tamara Staton, CCLs, education and resilience coordinator, and this is Resilient Climateeering through Unexpected Climate Connections. This isn’t a series about weather science or data. It’s about finding ways to worry less and act more on climate through a lens of playful curiosity. Today’s topic is listening and climate. 

Tamara Staton  11:52

Maybe 10 years ago, my friend Amanda and I started leaving long messages on each other’s voicemail. She might talk about her three sons, Zach, Grayson, and Aaron braving the Arizona heat to play soccer, and I’d call back days or weeks later to share about our camping trip adventures to the scenes or Kaya’s first day of third grade. I never expected to fall in love with that habit, but it became a powerful asynchronous communication strategy over time. It taught me the true power of listening, creating spaces where we can fully listen and be heard. 

Tamara Staton  12:23

What do we gain by slowing down and really listening to each other? Research shows that listening deeply can reduce stress, enhance creativity, and build trust, all of which are critical for fostering collaboration in climate work. According to a study published in the Harvard Business Review, good listening reduces the speaker’s anxiety and increases their self-insight, leading to improved emotional resilience. Additionally, research in the communications reports journal indicates that active empathic listening fosters empathic concern, which enhances creativity and collaboration. Moreover, a study in the International Journal of Listening highlights how effective listening builds trust and strengthens relationships. These are all traits we need in the climate movement. We can better attend to what needs care by actively listening, whether noticing the tension in our bodies or resolving conflicts. Listening helps us tune into the underlying issues and find pathways forward. 

Tamara Staton  13:21

Returning to my own story. Amanda and I have since graduated from voicemails to the Marco Polo app. For those unfamiliar, Marco Polo is like a game of virtual tag. You can send video messages back and forth at your convenience. It’s named after the classic pool game where one person calls out Marco and the other one answers Polo. This technology has brought a new level of communication. Now I can show her the back fence that we just built, and she can give me a tour of her blooming tower garden. Yet the essence of what we share remains the same deep listening and connection, whether through words or images, listening even through a screen offers a space for reflection, insight and creativity. These are qualities that we need in order to tackle the challenges of climate change. 

Tamara Staton  14:08

The habit that Amanda and I developed of simply being heard continues to strengthen our relationship and inspire new ideas. It’s a small practice with big ripples. So what’s it like for you when you listen? What do you hear? Who is the person you talk to, who listens without interrupting or needing to steer the conversation? What might it take to invite that into your life, And who might you offer that gift of listening to this week? I

Tamara Staton  14:33

n our next episode, I’ll dive into another set of unexpected Climate Connections, but in the meantime, I encourage you to practice listening in a way that feels new to you. Ask open ended questions, wear your curiosity hat and see what happens when you create space for others. You might be surprised by the connections and insights that arise. 

Tamara Staton  14:56

I’m Tamara Staton with the resilience corner. Thank you for listening and for your commitment to progress. To learn more about tools, trainings and resources for staying strong through the climate challenge, check out our resilience hub at CCLusa.org/resilience, and until next time, remember this: find your passion, let it guide you, and you’ll do amazing things for our world.

Dana Nuccitelli  15:37

Hi, I’m Dana Nuccitelli, CCL research coordinator, and this is the Nerd Corner.

Dana Nuccitelli  15:48

I’m here to highlight some interesting new climate research for the nerds out there, and to make it understandable for the nerd curious. In this episode, we consider the question, how will the Energy Permitting Reform Act impact climate pollution. 

Dana Nuccitelli  16:02

CCL has been advocating for clean energy permitting reform for nearly two years. That’s because research has shown that slow permitting processes are preventing us from building clean energy infrastructure fast enough to meet our climate commitments. Recently, Senators Joe Manchin and John Barrasso introduced the bipartisan energy permitting Reform Act to help solve this problem. The bill includes provisions to streamline the permitting process for electrical transmission lines and other key clean energy infrastructure. But because Congress is divided, in order to get sufficient bipartisan support, the bill also includes provisions to boost oil and gas lease sales on federal lands and waters and to speed up the permitting of liquefied natural gas export terminals. That poses a key question, which will have a bigger effect on climate pollution, the clean energy provisions or the fossil fuel provisions? 

Dana Nuccitelli  16:58

Fortunately, four expert modeling groups teamed up to answer this question. Jesse Jenkins from Princeton Zero Lab, RMI, Resources for the Future, and Third Way. we’re very lucky to have this super team of energy modeling experts provide such a thorough estimate of the energy permitting reform acts impacts on climate pollution. Despite making very conservative assumptions, the experts estimated that the bill’s fossil fuel provisions would only increase our emissions by a few percent, while the electrical transmission and other clean energy provisions would potentially reduce climate pollution by quite a lot. 

