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Environment May 25, 2026

UK Breaches 104-Year-Old May Temperature Record as Scorching Heatwave Intensifies

The UK recorded its highest ever May temperature of 33.5°C at Heathrow on 25 May 2026, breaking a 1…
The Historic Temperature Milestone and Ongoing HeatwaveA temperature of 33.5°C was recorded at London’s Heathrow airport on Monday lunchtime, shattering the previous May record set in Camden Square in 1922 and last matched in Tunbridge Wells and Regent’s Park in 1944. The Met Office expects temperatures to climb further to 35°C on Tuesday, with highs of 31°C forecast for Wednesday and 30°C on Thursday. Overnight temperatures also broke the UK’s highest minimum May temperature, with Kenley airfield recording a low of 19.4°C on Sunday.Climate Adaptation Urgency and Health RisksThe record-breaking heat underscores the growing impact of climate change on British life. Dr Chloe Brimicombe, a climate researcher at the University of Oxford, called it 'a reminder of how climate change is impacting our lives in the UK. It highlights the urgency of recent calls for heat adaptation.' Amber heat health alerts were issued on Friday, indicating a possible risk to life, particularly for the elderly, pregnant women, and those with underlying illnesses. Experts describe heat as a 'silent killer' because many related deaths go uncounted in official statistics; last summer, scientists attributed two in three heat-related deaths in European cities to climate breakdown.Policy Recommendations for a Hotter FutureLast week, the UK’s Climate Change Committee warned that British homes, hospitals, and schools are ill-equipped for the projected temperature rise. Its recommendations include installing air conditioning in all care homes and hospitals within 10 years and in all schools within 25 years, as well as setting maximum working temperatures for indoor and outdoor environments. Gareth Redmond-King of the Energy & Climate Intelligence Unit stressed that 'cutting those emissions to net zero is the only way to halt climate change and limit the danger,' but added that adaptation is equally critical. The current heatwave is driven by high pressure over the country, caused by sinking, compressing, and heating air, with the risk of more extreme heat amplified by the expected arrival of El Niño later this year.
#UK #Met Office #Heatwave
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Environment May 22, 2026

UK Air-Conditioned Homes Double to 4 Million Amid Rising Temperatures

The number of UK homes with air conditioning has doubled to over 4 million in just three years, dri…
The UK's Cooling Revolution More than 4 million homes in the UK now have air conditioning, double the figure from just three years ago, marking a significant shift in how British households cope with increasingly hot summers. Types of Cooling Systems and Their Usage Portable units with power ratings around 1kW are slightly more common than the more powerful built-in versions that can guzzle 2.7kW of power – more than an electric oven. Of the 4 million households with air conditioning, nearly 1.9 million have built-in units, while 2.2 million homes use portable air conditioning units. More than 260,000 UK households have heat pumps that can be used to cool homes. When used in cooling mode, heat pumps work like traditional air conditioning units by extracting heat from the home and releasing it outside. The Financial Impact of Cooling The energy consumption and associated costs of air conditioning are substantial. In a typical week, households use their built-in units for about four hours at a cost of £2.93. However, during heatwaves when usage increases to over nine hours daily, weekly costs soar to £42.43. Portable units, which use 1kW of power, typically cost 83p per week with three hours of usage. During hot spells, when used for more than nine hours daily, this rises to £15.71 weekly. Climate Change Drivers Experts suggest the increase in air conditioning ownership is the result of more people working from home and rising summer temperatures. Some of the UK's warmest summers have been in recent years, with the record high of 40°C set in July 2022. The government's climate advisers have warned that British homes will need air conditioning to survive predicted levels of global heating, as traditional cooling methods like drawing curtains and opening windows become insufficient. Future Projections and Recommendations The Climate Change Committee has recommended that air conditioning should be installed in all care homes and hospitals within the next 10 years, and in all schools within 25 years. Heatwaves were expected to exceed 40°C in all parts of the UK by 2050, potentially leading to an additional 10,000 heat-related deaths annually. With about nine in ten UK homes likely to overheat, the adaptation to higher temperatures is becoming increasingly urgent. However, air conditioning is energy intensive, accounting for about 4% of global greenhouse gas emissions. Sustainable Cooling Solutions Sam Alvis, head of energy security at the IPPR thinktank, called for more solar panels on roofs alongside air conditioning installations. "We are going to have to get used to being a hot country, which is quite a mindset shift for the UK," he said. "Air conditioning is actually a great pair for solar from an energy system point of view because it matches supply and demand." More efficient modern systems using heat pumps, which are already subsidized by the government to replace gas boilers, could provide a more sustainable cooling solution, though these are rarely installed at present.
#UK #air conditioning #climate change
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Environment May 22, 2026

