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Environment May 27, 2026

Indonesia's 'Eternity Glaciers' on Puncak Jaya Disappear at Alarming Rate

An expedition to document the last tropical glaciers in Oceania has revealed that Indonesia's 'eter…
The Disappearance of Indonesia's 'Eternity Glaciers' An expedition to document the end days of the last tropical glaciers in Oceania has revealed sombre footage of “planetary destruction on fast-forward”. The State of Puncak Jaya's Glaciers The once-mighty ice sheets on Puncak Jaya, a mountain surrounded by dense rainforests in West Papua, Indonesia, have survived beyond projections they would disappear by 2026 but have shrunk to a fraction of their original size. The most significant of the two remaining glaciers, which are known locally as “eternal snow” and referred to in English as the “eternity glaciers”, has lost 95% of its area since 2002, the expedition found. The Data Behind the Disappearance Papua’s tropical glaciers lost 97% of their ice mass between 1980 and 2024, Indonesian researchers found in a study published last month. Four of its six glaciers have completely disappeared, and they project the final two will be gone by the end of the decade. 97% of ice mass lost between 1980 and 2024 4 out of 6 glaciers have completely disappeared The remaining 2 glaciers are expected to disappear by the end of the decade The Impact of Climate Change Carbon pollution and the destruction of nature has heated the planet by about 1.4C since preindustrial times, making it less hospitable to human life. Glaciers are projected to lose a quarter of their global mass by 2100, even in a best-case scenario for cutting emissions, with devastating consequences for drinking water and food security. The Future Outlook “The ice will be gone: it’s not a question of if, it’s a question of when,” said Klaus Thymann, a Danish explorer and the founder of Project Pressure, an environmental charity. “And ‘when’ is coming very, very soon.”
#Indonesia #Climate Change #Glaciers
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Sports May 27, 2026

Rayo Vallecano’s Barrio Spirit Fuels Historic Conference League Final Run

Rayo Vallecano, the working‑class club from Madrid’s Vallecas barrio, reached the 2026 Conference L…
Rayo Vallecano’s Unlikely Journey to a European FinalThe club from the Vallecas barrio has become the first team in its century‑old history to play a European final, facing Crystal Palace in Leipzig. Captain Óscar Trejo describes the experience as “kids gifted a toy”, highlighting the emotional weight of the achievement.From the Barrio to Leipzig: The Story Behind the Semi‑Final TriumphKey moments that defined the run:Óscar Trejo handed in his captain’s armband in solidarity with club workers.Striker Sergio Camello called the side “the last team from another time”.Midfielder Óscar Valentín led the squad onto the pitch in Leipzig.Rayo’s semi‑final against Strasbourg featured a squad largely composed of players with no recent top‑flight trophies.Financial Realities: Budget, Stadium Costs and European QualificationAnnual rent for the municipal ground: €81,784.Rayo operate with the lowest budget in La Liga.They have endured 24 relegations and only one prior European appearance, which they missed due to administration.Top scorer Álvaro García holds 36 first‑division goals for the club.Community Identity and Political Tensions Shaping the Club’s RiseThe Vallecas neighbourhood, home to over 300,000 residents, provides a left‑wing, working‑class identity that permeates the club. Fans, known as the Bukaneros, greet players with street‑level hospitality, and political protests are a regular feature of matchday culture. Owner Raúl Martín Presa has sparked controversy by inviting far‑right politician Santiago Abascal, underscoring the clash between club leadership and its grassroots supporters.What Lies Ahead for Rayo Vallecano After Their Historic FinalIf Rayo clinches the Conference League trophy, it could reshape perceptions of small‑budget clubs in Europe, attract new sponsorship, and reinforce Vallecas’ cultural pride. Even without a win, the exposure may improve financial inflows, aid stadium upgrades, and inspire a new generation of players rooted in the barrio’s ethos.
#Rayo Vallecano #Óscar Trejo #Vallecas
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World Wide May 27, 2026