Dana Nuccitelli  17:35

Overall, the Energy Permitting Reform Act could curb America’s total climate pollution between 2030 and 2050 by up to 25% and conservatively by around 10%. That’s a big deal. Negotiations are still ongoing to improve the bill before it potentially comes up for a vote in Congress during the lame-duck session after the election in November or December. But we now have a great expert resource available confirming that passing the Energy Permitting Reform Act would be a big win for the climate. 

Dana Nuccitelli  18:09

I’m Dana Nuccitelli with the Nerd Corner. Thank you for being curious and for your commitment to climate progress, to join the discussion about climate science, technology, economics and policy with CCLs research team, check out the Nerd Corner at CCL usa.org/nerd-corner. I hope to see you there.

Peterson Toscano  18:37

If you have a question for Dana, email us radio @ citizensclimate.org. I we will make sure he gets it. And read more of Dana’s expert analysis by visiting CCLusa.org/nerd corner. 

Peterson Toscano  18:56

Before we close, let me tell you about our upcoming limited series, Hot Mess: How Climate ConsensusTturned into Political Chaos. In this six-part series, we will explore how the united concern about global warming unraveled in the United States and stalled climate change solutions. We’re especially curious about the people and moments in history that have been often overlooked, stories that have been underreported. Will this be an exhaustive history of climate politics from the 1960s to the present? No, that would require at least 600 episodes and a staff of 50 researchers. Instead, my guests and I will reveal puzzle pieces that will surprise you. You will learn about Republican and Democrat climate heroes who deserve recognition, and we expose some of the forces behind the dreadful shift from the political consensus to address climate change to the tragedy of missed opportunities. Through it all, you will encounter people who saw through the deception and kept their focus on the dangers that threaten humanity and life on Earth. They also pursued solutions. This is a story of reprehensible behavior by many and the determination and resilience of a handful of people. The story is not over yet, and for you listening right now, your part has yet to be told. Hot Mess will appear right here in the same place where you listen to Citizens’ Climate Radio. It is coming very soon, so stay tuned.

Peterson Toscano  20:54

Thank you for joining me for episode 99 of Citizens’ Climate Radio. I’m your host, Peterson Toscano. I also write the show, along with Tamara Staton, Dana Nuccitelli, and Elise Silvestri, who you’re going to meet very soon. Other technical support from Ricky Bradley and Brett Cease. Social media assistance from Flannery Winchester. The music on today’s show comes from epidemicsound.com. 

Peterson Toscano  21:23

Follow us on Instagram, X LinkedIn, Facebook, and Tiktok, call or text our listener voicemail line, 619-512-9646, plus one, if calling from outside the USA. Email us radio @ citizensclimate.org .visit CCLUSA org/radio, and you will see our show notes, full transcript, and you will find links to our guests. Citizens’ Climate Radio is a project of Citizens’ Climate Education.

The post Episode 99: The Energy Permitting Reform Act and the Sound of Climate Change appeared first on Citizens' Climate Lobby.

Episode 99: The Energy Permitting Reform Act and the Sound of Climate Change

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Analysis: UK newspaper editorial opposition to climate action overtakes support for first time

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Nearly 100 UK newspaper editorials opposed climate action in 2025, a record figure that reveals the scale of the backlash against net-zero in the right-leaning press.

Carbon Brief has analysed editorials – articles considered the newspaper’s formal “voice” – since 2011 and this is the first year opposition to climate action has exceeded support.

Criticism of net-zero policies, including renewable-energy expansion, came entirely from right-leaning newspapers, particularly the Sun, the Daily Mail and the Daily Telegraph.

In addition, there were 112 editorials – more than two a week – that included attacks on Ed Miliband, continuing a highly personal campaign by some newspapers against the Labour energy secretary.

These editorials, nearly all of which were in right-leaning titles, typically characterised him as a “zealot”, driving through a “costly” net-zero “agenda”.

Taken together, the newspaper editorials mirror a significant shift on the UK political right in 2025, as the opposition Conservative party mimicked the hard-right populist Reform UK party by definitively rejecting the net-zero target that it had legislated for and the policies that it had previously championed.

Record climate opposition

Nearly 100 UK newspaper editorials voiced opposition to climate action in 2025 – more than double the number of editorials that backed climate action.

As the chart below shows, 2025 marked the fourth record-breaking year in a row for criticism of climate action in newspaper editorials.

This also marks the first time that editorials opposing climate action have overtaken those supporting it, during the 15 years that Carbon Brief has analysed.

