You are here
News Feeds
Record renewables, declining investment, misinformation crisis: Energy leaders convene to talk it through
The Noosa Power & Energy Conference examines the key challenges and opportunities shaping Australia's renewable energy transition.
The post Record renewables, declining investment, misinformation crisis: Energy leaders convene to talk it through appeared first on Renew Economy.
Two Telstra-contracted solar farms power up in two separate states
Spanish energy outift commissions two solar plants in two separate states of Australia, both of which will start supplying on electricity to telecoms giant, Telstra.
The post Two Telstra-contracted solar farms power up in two separate states appeared first on Renew Economy.
Home battery installations reach the 430,000 mark, but get smaller as new settings do their job
The number of home batteries installed through the federal rebate has now passed 430,000, as new rules start to rein in uptake and dial down average system size.
The post Home battery installations reach the 430,000 mark, but get smaller as new settings do their job appeared first on Renew Economy.
Climate scientists warn of record rate of global warming, carbon budget to be exhausted in 3 years
Emissions of climate-warming pollutants are at an all-time high, mainly from the burning of fossil fuels.
The post Climate scientists warn of record rate of global warming, carbon budget to be exhausted in 3 years appeared first on Renew Economy.
“We cannot compete:” Why global inverter giant quit Australia’s home solar market
SMA boss Jürgen Reinert says decision to close down its Australian domestic business driven by its inability to match Chinese competitors on costs.
The post “We cannot compete:” Why global inverter giant quit Australia’s home solar market appeared first on Renew Economy.
Energy Insiders Podcast: “The grid doesn’t need rotating mass”
Jürgen Reinart, the CEO of inverter giant SMA, on why the grid can function without spinning machines, and why it quit the Australian home market. Plus: Is AEMO changing course on VPPs, and other news of the week.
The post Energy Insiders Podcast: “The grid doesn’t need rotating mass” appeared first on Renew Economy.
Solar is already creating the fastest shift in electricity generation in history – and it is still accelerating
Solar is moving fast. Really fast. Batteries are moving faster. And there is no evidence in either prices or deployment that the system is about to tap the brakes.
The post Solar is already creating the fastest shift in electricity generation in history – and it is still accelerating appeared first on Renew Economy.
Latest Report Shows That Sprawl Continues To Hamstring Youth, Limit Opportunities
Sprawl kills.
That’s the unmistakable conclusion drawn by researchers at Johns Hopkins University earlier this month in an update of their landmark 2014 report on the nation’s ongoing crisis of land misuse: sprawl chokes life out of our cities, undermines opportunities for our children, and, yes, even raises the risk of disease.
Riverside, the Southern California suburb, and Atlanta were at the bottom of the list for “most sprawling” while San Francisco and New York City topped the list as “most compact,” based on established metrics such as density of development and concentration of jobs.
The report, which comprises 233 metropolitan areas in the lower 48 states and covers 85 percent of the U.S. population, is not just about geography, of course, but about the most-basic quality-of-life issues facing the country today. Residents of compact and connected neighborhoods have “lower energy costs, better health outcomes, lower exposure to vector-borne diseases such as Lyme disease, well-connected social lives and greater opportunities for children to thrive,” according to the report, “Who Sprawls the Most? Mapping Sprawl and Assessing Its Impact on Everyday Life” [PDF].
And in a counter-intuitive development, given the debate over “abundance,” housing in compact cities was found to be more affordable than those in sprawling suburbs when the cost of transportation and energy are taken into account. (Transportation and energy costs are much lower for residents of compact and connected areas.)
Shima HamidiThe overall housing cost surprised the report co-author.
“The amount we pay for energy is becoming more and more a challenge for people,” said Shima Hamidi, director of the Center for Smart Transportation at the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University. “We found that in compact and connected neighborhoods, residents pay substantially less of their income on residential energy bills, and if you add that to transportation, the savings on these two budget items in a compact and connected neighborhood saves offsets the higher cost of housing in this area.”
Hamidi told Streetsblog that the report hits at a crucial time because of the ongoing debate about high housing costs in the most-walkable, most-livable parts of our greatest cities.
“Sprawl is getting attention these days because there are so many critics of smart growth and growth management policies these days who are arguing that these policies would restrict housing production and will lead to more expensive housing and less housing affordability for residents,” Hamidi said.
But, she added, there are other factors that cast sprawl in a bad light, including the level of social isolation, which leads to disconnected youth, not to mention “heat-related health outcomes … linked to climate change.”
Quality-of-life is simply worse in areas where people are disconnected from each other, job sites and social venues.
“A typical suburban neighborhood is very low density or exclusively single-family housing,” she said. “You don’t see much more other types of uses, like coffee shops, restaurants, bookstores, grocery stores. They are not within a walking distance of residents of these housing units, so residents have to drive long distances. … These neighborhoods are mostly characterized as having cul-de-sacs or dead ends that accommodate privacy and driving, but not really connection.
“In a neighborhood that’s more compact, you have a mix of uses: different coffee shops, restaurants, grocery stores within walking or biking distance. [These are] livable and vibrant types of neighborhoods.”
Can you put a value on that? The report and Hamidi suggests you can: As a result of sprawl, the U.S. has about double the number of “disconnected youth” as Europe — and it
“costs taxpayers an estimated $94 billion each year in lost productivity … with profound impact on the lives of these individuals and their families,” she said. “The future of these individuals is being shaped, and they just are kind of isolated and disconnected, and not getting the opportunities that they need.”
They’re also at higher risk of disease. And the very edge of sprawl, where low-density residential development meets forests or grasslands, creates conditions for higher risk of human-tick interactions, the report stated.
