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Climate change is driving up the cost of house and home insurance (and it’s not subtle)

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 Climate change is driving up the cost of house and home insurance (and it’s not subtle) Once upon a time, “home insurance” was the boring direct debit you paid so you could sleep at night while the wind tried to rearrange your roof tiles into modern art. Now it’s becoming a live commentary on the climate: more floods, more storms, more subsidence, bigger claims, and—inevitably—bigger premiums. In the UK, insurers are already paying out eye-watering sums for weather damage. The Association of British Insurers (ABI) reports £6.1bn in property insurance payouts in 2025 , with storm and flood claims both jumping, and the average payouts rising sharply (storms and floods aren’t just more frequent; they’re more expensive when they hit). That money comes from somewhere, and a chunk of it lands back on our doormats as higher premiums and excesses. Why climate change pushes premiums up 1) More claims, more often Warmer air holds more moisture, which helps supercharge heavy rainfall...

When flowers “turn up early” but insects don’t: what can happen?

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  When flowers “turn up early” but insects don’t: what can happen? As the climate warms, many plants are shifting their flowering dates earlier (and in some places, weirder — earlier or later). In the UK, large datasets show first-flowering dates have moved markedly earlier under recent warming. But insects (and other pollinators) don’t always shift at the same speed, because their life cycles can depend on different cues (temperature vs day length, winter chilling, rainfall patterns, etc.). That creates a phenological mismatch : flowers open when the right pollinators aren’t yet active. Here are the main knock-on effects of that mismatch: 1) Less pollination → fewer seeds and fruits If fewer pollinators are flying when flowers are ready, plants can suffer pollen limitation (not enough pollen delivered). That can mean fewer seeds, fewer berries, fewer apples — and weaker plant reproduction over time. 2) Hungry pollinators (and weaker colonies) Flip the timing around and i...

Chronic ocean heating is quietly emptying the sea (and a heatwave can hide it)

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  Chronic ocean heating is quietly emptying the sea (and a heatwave can hide it) We’re used to hearing about “marine heatwaves” – those headline-grabbing spikes where the sea turns into bathwater and everything with gills starts filing complaints. But a new study suggests the bigger problem is the slow, relentless background warming that never makes the news because it doesn’t look dramatic… until you add up the losses. The researchers analysed 702,037 estimates of biomass change across 33,990 fish populations (1,566 species) from 1993–2021 across major Northern Hemisphere ocean basins. Their key point: if the seabed warms faster , fish biomass falls faster. The headline figure is stark: about a 7.2% decline in fish biomass for every 0.1°C of seabed warming per decade . That’s not “a bit less fish on your plate”. That’s “your grandkids ask what a sprat is.” Heatwaves: the optical illusion in the data Here’s the twist: marine heatwaves can temporarily boost fish biomass in c...

How long do solar PV inverters really last?

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  How long do solar PV inverters really last? If solar panels are the tortoises of the renewables world (slow, steady, 25+ years), the inverter is the hare: brilliant at its job, but far more likely to need replacing along the way. Typical real-world lifespan (domestic systems): String (central) inverters: about 10–15 years is the common expectation. Hybrid inverters (solar + battery): often 10–15 years , but battery cycling and higher workload can pull that down if the system is worked hard. Microinverters (one per panel): often quoted at 15–25 years , and manufacturers commonly back them with much longer warranties. A useful rule of thumb from the PV world is: plan on replacing a string inverter once during the “life of the panels.” One study notes inverters are “typically said” to have ~15-year life expectancy—roughly half the typical module performance warranty period. Why inverters don’t last as long as panels Panels are mostly passive. Inverters are bus...

Why is fly tipping on the increase?

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 Why is fly tipping on the increase? Fly-tipping is rising for a messy mix of money, convenience, weak deterrence, and organised waste crime — and the latest England figures show it’s not a small uptick. What the latest numbers suggest (England) Local authorities dealt with around 1.26 million fly-tipping incidents in 2024/25 , up about 9% on 2023/24, with highways (roads/pavements) the most common location and “ small van load ” a very common size category. So: a lot of it is day-to-day household waste and small-scale dumping , not just “industrial villains in hi-vis”. Why it’s increasing 1) It’s often a “fee-avoidance” crime Disposing of waste properly can cost time, effort, and (sometimes) money — so fly-tipping becomes the illegal shortcut. Defra explicitly notes that fly-tipping is often driven by avoiding disposal costs . 2) “Man with a van” scams (rogue waste carriers) A big driver is people paying a cheap, unlicensed collector who then dumps it. Residents think t...

Plastic production has doubled in 20 years… and it’s gearing up to double again

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  Plastic production has doubled in 20 years… and it’s gearing up to double again If you ever needed proof that humans can commit to a long-term relationship, look no further than our devotion to plastic. We’ve doubled global plastic production over the last 20 years, and many projections suggest we’re on track to do it again. That isn’t just “a bit more packaging”. That’s a full-speed industrial snowball: more extraction, more manufacturing, more waste, more microplastics, more emissions — and more cost pushed onto councils, communities, beaches, rivers, and ultimately… us. Why is plastic still rising when we all “know better”? Because plastic is cheap for the producer , not cheap for society. Packaging and convenience still dominate: “single-use” is basically the business model. Petrochemicals are a growth engine for fossil fuel companies as other oil uses face pressure; petrochemicals are widely highlighted as a major driver of future oil demand growth. Recycling ...

Water in the Desert: pulling drinking water out of “nothing” (with chemistry doing the heavy lifting)

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  Water in the Desert: pulling drinking water out of “nothing” (with chemistry doing the heavy lifting) If you’ve ever stood in a desert and thought, “Lovely view. Shame about the whole ‘no water’ situation,” you’re not alone. The air does contain water vapour — even when it feels bone-dry — but grabbing it efficiently has always been the tricky bit. Enter Prof Omar Yaghi (University of California, Berkeley), the 2025 Nobel Prize winner in Chemistry, recognised for pioneering metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) — super-porous, molecular “scaffolds” built using reticular chemistry . In plain English: you design a material like LEGO at the molecular level, choosing the bits and connectors so it ends up full of tiny, tunable pores that can selectively trap molecules. So how does it harvest water? Yaghi’s approach uses these engineered porous materials to adsorb moisture from air (think: water sticking to internal surfaces), then release it when gently warmed. His company Atoco say...