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The United Kingdom has recorded its warmest spring since records began in 1884, prompting warnings for needed action on climate change.

The season was also the sunniest on record overall for the UK, with Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland recording their sunniest springs, and England experiencing its second sunniest since record keeping began in 1910, according to a new Met Office report.

The UK had 653.3 hours of sunshine this spring — 43 percent above the seasonal average. It outshone the 2020 record by more than 27 hours and has been the sunniest season since 1995.

“What’s particularly notable about Spring 2025 is the combination of record warmth and sunshine, alongside very low rainfall,” said Emily Carlisle, a climate scientist with the Met Office. “This spring shows some of the changes we’re seeing in our weather patterns, with more extreme conditions, including prolonged dry, sunny weather, becoming more frequent.”

The UK has had eight of its 10 warmest springs since 2000, with the three hottest occurring since 2017, the Met Office said.

🌡 ☀ The UK has recorded its warmest and sunniest spring on record, according to provisional Met Office statistics.

Spring 2025 is now the 4th sunniest season overall for the UK, with only 3 summers sunnier since 1910.

Full details here: www.metoffice.gov.uk/about-us/new…

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— Met Office – weather and climate (@metoffice.bsky.social) June 2, 2025 at 9:59 AM

The mean temperature of 9.5 degrees Celsius this spring was 1.4 degrees Celsius higher than the climatological average.

The previous daytime temperature record of 14 degrees Celsius from 1893 was broken by a wide margin this spring when it reached 14.6 degrees Celsius.

Waters surrounding the UK have also been heating up, with sea surface temperatures in some areas reaching up to four degrees Celsius higher than normal, creating an unprecedented marine heat wave.

“This combination of heat and sunshine, coupled with very low rainfall, has created challenging conditions across much of the country for agriculture and water resources,” the Met Office said.

The main factor that led to the unusual spring conditions was the persistence of high-pressure systems that often originate in mainland Europe or the Azores. The systems arrived over the UK in late February and lingered until the last week of May. The effect of the systems was to block the normal flow of Atlantic weather fronts, allowing for the dominance of high pressure.

By the middle of May, the UK was having the driest spring it had seen in over a century, reported the BBC. By the end of the month, the weather turned windier and wetter, but still turned out to be the UK’s driest spring since 1974, with only a little more than half of the expected rainfall.

It looks as though June will continue the pattern, with a hotter-than-usual summer predicted for the UK, and an increased likelihood of heat waves.

The most recent Met Office three-month outlook says it is twice as likely that this year’s meteorological summer from June 1 to August 31 will be hotter than normal.

The Met Office has said the extraordinary warming is largely the result of human-caused climate change, rather than any specific weather pattern.

“The UK’s climate continues to change,” Carlisle said in the press release. “The data clearly shows that recent decades have been warmer, sunnier, and often drier than the 20th century average, although natural variation will continue to play a role in the UK’s weather.”

The post UK Records Its Hottest and Sunniest Spring, With 43% More Sunshine Than Usual appeared first on EcoWatch.

https://www.ecowatch.com/uk-hottest-spring-2025.html

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Best of Sustainability In Your Ear: Okhtapus Cofounder Stewart Sarkozy-Banoczy Accelerates Ocean Solutions