Chart showing that for the first time, there were more UK newspaper editorials opposing climate action than supporting it in 2025
Number of UK newspaper editorials arguing for more (blue) and less (red) climate action, 2011-2025. Some editorials also present a “balanced” view, which is categorised as advocating for neither “more” nor “less” climate action. These editorials are not represented in this chart. Source: Carbon Brief analysis.

This trend demonstrates the rapid shift away from a long-standing political consensus on climate change by those on the UK’s political right.

Over the past year, the Conservative party has rejected both the “net-zero by 2050” target that it legislated for in 2019 and the underpinning Climate Change Act that it had a major role in creating. Meanwhile, the Reform UK party has been rising in the polls, while pledging to “ditch net-zero”.

These views are reinforced and reflected in the pages of the UK’s right-leaning newspapers, which tend to support these parties and influence their politics.

All of the 98 editorials opposing climate action were in right-leaning titles, including the Sun, the Daily Mail, the Daily Telegraph, the Times and the Daily Express.

Conversely, nearly all of the 46 editorials pushing for more climate action were in the left-leaning and centrist publications the Guardian and the Financial Times. These newspapers have far lower circulations than some of the right-leaning titles.

In total, 81% of the climate-related editorials published by right-leaning newspapers in 2025 rejected climate action. As the chart below shows, this is a marked difference from just a few years ago, when the same newspapers showed a surge in enthusiasm for climate action.

That trend had coincided with Conservative governments led by Theresa May and Boris Johnson, which introduced the net-zero goal and were broadly supportive of climate policies.

Chart showing nearly every climate-related editorial in the UK's right-leaning newspapers last year opposed climate action
The share of right-leaning, climate-related UK newspaper editorials arguing for more (blue) and less (red) climate action, 2011-2025, %. Some editorials also present a “balanced” view, which is categorised as advocating for neither “more” or “less” climate action. These editorials are not represented in this chart. Source: Carbon Brief analysis.

Notably, none of the editorials opposing climate action in 2025 took a climate-sceptic position by questioning the existence of climate change or the science behind it. Instead, they voiced “response scepticism”, meaning they criticised policies that seek to address climate change.

(The current Conservative leader, Kemi Badenoch, has described herself as “a net-zero sceptic, not a climate change sceptic”. This is illogical as reaching net-zero is, according to scientists, the only way to stop climate change from getting worse.)

In particular, newspapers took aim at “net-zero” as a catch-all term for policies that they deemed harmful. Most editorials that rejected climate action did not even mention the word “climate”, often using “net-zero” instead.

This supports recent analysis by Dr James Painter, a research associate at the University of Oxford, which concluded that UK newspaper coverage has been “decoupling net-zero from climate change”.

This is significant, given strong and broad UK public support for many of the individual climate policies that underpin net-zero. Notably, there is also majority support for the “net-zero by 2050” target itself.

Much of the negative framing by politicians and media outlets paints “net-zero” as something that is too expensive for people in the UK.

In total, 87% of the editorials that opposed climate action cited economic factors as a reason, making this by far the most common justification. Net-zero goals were described as “ruinous” and “costly”, as well as being blamedfalsely – for “driving up energy costs”.

The Sunday Telegraph summarised the view of many politicians and commentators on the right by stating simply that said “net-zero should be scrapped”.

While some criticism of net-zero policies is made in good faith, the notion that climate change can be stopped without reducing emissions to net-zero is incorrect. Alternative policies for tackling climate change are rarely presented by critical editorials.

Moreover, numerous assessments have concluded that the transition to net-zero can be both “affordable” and far cheaper than previously thought.

This transition can also provide significant economic benefits, even before considering the evidence that the cost of unmitigated warming will significantly outweigh the cost of action.

Miliband attacks intensify

Meanwhile, UK newspapers published 112 editorials over the course of 2025 taking personal aim at energy security and net-zero secretary Ed Miliband.

Nearly all of these articles were in right-leaning newspapers, with the Sun alone publishing 51. The Daily Mail, the Daily Telegraph and the Times published most of the remainder.

This trend of relentlessly criticising Miliband personally began last year in the run up to Labour’s election victory. However, it ramped up significantly in 2025, as the chart below shows.

Chart showing UK newspapers published more than 100 editorials criticising Ed Miliband last year – nearly twice as many as in 2024
Cumulative number of UK newspaper editorials criticising energy secretary Ed Miliband in 2024 (light blue) and 2025 (dark blue). Source: Carbon Brief analysis.

Around 58% of the editorials that opposed climate action used criticism of climate advocates as a justification – and nearly all of these articles mentioned Miliband, specifically.

