Welcome to Carbon Briefās DeBriefed.Ā
An essential guide to the weekās key developments relating to climate change.
US election extremes
HARRIS VS TRUMP: Kamala Harris and Donald Trump met for their first US presidential debate on Tuesday, with the final question asking what they would do to fight climate change, Rolling Stone reported. The article said that Trump, the Republican candidate, ācompletely ignored the questionā. Harris, the Democratic nominee, āvowed to take actionā but also āembrace[d]ā domestic fossil fuels, according to E&E News. The Guardian noted that Harrisā āstridentā support for fracking āraised eyebrows among some environmentalistsā.
āWHILE WILDFIRES RAGEā: The Atlantic said āclimate discussion did not go farā in the debate ā despite it being held āwhile wildfires rage in Nevada, southern California, Oregon and Idahoā and Louisiana was ābracingā for the landfall of Hurricane Francine. CNN said more than 70 active wildfires have been burning in the US. Climate change is āincreasing the severity of record wildfiresā, Axios noted. Meanwhile, the New York Times reported that Francine peaked as a category 2 hurricane on Wednesday, driving flash floods and ālife-threatening conditionsā.Ā
Floods and fires
STRONGER STORMS: Nearly 200 people have died and more than 125 are missing in Vietnam following Typhoon Yagi, according to Sky News. It added that such storms are āgetting stronger due to climate changeā. Yagi was the most powerful typhoon to hit Asia this year, and CNN noted that it struck southern China and the rest of south-east Asia as well. Elsewhere, Nigeriaās Foundation for Investigative Journalism reported on flooding in northern Borno state following heavy rainfall and the failure of a dam. Al Jazeera said more than one million have been affected.
MORE FIRE: Fires have also been raging across South America, with Bolivia declaring a national emergency after experiencing the largest number of wildfires since 2010, according to Reuters. Forest fires in Brazil have soared against a backdrop of record drought, Folha de Sao Paulo reported. The Peruvian rainforests have also been struck by fires, according to El Comercio.
- CANāT COMPETE: Former Italian prime minister Mario Draghi has produced a report for the European Commission examining how the EU can compete with the US and China, according to Euractiv. It contains many proposals for energy and climate policies, which are captured in a Carbon Brief summary.
- OUT OF ICE: The sea ice around Antarctica is about to reach a record winter low for the second year running, adding to the evidence that the Antarctic system has moved to a ānew stateā, the Guardian reported.
- CALL TO ACTION: Tens of thousands of protesters gathered in the South Korean capital of Seoul to call for urgent action āfrom both the government and individualsā to tackle climate change, the Korea Times reported.
- POPE ON TOUR: During a regional tour, the New York Times reported that Pope Francis heard about the threat of sea level rise in Papua New Guinea. He commended Singapore for its environmental efforts, the Straits Times added.
- EXPANDED MARKET: China will expand its national carbon market to include its steel, aluminium and cement industries at the end of this year, reported Bloomberg.
- COAL AND STEEL: A decision to approve the UKās first new coal mine in 30 years has been ruled unlawful by the High Court, Sky News reported. Elsewhere, the UK government has agreed to give Tata Steel Ā£500m to help move away from coal-based steelmaking, BBC News said.
The number of people killed last year defending the environment, according to figures gathered by the NGO Global Witness and reported by the New York Times.
- New research published in Nature Communications found no overall decline in fossil-fuel lending by banks since the Paris Agreement, with some European banks cutting their lending while others in Japan and Canada increased theirs.
- The worldās wetlands released, on average, around 153m tonnes of methane every year between 2001 and 2020, according to a new study in Earthās Future.
- A new study in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences identified an āurban wet islandā effect, meaning that urbanisation can result in increased rainfall. It said the magnitude of these urban wet islands āhas nearly doubledā from 2001 to 2020.
(For more, see Carbon Briefās in-depth daily summaries of the top climate news stories on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.)
Carbon Brief covered new data exploring how China has been investing in low-carbon energy projects across Africa. This follows the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) last week, where climate cooperation was a key topic for leaders from China and African nations. At the previous FOCAC in 2021, China pledged to increase investment in African clean energy. Despite a two-year lull in lending by Chinaās policy banks, the data shows that China-Africa cooperation on renewable energy continued through other channels during this period, and that policy bank lending rebounded in 2023.
How a UK-backed firm has fuelled African gas power
Carbon Brief investigates how a little-known company that is majority-owned by a UK government development body and backed by UK aid money has been pouring investment into gas power across Africa.
Globeleq describes itself as āthe leading independent power producer in Africaā. It runs 1,119 megawatts (MW) of gas power plants in Cameroon, Ivory Coast and Tanzania ā two-thirds of its total portfolio.