“A 10-percent increase in the county [sprawl] score reduces the risk of Lyme disease by
about 21 percent,” the report said.
The report is not all bad news. Atlanta had a bottom-of-the list score of 41 in the original report and remains second-to-last in the update, but a decade of effort has led to significant improvements in connectivity resulting in a score of 57.2 — a 40-percent improvement (take that, Lyme disease!).
“Atlanta is becoming more compact over time,” Hamidi said. “It takes a long time for urban sprawl to be mitigated, but the progress can be made. Atlanta [officials have had] a sizable impact.”
Save yourself: Recommendations from the reportSprawl doesn’t have to be like the weather — that thing that everyone complains about but no one does anything about. The report offered extensive recommendations for urban planners and policy makers. Among them:
- Zoning reform: Allow higher residential and mixed-use densities near transit corridors and employment centers
- Provide incentives for infill with tax breaks, density bonuses, and reduced parking minimum requirements (which reduce development cost).
- Transit-oriented upzoning: Require higher densities within walking distance (e.g., 800 feet of major transit stations).
- Affordable housing integration: Pair density increases with inclusionary zoning and affordable housing mandates to ensure equitable access to transit-rich, high-demand areas.
- Parking reform: Reduce or eliminate minimum parking requirements. (Maryland is clearly listening.)
- Design guidelines for livability: Ensure that higher-density areas include green spaces, community facilities, and active transportation infrastructure so density contributes to livability, not overcrowding.
“Local elected officials, state leaders, and federal lawmakers can all help communities grow in ways that support these improved outcomes,” the report concluded. “This study recommends local governments and elected and public officials to consider land-use planning strategies and policies that create more connections and facilitate healthier
transportation choices in walkable, vibrant, and connected neighborhoods that offer both
local and regional accessibility to residents.”
Thursday’s Headlines Kick Off the World Cup
- The World Cup will stress both the capacity and finances of transit systems in host cities, with special service in New Jersey costing $6 million per match to carry the majority of 82,000 fans to Met Life Stadium. Some cities, though, are treating the tournament as an opportunity to showcase their transit systems to a global audience, adding rail frequency and charter buses at little to no cost to fans. (CBS News)
- Whether it’s because of overpolicing, lack of investment or urban freeways cutting of neighborhoods, mobility for Black Americans is often limited, with devastating social and economic consequences, according to urban planner and author Charles T. Brown. (Planetizen)
- The environmental impact of driving an electric vehicle is greater for people who drive a lot and live in an area with a clean power grid, but EVs almost always come out ahead compared to gas-powered cars no matter what, according to an MIT study. (Anthropocene)
- A startup is using old Waymo batteries to provide energy storage for the power grid. (Fast Company)
- A lot of supposedly public EV charging stations are actually located at places like car dealerships that aren’t really public at all. (Electrek)
- Amtrak offered a preview of what a renovated Penn Station in New York City might look like, but failed to answer questions about who will pay the $7 billion price tag. (NY Times, Streetsblog NYC)
- Drivers in one of New York’s largest suburb sued to stop Westchester County from using license plate readers to catch them breaking traffic laws. (Associated Press)
- Tampa area drivers have killed more than 600 pedestrians in the past five years. (Tampa Bay Times)
- Lexington, Kentucky is considering a ban on parking in bike lanes, but with a lot of exceptions for drop-offs, pickups and deliveries. (Herald-Leader)
- New Orleans is seeking public input on improving its streetcar system. (Times-Picayune)
- The Dutch government introduced a discounted pass for unlimited off-peak rail travel at just 49 euros per month. (Rail Journal)
- Uber and British company Wayve are rolling out robotaxis in London, followed by Tokyo and several other cities. (CNN)
- University of Zurich students invented a brick evaporative cooling system that can significantly cool down spaces like bus stops during hot summer months. (Times of India)
New Mexico Just Set One of the Strongest Oil and Gas Cleanup Standards in the Country
New Mexico’s Oil Conservation Commission voted [Friday / DAY OF WEEK] to adopt the strongest standards in the country for making oil companies pay to clean up after themselves.
This win was years in the making and it belongs to every New Mexican who spoke up, showed up, or signed on.
[Add if results are MIXED]The final rules do not include all of the strongest safeguards that were proposed by community and environmental groups. They do include meaningful improvements that will help address the growing risks posed by inactive and abandoned oil and gas wells across the state.
What Happened and Why It MattersLast fall, Earthworks published a blog laying out the scope of the problem: oil and gas companies in New Mexico were routinely walking away from low-producing wells without cleaning them up. Abandoned wells, when left poorly or improperly plugged, can continuously release toxic air pollution, contaminate soil and water supplies. And what’s more, abandoned wells in the state leave taxpayers exposed to anywhere from $700 million to $8 billion in future cleanup costs. Under the old rules, a single operator could own thousands of wells and post as little as $250,000 total. This is a tiny amount when the average cost to plug a single well is $163,000.
The Oil Conservation Commission just changed that.
The updated rules:
- raise bonding to $150,000 per well for high risk operations;
- strengthen rules about transfers ownership of wells;
- require low-producing “marginal” wells to prove a useful purpose or be properly plugged;
- and tighten inactive well rules so that these can no longer remain indefinitely without cleanup plans.
These changes mark a fundamental shift in who is responsible for the cleanup cost of oil and gas extraction in New Mexico.
The companies that profit from extraction will now be responsible for paying for cleaning up their own mess.
Earthworks’ New Mexico Lead Campaigner, Mandy Sackett, surveys an oil and gas site near Maljamar, NM.What Earthworks Sees in the Field
Earthworks was motivated to fight to change these rules by what we see firsthand in the oil and gas fields through our optical gas imaging camera.
