Intentar ORO - Gratis
UK has highest number globally of fossil fuel sites in protected areas
The Guardian
|May 10, 2023
Fossil fuel extraction and exploration is taking place at almost 3,000 sites in protected areas around the world, analysis has revealed, with the UK having the highest number of fossil fuel sites in protected areas.

Globally, the activities affect more than 800 areas established to defend nature. The coal, oil and gas at the fossil fuel sites would lead to 47bn tonnes of climate-heating carbon dioxide if fully exploited, four times the annual emissions of China, the world's biggest polluter.
The sites included are oil and gas operations, coalmines, fossil fuel sites in development and those with exploration licences. "Every single one of these sites is a sign of hypocrisy, saying on one hand that this area is worthy of protection and then on the other hand, bringing fossil fuel extraction into those same areas," said Alice McGown, a geographic information expert at the Leave it in the Ground Initiative (Lingo), which produced the study.
Esta historia es de la edición May 10, 2023 de The Guardian.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE The Guardian
The Guardian
Bankers to get bonuses faster after regulators loosen rules on eight-year wait
UK regulators will speed up bonus payouts for high-earning bankers, watering down another important change introduced after the 2008 financial crisis.
1 mins
October 16, 2025
The Guardian
Detainees Returned bodies of Palestinians show signs of torture, doctors report
Many of the 90 bodies of Palestinians returned to Gaza by Israeli authorities under a ceasefire deal show signs of torture and execution, including blindfolding, cuffed hands and bullet wounds to the head, according to doctors' accounts.
2 mins
October 16, 2025
The Guardian
Watchdog was barking up the right tree when it decided to look into the veterinary industry
Poor Tiddles and Fido are too often getting a bad deal - or, rather, their owners are - from the large corporates that dominate the veterinary business these days.
2 mins
October 16, 2025
The Guardian
Polish minister denounces Russia's 'tactically stupid' drone incursion
Poland's foreign minister has accused Russia of a \"tactically stupid and counterproductive\" escalation of the war in Ukraine, saying its drone incursion into Poland last month appeared to be deliberate.
3 mins
October 16, 2025
The Guardian
Body returned by Hamas not that of a hostage, says Israel as it issues aid threat
One of the four bodies handed over by Hamas is not a missing hostage, Israel has said.
2 mins
October 16, 2025
The Guardian
Book of draft lyrics to offer 'window into brilliant mind' of Freddie Mercury
His voice is one of the most distinctive in pop history, but now Freddie Mercury’s words are to get top billing in a book that will include unreleased songs and alternative versions of Queen hits.
2 mins
October 16, 2025
The Guardian
Inhabitants of besieged Sudanese city 'pushed to the edge of survival'
The besieged Sudanese city of El Fasher has been declared \"uninhabitable\" with data indicating critical levels of malnourishment among people trapped there.
2 mins
October 16, 2025
The Guardian
Councils 'to remain poorer than in 2010 despite funding boosts'
Councils in England will be poorer by the end of this parliament than they were in 2010 despite Labour's funding increases, according to analysis by the Institute for Government (IfG).
2 mins
October 16, 2025
The Guardian
Thompson gets off the mark in Chelsea's demolition job
Chelsea kickstarted their European campaign with a comfortable victory over Paris FC. Alyssa Thompson scored her first goal in west London as Sonia Bompastor’s side dominated proceedings. Sandy Baltimore opened the scoring from the penalty spot while Johanna Rytting Kaneryd and Erin Cuthbert also got on the scoresheet.
2 mins
October 16, 2025
The Guardian
'Snatched from me' Father finally able to bury his son
As Michel Illouz slowly edged his way through the crowds under the cypress trees and palms at the cemetery in Ra'anana, a city 13 miles north of Tel Aviv; he thanked as many of those attending as he could.
2 mins
October 16, 2025
Translate
Change font size