Recent Carbon Brief articles by Molly Lempriere
Molly holds a BA in English literature from Brunel University. She was previously UK editor at Solar Media, where she covered the energy transition, managing Current± and Solar Power Portal. Prior to this, she was senior editor for the energy sector at Verdict Media.
- Webinar: Ask Carbon Brief anything about COP29
- DeBriefed 8 November 2024: Trump wins; COP16 ‘disarray’; Origin story of ‘$100bn’ climate-finance goal
- Experts: What does a Trump presidency mean for climate action?
- CCC: UK’s next Paris pledge should commit to ‘81% emissions cut by 2035’
- ‘Significant shift’ away from coal as most new steelmaking is now electric
- Experts: What is the Labour government’s top priority for meeting UK climate targets?
- DeBriefed 5 July 2024: Key climate MPs in new UK parliament; Hurricane Beryl; Biden calls deniers ‘really, really dumb’
- UK election 2024: What the manifestos say on energy and climate change
- Experts: What are the biggest geopolitical risks to climate action in 2024?
- DeBriefed 10 May 2024: 11 months of record heat; Climate scientists ‘hopeless and broken’; 40 years of the Thames Barrier
- Wind and solar are ‘fastest-growing electricity sources in history’
- 报告: 2023年中国新建煤电项目占全球的95%
- China responsible for 95% of new coal power construction in 2023, report says
- Wind and solar capacity in south-east Asia climbs 20% in just one year, report finds
- Analysis: Surge in heat pumps and solar drives record for UK homes in 2023
- Q&A: How Great Britain’s ‘demand flexibility service’ is cutting costs and CO2 emissions
- DeBriefed 10 November 2023: Loss-and-damage fund; UNEP warns of petrostate plans; Solar’s forgotten kidnapping
- World’s electricity supply close to ‘peak emissions’ due to growth of wind and solar
- EU’s use of fossil fuels for electricity falls 17% to ‘record low’ in first half of 2023
- Q&A: What does the UK’s new biomass strategy mean for net-zero?
- DeBriefed 11 August 2023: Amazon Summit; Hawaii fires; Limits of UK rooftop solar
- Autobahn speed limit would cut carbon and bring €1bn in benefits, study says
- Steel industry makes ‘pivotal’ shift towards lower-carbon production