Iran-US War: 'Deep Suspicion' of US Lingers as Iran Ponders Agreement

Iranian lawmakers and officials express 'deep suspicion' of the US as they consider an agreement to…
The Lingering DistrustSenior Iranian lawmaker Abbas Moghtadaei described the situation to state television on Tuesday as: 'The fundamental principle is distrust towards America.' This sentiment comes as an Iranian delegation, led by Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, returned to Tehran from Qatar amid efforts to reach an understanding with the United States on ending the nearly three-month-long war on the country.The Recent EscalationHours earlier, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs accused Washington of committing a 'blatant violation' of the shaky ceasefire reached on April 8 by attacking the southern province of Hormozgan on Monday night. The Ministry added that the strikes validated the 'deep suspicion' Iran harboured towards the US.The Data AnalysisThe war has lasted for nearly three months.Iranian armed forces fired back and shot down a US-made RQ-4 drone.A tanker reported an external explosion and fuel leak some 60 nautical miles east of Oman’s capital city Muscat.The Impact AnalysisNicole Grajewski, an assistant professor at Sciences Po’s Center for International Research, said many in the Iranian leadership appear concerned that an agreement could simply provide operational pause, intelligence access or political cover before the US and Israel launch another round of large-scale attacks on the country.The PredictionFor a deal to succeed, the Iranian leadership will need to believe that some sanctions relief will be tangible and fast. Iran will also seek to preserve enough of a deterrence mechanism and symbolic dignity to avoid looking defeated, and ensure that the agreement prevents another war from breaking out in the future.
#Iran #US #Israel
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World Wide May 27, 2026

Eid al‑Adha in Gaza: Faith Struggles Under Siege and Livestock Scarcity

Gaza’s residents face a stark Eid al‑Adha without livestock, Hajj pilgrim bans, and soaring food pr…
Humanitarian Crisis Shadows Gaza’s Eid al‑Adha CelebrationsFor a third consecutive year, Gaza’s Muslims confront Eid al‑Adha under the weight of war, displacement, and an imposed siege that has erased the festival’s core rituals.Displacement and Loss: Personal Stories of I’tidal Hamdan and FamiliesI’tidal Hamdan, 68, lives in a tent after her home in Beit Hanoon was bombed. She has lost her husband, two sons and six grandchildren to Israeli strikes and now faces a third Eid away from her hometown.Other voices echo her grief:Emad Suhweil, 43, a displaced father of five, describes the disappearance of the traditional animal sacrifice.Fawzi Hamdan, 63, recalls saving for Hajj only to see the dream vanish.Intisar Awda, 56, speaks of the “unbearable hardship” of living in tents while trying to keep hope alive.Escalating Costs: Livestock Prices Skyrocket Amid SiegeThe Gaza Chamber of Commerce reports that more than 90 % of livestock farms have been destroyed or damaged since October 2023.Livestock prices illustrate the economic shock:Pre‑war price of a sheep: 400–500 Jordanian dinars (≈ $560–$700).Current price: 16,000–17,000 shekels (≈ $4,400–$4,700) for a weak 50‑kg animal.Some reports cite a jump from $400–$600 to as high as $6,000 per animal.These figures place any sacrifice beyond the reach of most families, who now struggle to afford basic vegetables.Rituals Erased: How the Siege Reshapes Religious ObservanceIsraeli restrictions on movement prevent pilgrims from leaving Gaza for Hajj, a pillar of Islam that coincides with Eid al‑Adha. Simultaneously, the blockade blocks live animal imports, crippling the sacrificial tradition.Consequences include:Absence of communal feasts and meat distribution to the poor.Replacement of live animal sacrifice with canned meat or, for some, the idea of slaughtering a chicken.Psychological impact: families feel “a different sect of Muslims” unable to perform core rites.Future Outlook: Prospects for Eid Traditions Post‑ConflictResidents cling to hope that the next Eid will restore normalcy. I’tidal Hamdan still dreams of performing Hajj once the siege ends.Key factors that will determine the revival of Eid practices:Removal of the Israeli blockade to allow livestock and humanitarian aid.Reconstruction of destroyed farms and infrastructure.Stability that permits safe travel for pilgrims.Until these conditions improve, Gaza’s Eid al‑Adha will remain a symbol of resilience amid hardship, with faith expressed through perseverance rather than traditional rituals.
#Gaza #Eid al-Adha #I’tidal Hamdan
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Economy May 27, 2026

