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Adapting to Climate Change at Home: What Families Should Start Preparing For Now

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  Adapting to Climate Change at Home: What Families Should Start Preparing For Now For years, “climate action” has often meant cutting carbon, installing solar panels, using less energy, recycling more carefully, or perhaps looking suspiciously at yet another over-packaged USB cable. But the Climate Change Committee’s new report, A Well-Adapted UK , makes another point very clear: cutting emissions is no longer enough on its own. We also have to prepare our homes, gardens, communities and daily routines for the climate impacts already arriving. The CCC says the UK’s biggest climate adaptation priorities are heat, flooding and drought . By 2050, it warns that 92% of existing UK homes could overheat , peak river flows could be up to 45% higher , and water supply shortfalls could exceed five billion litres per day without stronger action. This is not about panic. It is about practical preparation. And for families, the question becomes: What should we be doing now so that our h...

Could Community Energy Be Britain’s Quiet Revolution?

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  Could Community Energy Be Britain’s Quiet Revolution? What If Your Street Became Its Own Power Station? We tend to imagine the energy revolution as something enormous. Great fields of solar panels. Offshore wind farms on the horizon. Government targets. National Grid upgrades. Huge companies. Large infrastructure. Serious people in hard hats pointing at substations. And yes, all of that matters. But there may be another energy revolution happening much more quietly. One that does not begin in Whitehall, or in a boardroom, or on a distant wind farm. It might begin in a village hall. Or on the roof of a school. Or beside a parish noticeboard. Or in a street where several houses decide that perhaps energy should not always be something done to communities, but something done by them. What if your street became its own power station? Not completely independent. Not cut off from the world. Not a survivalist fantasy involving tinned beans and a suspicious number of c...

Why Modern Packaging Is Getting Worse, Not Better

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  Why Modern Packaging Is Getting Worse, Not Better Somehow, buying a USB cable now generates enough packaging to protect a nuclear reactor. There was a time when packaging had one main job: stop the thing inside from being broken, bruised, leaking, crushed, stolen, or eaten by mice. That seemed fair enough. A loaf of bread needs a bag. A bottle of milk needs a bottle. A fragile glass ornament needs something to stop it arriving as festive glitter. But modern packaging seems to have developed ambitions of its own. It no longer simply protects the product. It performs. It advertises. It reassures. It disguises. It pretends to be greener than it is. And, very often, it makes opening a perfectly ordinary item feel like breaking into a high-security laboratory. Somehow, despite decades of environmental awareness, recycling campaigns, plastic reduction pledges, and corporate sustainability statements, packaging often feels worse than ever. We are told we are living in a greener a...