Editorials denounced Miliband as a “loon” and a “zealot”, suffering from “eco insanity” and “quasi-religious delusions”. Nicknames given to him include “His Greenness”, the “high priest of net-zero” and “air miles Miliband”.

Many of these attacks were highly personal. The Daily Mail, for example, called Miliband “pompous and patronising”, with an “air of moral and intellectual superiority”.

Frequently, newspapers refer to “Ed Miliband’s net-zero agenda”, “Ed Miliband’s swivel-eyed targets” and “Mr Miliband’s green taxes”.

These formulations frame climate policies as harmful measures that are being imposed on people by the energy secretary.

In fact, the Labour government decisively won an election in 2024 with a manifesto that prioritised net-zero policies. Often, the “targets” and “taxes” in question are long-standing policies that were introduced by the previous Conservative government, with cross-party support.

Moreover, the government’s climate policy not only continues to rely on many of the same tools created by previous administrations, it is also very much in line with expert evidence and advice. This is to prioritise the expansion of clean power and to fuel an economy that relies on increasing levels of electrification, including through electric cars and heat pumps.

Despite newspaper editorials regularly calling for Miliband to be “sacked”, prime minister Keir Starmer has voiced his support both for the energy secretary and the government’s prioritisation of net-zero.

In an interview with podcast The Rest is Politics last year, Miliband was asked about the previous Carbon Brief analysis that showed the criticism aimed at him by right-leaning newspapers.

Podcast host Alastair Campbell asked if Miliband thought the attacks were the legacy of his strong stance, while Labour leader, during the Leveson inquiry into the practices of the UK press. Miliband replied:

“Some of these institutions don’t like net-zero and some of them don’t like me – and maybe quite a lot of them don’t like either.”

Renewable backlash

As well as editorial attitudes to climate action in general, Carbon Brief analysed newspapers’ views on three energy technologies – renewables, nuclear power and fracking.

There were 42 newspaper editorials criticising renewable energy in 2025. This meant that, for the first time since 2014, there were more anti-renewables editorials than pro-renewables editorials, as the chart below shows.

As with climate action more broadly, this was a highly partisan issue. The Times was the only right-leaning newspaper that published any editorials supporting renewables.

Chart showing newspaper editorials criticising renewables overtook those supporting them for the first time in more than a decade
Number of UK newspaper editorials that were pro- (blue) and anti-renewables (red), 2011-2025. Some editorials also present a “balanced” view, which is categorised as advocating for neither “more” or “less” climate action. These editorials are not represented in this chart. Source: Carbon Brief analysis.

By far the most common stated reason for opposing renewable energy was that it is “expensive”, with 86% of critical editorials using economic arguments as a justification.

The Sun referred to “chucking billions at unreliable renewables” while the Daily Telegraph warned of an “expensive and intermittent renewables grid”.

At the same time, editorials in supportive publications also used economic arguments in favour of renewables. The Guardian, for example, stressed the importance of building an “affordable clean-energy system” that is “built on renewables”.

There was continued support in right-leaning publications for nuclear power, despite the high costs associated with the technology. In total, there were 20 editorials supporting nuclear power in 2025 – nearly all in right-leaning newspapers – and none that opposed it.

Fracking was barely mentioned by newspapers in 2023 and 2024, after a failed push by the Conservatives under prime minister Liz Truss to overturn a ban on the practice in 2022. This attempt had been accompanied by a surge in supportive right-leaning newspaper editorials.

There was a small uptick of 15 editorials supporting fracking in 2025, as right-leaning newspapers once again argued that it would be economically beneficial.

The Sun urged current Conservative leader Badenoch to make room for this “cheap, safe solution” in her future energy policy. The government plans to ban fracking “permanently”.

North Sea oil and gas remained the main fossil-fuel policy focus, with 30 editorials – all in right-leaning newspapers – that mentioned the topic. Most of the editorials arguing for more extraction from the North Sea also argued for less climate action or opposed renewable energy.

None of these editorials noted that the UK is expected to be significantly less reliant on fossil-fuel imports if it pursues net-zero, than if it rolls back on climate action and attempts to squeeze more out of the remaining deposits in the North Sea.

Methodology

This is a 2025 update of previous analysis conducted for the period 2011-2021 by Carbon Brief in association with Dr Sylvia Hayes, a research fellow at the University of Exeter. Previous updates were published in 2022, 2023 and 2024.

The count of editorials criticising Ed Miliband was not conducted in the original analysis.

The full methodology can be found in the original article, including the coding schema used to assess the language and themes used in editorials concerning climate change and energy technologies.

The analysis is based on Carbon Brief’s editorial database, which is regularly updated with leading articles from the UK’s major newspapers.