No spreadsheet or data can make the case for a change to these rules like the video evidence we capture at well site after well site, often right next to schools, homes and communities.
At one low-producing Hilcorp site near Counselor, Earthworks’ Indigenous Community Field Advocate has repeatedly found continuous emissions from multiple different sources: the tank vent, the sump area, and a horizontal separator. That site sits 900 feet from a K-8 school serving Navajo students.
The video clip above shows three sources of emissions at the well site near the Dzilth-Na-O-Dith-Hle Community School, from the vent stack on the separator, the tank vent and the sump area produced water tank.At another low-producing Permian Resources site in Carlsbad, I found uncontrolled emissions from an improperly functioning flare a few hundred yards from an elementary school.
You can’t say the system is working when you can literally see methane and harmful gases and chemicals pouring into the sky through the optical gas imaging camera.
The hearing process drew a lot of public testimony from frontline Diné community leaders, health advocates, ranchers, and residents across the state. The polling confirms what the comment record showed: 89% of New Mexicans support requiring corporations to pay to clean up the wells they drill.
The Stakes Are Real Earthworks has documented this oil and gas site with multiple sources of emissions on numerous occasions, just 900 feet from the Dzilth-Na-O-Dith-Hle Community School serving K-8 Navajo students.The Commission’s decision comes as the federal government moves in the opposite direction. The Trump administration is working to roll back environmental protections, revisit federal bonding rules set in the Biden-era, and expand drilling on public lands.
With these rules, New Mexico joins a small group of states that have actually aligned bonding requirements with real-world cleanup costs, and done so in a way that’s risk-based, not one-size-fits-all. The rules target risky behavior, not small operators.
Every company that profits from New Mexico’s land and resources should be prepared to clean up after itself.
Thank YouTo the Oil Conservation Commission, the Oil Conservation Division, and the State Land Office: thank you for listening to New Mexicans and adopting rules that prioritize our water, our health, and our communities over the status quo.
To the coalition partners, the frontline voices, the public commenters, and the advocates who showed up across months of hearings: this win belongs to all of us. We’re not done, but today is a real step forward.
The post New Mexico Just Set One of the Strongest Oil and Gas Cleanup Standards in the Country appeared first on Earthworks.
Bipartisan Bill to Help Communities Support Bird Habitat Clears House Committee
Bringing Bird-Friendly Ranching to the Southwest
Guest post: How a record-high ‘energy imbalance’ is driving global warming
The planet is heating up more quickly than ever before.
For decades, greenhouse gas emissions caused by human activity have been building up in the atmosphere and trapping ever-higher levels of heat.
The resulting asymmetry between incoming solar energy and energy radiated back out into space – known as “Earth’s energy imbalance” – provides a direct measure of the extent to which humans are disrupting the Earth’s climate system.
This imbalance is growing and in 2025 its 10-year average reached a record high, indicating that global temperatures could increase at even higher rates in the future.
This is among the headline findings of the latest “indicators of global climate change” (IGCC) report, published in the journal Earth System Science Data, which tracks changes in the climate system on an annual basis.
The report, now in its fourth iteration, has been produced by dozens of scientists from around the world.
Its findings are designed to fill the gap between Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) science reports, which are published every 5-7 years.
In this article, we unpack the IGCC report, which explores how human activity is driving a growing energy imbalance and why monitoring systems to track global climate are so crucial.
(For more on previous IGCC reports, see Carbon Brief’s coverage in 2023, 2024 and 2025.)
Greenhouse gas emissions remain at an all-time highGlobal greenhouse gas emissions are continuing to increase, mostly as a result of the use of fossil fuels. However, deforestation, agriculture and industrial processes also play an important role.
GlossaryCO2 equivalent: Greenhouse gases can be expressed in terms of carbon dioxide equivalent, or CO2e. For a given amount, different greenhouse gases trap different amounts of heat in the atmosphere, a quantity known as the global warming potential. Carbon dioxide equivalent is a way of comparing emissions from all greenhouse gases, not just carbon dioxide.CloseCO2 equivalent: Greenhouse gases can be expressed in terms of carbon dioxide equivalent, or CO2e. For a given amount, different greenhouse gases trap different amounts of heat in the atmosphere, a quantity known as… Read MoreOver the most recent decade (2015-24), emissions stood at the equivalent of 54.6bn tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (GtCO2e) per year. In 2024, the most recent year for which we have complete data, emissions reached 56.8GtCO2e.
As the chart below shows, these emissions have pushed up atmospheric levels of CO2, methane and nitrous oxide. In 2025, concentrations of these gases reached 425.6 parts per million (ppm), 1936.3 parts per billion (ppb) and 339.4ppb, respectively.
This represents a rise of 3.8%, 3.8% and 2.2%, respectively, since the 2019 levels reported in the IPCC’s sixth assessment report (AR6).
Atmospheric concentrations of CO2 (yellow), methane (blue) and nitrous oxide (green) over 2000-25. The grey-shaded region represents continuing changes since AR6. Note the different vertical scales for each gas. Credit: Forster et al. (2026)At the same time, declines in emissions of aerosols such as sulphur dioxide, partly as a result of efforts to tackle air pollution, are increasing the Earth’s energy imbalance. This is because aerosols have a cooling effect on the Earth’s climate, counteracting warming from CO2 and other greenhouse gas emissions.
(Tackling sulphur dioxide, alongside other particulate emissions, remains critical because the immediate health and environmental damage they cause far outweighs their short-term cooling effect on the climate.)