The company is controlled, with a 70% stake, by British International Investment (BII) ā the UKās development finance institution. BII is an āarms lengthā body that is nevertheless 100% owned by the government and receives funds from the UK aid budget.Ā
BII has strongly emphasised its focus on renewables. Yet Carbon Brief analysis of Globeleq figures shows that its gas power generation has increased by a much larger amount in recent years, and is set to almost double as new plants come online.
Globeleq has received hundreds of millions of dollars of investment via BII. According to reporting by Bloomberg, BIIās stake in the company is valued at around $1bn.
BIIās support for gas in Africa has come under fire for conflicting with wider UK government climate goals. MPs and campaigners have called for it to divest from fossil fuels altogether.
Gas expansion
BII emphasises its efforts to drive a āpivot towards renewablesā within Globeleq.
However, Carbon Brief analysis of company figures shows that the renewable share of its electricity output has barely changed since 2019.
Even as new solar and wind projects are added to its portfolio, Globeleq produces more than five times as much power from fossil fuels as from renewables.Ā Ā
The amount of gas power Globeleq produces is still growing. As its large new projects start up in Mozambique and Ivory Coast, the amount of gas-fired electricity the company produces is on track to nearly double ā rising to 11,013 gigawatt-hours (GWh) next year.Ā
Globeleq is developing more renewables, but its gas expansion would still raise the fossil fuel share of the electricity the company generates from 84% in 2023 to around 89% of the total.
BII told Carbon Brief it ādid not make a single new commitment to fossil-fuel assetsā over the past year. BII also said it invested āover Ā£1bn to address the climate emergencyā in the past two years.
āConflictā with climateĀ
The involvement of the UKās government and money in BII and Globeleq has raised questions about the nationās commitment to stop overseas fossil-fuel investment.
Under the previous Conservative government, the UK pledged to stop funding new overseas fossil-fuel projects beyond March 2021. Globeleqās Temane gas-fired power plant in Mozambique reached financial close in December 2021.
However, the government and BII commitments contained exemptions ā dubbed āloopholesā by some observers ā that allow for funding of gas power plants if they āalignā with nations achieving net-zero emissions by 2050. The Temane project was deemed to fit these criteria.
The international development committee of MPs pointed out last year that the then-government had pledged to align aid with the Paris Agreement and that some BII schemes āconflict[ed]ā with this. āBII holds some investments that conflict with the UK governmentās policies, such as those relating to fossil fuels,ā it said.
The committee said BII ālags behind other peer institutionsā in divesting from fossil fuels and switching to āgreen energyā.Ā
Sandra Martinsone, policy manager at the NGO Bond, told Carbon Brief that BII has āno clear planā for phasing out fossil fuel investments and said the government could push it to do so. The UK government had not provided Carbon Brief with a comment at the time of publication.
Moreover, with a majority share in Globeleq, Martinsone says BII could steer it in āany direction it wantsā.
Gas for Africa?
BII stresses Globeleqās role in providing electricity to millions of Africans.Ā
Under the scenario compatible with the Paris Agreement target of limiting warming to 1.5C, set out by the International Energy Agency (IEA), global demand for gas would drop by 55% from 2021 to 2050.
Yet BII argues that African nations often need the ābaseloadā power provided by gas, which can allow the integration of more renewables.
This view has been supported by many African governments. However, African civil society groups have pushed back, arguing that nations could be ālocked inā to fossil fuels, leaving them vulnerable to fuel price spikes and health impacts for communities nearby to plants.Ā
Mohamed Adow, director of Power Shift Africa, told Carbon Brief it is āabsurdā to see UK aid money linked to fossil-fuel investments that leave Africans with the ādirty and polluting energy of the pastā.
Watch, read, listen
SPILLED: Climate journalists Mary AnnaĆÆse Heglar and Amy Westervelt discussed what US Republicansā much-discussed Project 2025 plan lays out for climate change in the latest episode of Spill, their āclimate talk showā.
MASS DISPLACEMENT: An article in the Conversation asked if the hundreds of thousands of people who have been forced from their homes by huge floods in South Sudan could be āthe first example of a mass population permanently displaced by climate changeā.
YOUTH AND ANXIETY: The Los Angeles Times has published a āyouth and climate anxiety special sectionā made up of a series of articles that āreminds us thereās still time to seize control of our collective destinyā.
Coming up
Pick of the jobs
- The Washington Post, power and politics editor, climate and environment | Salary: $122,500-$204,100. Location: Washington DC
- Stockholm Environment Institute, centre director | Salary: Ā£70,000-Ā£80,000. Location: Oxford, UK
- Uplift, deputy director | Salary: From Ā£74,444. Location: Remote (UK)
- Climate Now, data visualisation designer | Salary: $85,000-$120,000. Location: New York
DeBriefed is edited by Daisy Dunne. Please send any tips or feedback to [emailĀ protected].
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