| 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. This is the last edition of Cropped for 2025. The newsletter will return on 14 January 2026. Key developments High Seas Treaty enters force OCEAN BOOST: The High Seas Treaty â formally known as the âbiodiversity beyond national jurisdictionâ, or âBBNJâ agreement â entered into force on 17 January, following its ratification by 60 states, reported Oceanographic Magazine. The treaty establishes a framework to protect biodiversity in international waters, which make up two-thirds of the ocean, said the publication. For more, see Carbon Briefâs explainer on the treaty, which was agreed in 2023 after two decades of negotiations. Subscribe: CroppedSign up to Carbon Briefâs free \âCropped\â email newsletter. A fortnightly digest of food, land and nature news and views. Sent to your inbox every other Wednesday. DEEP-SEA MINING: Meanwhile, the US â which is not a party to the BBNJâs parent Law of the Sea â is pushing on with an effort to accelerate permitting for companies wanting to hunt for deep-sea minerals in international waters, reported Reuters. The newswire described it as a âmove that is likely to face environmental and legal concernsâ. UK biodiversity probe SECURITY RISKS: The global decline of biodiversity and potential collapse of ecosystems pose serious risks to national security in the UK, a report put together by government intelligence experts has concluded, according to BBC News. The report was due to be published last autumn, but was âsuppressedâ by the prime ministerâs office over fears it was âtoo negativeâ, said the Times.COLLAPSE CONCERNS: Following a freedom-of-information (FOI) request, the government published a 14-page âabridgedâ version of the report, explained the Times. A fuller version seen by both the Times and Carbon Brief looked in detail at the potential security consequences of ecosystem collapse, including shifting global power dynamics, more migration to the UK and the risk of âprotests over falling living standardsâ. News and views OZ BUSHFIRES: Bushfires continued to blaze in Victoria, Australia, amid record-breaking heat, said the Guardian. A recent rapid attribution analysis found that the âextremeâ Australian heat in early January was made around five times more likely by fossil-fuelled climate change. MERCO-SOURED: On 17 January, the EU signed its âlargest-ever trade accordâ with the Mercosur bloc of countries â Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay â after 25 years of negotiations, per Reuters. On 21 January, amid looming new US sanctions, EU lawmakers voted to send the pact to the European Court of Justice, which could delay the deal by almost two years, according to the New York Times. SOY IT ISNâT SO: Meanwhile, the Guardian reported that UK and EU supermarkets have âurgedâ traders who had âabandonedâ the Amazon soya moratorium to stick to its core principles: ânot to source the grain from Amazon land cleared after 2008â. WATER âBANKRUPTCYâ: A new UN report warned that the world is facing irreversible âwater bankruptcyâ caused by overextracting water reserves, along with shrinking supplies from lakes, glaciers, rivers and wetlands, Reuters reported. Lead author Prof Kaveh Madani told the Guardian that the situation is âextremely urgent [because] no one knows exactly when the whole system would collapseâ. KRUGER UNDER WATER: Flood damages to South Africaâs Kruger National Park could âtake years to repairâ and cost more than $30m, said the countryâs environment minister, quoted in Reuters. Rivers running through the park âburst their banksâ and submerged bridges, with âhippos seenâŚamong treetopsâ, it added. FORESTS VS COPPER: A Mongabay report examined how âcommunity forests stand on the frontlineâ of critical-minerals mining in the Democratic Republic of the Congoâs copper-cobalt belt. Spotlight Natureâs coast guard, with backup This week, Cropped speaks to the lead author of a new study that looks at how â and where â mangrove restoration can be best supported across the world. Along Mumbaiâs smoggy shoreline, members of the cityâs Indigenous Koli community wade through the mangroves at dawn to catch fish. Behind their boats, giant industrial cranes whir to life, building new stretches of snaking coastal highway that blot out the horizon. Mumbaiâs mangrove cover is possibly the highest for any major city. With their tangled, stilt roots, mangrove species serve as a natural defence for a city that experiences storm surges and urban flooding every year. These events disproportionately affect the cityâs poor â particularly its fishing communities. This mangrove buffer is being increasingly threatened, as the city chooses coastal roads and other large development projects over green cover, despite protests. But can green and grey infrastructure coexist to protect vulnerable communities in a warming world? A new global-scale assessment published last week tallied the benefits of mangrove restoration for flood risk reduction, factoring