The Earth’s energy imbalance is rising rapidlyThe Earth’s energy imbalance has long been recognised as a key indicator of how the climate is being affected by human activities.
However, it is only in the last few decades that scientists have been able to record temperature changes deep enough in the ocean to accurately quantify it.
Earth’s energy imbalance measures how quickly excess heat is accumulating in every part of the Earth system, primarily in the ocean, but also in land, ice and atmosphere.
Through this accumulation of heat, the energy imbalance influences the rate of sea level rise and ice melt across the world, as well as increasing the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events, such as storms, floods and droughts.
Without human influence, the Earth’s energy imbalance would be close to zero.
But, as greenhouse gas emissions have built up in the atmosphere, the imbalance has been growing since the 1970s. Recent increases to Earth’s energy imbalance have outpaced those projections made by climate models — indicating the planet could see more warming than expected in the future.
As the right-hand chart below shows, the imbalance is now at a record high, having more than doubled over the past two decades.
It has increased by around 40% since 2019, from an average 0.79 watts per square metre (Wm2) over 2006-18, according to IPCC AR6, to 1.12Wm2 over 2013-25.
The left-hand chart shows how heat is accumulating in the ocean (blues), ice (grey), land (orange) and atmosphere (purple).
Left: Observed changes in the Earth heat inventory for the period 1971-2020. Right: Estimates of the Earth energy imbalance for successive overlapping 20-year periods and the most recent decade (right). Shaded regions indicate the very likely range (90-100 % probability), while the stars show the CERES (NASA Clouds and the Earth’s Radiant Energy System) estimates for comparison. Credit: Forster et al. (2026)Global temperature rise
The excess heat building up in the climate system from the energy imbalance is pushing up global temperatures at a record rate of 0.27C per decade.
We estimate that human-induced warming – the amount of observed global surface temperature increase attributable to both the direct and indirect effects of human activities – reached 1.37C in 2025. This has risen from 1.0C in 2017, as reported in IPCC AR6.
While natural variability in the climate system – such as El Niño or La Niña events – can also influence temperatures year-to-year, the upward temperature trend we are seeing is being driven by the persistent imbalance in energy.
We now expect global temperatures to exceed the Paris Agreement limit of 1.5C above pre-industrial levels around the year 2030.
This is significant because 1.5C has been identified as the critical dividing line between manageable climate risks and catastrophic, potentially irreversible damage to global ecosystems and human societies.
Heat accumulating throughout the Earth systemWhile heat is accumulating throughout the Earth system, it is not being distributed evenly around the globe.
Since the 1970s, around 90% of this heat has been taken up by the ocean, affecting marine ecosystems, ocean circulation patterns, sea level rise and climate extremes.
For example, the number of marine heatwave days – periods of unusually high sea surface temperatures – has more than tripled globally since the early 1990s. The year 2025 alone saw 65 days of marine heatwaves – meaning they occurred, on average, more than one day a week.
Meanwhile, the cryosphere – the portion of the Earth made up of frozen water, including glaciers, ice sheets and permafrost – is experiencing widespread ice loss and thawing in response to the growing energy imbalance. This affects ecosystems, sea level rise and infrastructure in polar and high-latitude regions.
Rapid warming has also resulted in record extreme temperatures over land, with average maximum temperatures for any single day over 2016-25 around 1.92C above pre-industrial levels). This is an increase of almost half a degree compared to the previous decade (2006-15).
Sea level rise and the energy imbalanceSea level rise provides one of the clearest long-term signals of a changing planet.
It is closely linked to Earth’s energy imbalance. As heat accumulates in the ocean, water expands, raising sea levels. Meanwhile, a warming land and atmosphere means addition of water to the oceans through melting of glaciers and ice sheets, also adding to sea level rise.
Over the long-term, sea levels have been rising, on average, at a rate of around 1.8mm per year since 1901, totalling a record 23cm in 2025. This is increasing the risk of coastal flooding, erosion and habitat loss in many low-lying areas around the world.
This rise can be seen in the left-hand chart below, which shows observed global sea level changes from tide gauges (grey and blue dashed lines) and satellites (red dashed lines) since 1901. The solid lines indicate the average across multiple datasets.
Sea level rise is accelerating consistent with the observed increase in Earth’s energy imbalance. Over 2006-25, sea levels have risen at a rate of 3.67mm per year – more than double the rate of 1.69mm per year seen over 1976-95.
This increasing rate is shown in the right-hand figure below, which shows four successive overlapping 20-year periods and the most-recent decade.
(Last year’s transition from El Niño to weak La Niña conditions affected global rainfall patterns and led to a small and temporary fall in global average sea level in 2025. This explains the slight decrease in rate of sea level rise for the most recent decade, which is affected more than the 20-year period 2006-25.)
Left: Global average sea level rise over 1901-2025, relative to a 1995-2014 baseline. Individual timeseries are shown with dashed lines, while the black solid line shows the average (from tide gauges and satellites) used in AR6 and the solid red line shows the 1993-2025 average from satellites. Right: Global mean sea-level rates (in mm per year) for four successive overlapping 20-year periods and the most-recent decade. The shading indicates the very likely range. Credit: Forster et al. (2026) The bigger pictureDespite greenhouse gas emissions not increasing as rapidly as in the 2000s, this year’s IGCC findings continue to show how far and how fast the climate is changing due to human activity.
A significant increase in decarbonisation efforts in the second half of this decade is required to slow down the rate of human-caused warming and limit the escalation of climate risks and impacts.
These findings, like many others produced by scientists across the globe, rely on international expertise, partnership and the maintenance and availability of global climate datasets and the global observing programmes that underpin them.