The post Analysis: UK newspaper editorial opposition to climate action overtakes support for first time appeared first on Carbon Brief.

Analysis: UK newspaper editorial opposition to climate action overtakes support for first time

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DeBriefed 16 January 2026: Three years of record heat; China and India coal milestone; Beijing’s 2026 climate outlook

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Welcome to Carbon Brief’s DeBriefed. 
An essential guide to the week’s key developments relating to climate change.

This week

Hottest hat-trick

STATE OF THE CLIMATE: Scientists have announced that 2025 was either the second or third hottest year on record, with close margins between last year and 2023, reported the Associated Press. The newswire noted that “temperature averages for 2025 hovered around – and mostly above – 1.4C of industrial era warming”. Bloomberg said that this happened despite the natural weather phenomenon La Niña, which “suppresses global temperatures”, meaning “heat from greenhouse gases countered that cooling influence”. Carbon Brief’s comprehensive analysis of the data found cumulative global ice loss also “reached a new record high in 2025”.

OVERHEATING OCEANS: Separately, the world’s oceans “absorbed colossal amounts of heat in 2025”, said the Guardian, setting “yet another new record and fuelling more extreme weather”. It added that the “extra heat makes the hurricanes and typhoons…more intense, causes heavier downpours of rain and greater flooding and results in longer marine heatwaves”.

FIRE AND ICE: Wildfires in Australia have destroyed around 500 structures, said the Sydney Morning Herald, with a “dozen major fires” still burning. A wildfire in Argentinian Patagonia has “blazed through nearly 12,000 hectares” of scrubland and forests, according to the Associated Press. Meanwhile, parts of the Himalayas are “snowless” for the first time in nearly four decades, signalling a “climatic anomaly”, reported the Times of India.

Around the world

  • EMISSIONS REBOUND: US emissions rose 2% last year after two years of declines” due to a rise in coal power generation, said Axios, in coverage of research by the Rhodium Group.
  • ‘UNINVESTABLE’ OIL: US president Donald Trump may “sideline” ExxonMobil from Venezuela’s oil market after its comment that Venezuela is “uninvestable”, reported CNBC. TotalEnergies is also “in no rush to return to Venezuela”, said Reuters
  • PRICE WARS: The EU issued guidelines that will allow tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles to be removed in exchange for minimum price commitments, said Reuters
  • ‘RECORD’ AUCTION: The UK government has secured “8.4 gigawatts of new offshore wind power” in a “record” auction, said Sky News. Although the auction saw some price rises, this will likely be “cost neutral” for consumers, Carbon Brief said – contrary to the “simplistic and misleading” narratives promoted by some media outlets.
  • COP STRATEGY: The Guardian reported that Chris Bowen, the Australian minister appointed “president of negotiations” for COP31, plans to use his role to lobby “Saudi Arabia and others” on the need to phase out fossil fuels. 

$2bn

The size of a new climate fund unveiled by the Nigerian government, according to Reuters


Latest climate research

  • Rooftop solar in the EU has the potential to meet 40% of electricity demand in a 100% renewable scenario for 2050 | Nature Energy
  • Natural wildfires, such as those ignited by lightning strikes, have been increasing in frequency and intensity in sub-Saharan Africa, driven by climate change | Global and Planetary Change
  • Engaging diverse citizens groups can lead to “more equitable, actionable climate adaptation” across four pilot regions in Europe | Frontiers in Climate

(For more, see Carbon Brief’s in-depth daily summaries of the top climate news stories on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.)

Captured

Chart: Record clean energy growth helped cut coal power in China and India

Both China and India saw coal power generation fall in 2025, in the “first simultaneous drop in half a century”, found new analysis for Carbon Brief, which was widely reported around the world. It noted that, for both countries, the decline in coal was driven by new clean-energy capacity additions, which were “more than sufficient to meet rising demand”.

Spotlight

What are China experts watching for in 2026?

The year 2026 will be pivotal for China’s climate policy. In March, the government will release key climate and energy targets for 2030, the year by which China has pledged to have peaked its emissions.

At the same time, with the US increasingly turning away from climate policy and towards fossil fuel expansionism, China’s role in global climate action is more important than ever.

Carbon Brief asks leading experts what they are watching for from China over the year ahead.

Shuo Li, director of the China Climate Hub, Asia Society Policy Institute

After decades of rapid growth, independent analyses suggest China’s CO2 emissions may have plateaued or even begun to decline in 2025.

The transition from emissions growth to stabilisation and early decline will be the key watch point for 2026 and will be shaped by the forthcoming 15th five-year plan. [This plan will set key economic goals, including energy and climate targets, for 2030.]

