Welcome to Carbon Brief’s DeBriefed. An essential guide to the week’s key developments relating to climate change. This week Heat and firewaves ‘FIREWAVE’: Wildfires ravaged Europe and North America this week. France utilised water-dumping planes collecting from the Seine to contain a fire in the Fontainebleau forest near Paris, according to the Associated Press. The Financial Times reported that the UK has had ‘25 non-consecutive days with temperatures of 30C or more, including nine days above 34C’, creating a ‘firewave’ and putting pressure on emergency services. Meanwhile, an ‘orange haze from Canada wildfires’ could be ‘seen in Ontario and northern US’, said BBC News. ‘NEW NORMAL’: Climate events previously seen as extreme are becoming the ‘new ‘normal’’, said the Met Office, in a report on the UK’s climate. While last year was the UK’s hottest on record, rising temperatures mean it is expected to be surpassed in the next few years, reported Reuters. Liz Bentley, head of the Royal Meteorological Society, told the Guardian that ‘climate change has been described by scientists for many years but is now increasingly being felt by the UK population in their own homes and communities’. Around the world ELECTRIFYING PUSH: The European Commission has announced a target for electricity to account for 46% of energy consumption across the bloc by 2040, reported Carbon Pulse. The commission has also made plans to adapt its emissions trading system to ‘bring relief to industry’, it said. FALLING OIL: The International Energy Agency said that global oil demand is expected to decline this year for the first time since 2020, reported the Associated Press. US ROLLBACKS: Trump cuts to clean energy support ‘led to the cancellation ​or delay of $83bn in investment across hundreds of projects’, reported Reuters. The Trump administration has also changed environmental law to allow development in the habitats of endangered species, according to CNN. BURNHAM BEGINS: Incoming UK prime minister Andy Burnham is preparing to announce new North Sea drilling ‘within days of taking office’, said Bloomberg. Carbon Brief looked at 28 statements that Burnham has made about climate change and fossil fuels. DRY JULY: Drought in Uganda led to significant crop losses and at least 16 deaths from starvation, said BBC News. ON AI: Australia planned to implement restrictions on energy and water usage for datacentres ‘amid [an] AI boom’, said the New York Times. 38% The drop in Brazilian Amazon deforestation in the first half of 2026, compared to last year, reported Al Jazeera. Latest climate research The area of land burned by wildfires in Africa each year has reduced due to a shrinking dry season Geophysical Research Letters Most people do not distinguish between climate adaptation and mitigation when thinking about tackling climate change Climate Outreach An ‘effort-sharing framework’ has been developed to support progress towards the Paris Agreement npj Climate Action (For more, see Carbon Brief’s in-depth daily summaries of the top climate news stories on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.) Captured Carbon Brief explained how more than 1,000 heat-related deaths in England and Wales during May and June were attributed to climate change, accounting for almost half of all heat-related deaths experienced during those months. The article also unpacked the different methods for estimating heat deaths around the world. Spotlight Natural History Museum exhibits climate change This week, Carbon Brief interviews Meaghan Macdonald, senior project and programme manager for London’s Natural History Museum, about their first permanent climate-themed exhibition, Fixing Our Broken Planet. Carbon Brief: Why are programmes such as Fixing Our Broken Planet so important? Meaghan Macdonald: One of the main things we’re trying to achieve with Fixing Our Broken Planet is to place the museum as a convener of conversations around the planetary emergency…trying to bring together the different groups of people who need to be involved in this conversation in order to work together to find a solution. And we find that a lot of the people who come into the gallery weren’t necessarily coming here to see it; they come across it, which is a really great way to engage people who may not have been engaged in that discussion previously. CB: How does the exhibition engage and inspire visitors? MM: A driving force for this exhibition is that you are dealing with a subject matter that can be quite disheartening, and one of the things that we were very careful about is to try to make sure that woven throughout the scientific data… is a sense of hope… to enable people to feel empowered to make a difference. We were able to do things like our ‘what you can do’ labels, which give an example that people can take away with them. We also have ‘conversation starters’, which is a digital screen that asks people a series of questions related to the planetary emergency. Things like: ‘Should we mine the deep sea to power the green economy?’…And there’s no right or wrong answer. We [also] set out very specifically to…forefront the science that’s happening here. We know from multiple studies from thinktanks and organisations that people actually trust our scientists the most. Natural History Museum’s Fixing Our Broken Planet exhibition. Credit: Micheal Melia / Alamy Stock Photo CB: The museum has set out a goal to ‘create advocates for the planet’. What does this mean? How does it relate to the exhibition and the museum’s wider climate action? MM: The aim of the museum is to get to a place where both people and the planet thrive. Being a library of the natural world, it is our duty to be standing up for it and to help people find their way, fighting for nature’s side. In order to create those advocates, the aim of the [exhibition] and the wider advocacy programmes at the museum is to try to find ways to bring all these people [individuals, policymakers, industry, scientists] together. We have the wider programme with Fixing Our Broken Planet. We have Generation Hope…a free graphic panel version of our display in the gallery that we have been able to get into a number of venues in Bangalore…the very long-standing and beloved wildlife photographer of the year [exhibition]…our urban nature movement…[and] an initiative that we are doing with the Department for Education called the National Education Nature Park. Watch, read, listen STUBBORN HOPE: For the Conversation, climate scientist Prof Peter Stott argued that researchers need to ‘talk more about the very worst-case scenarios’ and the possibility for action. EXTREME: Vox’s the Gray Area podcast spoke to New York Times journalist David Wallace-Wells about the possibility of a ‘Godzilla’ El Niño. RESPONSIBILITY: For Climate Home News, two researchers from the Center for International Environmental Law explored how ‘major emitting countries knew of climate risks decades earlier than claimed’. Coming up 13-31 July: Meeting of the International Seabed Authority assembly and council, Kingston, Jamaica 17-19 July: 3rd International Conference on Environment and Sustainable Development, London 19 July: Presidential election, São Tomé and Príncipe Pick of the jobs Zero Carbon Analytics, research lead Salary: Unknown. Location: Remote Met Office, ocean climate scientific manager Salary: £54,515-£58,582. Location: Exeter National Trust, land use and nature delivery partner Salary: £44,499. Location: Newcastle or York DeBriefed is edited by Daisy Dunne. Please send any tips or feedback to [email protected]. This is an online version of Carbon Brief’s weekly DeBriefed email newsletter. Subscribe for free here. DeBriefed 10 July 2026: Deadly Europe heat EU electrification leak COP31 president interview DeBriefed 10.07.26 DeBriefed 3 July 2026: US faces scorching Independence Day Record ocean temperatures Vietnam’s EV surge DeBriefed 03.07.26 DeBriefed 26 June 2026: Heat records broken across Europe London climate action week Introducing ‘Project Cosmos’ DeBriefed 26.06.26 DeBriefed 19 June 2026: Bonn talks end in ‘gridlock’ Energy’s ‘new era’ Oceans in climate negotiations DeBriefed 19.06.26 The post Debriefed 17 July 2026: UK ‘firewave’ Fossil-fuelled heat deaths London’s Natural History Museum spotlights climate appeared first on Carbon Brief.

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