Iffiltra skont
Aħbarijiet (57)
RSSWe all enjoy taking a well-deserved break, especially during the summer holidays. But travelling to different destinations can come with a considerable environmental footprint.
As Europeans prepare to vote for their representatives in the new European Parliament on 6–9 June 2024, there’s a lot to consider.
Floods, droughts, wildfires, heatwaves: adapting to life in a world impacted by climate change and managing its various risks is undoubtedly one of the biggest challenges of our time.
This year’s European Climate Pact event gathered over 200 members of the Climate Pact community from across Europe to work together on new ways to spark climate action in their local communities.
For many of us, small climate actions like taking shorter showers, getting the train to work, and turning the tap off or the heating down have become part of everyday life. But we need to spread the word and scale up our action for greater impact – and the European Climate Pact is here to help.
In the last few years, we’ve seen a series of devastating extreme weather events, along with global temperature records being broken time after time, putting climate change in the headlines and on our minds.
Our towns and cities may be becoming friendlier to cyclists and pedestrians, but many of us still choose to take the car over the bus, the bicycle or our own two feet. Why?
With COP28 climate negotiations in Dubai ongoing, climate science and policy come under the spotlight. With this, enter disinformation.
While the festive season is a time for treats, it also generates huge amounts of waste in the form of non-recyclable wrapping paper, plastic decorations and uneaten food.
While gift-giving at this festive time of year is a tradition that dates back centuries, many of the products we give to each other contribute to the waste generated during the holiday period.