However, the precise timing, scale and enforceability of these absolute emissions control measures remain under active debate. Chinese experts broadly agree that if the 2021-2025 period was characterised by continued emissions growth, and 2031-2035 is expected to deliver a clear decline, then 2026-2030 will serve as a critical “bridge” between the two.

Yan Qin, principal analyst, ClearBlue Markets

First, the 15th five-year plan inaugurates the “dual control of carbon” system. This year marks the first time industries and local governments face binding caps on total emissions, not just intensity.

Second, the national carbon market is aggressively tightening. With the inclusion of steel, cement and aluminum this year, regulators are executing a “market reset” – de-weighting older allowances [meaning they cannot be used to contribute to polluters’ obligations for 2026] and enforcing stricter benchmarks to bolster prices ahead of the full rollout of the EU’s carbon border adjustment mechanism.

Cecilia Trasi, senior policy advisor for industry and trade, ECCO

China’s solar manufacturing overcapacity is prompting Beijing’s first serious consolidation efforts. At the same time, its offshore wind technology is advancing rapidly [and there are] signals that Chinese wind companies are pursuing entry into European markets through local production, mirroring strategies adopted by battery manufacturers.

Together, these dynamics suggest that the next phase of cleantech competition will be shaped less by trade defense alone and more by the interaction between Chinese supply-side reforms and global market-absorption capacity.

Tu Le, managing director, Sino Auto Insights

China’s electric vehicle (EV) industry has been the primary force pushing the global passenger vehicle market toward clean energy. That momentum should continue. But a growing headwind has emerged: tariffs. Mexico, Brazil, Europe and the US are just a few of the countries raising barriers, complicating the next phase of global EV expansion.

One new wildcard: the US now effectively controls Venezuelan oil. If that meaningfully impacts global oil prices, it could either slow – or unexpectedly accelerate – the shift toward clean-energy vehicles.

Responses have been edited for length and clarity.

A full-length version of the article is available on the Carbon Brief website.

Watch, read, listen

SHAPING THE LAND: In addition to land use shaping the climate, climate change is now increasingly “changing the land”, according to satellite monitoring by World Resources Institute, creating a “dangerous feedback loop”.

‘POSITIVE TIPPING POINTS’: A commentary co-authored by climate scientist Prof Corinne Le Quéré in Nature argued that several climate trends have locked in “irreversible progress in climate action”.

FROM THE FLAMES: Nick Grimshaw interviewed musician and data analyst Miriam Quick on how she turned the 2023 Canadian wildfires into music on BBC Radio 6. (Skip to 1:41:45 to listen.)

Coming up

Pick of the jobs

DeBriefed is edited by Daisy Dunne. Please send any tips or feedback to debriefed@carbonbrief.org.

This is an online version of Carbon Brief’s weekly DeBriefed email newsletter. Subscribe for free here.

The post DeBriefed 16 January 2026: Three years of record heat; China and India coal milestone; Beijing’s 2026 climate outlook appeared first on Carbon Brief.

DeBriefed 16 January 2026: Three years of record heat; China and India coal milestone; Beijing’s 2026 climate outlook

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Brazil’s biodiversity pledge: Six key takeaways for nature and climate change

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The world’s most biodiverse nation, Brazil, has belatedly published its UN plan for halting and reversing nature decline by the end of this decade.

Brazil is home to 10-15% of all known species on Earth, 64% of the Amazon rainforest and it supplies 10% of global food demand, according to official estimates.

It was among around 85% of nations to miss the 2024 deadline for submitting a new UN nature plan, known as a national biodiversity strategy and action plan (NBSAP), according to a joint investigation by Carbon Brief and the Guardian.

On 29 December 2025, Brazil finally published its new NBSAP, following a lengthy consultation process involving hundreds of scientists, Indigenous peoples and civil society members.

The NBSAP details how the country will meet the goals and targets of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF), the landmark deal often described as the “Paris Agreement” for nature, agreed in 2022. 

Below, Carbon Brief walks through six key takeaways from Brazil’s belated NBSAP:

  1. The government plans to ‘conserve’ 80% of the Brazilian Amazon by 2030
  2. It plans to ‘eliminate’ deforestation in Brazilian ecosystems by 2030
  3. Brazil has ‘aligned’ its actions on tackling climate change and biodiversity loss
  4. The country seeks to ‘substantially increase’ nature finance from a range of sources
  5. Brazil’s plans for agriculture include ‘sustainable intensification’
  6. Brazil conducted a largest-of-its-kind consultation process before releasing its NBSAP

The government plans to ‘conserve’ 80% of the Brazilian Amazon by 2030

The third target of the GBF sets out the aim that “by 2030 at least 30% of terrestrial, inland water and of coastal and marine areas…are effectively conserved and managed”. This is often referred to as “30 by 30”.  