in future climate change, development and poverty. It advanced the idea of âhybridâ coastal defence measures. These combine pairing tropical ecosystems with modern, engineered defences for sea level rise, such as dykes and levees. When Carbon Brief contacted lead author and climate scientist Dr Timothy Tiggeloven of Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, he was in Kagoshima in Japan, home to the worldâs northernmost mangrove forests. Why combine mangroves and dykes? Tiggeloven explained: âMangroves are like active barriers: they reduce incoming energy from waves, but they will not stop the water coming in from storms, because water can flow through the branches. But wave energy can still be overtopped. So if you reduce wave energy via mangroves and have dykes behind this, they very much have a synergy together and we wanted to quantify the benefits for future adaptation.â According to the study, if mangrove-dyke systems were built along flood-prone coastlines, mangrove restoration could reduce damages by $800m a year, with an overall return-on-investment of up to $125bn. It could also protect 140,000 people a year from flood risk â and 12 times that number under future climate change and socioeconomic projections, the study said. According to the study, south-east Asia could reap the âhighest absolute benefitsâ from mangrove restoration under current conditions. Countries that could see the âhighest absolute potential risk reductionâ â considering future climate damages in 2080 â are Nigeria ($5.6bn), Vietnam ($4.5bn), Indonesia ($4.3 bn), and India ($3.8bn), it estimated. Maharashtra â which Mumbai serves as the state capital for â is one of two subnational regions globally that could reap the largest benefits of restoration. Tiggeloven emphasised that the goal of the study was to examine how restoration impacts people, âbecause if weâre looking only at monetary terms, weâre only looking at large cities with a lot of assetsâ, he told Carbon Brief. A pattern that his team found across multiple countries was that people with lower incomes are disproportionately living in flood-prone coastal areas where mangrove restoration is suitable. He elaborated: âWealthier areas might have higher absolute damages, but poor communities are more vulnerable, because they lack alternatives to easily relocate or rebuild, so the relative impact on their wellbeing is much greater.â Poorer rural coastal communities with fewer engineered protections, such as sea walls, could benefit the most from restoration as an adaptive measure, the study found. But as the studyâs map showed, there are limits to restoration. Tiggoloven concluded: âWe also should be very careful, because mangroves cannot grow anywhere. We need to think âconservationâ â not only ârestorationâ â so we do not remove existing mangroves and make room for other infrastructure.â Watch, read, listen DU-GONE: A feature in the Guardian examined why so many dugongs have gone missing from the shores of Thailand. WILD LONDON: Sir David Attenborough explored wildlife wonders in his home city of London. The one-off documentary is available in the UK on BBC iPlayer. GREAT BARRIER: A Vox exclusive photo-feature looked at the âlargest collective effort on Earth ever mountedâ to protect Australiaâs Great Barrier Reef.âSURVIVAL OF THE SLOWESTâ: A new CBC documentary filmed species â from sloths to seahorses â that âhave survived not in spite of their slowness, but because of itâ. New science Including carbon emissions from permafrost thaw and fires reduces the remaining carbon budget for limiting warming to 1.5C by 25% | Communications Earth and Environment Penguins in Antarctica have radically shifted their breeding seasons in response to rising temperatures | Journal of Animal Ecology Increasing per-capita meat consumption by just one kilogram a year is âlinkedâ to a nearly 2% increase in embedded deforestation elsewhere | Environmental Research Letters In the diary 31 January: Deadline for inputs on food systems and climate change for a report by the UN special rapporteur on climate change 1 February: Costa Rica elections 2-6 February: First session of the plenary of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Panel on Chemicals, Waste and Pollution | Geneva 2-8 February: Twelfth plenary session of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services | Manchester, UK 5 February: Future Food Systems Summit | London 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 14 January 2026: Wildfires scorch three continents; EU trade; Food and nature in 2026 Cropped | 14.01.26 Cropped 17 December 2025: âDeadlyâ Asia floods; Boosting Londonâs water birds; UN headwinds Cropped | 17.12.25 Cropped 3 December 2025: Extreme weather in Africa; COP30 roundup; Saudi minister interview Cropped | 03.12.25 Cropped 19 November 2025: COP30 edition Cropped | 19.11.25 The post Cropped 28 January 2026: Ocean biodiversity boost; Nature and national security; Mangrove defence appeared first on Carbon Brief. |