Euracoal accuses the European Commission of using air pollution legislation to implement climate policy, in breach of procedural rules
Rice growers are digging ever-deeper wells to try and beat prolonged drought, amid changing rainfall patterns
Early warning systems and early action funds are needed to prevent repeats of the 2015/16 famine, experts warn in response to latest science
Farmers in Kenya’s Rift Valley are being forced from their farms by drought then hit by rising food prices as maize shortages bite
Opposition parties accuse the Kenyatta administration of failing to plan for poor harvests, as inflation bites ahead of an August general election
A valuable fungus reputed to be an aphrodisiac has been disappearing from the mountains of Nepal, taking with it a valuable source of income
Matt Canavan, who has strongly backed Adani’s Queensland mega-mine, is third senator in recent weeks to be caught out by dual citizenship rule
Revenue raised by a tax on coal was originally intended to support renewables, but a Scroll.in investigation revealed it is being spent on an unrelated policy
Six protesters were killed in the Mandsaur district of Madhya Pradesh in June. Meet the bereaved families driven to despair by erratic weather and a tough market
Indian solar manufacturers are likely to go bust when a World Trade Organization ruling kicks in later this year, experts say, increasing the dominance of Chinese imports
Farmers along the lower Nile have little information to guide them as upriver barrage threatens to compound the impacts of global warming
Embattled president is regularising illegally occupied land at knock-down prices, in a move environmentalists fear will lead to more deforestation
NGOs warn that a project supposed to reduce deforestation could have the opposite effect, opening up large areas to industrial logging
In the week China’s president called for development banks to support low emissions in poor countries, China Development Bank loaned $1.5bn to coal in South Africa
Growing number of multinational banks becoming conduits for UN climate funds means money will not reach certain projects, NGOs warn
“I want grid power,” say locals, despite concerns that Rampal’s mega-plant may threaten the world heritage listed Sundarbans mangrove forests
How the tiny, climate-threatened Marshall Islands came to be represented at UN shipping talks by a private company based in Virginia, 11,000km away
Developing countries have been promised $100bn per year by 2020, with no sign of it arriving some are taking matters into their own hands
A cooperative of developing-world universities aim will share curricula on climate change, reducing the need for consultants from wealthy countries
After a barrage of criticism, the UN’s primary climate fund has released $5.2m to a handful of projects