Suzanne Goldenberg
Suzanne Goldenberg is the US environment correspondent of the Guardian and is based in Washington DC. She has won several awards for her work in the Middle East, and in 2003 covered the US invasion of Iraq from Baghdad. She is author of Madam President, about Hillary Clinton's historic run for White House
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Letter asking the president to prevent future hunting for oil in the waters follows a series of new heat and melting records in the Arctic, which stunned researchers
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Analysis of Peabody Energy court documents show company backed trade groups, lobbyists and thinktanks dubbed ‘heart and soul of climate denial’
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Barack Obama tightens restriction on sale of elephant ivory within the US to clamp down on illegal trade
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Report from US Geological Survey says northern wildfires must now be seen as significant driver of climate change, not just a side-effect
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Exclusive: 2001 intervention adds to evidence that oil company was aware of the science and its implications for government policy and the energy industry
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ExxonMobil and others pursued research into technologies, yet blocked government efforts to fight climate change for more than 50 years, findings show
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White House announces new regulations to cut methane emissions – a climate pollutant – from the oil and gas industry almost in half
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Hoesung Lee, head of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, voices hope in battle against 2C increase in warming but warns of ‘phenomenal’ costs
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It was a slow day before the five-state marathon of the so-called “Acela primaries” in Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Maryland and Delaware tomorrow
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At least 34 countries representing 49% of greenhouse gas emissions formally joined the agreement, bringing it ‘within striking distance’ of entering into force
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Representatives of more than 170 countries endorse Paris agreement to cut carbon emissions, with France’s president saying: ‘There is no turning back’
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World leaders convened at the UN this week in support of the historic deal, but epic challenges lie ahead if the promises of Paris are going to be put into action
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With the ice cover down to 14.52m sq km, scientists now believe the Arctic is locked onto a course of continually shrinking sea ice
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Coast guard officials are training for catastrophe as melting sea ice opens up Northwest Passage allowing liner to cruise with 1,700 from Alaska to New York
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After record high winter temperatures reduced parts of the course to a bone-jarring, sled-wrecking obstacle course, is the great mushing race on its way out?
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Scientists hope monitoring the ice through winter, as well as summer, will give insight into the effect of winds, clouds, snow and sun on melt rates
Topics
- Climate change (Environment)
- Greenhouse gas emissions
- Paris climate agreement
- Energy
- Barack Obama
- Fossil fuels
- Arctic
- Canada
- United Nations
- US politics
- Polar regions
- Obama administration
- COP 21: UN climate change conference | Paris
- Justin Trudeau
- Alaska
- Americas
- Coal
- Sea ice
- Climate change (Science)
- Oil and gas companies
Arctic sea ice crashes to record low for June