Big Oil's War Profits May Have a Silver Lining After All

Fossil fuel companies are reaping massive profits from the Iran conflict while ordinary consumers f…
The LeadA friend of mine was recently left in tears after filling up the car she relies on to drive to work. Thanks to the US-Israeli attacks on Iran, prices at the pumps have soared. She wasn't sure how her family was going to make it to the next paycheck.It is a personal story and a distressing one, but the big picture is truly obscene. Fossil fuel companies are raking in monstrous, unearned war profits taken from the pockets of people like you, me, my friend, and any of us who fills up a vehicle or pays an energy bill.The War-Profits Bonanza$30m an hour: that's the pure, unearned profits banked by the world's top 100 oil and gas companies in the first month of the conflict in Iran, purely due to the spike in the oil price. Now the first numbers are in, and that $30m may have been a major underestimate.Shell's profit for the first three months of 2026 more than doubled to $6.9bn, as did BP's, to $3.2bn. TotalEnergies profits also surged by more than 50%, up to $5.8bn. Even in the Gulf itself, where the flow of oil through the strait of Hormuz has been heavily restricted, some companies have still flourished. Aramco, the state oil company of Saudi Arabia, saw its profits soar by 26% to $33.6bn in the first quarter.The Financial Impact on ConsumersThose four companies alone, benefiting not just from the oil price hike but also bumper oil-trading profits, made $23m an hour for the whole of January, February and March. And the Iran conflict only started on 28 February.To get some idea of the scale of this, imagine I gave you $6,200. What would you do? Pay off a loan? Book a fancy holiday? A second later, I give you another $6,200; then again, for hours, weeks and months. That is the rate of profit of just those four companies.There is plenty more to come for the industry. Oil and gas supplies will take months to return to prewar levels, and reserves are getting dangerously low. Even if the oil price remains at today's level of about $100 a barrel, those 100 companies will make $234bn by the end of the year. Remember, the companies, and petrostates such as Russia, have done no extra work for this, just ridden a soaring oil price. Also remember, you are paying for this. Where I live in the UK, household energy bills are about to jump by £209 ($280) a year for the average home.The Industry's Climate ObstructionThe profits are extreme, but not new: big oil and gas has been wildly profitable for decades. It has made an average $1tn a year in pure profit for about 50 years. The fossil fuel sector also benefits from explicit subsidies that totalled $1.3tn in 2022, according to the International Monetary Fund.These riches have funded the lobbying and campaigns that block climate action and have done so for years, long after the science became crystal clear. As an example of the consequences, the UK's official climate advisers said on Tuesday that all care homes and hospitals will need air conditioning within the coming 10 years, to stop the heat killing people.The Green Transition AccelerationBut here's that silver lining I promised: these peak profits contain the seeds of their own downfall. Sky-high fossil fuel prices are pushing people, companies and nations to supercharge their rush towards green power for the simple reason that it is now cheaper and more reliable. Solar power does not need to transit through the strait of Hormuz, as Bill McKibben has observed.The numbers on the surge in renewable energy deployment, already exponential, are not yet in, but they will almost certainly be huge. Green funds are already attracting billions of dollars in new investments and one consultancy estimates that an oil price of $100 a barrel will drive $4tn of extra green investment by 2030.Big oil remains a formidable political force but, on the ground, people are already voting with their feet. Sales of new electric cars in the UK leapt by 59% in April, for example. The pain and anger of today's energy crisis may yet become a critical turning point in confronting the climate crisis.
#Big Oil #Iran Conflict #Renewable Energy
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Environment May 20, 2026

UK Infrastructure Crisis: Climate Change Demands Radical Adaptation as Temperatures Soar

The UK's Climate Change Committee warns that the nation's infrastructure is unprepared for rising t…
The UK's Climate Reality CheckBritish homes will need air conditioning to survive predicted levels of global heating, the government's climate advisers have warned in a report, as traditional measures such as drawing curtains, opening windows and growing trees for shade are not likely to be enough. The Climate Change Committee (CCC) has published a major report on adapting to the impacts of global heating, revealing that the UK was "built for a climate that no longer exists" and requires urgent changes to survive the coming decades of rising temperatures.Cooling Imperative for Vulnerable BuildingsThe CCC recommends that air conditioning should be installed in all care homes and hospitals within the next 10 years, and in all schools within 25 years. The government should also set a maximum temperature for working conditions, both indoors and outdoors. Heatwaves are expected to exceed 40C in all parts of the UK by 2050, with periods of hot weather becoming longer and more intense. This could lead to an additional 10,000 heat-related deaths a year, as about nine in ten UK homes are likely to overheat.Financial Costs of Climate InactionThe climate crisis is already costing the UK about £60bn a year, or approximately 2% of GDP, including flood damages and agricultural losses. Protecting people and infrastructure would cost about £11bn annually, with roughly half coming from the private sector. However, every £1 spent would yield approximately £5 in benefits, making adaptation a sound economic investment. The UK currently invests 50 times this amount each year, some of it on infrastructure that exacerbates the climate crisis or increases vulnerability to it.Infrastructure Transformation RequiredThe UK faces multiple climate challenges beyond heat. The 7 million properties at risk of flooding could increase by 40% by 2050, with river peak flows potentially 45% higher. Sea levels will rise by 20cm to 45cm, putting some coastal areas at risk, while heavy rainfall intensity could increase by 60%. Droughts will also become more frequent, with river flows likely about a third lower in summer than they were 20 years ago. By 2050, the shortfall in water supply could reach 5bn litres daily—equivalent to about 2,000 Olympic swimming pools.Preparing for a Hotter FutureBy 2100, summers as dry as 2018 and 1976 would become the norm. Even by 2050, the number of high-risk days for wildfires is likely to double, with the wildfire season extending into early autumn. Schools should consider the impact of heat on pupils taking exams, not only related to classroom temperature but also to students' ability to sleep when nighttime temperatures remain above 20°C. Domestic food production is under threat, with the government urged to ensure at least 60% of the UK's food continues to be produced domestically despite rising temperatures and changing weather patterns.
#Climate Change #UK #Global Heating
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Politics May 16, 2026

