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Jonathan Watts
23 août 2025
Suspension of Soy moratorium could open up area of rainforest the size of Portugal to destruction
29 juin 2025
The Kenyan marine ecologist David Obura is chair of a panel of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES), the world’s leading natural scientists. For many decades, his speciality has been corals, but he has warned that the next generation may not see their glory because so many reefs are now “flickering out across the world”.
EN
‘We are perilously close to the point of no return’: climate scientist on Amazon rainforest’s future
(29/06) - Jonathan Watts,Carlos Nobre,For more than three decades, Brazilian climate scientist Carlos Nobre has warned that deforestation of the Amazon could push this globally important ecosystem past the point of no return. Working first at Brazil’s National Institute for Space Research and more recently at the University of São Paulo, he is a global authority on tropical forests and how they could be restored.
EN
‘This is a fight for life’: climate expert on tipping points, doomerism and using wealth as a shield
(29/06) - Jonathan Watts,Genevieve Guenther,Economic assumptions about risks of the climate crisis are no longer relevant, says the communications expert Genevieve Guenther
28 juin 2025
The world has been too optimistic about the risk to humanity and planet – but devastation can still be avoided, says Timothy Lenton
Despite working on polar science for the British Antarctic Survey for 20 years, Louise Sime finds the magnitude of potential sea-level rise hard to comprehend
27 octobre 2024
Oceanographer Stefan Rahmstorf explains why Amoc breakdown could be catastrophic for both humans and marine life
26 octobre 2024
If despair is the most unforgivable sin, then hope is surely the most abused virtue. That observation feels particularly apposite as we enter the Cop season, that time of United Nations megaconferences at the end of every year, when national leaders feel obliged to convince us the future will be better, despite growing evidence to the contrary.
25 août 2024
The signs of weakening resilience raise concerns that the world’s greatest tropical forest – and biggest terrestrial carbon sink – is degrading towards a point of no return. It follows four supposedly “one-in-a-century” dry spells in less than 20 years, highlighting how a human-disrupted climate is putting unusually intense strains on trees and other plants, many of which are dying of dehydration.
20 avril 2024
Cost of environmental damage will be six times higher than price of limiting global heating to 2C, study finds