Previous analysis by Carbon Brief and the Guardian found that more than half of countries’ pledges were not aligned with this aim. (Importantly, all of the GBF’s targets are global ones and do not prescribe the amount of land that each country must protect.)

Brazil’s NBSAP sets a substantially higher goal – it seeks to conserve 80% of the Amazon rainforest within its borders, as well as 30% of the country’s other ecosystems.

Since Brazil is one of the largest countries in the world, in addition to being the most biodiverse, this higher target represents a significant step towards achieving the global target.

For the purposes of its protected areas target, Brazil considers not just nationally designated protected areas, but also the lands of Indigenous peoples, Quilombola territories and other local communities.

As the NBSAP notes, Brazil has already taken several steps towards achieving the “30 by 30” target.

In 2018, the country created or expanded four marine protected areas in its territorial waters, increasing its protected area coverage from around 1.5% to greater than 25%. 

According to Brazil’s sixth national report, submitted to the CBD in 2020, 18% of the country’s “continental area” – that is, its land and inland waters – was part of a protected area. More than 28% of the Amazon received such a designation. 

A further 12% of the country is demarcated as Indigenous lands, which “provide important protection to a large territorial extension of the country, particularly in the Amazon biome”, the report says.

The action plan that accompanies the new NBSAP sets out 15 actions in support of achieving target three, including recognising and titling Indigenous lands, establishing ecological corridors and biosphere reserves and implementing national strategies for mangrove, coral reef and wetlands protection.

It plans to ‘eliminate’ deforestation in Brazilian ecosystems by 2030

As well as committing to the GBF targets of protecting and restoring ecosystems, Brazil’s NBSAP also sets a separate target to “eliminate” deforestation in Brazilian biomes by 2030.

Target 1B of Brazil’s NBSAP says that the country aims to “achieve zero deforestation and conversion of native vegetation by 2030”.

The country hopes to achieve this “through the elimination of illegal deforestation and conversion, compensation for the legal suppression of native vegetation, prevention and control of wildfires, combating desertification and attaining land degradation neutrality”.

This goes above and beyond what is set out in the GBF, which does not mention “deforestation” at all.

Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva was reelected as leader in 2022 on a promise to achieve “zero deforestation”, following a rise in Amazon destruction under his predecessor, Jair Bolsonaro.

Data from Global Forest Watch (GFW), an independent satellite research platform, found that deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon fell by a “dramatic” 36% in 2023 under Lula.

However, Brazil remains the world’s largest deforester. Separate GFW data shows that the country accounted for 42% of all primary forest loss in 2024 – with two-thirds of this driven by wildfires fuelled by a record drought.

Brazil has ‘aligned’ its actions on tackling climate change and biodiversity loss

Brazil’s NBSAP comes shortly after it hosted the COP30 climate summit in the Amazon city of Belém in November.

One of the presidency’s priorities at the talks was to bring about greater coordination between global efforts to tackle climate change and biodiversity loss.

At the Rio Earth summit in 1992, the world decided to address Earth’s most pressing environmental problems under three separate conventions: one on climate change, one on biodiversity and the final one on land desertification.

But, for the past few years, a growing number of scientists, politicians and diplomats have questioned whether tackling these issues separately is the right approach.

And, at the most recent biodiversity and land desertification COPs, countries agreed to new texts calling for closer cooperation between the three Rio conventions. 

At COP30, the Brazilian presidency attempted to negotiate a new text to enhance “synergies” between the conventions. However, several nations, including Saudi Arabia, vocally opposed the progression of a substantive outcome.

Following on from this, Brazil’s NBSAP states that its vision for tackling nature loss is “aligned” with its UN climate plan, known as a nationally determined contribution (NDC).

In addition, the NBSAP states that Brazil is taking a “holistic approach to addressing the existing crises of climate change and biodiversity loss in a synergistic manner”.

It lists several targets that could help to address both environmental problems, including ending deforestation, promoting sustainable agriculture and restoring ecosystems.

Brazil joins a small number of countries, including Panama and the UK, that have taken steps to bring their actions to tackle climate change and biodiversity loss into alignment.

The country seeks to ‘substantially increase’ nature finance from a range of sources

According to target 19 of the NBSAP, the Brazilian government will “develop and initiate” a national strategy to finance the actions laid out in the document by the end of 2026.

This financial plan “should aim to substantially increase…the volume of financial resources” for implementing the NBSAP.