Trump Expresses Pessimism for Jimmy Lai's Release After Xi Jinping Call

Donald Trump raised the case of jailed Hong Kong democracy campaigner Jimmy Lai with Chinese leader…
The LeadPresident Donald Trump has expressed a lack of optimism regarding the potential release of Hong Kong democracy activist Jimmy Lai after discussing his case with Chinese leader Xi Jinping during a recent diplomatic visit. Despite raising the matter with Xi, Trump characterized the response as negative, with the Chinese leader reportedly describing Lai's case as 'a tough one'.The Diplomatic ExchangeDuring his two-day visit to China, Trump made a point of raising Lai's case with Xi, hoping to secure the release of the 78-year-old British citizen who has been imprisoned since 2020. Speaking aboard Air Force One on his return journey, Trump revealed that Xi seemed more open to considering the release of a detained church pastor than Lai's case. 'I did bring it up, but it's a tougher one for him. He said Jimmy Lai is a 'tough one' for him,' Trump stated.In a subsequent interview with Fox News, Trump further emphasized his pessimistic outlook: 'I bought up Jimmy Lai. I would say the response to that was not positive... I did not feel optimistic.' These comments mark a stark contrast to Trump's previous statements about Lai, made at the end of last year when he told reporters he had spoken to Xi about considering his release.The Legal SituationJimmy Lai, an influential media tycoon and democracy advocate in Hong Kong, was sentenced to 20 years in prison in February 2026 under a security law imposed by Beijing. His arrest in 2020 was part of a broader crackdown following massive anti-government protests in the former British territory. The legal team representing Lai has consistently maintained his innocence and highlighted the political nature of his prosecution.The case has become a significant point of international concern, particularly in the United Kingdom, where Lai is viewed as being punished for defending democratic undertakings promised during the 1997 handover of Hong Kong from British to Chinese rule. His imprisonment has been widely condemned by human rights organizations and Western governments as a test case for Beijing's commitment to the 'one country, two systems' principle.The Human CostBeyond the legal and political dimensions, Lai's deteriorating health conditions in prison have raised serious humanitarian concerns. The 78-year-old diabetic has been kept in solitary confinement without air conditioning in a facility where summer temperatures reportedly reach 44°C (111°F). His family has described alarming physical deterioration, including significant weight loss, discoloration and loss of nails, and deteriorating dental health.'He has lost a very significant amount of weight, visibly, and he is a lot weaker than he was before,' Lai's daughter Claire said in remarks to media earlier this year. 'His nails turn almost purple, gray and greenish before they fall off, and his teeth are getting rotten.' These conditions have fueled fears that Lai may not survive his lengthy prison sentence, particularly given his advanced age and pre-existing health issues.The International ResponseDespite Trump's pessimistic assessment, Lai's family remains hopeful about potential diplomatic intervention. Claire Lai expressed gratitude to Trump for his commitment to her father's release, stating: 'He has earned his reputation as liberating the unjustly detained and I am confident he and his administration will be the ones to free my father.' She added that Xi Jinping had an opportunity to do 'the only just and honourable thing' by releasing Lai.The international community has continued to monitor Lai's case closely, with human rights organizations and several Western governments expressing concern about his treatment and the implications for freedom of the press in Hong Kong. The case has become a symbol of the broader struggle for democratic values in the face of increasing Chinese assertiveness in the region.The Future OutlookWhile Trump's direct intervention with Xi did not yield immediate results, the continued international attention on Lai's case may still influence diplomatic calculations. The potential release of a detained church pastor, which Trump suggested Xi might be considering, could indicate areas where China is willing to make concessions on human rights issues.For Jimmy Lai, the coming months will be critical as his health conditions deteriorate in prison. The combination of diplomatic pressure, public awareness campaigns, and potential legal challenges may create pathways for his release, though the apparent resistance from Beijing suggests this will be a difficult and protracted process. The case will likely remain a focal point in discussions about human rights, press freedom, and the future of Hong Kong's autonomy.
#Donald Trump #Xi Jinping #Jimmy Lai
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