We handpick and explain the most important stories at the intersection of climate, land, food and nature over the past fortnight. This is an online version of Carbon Briefâs fortnightly Cropped email newsletter. Subscribe for free here. Key developments Forests under fire âONEROUS REQUIREMENTSâ: A letter from 18 EU member states called for the bloc to âdelay and further simplifyâ the forthcoming application of new rules to curb global deforestation, according to Bloomberg. The letter said the regulation, due to take effect in December, âdoes not sufficiently take into account countries with effective forest protection laws and a negligible risk of causing deforestationâ, the outlet said. The Financial Times added that Indonesia also demanded EU âpolicymakers cut back on âonerousâ requirementsâ, citing the challenges facing smallholder farmers and producers. âILLICIT TIMBER TRADEâ: Illegal loggers are âprofit[ing] from Brazilâs carbon credit projectsâ, Reuters analysis found. Companies have invested âhundreds of millions of dollarsâ into these conservation projects. But at least 24 of 36 projects in the Brazilian Amazon examined by the newswire âinvolved landowners, developers or forestry firms that have been punished by Brazilâs environmental agency Ibama for their roles in illegal deforestationâ. Offences ranged from âclear-cutting the rainforest without authorisationâ to âentering false information in a government timber tracking systemâ, Reuters said. It is a âfailure of the whole ideaâ, said Raoni RajĂŁo, who formerly ran Brazilâs environment ministryâs programme combating deforestation. WILDFIRES ABLAZE: Elsewhere, wildfires âfannedâ by extreme heat across France, Spain, Greece and other parts of Europe resulted in forced evacuations and âmajor firefighting operationsâ, the Independent reported. According to Reuters, 227,000 hectares of land has burned in Europe since the beginning of 2025, âmore than double the average for this time of year over the past two decadesâ. More than 100 wildfires burned in a central Canadian province, the New York Times said, while fires in a Syrian coastal mountain region âoverwhelm[ed]â emergency services, according to CNN. Ag emissions projected to rise EMISSIONS INCREASE: A new report by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) estimated that the growth of farming and livestock production worldwide will increase the sectorâs greenhouse gas emissions by 6% by 2034. However, yield improvements derived from changed farming practices mean that global agricultural carbon intensity will actually decrease over the next decade, the report found. FAO director general Qu Dongyu said in a press release: âLower carbon intensity of agrifood systems is also welcome, but we can do better.â LIVESTOCK IMPACT: According to the report, the main drivers of the expected rise in emissions include the increase of ruminants and livestock (70% of the projected global emissions), followed by the use of synthetic fertilisers (28%), rice cultivation and other activities, such as burning crop residues. The largest increases are expected in south Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, the report said. Agricultural emissions are projected to rise in these two regions by 14% and 8%, respectively, by 2034, partly due to the expansion of ruminant herds, it noted. YIELD DISPARITY: The report also estimated that current differences in agricultural yields between developed and developing countries will not have âsignificant changesâ over the next decade. For instance, yields of maize are higher in North America, compared to the rest of the world. This is attributed to several factors, including gaps in access to finance and modern technologies, the report noted. The authors offered solutions for increasing agricultural yields while mitigating emissions from the sector, including increasing productivity, manure management and addressing both production and consumption of livestock products. Spotlight Climate impacts for US lobsters A deceased American lobster with epizootic shell disease at the University of Rhode Island. Credit: Orla Dwyer / Carbon Brief This week, Carbon Brief food, land and nature reporter Orla Dwyer explores how climate change is impacting US lobsters, after recently attending a science workshop as part of the Metcalf Fellowship at the University of Rhode Island. Scaly? Check. Covered in scabs resembling cigarette burns? Check. Yes, that lobster has epizootic shell disease â and climate change is making it worse. This disease â first recorded in the north-eastern US region of New England in the 1990s â acts as a âmanifestation of an environment that is increasingly inhospitable to lobsters,â said Dr Ben Gutzler, a post-doctoral research fellow at the Wells Reserve at Laudholm in Maine. He told Carbon Brief that the disease is one indication of the âstressâ lobsters are under due to warmer ocean conditions, which leave them more vulnerable to these kinds of ailments. Gutzler co-authored new research that assessed more than 1,000 peer-reviewed studies on American lobsters published over the past 25 years. The research found that epizootic shell disease currently affects as much as half of lobsters in parts of southern New England, where overall lobster numbers have plummeted in recent decades. Warmer oceans fuelled the spread of the disease-causing bacteria, Gutzler said, telling Carbon Brief: âThe warmer water leads to faster microbial growth, because everything happens faster at warmer temperaturesâŠOnce [lobsters] get a nick on their shell that provides that portal of entry, the microbes can just go gangbusters.â The disease causes lesions to form on a lobsterâs shell and can reduce their growth and impact reproduction. In severe cases, the sores grow, spread beneath the shell and enter the lobsterâs tissue, eventually damaging their internal organs and gills. A disease-free, alive lobster at the University of Rhode Island. Credit: Orla Dwyer / Carbon Brief âLeprosyâ lobsters Carbon Brief recently spoke to researchers at the University of Rhode Island about the impact climate change is having on lobsters in New England, where the vast majority of the US lobster industry is located. They explained that lobsters are cold-water creatures, generally most comfortable in waters of around 16C. The north-eastern Atlantic waters are warming faster than the global average and lobsters in the region are struggling as a result. Although epizootic shell disease looks unpleasant, Gutzler said that it does not impact the taste of a lobster: âIt just becomes annoying for the fishermen, because nobody wants to eat a lobster that looks like it has leprosy.