Many analysts hailed last year’s climate talks as a success, but were they too quick to judge? Jie Yu says age-old questions of equity and development rights are far from being answered.
chinadialogue’s "Changing climates" forum brought together policy makers from China and Europe to discuss energy and climate security on a warming planet. Here, LiuZhiyan, LongXiaobo and Feng San explain China’s responses.
Climate change will bring India the wrong rain in the wrong places. Fierce flooding will ruin lives, while India’s rivers and soil are sucked dry by drought, write Terry Slavin and Malini Mehra.
Europe has been hailed as a leader in the fight against global warming, but are its policies really enough to prevent catastrophe? Jennifer Morgan assesses the EU’s recent policy proposals.
Beijing’s strategy for clean water during the Olympics? Pay rural farmers to “grow” it. Katherine Ellison explores China’s new hope for conserving the precious natural resources it has left.
With an increasing global population, the earnest debate over the merit of biofuels and wind farms misses the point, argues John Gray. It is the technologies we fear that will be our salvation.
Snow chaos hit China 30 years after the northern US suffered the effects of a great blizzard. Lei Xiong looks for the lessons both can teach us about resilience and development.
Heavy snow brought havoc to south China in recent weeks, and climate scientists say extreme weather will become more frequent. The country needs to improve its ability to withstand disaster, writes Tang Hao.
Academia is making moves to tackle climate change, but are universities going far enough, fast enough? Some are finding it difficult to move out of their comfort zones, writes Bibi van der Zee, who sees no margin for complacency.
Written against the backdrop of continuing suicides among Indian farmers, a new book describes the impact of the country’s agricultural crisis on women
The Fate of the Species by Fred Guterl is a bracing overview of the worst that can happen if humans do not overcome their ecological and Earth-systems illiteracy, writes Caspar Henderson.