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Headlines
Council-maintained schools in England outperforming academies in Ofsted ratings
Education  
Council-maintained schools in England outperforming academies in Ofsted ratings
Research for Local Government Association renews questions over government’s ‘academisation’ policy
UK aid budget  
Cuts are ‘death sentence’ for world’s most vulnerable children
Donald Trump  
Ex-president to appear in court over attempt to overturn 2020 US election
BBC  
Radio 2 loses 1 million listeners since Ken Bruce departure
War on Ukraine  
Russia ‘systematically’ forcing Ukrainians to accept citizenship, US report finds

A recent scientific paper showed that climate breakdown is drastically increasing the chances of simultaneous crop losses in the world's poorest nations. The effects of this could be devastating.

We face an epochal, unthinkable prospect: of perhaps the two greatest existential threats – environmental breakdown and food system failure – converging, as one triggers the other.

So why isn’t this all over the front pages? Why, when governments know we’re facing existential risk, do they fail to act?

Looking back on previous human calamities, all of which will be dwarfed by this, you find yourself repeatedly asking “why didn’t they … ?” The answer is power: the power of a few to countermand the interests of humanity. It always has been, but the stakes are now higher than ever.

At the Guardian, we make a point of maintaining focus on the climate crisis. We have a large, global team of writers whose sole focus is this subject, and have recently appointed an extreme weather reporter and a European environment correspondent as well. We can only do this thanks to support from readers.

If you can, support journalism which puts the planet first.

George Monbiot,
Guardian columnist

Ukraine invasion
Ukrainian counteroffensive’s slow going offers reality check but could yet pay off
Analysis  
Ukrainian counteroffensive’s slow going offers reality check but could yet pay off
Hopes of a rapid breakthrough proved over-optimistic in the face of entrenched defences but Russian forces are suffering major damage
At a glance  
What we know on day 526 of the Russian invasion
Odesa  
Putin aiming for ‘global catastrophe’, says Zelenskiy
Poland  
Warsaw sends troops to border, accusing Belarus of violating its airspace
Spotlight
‘It’s a very proud moment’  
British Muslim women cheer hijab at World Cup
British Muslim women cheer hijab at World Cup
‘Everything you’ve been told is a lie!’  
Inside the wellness-to-fascism pipeline
‘Destroyed me completely'  
Kenyan moderators decry toll of training of AI models
Cancer  
Rates are rising in young people like me, and we don’t fully know why
Indigenous voice to parliament  
Australia’s referendum explained in 30 seconds
Most read in last 24 hours
Mothers negatively affected by having three daughters and no sons, study shows
Mothers negatively affected by having three daughters and no sons, study shows
Want a glimpse of dystopia? Visit the self-service checkouts
UK graduates paid back £100m in student loans while below threshold
A moment that changed me: my teacher went totally off script – and opened a door for my life to flow through
Rishi Sunak heads to California for ‘special trip’ with family
Opinion
Rishi Sunak, beware: the Bibby Stockholm is becoming a monument to your incompetence
Rishi Sunak, beware: the Bibby Stockholm is becoming a monument to your incompetence
Trump’s indictment proves he might not be bright, but he is dangerous
Grief can take us to the darkest of places - why don’t we take it seriously?
Sport
Exclusive  
Rugby league brain injuries claim is heading for court
Rugby league brain injuries claim is heading for court
The Ashes 2023  
Fifteen moments that shaped a dramatic series
Chelsea 1-1 Borussia Dortmund  
Nkunku injured in pre-season draw
The art of reinvention: How to embrace change and rediscover your life’s passions
Monday 21 August, 6pm-8.30pm BST
Work out what you have to offer the world and kickstart your reinvention in this practical workshop with the psychologist Dr Susan Kahn.
Podcast
Rishi Sunak’s anti-green gamble
Today in Focus  
Rishi Sunak’s anti-green gamble
The prime minister’s announcement of new oil and gas licences in the North Sea this week is a sign he sees electoral advantage in being anti-green. Kiran Stacey reports
Climate crisis
China  
Firefighter ‘dies heroic death’ as Beijing reports heaviest rain on record
Firefighter ‘dies heroic death’ as Beijing reports heaviest rain on record
Committee on Climate Change  
At least 60 people apply to head UK government advisory body
In pictures
Ala Kheir’s best photograph  
A tea shop in Khartoum before the bombs
A tea shop in Khartoum before the bombs
Readers' best photographs  
Deer stalker and summer loving
Deer stalker and summer loving
Get in touch
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With daily reports of extreme heat, the time for denial is over. Heatwaves across the northern hemisphere are more alarming evidence of the accelerating levels of climate damage; reminders that people across the world are losing their livelihoods – and lives – due to deadlier and more frequent heatwaves, floods, wildfires and droughts.

Journalism alone won’t reverse our trajectory. But there are three reasons why properly funded independent reporting will help us address it.

1. Quality climate journalism reminds us that this problem is not going away, and must be urgently addressed.
2. Independent journalism that amplifies the latest science, data and studies puts pressure on policymakers to take action.
3. Our work foregrounds solutions that encourage the innovation and investment in new technologies that we so desperately need.

At the Guardian, we have climate reporters stationed around the world. We have renounced advertising from fossil fuel companies and have significantly cut our own carbon emissions.

Help power the Guardian’s journalism for the years to come, whether with a small amount or a larger one.

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