UK Energy Price Cap Set to Jump 13% This Summer

From July to September, the UK’s energy price cap will increase by 13%, pushing the average househo…
The Summer Surge: 13% Rise in the UK Energy Price CapThe government’s energy regulator, Ofgem, announced that the cap on household gas and electricity prices will climb by 13% this summer, marking the steepest increase in four years.How Ofgem Calculates the New CapOfgem determines the maximum price a supplier can charge by averaging wholesale market costs in the months leading up to each cap period and adding the highest allowable daily standing charge.Numbers Behind the IncreaseAverage annual bill rises to £1,862 (July‑September).Electricity rate jumps from 24.67p/kWh to 26.11p/kWh.Gas rate climbs from 5.74p/kWh to 7.33p/kWh.Petrol price up ~20% to 159.43p/litre.Diesel price up >30% to 184.96p/litre.Unpaid energy debt reached a record £4.5bn earlier this year.Households contribute an annual £52 charge embedded in the cap to help repay debt.Broader Implications for Households and the Energy MarketThe higher cap will squeeze disposable income at a time when many families are already coping with record energy debt. It also signals that global supply shocks—particularly the war in Iran that has choked Gulf oil and gas exports—are being passed directly to consumers.What to Expect After September: Autumn Billing OutlookWhile the summer increase is painful, the real challenge looms in autumn when heating demand rises. Analysts warn that bills could climb further if wholesale prices stay elevated, prompting calls for additional consumer protections or targeted subsidies.
#Ofgem #Great Britain #energy price cap
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Business May 27, 2026

UK Heatwave Drives Surge in Sales of Cooling Products and Summer Essentials

The UK's record-breaking heatwave in May has led to a significant surge in sales of cooling product…
The UK Heatwave Effect The UK experienced a 'tropical night' on Monday after temperatures earlier in the day had hit a provisional all-time meteorological spring record of 34.8C (94.6F) at Kew Gardens in south-west London. The record was broken again on Tuesday when temperatures provisionally reached 35C (95F) at Heathrow and Kew Gardens. Surge in Sales of Cooling Products Retailers have reported a significant surge in sales of cooling products and summer essentials. Tesco said that, compared with the previous week, sales of ice cubes had tripled during the heatwave, while sunscreen sales rose almost sixfold. A spokesperson said: 'We sold more than 30 times as many electric fans.' Sales of fans are selling at a rate of three a minute. Ice cube sales have tripled compared to the previous week. Sunscreen sales have risen almost sixfold. The Rise of Air Conditioning in UK Homes An estimated 4m homes in the UK now have air conditioning, double the figure from three years ago, as Britons complain of 'unliveable' conditions during high temperatures. Impact on Retail and Consumer Behavior Households are also swapping heavy bedding for low-tog summer duvets and installing blackout blinds to block out the sun. Ufurnish, a platform that helps users find furniture, said searches for blackout blinds last week rose by 118%, parasol searches increased by 384% and outdoor rug searches climbed 158%. Future Outlook Experts suggest the increase in ownership of cooling products and air conditioning is the result of more people working from home and rising summer temperatures. The climate crisis is making every heatwave more intense and more likely to happen.
#Tesco #UK heatwave #sunscreen
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Politics May 27, 2026

Tony Blair Advises Labour to Abandon Net Zero, Move Closer to Trump Amid Election Fears

Former Prime Minister Tony Blair delivers a scathing critique of Labour's current leadership, urgin…
The Blair Intervention: A Stark Warning to Labour LeadershipFormer Prime Minister Tony Blair has delivered a scathing 5,700-word critique of Labour's current leadership, accusing Keir Starmer and potential successors of abandoning the center ground and putting the party's future at risk. In an unprecedented intervention, Blair warns that Labour's "almost infinite capacity for self-delusion" means it is likely to lose the next election unless it fundamentally changes its policy direction.Blair's Policy Prescription: Abandoning Core Labour PrinciplesBlair's essay calls for a dramatic shift in Labour's approach, urging the government to crack down on welfare spending, abandon restrictions on oil and gas licenses, and smooth relations with Donald Trump. He specifically criticizes Angela Rayner's employment rights bill and Ed Miliband's net zero drive as key mistakes, arguing these policies have created "headwinds, not tailwinds to British business." The former prime minister also named Rachel Reeves' decision to raise the minimum wage and national insurance as problematic policies.Targeting Starmer and Leadership ContendersBlair directly criticizes Prime Minister Keir Starmer for lacking "grounding" and appearing to "totter in the breeze," suggesting the government lacks "ballast." He also attacks potential leadership contenders Andy Burnham and Wes Streeting, dismissing their ideas on tax and spending as having been "rejected by serious governments." Blair suggests it would be a mistake for others in the party to seek to remove Starmer before establishing a clear policy direction, stating: "The Labour party is playing with fire; or, more accurately with its future, and that of the country."The International Dimension: Trump and EuropeIn a significant foreign policy shift, Blair criticizes Starmer's approach to the US war with Iran despite its popularity with the public, arguing it is vital that the US can trust the UK as an ally. He also criticizes cuts to international aid, which he says have weakened Britain's influence, and suggests that seeking to negotiate a new deal with Europe is nonsensical when Britain is in a weak position. Blair now believes that reversing Brexit isn't the answer to the country's challenges.Labour's Response and the Path ForwardA senior Labour source responded sharply to Blair's intervention, accusing him of "abandoning social democratic values" and being "away with the tech bro fantasists." Despite this criticism, Blair's intervention highlights the deep divisions within the party and the ongoing struggle to define Labour's identity in a post-Brexit, post-pandemic world. The former prime minister concludes that without a "radical but sensible" agenda, Britain will continue its "long slide towards relegation from the Premier League of Nations."
#Tony Blair #Keir Starmer #Labour Party
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World Wide May 27, 2026