â This disease is far from the only way lobsters are affected by the impacts of climate change. Warmer, more acidic oceans are impacting the areas in which lobsters settle and grow in abundance. Gutzler added: âThereâs a whole suite of things driven by ocean temperature that all add up to: itâs harder to be a lobster and successfully complete your life cycle in this new thermal regime.â News and views POLICY CONTRADICTIONS: Labour proposals to âweaken environmental regulations for small housebuildersâ in the UK would exempt 97% of planning approvals from the ârequirement to replace destroyed natureâ, the Guardian reported. The plans could âdestroy 215,000 hectares of nature in Englandâ, it added. Meanwhile, the UK government released a new food strategy for England, promising to âimprove environment and healthâ, according to BusinessGreen. The strategy âpromises [a] wave of fresh policies to tackle emissions [and] curb nature impactsâ, the outlet said, adding that campaigners âhave repeatedly warned the UK remains off track to meet targets to reverse nature loss by 2030â. âGREEN GREAT WALLâ: China has completed a âsand control beltâ that spans the Badain Jaran, Tenegger and Ulan Buh deserts in the westernmost part of Inner Mongolia, according to the South China Morning Post. The green belt, stretching 1,856km, represents the âlatest phaseâ in Chinaâs âdecades-long efforts to curb desertificationâ, the outlet said. Similar projects to combat desertification include Africaâs âGreat Green Wall Initiativeâ, which China supports through âsharing technology expertise and fundingâ, it added. SALTY: Thousands of salt farmers in the western India state of Gujarat are undertaking an âunlikely green revolutionâ by switching from diesel to solar-powered water pumps, JUST Stories reported. The outlet noted that 80% of Indiaâs salt is produced in Gujarat, where the âvast majorityâ of salt workers are women. The salt pan workers, known as Agariyas, have been âsteadily replacingâ their pumps with help from a self-employed womenâs trade union, the outlet said. Mary Robinson, climate advocate and former president of Ireland, said this initiative is âone of the most stunning examples of a truly just transitionâ. ALL OVER THE WORLD: A report from the UN Convention to Combat Desertification found that the 2023-24 drought, which was exacerbated by El Niño, affected wide swathes of the planet, including the Mediterranean, Amazon basin, Panama, Mexico and south-east Asia. According to the report, the droughtâs impacts varied by region, but generally included water supply shortages, agricultural failures and power rationing. Human and livestock deaths were recorded in eastern Africa, while the Amazon released more carbon into the atmosphere as a result of the drought. HYDRO-POWERED: Women in Somalia who have been displaced by conflict and climate change are growing spinach, tomatoes and leafy greens with hydroponics, instead of planting them in the soil, Deutsche Welle reported. The hydroponics project was launched by the not-for-profit SOS Childrenâs Villages in 2022 in âresponse to the countryâs worsening droughts and floods, which have devastated traditional agricultureâ. The project is carried out in 41 solar-powered greenhouses and allows women to earn up to âŹ43 a month, per person. The outlet quoted a farmer who said: âThese beautiful farms have changed our lives.â Watch, read, listen SWEET COEXISTENCE: Euronews Green explored whether wild pollinators and honeybees can co-exist and assessed the risk of pollinator extinction in the EU. âMEDIOCREâ MILK: A joint investigation by DeSmog and the Premium Times examined how a milk powder produced using Irish dairy is being sold in west Africa under a âcarefully constructedâ image of being âhealthy and sustainableâ. BIG SHIFT: This NPR Short Wave podcast addressed how ocean currents, such as the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, are shifting due to climate change. PLANT POWER: The Guardian spoke to ârainforest gardenersâ at a botanical sanctuary in Kerala, which is a âhaven for more than 2,000 native plant species from southern Indiaâ. New science A new review article, published in Nature, found that marine heatwaves have intensified since around 1980 due to human-driven climate change, resulting in âbiological, ecological and socioeconomic change in almost all oceans and seasâ. The authors wrote that reducing greenhouse gas emissions is the âonly long-term solutionâ. A PLOS One study found that 80% of areas with the highest potential for flowering plant discoveries in Brazil are not within protected areas, but 50% of them lie in Indigenous lands. The study highlighted the âurgent needâ to expand collection efforts, protected areas and collaboration with Indigenous peoples, the authors said. Cropland productivity âstagnatedâ in most parts of southern Africa over the past 20 years, according to research published in Nature Food. The findings are in contrast to official crop statistics and, although climate change influenced annual fluctuations in productivity, the study authors said climate trends do not explain the stagnation. In the diary 7-25 July: 30th session of the International Seabed Authority (part two) |
Kingston, Jamaica 23-31 July: 15th meeting of the conference of the contracting parties to the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands |
Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe 24 July: EU-China summit |
Beijing 27-29 July: Second UN food systems summit stocktake |
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia Cropped is researched and written by Dr Giuliana Viglione, Aruna Chandrasekhar, Daisy Dunne, Orla Dwyer and Yanine Quiroz. Please send tips and feedback to [email protected] Cropped 2 July 2025: US public lands under attack; How Indiaâs gig workers are suffering under climate change; Bonn to BelĂ©m Cropped |
02.07.25 Cropped 18 June 2025: High Seas Treaty ratifications; Ocean warming woes; Brazilian deforestation âsurgesâ Cropped |
18.06.25 Cropped 4 June 2025: âTricksâ and âcover-upsâ; Wild weather; Former UN nature negotiator interviewed Cropped |
04.06.25 Cropped 7 May 2025: Ocean alarm; Tariff deforestation risk; West Africaâs fisheries Cropped |
07.05.25 The post Cropped 16 July 2025: EU deforestation law pushback; Agri emissions; US lobster disease appeared first on Carbon Brief. |