COP26: World will try again to avert climate disaster
Negotiations will boil down to questions of fairness and trust between rich countries whose emissions caused climate change, and poor nations being asked to de-carbonise their economies with insufficient financial support
Pope, Pacific Islands urge action as rich nations ring climate alarm
The low-lying Pacific islands are widely seen as a frontline in the fight against climate change as they struggle with rising sea levels
Back to the land: Thai forest draws young, green farmers
A community forest in northern Thailand shows conservation is possible with the participation of local farmers
Britain drafts COP26 deal on global aviation emissions
Many countries do not include emissions from international flights in their national climate targets, although some are planning tougher policies
Gulf energy giants pledge net zero - but plan to stick with oil
Big oil producers have made new emissions-cutting pledges ahead of the COP26 U.N. climate talks - but analysts say they are not enough
World needs $5 trillion in annual climate finance by 2030 for rapid action
From transport to agriculture and electricity, progress is lagging in all sectors on reducing planet-heating emissions at the pace required to limit global warming to 1.5C, the study finds
World should shut nearly 3,000 coal plants to keep on climate track -study
The need to close nearly 1,000 gigawatts of coal-fired capacity would put the onus on China to accelerate its shift towards cleaner electricity
Wildfires, logging turn protected forests into carbon emitters -report
Over centuries forests have stored some 13 billion tons of carbon but with increasing wildfires and logging, many of the world's protected forests are emitting more carbon than they can absorb
Climate change to displace tens of millions of East Africans by 2050 -World Bank
Rich nations promised to deliver $100 billion a year to poorer countries to help tackle impact of global warming, but funding will be delayed further COP26 president admitted
More victims complain of sexual abuse in Congo scandal - WHO expert
Some 83 aid workers, a quarter employed by the WHO, were involved in sexual coercion and abuse during DRC's 10th Ebola epidemic