Australian Government Allows Return of Women and Children with Alleged ISIL Ties

A group of 19 women and children with alleged links to ISIL has returned to Australia from a Syrian…
The Return of Alleged ISIL Supporters A group of 19 women and children with alleged links to ISIL (ISIS) has returned to Australia, with the government warning that anyone found to have engaged in criminal activity will be prosecuted. The six women and 13 children arrived from a Syrian refugee camp on Tuesday, with one group landing in Sydney and the other in Melbourne. Government Response and Public Reaction It is the second cohort of Australian women and children to return from Syria this month. Responding to criticism over their arrival, the Australian government said it had not assisted them in any capacity. “These are people who have made the horrific choice to join a dangerous terrorist organisation and to place their children in an unspeakable situation,” Minister for Home Affairs Tony Burke said. The group’s return has sparked anger in some sections of Australian society. According to local media, a large police presence was deployed at Melbourne airport, where a scuffle reportedly broke out as the group of women and children was escorted out through a side entrance. Background and International Context Australian women began travelling to Syria to marry members of ISIL in 2012, with some allegedly taken against their will. At the height of its power in 2015, ISIL controlled territory across Syria and Iraq roughly equivalent in size to the United Kingdom. Australia is one of several Western countries that have shown reluctance to repatriate citizens who travelled to the Middle East to join ISIL about a decade ago. Both France and the UK have expressed opposition to allowing former ISIL members to return. Security Concerns and Expert Analysis Afzal Ashraf, a visiting fellow at Loughborough University specialising in international relations and security, said the risk posed by people returning from countries including Syria needs to be viewed proportionately. “There will be some security challenges, because people like this are likely to suffer from issues such as PTSD,” Ashraf told Al Jazeera. “The fact of the matter is that there are security challenges in Australia and other countries, but statistically speaking, the return of these nationals doesn’t increase that risk very much, while the threat to life from terrorism is far lower than the threat posed by road accidents, for example.”
#Australia #ISIL #Syria
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Environment May 27, 2026

Trump Administration's Plan to Destroy PFAS Deemed 'Nonsensical'

The Trump administration's plan to destroy PFAS, also known as 'forever chemicals,' has been critic…
The Flawed Plan to Destroy PFAS The Trump administration's plan to ditch PFAS drinking water regulations and instead attempt to destroy 'forever chemicals' on a wide scale has been met with criticism from experts. The plan, which was announced by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), involves using technology to destroy PFAS, rather than implementing strong drinking water regulations. The Problem with PFAS Destruction Technology The problem with the Trump plan is that technology that fully destroys PFAS does not exist. While progress is being made in its development, it is unclear when – if ever – it may be deployed on an industrial scale. Current technologies used to destroy PFAS, from incineration to thermal oxidization, often fail to fully destroy a PFAS compound, instead essentially breaking it into smaller bits, or byproducts. The Financial Impact of PFAS Destruction The cost of removing PFAS from water can be as high as $18 million per pound. The processes of destroying PFAS are extremely expensive. Taxpayers shoulder most of the cost, and the powerful waste management industry gets paid. The Impact on Public Health Pfas are a class of at least 16,000 compounds most frequently used to make products water-, stain- and grease-resistant. They have been linked to cancer, birth defects, decreased immunity, high cholesterol, kidney disease and a range of other serious health problems. The solution is to 'turn off the tap' – reduce the production and use of PFAS – rather than attempting to destroy them after they have been released into the environment. The Future of PFAS Regulation Ultimately, PFAS destruction has all the same problems as carbon capture – it is inefficient, expensive, unreliable, prone to technical failures and clearly not an alternative to regulations. Experts argue that the focus should be on reducing the production and use of PFAS, rather than attempting to destroy them after they have been released into the environment.
#Trump Administration #EPA #PFAS
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