This year’s edition of IGCC used more than 40 global datasets produced by research teams around the world, including the NASA satellite record of the Earth’s energy imbalance and the ARGO deep ocean float network.
However, a number of long-term monitoring programmes could be threatened by funding decisions made by governments around the world, most notably the Trump administration in the US.
Local meteorological data and weather balloon measurement programmes in many countries have declined in recent years, especially in Africa, the west Pacific and South America. This reduces scientists’ ability to monitor and understand key indicators of climate change.
This is not just an issue for climate science. Many of these observations are key to weather forecasts and systems that provide early warning for extreme weather. For example, media reports have suggested that recent reductions in weather balloon measurements in Alaska led to a lack of warnings for a recent winter storm.
The continuity and integrity of the climate observations that scientists use to understand how the climate is changing depends on effective and sustained coordination by international organisations, such as the Global Climate Observing System, the World Meteorological Organization and World Climate Research Programme.
Without this data and its coordination, future assessments will be much more difficult at a time when urgent climate action is needed.
Analysis: What are the causes of recent record-high global temperatures?
El Niño
|Guest post: Why carbon emissions from fires are significantly higher than thought
GHGs and aerosols
|UNEP: New country climate plans ‘barely move needle’ on expected warming
Emissions
|Explainer: How human-caused aerosols are ‘masking’ global warming
GHGs and aerosols
| jQuery(document).ready(function() { jQuery('.block-related-articles-slider-block_4a16ea1cab937c2e38d977e7dca27e3a .mh').matchHeight({ byRow: false }); });The post Guest post: How a record-high ‘energy imbalance’ is driving global warming appeared first on Carbon Brief.
EWG statement on California Supreme Court declining to hear rooftop solar case
SACRAMENTO – California’s Supreme Court in a brief order today declined to hear an appeal by the Environmental Working Group and allies of an appeals court decision that threatens the future of affordable rooftop solar in the state.
The high court’s decision means the lower court’s ruling stands. The California Court of Appeals in March upheld a California Public Utilities Commission policy sharply scaling back the state’s once-thriving rooftop solar program, known as net energy metering.
The state’s monopoly utilities – Pacific Gas & Electric Company, San Diego Gas & Electric and Southern California Edison – sought the policy, seeing rooftop solar as their main competition and their regulator went along with them.
EWG, the Center for Biological Diversity, and the Protect Our Communities Foundation in April petitioned the state Supreme Court to review the appeals court’s ruling.
The advocates have argued that the appeals court, in upholding the policy, gave too much deference to the commission’s decision-making.
They also said both the policy and ruling ignored the California State Legislature’s clear directives on how to value rooftop solar. Specifically, they said the ruling ignored many benefits of small, distributed solar systems, which help lower costs and make energy more affordable for everyone at a time of sky-high energy bills.
The following is a statement from Bernadette Del Chiaro, EWG’s senior vice president for California:
This is a deeply disappointing decision that sets California back on its clean energy goals. The net metering policy is fundamentally flawed and has had disastrous effects in causing rooftop solar installations to plummet, with significant job losses in the once-thriving solar industry.
At a time when Californians struggle to pay some of the highest electricity rates in the country, it makes no sense to leave in place a policy that is anti-affordability, anti-clean energy and will further complicate the state’s ability to meet its clean energy goals.
EWG will continue to advocate for sensible, pro-renewable policies that promote reliable, clean power like solar and that can help with lowering the cost of energy in California.
###
The Environmental Working Group (EWG) is a nonprofit, non-partisan organization that empowers people to live healthier lives in a healthier environment. Through research, advocacy and unique education tools, EWG drives consumer choice and civic action.
Areas of Focus Energy Renewable Energy California Decision leaves in place harmful policy undermining cost-saving clean energy Press Contact Alex Formuzis alex@ewg.org (202) 667-6982 June 10, 2026Federal health care cuts threaten Michigan hospitals. It’s time for Medicare for All.
Bipartisan Legislation Introduced to Extend Legacy Restoration Fund
Seabirds of the Boreal?
Shell Boss Warns Oil Pain Could Drag On for a Year — As Shell Sits Pretty in the Crisis Chair
Disclaimer: This article is commentary and satire based on publicly reported information. It includes opinion, criticism, and parody. Site wide disclaimer also applies.
Shell, previously known as Forthdeal Limited, subsequently as Royal Dutch Shell plc, and now hiding in plain sight as Shell plc after ditching the disgraced Royal Dutch moniker, has reportedly marched back into the headlines with another sermon from the high altar of hydrocarbons: oil markets, we are told, may take “a year, if not longer” to return to equilibrium.Translation for ordinary mortals: buckle up, keep paying, and please admire the corporate gravitas while the till keeps ringing.
According to Reuters, Shell chief executive Wael Sawan warned that restoring balance to the crude oil market after the Iran/Persian Gulf disruption will not be a quick job. The Wall Street Journal also reported Sawan’s broader message: oil and gas prices may keep rising even after the immediate conflict eases, because the world’s hunger for energy is still growing, easy resources are harder to find, and governments are now treating energy security as national security.
And there it is: the grand new wrapping paper for the old fossil-fuel gift basket.
Energy security. National security. Resilience. Long-term systems. A more complex world. The language sounds statesmanlike, almost noble, until one remembers that the same market turmoil causing headaches for consumers, airlines, industries, and governments can also become a very handsome earnings environment for a supermajor with global trading arms, LNG exposure, upstream barrels, and enough corporate polish to turn a geopolitical crisis into a strategy deck.