These resources should come in the form of federal, state and municipal funding, international finance, private funding and incentives for preserving biodiversity, the document continues.

The accompanying action plan includes a number of specific mechanisms, which could be used to finance efforts to tackle nature loss. These include biodiversity credits, a regulated carbon market and the Tropical Forest Forever Facility.

Separately, the NBSAP sets out a goal in target 18 of identifying “subsidies and economic and fiscal incentives that are directly harmful to biodiversity” by the end of this year. Those identified subsidies should then be reduced or eliminated by 2030, it adds.

The document notes that the phaseout of harmful subsidies should be accompanied by an increase in incentives for “conservation, restoration and sustainable use of biodiversity”.

The NBSAP does “important work” in translating the targets of the GBF into “ambitious targets” in the national context, says Oscar Soria, co-founder and chief executive of civil-society organisation the Common Initiative

Soria tells Carbon Brief:

“While the document is laudable on many aspects and its implementation would change things for the better, the concrete financial means to make it a reality – funding it and halting the funding of activities going against it – are still lacking. In this regard, this NBSAP is a good example of the GBF’s problem at the global level.

“The hardest part of political negotiations will begin only now: in 2026, the Brazilian government will have to evaluate the cost of implementing the NBSAP and where finance will come from.”

Brazil’s plans for agriculture include ‘sustainable intensification’

Brazil is one of the world’s leading food producers, meeting 10% of global demand, according to its NBSAP.

It is also the world’s largest grower of soya beans and the second-largest cattle producer.

However, agriculture is also a major driver of biodiversity loss in Brazil, largely due to the clearing of rainforest or other lands for soya growing and cattle ranching. Agriculture itself is also affected by biodiversity loss, particularly the loss of pollinators. The NBSAP says:

“Biodiversity loss directly undermines agricultural production and human well-being, demonstrating that agriculture, other productive activities and biodiversity conservation are interdependent rather than antagonistic.”

Brazil’s NBSAP addresses sustainable agriculture in target 10A, which aims to “ensure that, by 2030, areas under agriculture, livestock, aquaculture and forestry are managed sustainably and integrated into the landscape”.

It lists several approaches to achieving sustainable production, including agroecology, regenerative agriculture and sustainable intensification.

Targets seven and 10B also pertain to food systems. Target seven seeks to reduce the impacts of pollution, including nutrient loss and pesticides, on biodiversity, while target 10B commits to the sustainable fishing and harvesting of other aquatic resources.

In 2021, Brazil launched its national low-carbon agriculture strategy, known as the ABC+ plan. The plan promotes sustainability in the agricultural sector through both adaptation and mitigation actions. 

Brazil conducted a largest-of-its-kind consultation process before releasing its NBSAP

Brazil was among the majority of nations to miss the UN deadline to submit a new NBSAP before the COP16 biodiversity summit in Colombia in October 2024.

At the time, a representative from the Brazilian government said that it was unable to meet the deadline because it was embarking on an ambitious consultation process for its NBSAP.

Braulio Dias, director of biodiversity conservation at the Brazilian Ministry of Environment, who is responsible for the NBSAP process, told Carbon Brief and the Guardian in 2024:

“Brazil is a huge country with the largest share of biodiversity [and] a large population with a complex governance. We are a federation with 26 states and 5,570 municipalities. We started the process to update our NBSAP in May last year and have managed to conclude a broad consultation process involving over a thousand people in face-to-face meetings.

“We are in the process of consolidating all proposals received, consulting all the departments of the Brazilian Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change, all the federal ministries and agencies engaged in the biodiversity agenda and the National Biodiversity Committee, before we can have a high-level political endorsement.

“Then we still have to build a monitoring strategy, a finance strategy and a communication strategy. We will only conclude this process toward the end of the year or early next year.”

In its NBSAP, the Brazilian government says it engaged with around 200 scientific and civil society organisations and 110 Indigenous representatives while preparing its NBSAP.

Around one-third of the Amazon is protected by Indigenous territories.

Indigenous peoples in Brazil have continuously called for more inclusion in UN processes to tackle climate change and nature loss, including by holding multiple demonstrations during the COP30 climate summit in November.

Michel Santos, public policy manager at WWF Brazil, says that many in Brazil’s civil society were pleased with the NBSAP’s extensive consultation process, telling Carbon Brief:

“Brazilian civil society is very happy with everything. It was a long process with broad participation. It took a while to be completed, but we consider the result quite satisfactory.”

The post Brazil’s biodiversity pledge: Six key takeaways for nature and climate change appeared first on Carbon Brief.

Brazil’s biodiversity pledge: Six key takeaways for nature and climate change

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