A scenic landscape in the virtual world Second Life. ▓▒░ TORLEY ░▒▓, Flickr

The metaverse, bloody microplastics, and Finland’s solution to nuclear waste

News to know in our bi-weekly digest
01 April 2022

The Great Barrier Reef is going through a historic sixth mass bleaching event – its fourth in six years, despite temperatures being cooler than usual due to La Niña.

It’s a frightening preview of what’s to come as our planet gets hotter. More on that, as well as the metaverse, yogurt cups, Finland’s nuclear tomb and more in this week’s Landscape News round-up.

LANDSCAPE NEWS

Green roofs, like this one in Singapore, are an example of a nature-based solution. CHUTTERSNAP, Unsplash
Green roofs, like this one in Singapore, are an example of a nature-based solution. CHUTTERSNAP, Unsplash

Where are carbon markets headed in 2022? We covered the latest green investing insights in our recent Digital Forum on sustainable finance for nature-based solutions.

Read the wrap-up here, and learn more in our new online seminar series on carbon finance. Applications are now open and due 22 April.

Meet the scientists turning landscapes into soundscapes by using their ears to assess ecosystem health.

The metaverse could result in more greenhouse gas emissions, but could we reprogram it to help heal the planet instead?

POLICY

An oil tanker in Arkhangelsk, Russia. Alexxx Malev, Flickr
An oil tanker in Arkhangelsk, Russia. Alexxx Malev, Flickr

Ukrainian and Russian climate activists have joined forces to demand a European embargo on Russian oil, gas and coal.

Some European countries are considering burning more coal to wean themselves off Russian gas, raising concerns over the war’s threats to the climate. Finland, meanwhile, is building an underground pit to store nuclear waste for the next 100,000 years.

Could this feed into a “just transition” to sustainable economies? Rich countries would have to stop producing oil and gas by 2034 to give poorer countries time to switch to renewables.

Meanwhile, world leaders have failed to agree on a treaty to protect the world’s oceans. Negotiations for a new, long-awaited global treaty to conserve biodiversity seem to have ground to a halt, too.

U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres has proposed for the entire world to have early warning systems for extreme weather within five years.

PEOPLE

Smog envelopes Bangkok, Thailand. Nick van den Berg, Unsplash
Smog envelopes Bangkok, Thailand. Nick van den Berg, Unsplash

Not a single country in the world meets air quality standards set by the World Health Organization, and only 3 percent of global cities have healthy air.

Microplastics have been found in human blood for the first time, the health effects of which remain unclear.

In Kenya’s coastal city of Mombasa, locals are scouring the beaches for yogurt cups and reusing them to plant mangroves.

BUSINESS

The Bank of England, the central bank of the U.K. Geoff Henson, Flickr
The Bank of England, the central bank of the U.K. Geoff Henson, Flickr

Biodiversity loss threatens global economic stability, says a report from a network of central banks, and yet these institutions are at the top of the list of those needing better biodiversity strategies to address it.

Almost all of the world’s largest banks have set net-zero targets, but none are taking meaningful action.

U.S. companies could soon be required to disclose greenhouse gas emissions and climate risks under new rules proposed by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

McDonald’s is buying beef from ranches that drive deforestation in the Amazon, according to a Brazilian journalist group.

PLANET

An iceberg in Greenland. Annie Spratt, Unsplash
An iceberg in Greenland. Annie Spratt, Unsplash

Both the Arctic and the Antarctic are experiencing heatwaves, with temperatures some 30 to 40 degrees Celsius warmer than average.

The warm weather has caused an ice shelf to collapse in East Antarctica for the first time in human history, while Arctic sea ice has reached its maximum extent more than two weeks earlier than usual.

Many birds are laying their eggs earlier in response to the climate crisis, but will there be enough food for chicks to eat?

The war in Ukraine threatens conservation in neighboring Belarus, where dozens of wildlife NGOs have been forced to shut down amid a mass crackdown on civil society.

A glimmer of hope in crisis-hit Lebanon: landscape restoration is creating jobs and building resilience in the Middle East’s largest biosphere reserve.

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