Shell’s own Q1 2026 results presentation said the company delivered adjusted earnings of just under $7 billion amid “heightened volatility.” It also reported more than $17 billion of cash flow from operations excluding working capital. In plainer English: while the world sweated over energy shocks, Shell was hardly wandering the desert with an empty begging bowl.
The latest Sawan message is therefore a neat little performance. On one side, Shell sounds the alarm about fragile energy systems and depleted buffers. On the other, it positions itself as the indispensable adult in the room: the company that can trade, ship, drill, liquefy, optimise, and profit its way through the turbulence.
The public gets warnings. Investors get reassurance.
Sawan’s point that oil-market equilibrium may take a year or more is not, on its face, absurd. A major supply shock through the Gulf, especially involving the Strait of Hormuz and disrupted regional flows, can drain inventories, distort shipping, trigger emergency releases, hammer refiners, and raise the cost of everything from aviation to chemicals. Even when fighting stops, tankers do not teleport, infrastructure does not heal overnight, and inventories do not refill by magic.
But the political usefulness of this narrative should not be missed. If a crisis makes hydrocarbons look scarce, strategic, and irreplaceable, it also strengthens the case for more fossil investment, more LNG expansion, more upstream development, and more tolerance for the old industry argument: yes, yes, the energy transition is lovely, but not too fast, not too disruptive, and certainly not at the expense of shareholder returns.
Shell’s official transition messaging says it supports a “balanced and orderly” transition, aims for net zero by 2050, invests in low-carbon energy, and wants to provide energy today while building the system of the future. Yet the company also says it is keeping oil production stable and growing LNG. That is Shell’s favourite two-step: one foot in the climate brochure, the other planted firmly in the hydrocarbon cash register.
Sawan’s WSJ theme — energy security is national security — is especially convenient. Once energy becomes “national security,” criticism of oil and gas expansion can be made to sound naive, unpatriotic, or detached from reality. Never mind that climate security, consumer affordability, industrial resilience, and the long-term cost of fossil dependence are also national security issues. The phrase is powerful because it narrows the debate to supply, supply, supply — and who better to provide supply than the companies already profiting from the shortage?
This is how the oil majors win the room. First, they warn that the system is fragile. Then they remind everyone that only they understand it. Then they suggest that any serious government must keep them close, keep projects moving, and keep capital flowing. Finally, they call the whole thing realism.
Meanwhile, ordinary people get the bill in petrol, diesel, heating, freight, food, air fares, and inflation. Shell gets to appear grave, responsible, and indispensable — a sort of corporate firefighter standing heroically beside a blaze from which its own business model has long benefited.
There is also a delicious irony in Shell talking about equilibrium. This is a company whose legal identity has been through more costume changes than a pantomime villain: incorporated as Forthdeal Limited in 2002, renamed Royal Dutch Shell plc in 2004, then renamed Shell plc in 2022 after the grand simplification exercise. Apparently, balance is very important — especially when it involves balancing public concern, shareholder value, and the optics of dropping a tarnished old title.
The serious point is this: Sawan is probably right that the oil market will not simply snap back overnight. But Shell’s role is not that of neutral weather forecaster. Shell is not merely observing the storm; it is a giant ship built to sail profitably through it.
The company’s message to governments is clear: energy security requires companies like Shell. Its message to investors is clearer still: volatility can be opportunity. Its message to the public, dressed in softer language, is the oldest one in the oil business: keep calm and keep paying.
Spoof Shell PR/Spin SectionShell plc Statement — Extremely Serious Voice Edition
At Shell, previously known as Forthdeal Limited, then Royal Dutch Shell plc, and now simply Shell plc because shorter names travel better through controversy, we recognise that energy security is national security, economic security, shareholder security, bonus security, and, where appropriate, reputational-security-through-careful-wording.
Our CEO Wael Sawan has responsibly warned that restoring oil-market equilibrium may take a year, if not longer. This should not be interpreted as us enjoying higher prices. We are merely responsibly positioned to generate resilient value from a challenging macro environment of unfortunate global tightness.
We remain committed to the energy transition, provided it is balanced, orderly, commercially attractive, compatible with stable oil production, supportive of LNG growth, and not unduly disruptive to the sacred quarterly distribution rhythm.
Shell will continue helping the world navigate volatility by being very large, very integrated, very necessary, and very available for meetings with governments.
We understand the pain consumers feel at the pump. We also understand trading margins, upstream cash flows, LNG arbitrage, and the importance of disciplined capital allocation.
Together, we can build a lower-carbon future — at a responsible pace, with a robust hydrocarbon foundation, and preferably with Shell in the middle of every sentence.
Spoof Bot-Reaction / Comment Section@BarrelBot9000:
BREAKING: Oil giant discovers that oil shortage may be bad for consumers but strategically fascinating for oil giants.
@TransitionGoblin:
Shell’s energy transition strategy: one solar panel in the brochure, one LNG tanker in the bank account.
@ForthdealFanClub:
Never forget the glow-up: Forthdeal Limited to Royal Dutch Shell to Shell plc. Same fossil opera, shorter programme notes.
@PumpPricePeasant:
Lovely to hear equilibrium may take a year. My wallet has entered a disorderly transition.
@SecuritySloganBot:
Energy security is national security. Climate security is apparently a footnote in 8-point font.
@InvestorWhisperer:
Consumer crisis detected. Reclassifying as “heightened volatility” and routing to earnings call.
@CarbonNeutralByEventually:
Shell says the future is low carbon, but the present remains extremely billable.
@HydrocarbonHamster:
The wheel keeps spinning, the barrels keep moving, and somehow the hamster is paying £1.80 a litre.