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The ocean provides half the oxygen we breathe, absorbs 30% of our carbon emissions, and helps control the planet’s climate. By 2030, it’s expected to support a $3.2 trillion Blue Economy. Yet 70% of proven ocean solutions, such as coastal resilience, coral restoration, and marine pollution cleanup, never move past the pilot stage. These projects often win awards and get media attention, but then stall because funding systems don’t connect working ideas with the cities, ports, and coastal areas that need them. Stewart Sarkozy-Banoczy, co-founder and ocean lead at Okhtapus, wants to change that. Okhtapus, named with the Persian word for the octopus, uses a model that links what Stewart calls “the three hearts” of successful projects: innovators with proven solutions, cities and ports ready to use them, and funders looking for solid projects.
Stewart Sarkozy-Benoczy, Cofounder and Ocean Lead at Okhtapus.org, is our guest on Sustainability In Your Ear.
The first Okhtapus Global Replicator will launch in 2026. It will bring groups of proven innovators to work on important projects in specific places, such as a single port city like Barcelona, where Okhtapus already has strong partnerships, or a group of Caribbean islands facing similar problems. The aim is to have enough successful projects that funders stop asking “where are the deals?” and start saying “we’ve got enough.” The platform focuses on late-stage startups and scale-ups, not early-stage ideas. Stewart calls these the “Goldilocks zone”—solutions that are proven enough to copy but still need funding and partners to grow. By combining several solutions for different locations, Okhtapus can offer investors portfolios that fit their needs and make a real difference in cities, ports, and island nations.
Stewart has spent 20 years working where climate resilience and policy meet. He was part of President Obama’s Hurricane Sandy Rebuilding Task Force, led policy and investments at the Resilient Cities Network, and is now Managing Director of the World Ocean Council. “Ten years from now, if this is done fast enough,” Stewart said, “we should have pushed hard enough on the funders and the system to change it. What we don’t know is whether we’ll get to the solution status fast enough for some of these tipping points.”
To find out more about Okhtapus, visit okhtapus.org.

Editor’s Note: This episode originally aired on December 22, 2025.

The post Best of Sustainability In Your Ear: Okhtapus Cofounder Stewart Sarkozy-Banoczy Accelerates Ocean Solutions appeared first on Earth911.

https://earth911.com/podcast/sustainability-in-your-ear-okhtapus-cofounder-stewart-sarkozy-banoczy-accelerates-ocean-solutions/

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Earth911 Inspiration: A Serious Look at Modern Lifestyle

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Today’s quote comes from Pope John Paul II’s message for the celebration of the World Day of Peace, 1990. He wrote, “Modern society will find no solution to the ecological problem unless it takes a serious look at its lifestyle.”

Earth911 inspirations. Post them, share your desire to help people think of the planet first, every day.

Pope John Paul II quote from World Day of Peace message

The post Earth911 Inspiration: A Serious Look at Modern Lifestyle appeared first on Earth911.

https://earth911.com/inspire/earth911-inspiration-take-serious-look-lifestyle/

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Best of Sustainability In Your Ear: Making Billions of Square Feet of Commercial Space Sustainable with CBRE’s Rob Bernard

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The built environment, particularly office buildings other urban facilities, are responsible for 39% of the global energy-related emissions, according to the World Green Building Council. About a third of that impact comes from the initial construction of a building and the other two-thirds is produced over the lifetime of a building by heating, cooling, and providing power to the occupants. Our guest today is leading a key battle to reduce the impact of the built environment. Tune in for a wide-ranging conversation with Rob Bernard, Chief Sustainability Officer at CBRE Group Inc., which manages more than $145 billion of commercial buildings, providing logistics, retail, and corporate office services across more than than 100 countries.

Rob Bernard, Chief Sustainability Officer at the commercial real estate giant CBRE, is our guest on Sustainability In Your Ear.

Rob cut his sustainability teeth at Microsoft, as its Chief Environmental Strategist for 11 years, as the company was developing its world-leading approach and collaborating with other tech giants to lobby for policy and funding to accelerate progress. He discusses CBRE’s Sustainability Solutions & Services for commercial building owners, as well as the accelerating progress for renewables, carbon tracking, and economic, health, and lifestyle benefits of living lightly on the planet. You can learn more about CBRE and its sustainability services at cbre.com

Take a few minutes to learn more about making construction and building operations more sustainable:

Editor’s Note: This podcast originally aired on April 15, 2024.

The post Best of Sustainability In Your Ear: Making Billions of Square Feet of Commercial Space Sustainable with CBRE’s Rob Bernard appeared first on Earth911.

https://earth911.com/podcast/earth911-podcast-making-billions-of-square-feet-of-commercial-space-sustainable-with-cbres-rob-bernard/

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