Fiona Harvey
About Fiona Harvey
Fiona Harvey is an award-winning environment journalist for the Guardian. Prior to this, she worked for the Financial Times for more than a decade. She has reported on every major environmental issue, from as far afield as the Arctic and the Amazon, and her wide range of interviewees include Ban Ki-moon, Tony Blair, Al Gore and Jeff Immelt.
Warning from UN chief: Humanity faces ‘collective suicide’ over climate crisis
António Guterres tells governments "half of humanity is in the danger zone" as countries battle extreme heat.
Sea-level rise in England puts about 200,000 homes at risk
These are the homes that may not end up being saved because it would be very expensive to try, using measures such as seawalls and other coastal defences.
Using phosphorus from sewage could take a bite out of soaring food bills
Extracting the chemical used in fertilizers from waste rather than mining it could also help reduce pollution, according to a new report.
World risks ‘sleepwalking to disaster’
Bonn Climate Change Conference envoys walk out during Russian address.
Trust this expert when she says we can’t adapt our way out of climate crisis
Katharine Hayhoe says the world is heading for dangers people have not seen in 10,000 years of civilization.
Former WTO head leads commission to explore rules on climate geoengineering
Countries must urgently agree to a way of controlling and regulating attempts to geoengineer the climate, the former head of the World Trade Organization says.
Skip gas as 'transition' fuel on path to clean energy, study suggests
Analysis says countries can save money by switching from coal straight to renewable energies
Universities urged to reject fossil fuel cash for climate research
An open letter from 500 academics likens fossil-energy funding of climate solutions to tobacco industry disinformation.
Heat waves at both of the Earth’s poles alarm climate scientists
Antarctic areas reach 40 C above normal at the same time as North Pole regions hit 30 C above usual levels.
Europeans told to turn down the heat to reduce need for Russian gas
IEA says the reduction could help wean consumers off fuel that Russia is using as a weapon in Ukraine war.