@CrisisMonetisationUnit:
Please do not call it profiteering. The preferred term is “resilient integrated portfolio performance amid geopolitical complexity.”
@NationalSecurityNarrator:
When households cannot afford energy, it is a cost-of-living crisis. When oil companies discuss it, it becomes a strategic framework.
©2018 "Royal Dutch Shell Plc .com". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at john@shellnews.net
The Cultural Movement that Once Defeated Neo-Nazism
In the fall of 1978, the National Front (NF), a growing neo-Nazi organization in Britain, was prepared to stand 318 candidates for Parliament. In local London elections, it had received 119,000 votes out of 2.2 million in May. The NF had gained a reputation of challenging immigrants and minorities in street battles and organizing mass marches through minority neighborhoods. There was a very real danger that the NF was on the verge of legitimacy.
Not since Oswald Mosley and his British Union of Fascists clashed with over 100,000 counterdemonstrators in the 1930s in what became known as “The Battle of Cable Street,” had Britain been threatened by such an aggressive ultra-right organization. With street confrontations growing and electoral challenges growing increasingly threatening, the need to unite an opposition was paramount. To answer that need, the Anti Nazi League (ANL), in alliance with movement organizations, trade unions, neighborhood coalitions, churches, and thousands of individuals, was formed to challenge the NF. Geoff Brown’s timely book, A People’s History of the Anti Nazi League, offers a wealth of first-hand accounts from those who came together to stop the NF before it achieved a foothold within the power structure of Britain.
A decade before the NF rose to prominence, Enoch Powell, a Conservative member of Parliament, delivered an alarming speech about the dangers of immigration, which he saw as a madness leading to “the white population…made strangers in their own country.” In what became known as the “rivers of blood speech,” Powell incited a subsequent period of racial violence and reactionary mobilizations, including strikes. Powell’s legacy is often the starting point for today’s racists, such as Tommy Robinson. Robinson recently led a massive anti-immigrant march in London that echoed many far-right themes of the past.
U.S. history is littered with racist marches and antisemitic attacks by Nazis and co-racists like the Ku Klux Klan. Spurred by Trump’s anti-immigrant policies, we are again facing reactionary mobilizations. In 2017, Nazis appeared in Charlottesville, North Carolina, in their largest numbers since World War II. Nazis, together with the KKK, neo-Confederates, and Far-Right militias gathered in an action billed as “Unite the Right” to “protect a Confederate statue.” They paraded with torches, shouted antisemitic slogans, and gave the Nazi salute. A woman was killed when a Nazi drove his car into the counter-protesters.
As the World War II generation disappears and the history of that period becomes less compelling, Nazis are showing signs of growth in several countries. Unbound by the history of their Nazi heroes, they are more confident in demonstrating their hatred. A recent Trump nominee for U.S. attorney was forced to withdraw his nomination when boastful Nazi praises were found in his text messages. Perhaps more alarming was the revelation of a recent group chat of young Republicans that was filled with racist, sexist, and anti-gay rhetoric, and included one participant championing his hero, Hitler. These “leaks” indicate a less circumspect extreme Right willing to embrace Nazism with all that it implies, including Holocaust denial. According to yearly reports from both the Southern Poverty Law Center and the Anti-Defamation League, there has been a 60 percent growth in active neo-Nazi clubs since 2023, from 49 to 78 clubs. The number of violent attacks initiated by these clubs in that period has also grown. Some of their members are believed to have taken jobs in ICE and Border Patrol. These signs of far-right growth cannot be ignored. As Brown’s work makes clear, building a militant and wide-ranging resistance to Nazis and other racist formations is essential if they are to be stopped.
In August 1977, 500 members of the NF attempted to march through Lewisham, a mostly Black district of London, guarded by 4,000 police officers. They were met by a counter-demonstration of nearly 5,000, representing a coalition of 23 organizations, including unions, neighborhood groups, and Left parties, such as Brown’s own Socialist Workers Party (SWP).
Before the ANL, the Anti-Racist, Anti-Fascist Coordinating Committee struggled to build an anti-racist coalition. Representatives of the coalition held many debates. Some wanted to remove “fascism” from the targeted racists and organize an event away from where the Nazis were to march:
Believing that there was no possibility of persuading people to confront the Nazis, the Communist Party proposed some kind of music event on the other side of the borough: music, poetry, cultural events, and prayers. At this a vicar leapt to his feet to say, ‘Oh for goodness sakes, what’s the point of that?’
In the end, the coalition endorsed confronting the NF, and while the numbers were different (5,000 vs. 100,000 in 1936), the participants had no doubt that they had succeeded in halting the NF’s ability to march through the district.
While Lewisham was a success, it was not the end of the NF. Intending to stand 300-plus candidates in the next general election, the NF upped its vicious attacks on minorities and boasted that they could not be stopped. Something more was needed, a broad-based national organization that could provide leadership in standing up to the NF. However, it would not be easy to put together such an organization. Even in the wake of the Lewisham success, the Left was still divided on how to stop the Nazis. Nevertheless, the SWP which had gained credibility in helping to organize the confrontation in Lewisham, believed that nothing less than a nationwide united front of organizations and individuals committed to exposing and stopping the growing NF threat was paramount. Brown summarizes, “The new initiative had to include both identifying the fascists as Nazis—that they came from the same tradition that led to the Holocaust—and mobilizing the largest possible number in opposition to the fascists in whatever ways was necessary.”
Jim Nichol, the SWP national secretary,branded the proposed national formation with the name “the Anti Nazi League.” Nichol was tasked with “selling” the new organization to a broad number of prominent individuals and organizations, from religious groups to the Far Left. The main goal was to stop the NF. Church officials, leaders of minority communities, a prominent journalist, Mary Holland, of the Observer, as well as “a hardline” CP member and solicitor for the ANC, Michael Seifert, were all asked to take part. Nichol was able to convince them to come on board and helped establish a legitimacy for the proposed ANL. The battle of Lewisham had propelled anti-fascism to the front pages.
After many one-on-one discussions with key activists and organizational heads, it was time to launch the ANL. As its founding document made clear:
For the first time since Mosly in the thirties, there is the worrying prospect of a Nazi party gaining significant support in Britain…Like Hitler with the Jews the British Nazis seek to make scapegoats of black people. …If their evil propaganda takes root we will be facing an alarming development in Britain, which affects every one of us. …In every town, in every factory, in every school, on every housing estate, whenever the Nazis attempt to organise, they must be countered.
The ANL’s program was an all-out campaign, including distributing millions of leaflets to mass gatherings to stop NF marches. From pulpits to street corners, from factory floors to union halls, from schools to housing estates, ANL activists took the fight to as broad a constituency as possible. This was to be a “united front” of all organizations and individuals who saw the danger posed by the NF. Inspired by Trotsky’s writings on how to stop the Nazis in the thirties, the comrades in the SWP saw the need to expand beyond the labor movement and include all who had an interest in stopping the rise of Nazism. The unifying slogan and sole agreement to join the ANL was, “They shall not pass.”
…the comrades in the SWP saw the need to expand beyond the labor movement and include all who had an interest in stopping the rise of Nazism. The unifying slogan and sole agreement to join the ANL was, “They shall not pass.”During the existence of the ANL there were many confrontations with the NF as they attempted to march, harass, and intimidate their opposition. Brown’s history of this period is shaped by input from those who participated in building the ANL as well as allied organizations. For example, the year before the emergence of the ANL, a group of musicians had coalesced to oppose racist attacks after headline musicians Eric Clapton and David Bowie had attacked immigrants. Clapton had demanded at one of his concerts for all the immigrants in the audience to leave. “I don’t want you here in the room or in my country.” The same month, David Bowie told Playboy magazine that “Britain could benefit from a fascist leader…Adolf Hitler was one of the first rock stars…You’ve got to have an extreme right front come up and sweep everything off its feet and tidy everything up.”
In response to Clapton’s and Bowie’s racist attacks, Red Saunders, a theater promoter, drafted a letter which he circulated to the entertainment press calling for a strong response to the racism of these entertainers and asking for all who agreed to sign in favor of a rank-and-file organized one-off concert, Rock Against Racism (RAR). So successful was the response that RAR became a leading anti-racist organization, producing numerous concerts and providing the inspiration for the ANL. Together Rock Against Racism and the ANL organized two national carnivals, attended by tens of thousands of young people of all racial backgrounds. Brown notes, “RAR and the ANL became inseparably intertwined.”
Key to building the ANL were the many small meetings and one-on-one conversations stressing the danger posed by the NF. Underlining that the NF and Nazism were one and the same helped to negatively brand NF candidates. From the RAR concerts and the many small meetings, a network of anti-fascists emerged ready to stand up to the NF when it appeared in the streets. As a result, these confrontations attracted more participants. Brown’s book is an excellent resource for understanding the dynamics of a mass movement built around one commitment: “They shall not pass.”
While the SWP as an initiating organization was often accused of using the ANL for its own purposes, it was the Labour Party that grew substantially during this period, even moreso than the SWP. In fact, as noted by one Labour Member of Parliament, “The ANL steering committee meeting in the House of Commons had twice as many Labour MPs on it as SWP members.” What’s important to understand is that the ANL was a broad, single focus united front organization that exposed and stood up to the NF before it could gain a solid foothold in British society. Which organization grew out of its participation was secondary to this historic undertaking.
The SWP’s initiative helped introduce a new generation to the dangers of Nazism. The effort helped shift politics to the left, which benefited the Labour Party in subsequent elections. The NF was pushed to the margins. Nevertheless, the conditions which gave the NF a platform continued to be fueled by the policies of both Labour and Conservatives and have produced another current period of racist activity and organizations targeting the least powerful on an international scale. This makes A People’s History of the Anti Nazi League a timely resource for those organizing to stop neo-Nazism.
As Brown concludes, “The crisis of the liberal centre is once again opening the door to the far right and fascists. …Yet not all is lost—far from it if we act decisively.” Toward that goal, his book offers a wealth of lessons—both positive and negative—to help guide a new anti-Nazi movement.
Opinions expressed in signed articles do not necessarily represent the views of the editors or the Tempest Collective. For more information, see “About Tempest Collective.”The post The Cultural Movement that Once Defeated Neo-Nazism appeared first on Tempest.
Pages
The Fine Print I:
Disclaimer: The views expressed on this site are not the official position of the IWW (or even the IWW’s EUC) unless otherwise indicated and do not necessarily represent the views of anyone but the author’s, nor should it be assumed that any of these authors automatically support the IWW or endorse any of its positions.
Further: the inclusion of a link on our site (other than the link to the main IWW site) does not imply endorsement by or an alliance with the IWW. These sites have been chosen by our members due to their perceived relevance to the IWW EUC and are included here for informational purposes only. If you have any suggestions or comments on any of the links included (or not included) above, please contact us.
The Fine Print II:
Fair Use Notice: The material on this site is provided for educational and informational purposes. It may contain copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. It is being made available in an effort to advance the understanding of scientific, environmental, economic, social justice and human rights issues etc.
It is believed that this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have an interest in using the included information for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner. The information on this site does not constitute legal or technical advice.




