logo
Haunting images from photo prize show the ‘beauty and tragedy' of our planet

Haunting images from photo prize show the ‘beauty and tragedy' of our planet

CNN17-06-2025
A melting glacier draped in the tattered remains of a thermal blanket, a ghostly abandoned mining town in Chile, and an ancient tree marked by floodwaters are among the winning images of the Earth Photo 2025 competition.
The award — created in 2018 by Forestry England, the UK's Royal Geographic Society and visual arts consultancy Parker Harris — aims to showcase the issues affecting the climate and life on our planet.
More than 1,500 images and videos were submitted to this year's competition by photographers and filmmakers from all over the world. The winners were announced last night at a ceremony at London's Royal Geographical Society, ahead of an exhibition of the imagery at the same location.
Photographer Lorenzo Poli took the top prize for his series of photos titled 'Autophagy,' which document — in black and white — the Chuquicamata mine in Chile, one of the largest and deepest open-pit copper mines in the world, plunging nearly 1,000 meters (3,300 feet) into the Earth.
Poli captures the vastness of the site, with moonlike landscapes of endless gray. One photo shows an abandoned miners' town and cemetery which is gradually being enveloped by the expanding mineral ore extraction. In a press release he said the photograph highlights the 'unrelenting expansion of extractive endeavors' and he hopes that it serves to highlight unsustainable mining practices.
Through the competition, Earth Photo wants to open people's eyes to the stories behind the pictures and encourage conversation and action.
'These compelling images and storytelling bring us closer to landscapes, wildlife and communities, engaging us all with the conservation work underway and the new creative solutions needed ahead. Intensely thought-provoking photography and film like this deepens our understanding and can inspire all of us to action,' Hazel Stone, national curator of contemporary art at Forestry England and a member of the jury, told CNN.
Other winning imagery included a photograph titled 'Waterline,' by Mateo Borrero, that depicts declining flood waters in the Amazon rainforest of Peru. In one photo, a man from the Ticuna indigenous people stands beside a gigantic ancient Ceiba tree, the waterline from previous rainy seasons visible just below his shoulders.
'This photograph, taken in May 2024, shows that the water level should be at its maximum; however, rainfall was scarce and, by the peak of the rainy season, non-existent,' explained Borrero in a press release.
Drought is increasingly becoming a problem in the region, with some areas of the Amazon reportedly seeing river levels at their lowest in 120 years. This has disrupted ecosystems and affected millions of people who rely on the rivers for transport, food and income.
Louise Fedotov-Clements, prize chair and director of Photoworks UK, said in a press release that the images bring us 'face to face' with the reality of the climate crisis.
'Within each edition of Earth Photo we see a compelling diversity of international projects using these powerful visual tools to share the beauty and tragedy of life on our planet. Through the lens, film and photography transforms climate change from an abstract threat into a visceral reality, capturing not only the damage, but the resilience of communities and ecosystems in the face of environmental crisis,' she said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

B.C. climate news: Crews battle 147 wildfires in B.C.  Trump cancels plans for offshore wind projects
B.C. climate news: Crews battle 147 wildfires in B.C.  Trump cancels plans for offshore wind projects

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

B.C. climate news: Crews battle 147 wildfires in B.C. Trump cancels plans for offshore wind projects

Here's the latest news concerning climate change and biodiversity loss in B.C. and around the world, from the steps leaders are taking to address the problems, to all the up-to-date science. Check back every Saturday for more climate and environmental news or sign up for our Climate Connected newsletter In climate news this week: • Crews battle 147 wildfires in B.C., with 41 new fires overnight Friday • With fires burning across B.C., is it safe to continue with travel plans? • Alberta heat wave brings added wildfire risk • Trump administration cancels plans to develop new offshore wind projects Human activities like burning fossil fuels and farming livestock are the main drivers of climate change, according to the UN's intergovernmental panel on climate change. This causes heat-trapping greenhouse gas levels in Earth's atmosphere, increasing the planet's surface temperature. The panel, which is made up of scientists from around the world, including researchers from B.C., has warned for decades that wildfires and severe weather, such as the province's deadly heat dome and catastrophic flooding in 2021, would become more frequent and intense because of the climate emergency. It has issued a code red for humanity and warns the window to limit warming to 1.5 C above pre-industrial times is closing. According to NASA climate scientists, human activities have raised the atmosphere's carbon dioxide content by 50 per cent in less than 200 years, and 'there is unequivocal evidence that Earth is warming at an unprecedented rate.' As of July 14, carbon dioxide in the atmosphere was 429.61 ppm, slightly down from 430.51 ppm last month, according to NOAA data measured at the Mauna Loa Observatory, a global atmosphere monitoring lab in Hawaii. The NOAA notes there has been a steady rise in CO2 from under 320 ppm in 1960. Climate change quick facts: • The Earth is now about 1.3 C warmer than it was in the 1800s. • 2024 was hottest year on record globally, beating the record in 2023. • The global average temperature in 2023 reached 1.48 C higher than the pre-industrial average, according to the EU's Copernicus Climate Change Service. In 2024, it breached the 1.5 C threshold at 1.55 C. • The past 10 years (2015-2024) are the 10 warmest on record. • Human activities have raised atmospheric concentrations of CO2 by nearly 49 per cent above pre-industrial levels starting in 1850. • The world is not on track to meet the Paris Agreement target to keep global temperature from exceeding 1.5 C above pre-industrial levels, the upper limit to avoid the worst fallout from climate change including sea level rise, and more intense drought, heat waves and wildfires. • On the current path of carbon dioxide emissions, the temperature could increase by as much 3.6 C this century, according to the IPCC. • In June 2025, global concentrations of carbon dioxide exceeded 430 parts per million, a record high. • Emissions must drop 7.6 per cent per year from 2020 to 2030 to keep temperatures from exceeding 1.5 C and 2.7 per cent per year to stay below 2 C. • There is global scientific consensus that the climate is warming and that humans are the cause. (Sources: United Nations IPCC, World Meteorological Organization, UNEP, NASA, Latest News Number of active wildfires in B.C. jumps to 147 Firefighters in B.C. are gearing up for a busy long weekend, as the number of active wildfires jumped to 120 Friday, up from 90 on Thursday. Much of the province is parched from continuing hot and dry conditions. Although heat warnings have been lifted for parts of the B.C. Interior such as the Okanagan and Fraser Canyon, temperatures are still expected to be in the low-to-mid 30s, according to Environment and Climate Change Canada. Heat warnings remained in effect Friday for Fort Nelson, and the North and South Peace regions. Lytton is under an air quality alert because of the wildfire smoke. Meantime, The wildfire near Peachland that forced hundreds of residents to quickly evacuated their homes just days ago is no longer out of control and the evacuation order has been lifted for all residents. On Vancouver Island, an evacuation order was issued for properties in the Nanaimo region including waterfront properties on the north side of Cameron Lake and a portion of Little Qualicum Falls Provincial Park. The Wesley Ridge wildfire, which is burning on the north side of Cameron Lake, is considered out of control and has grown to 2.45 square kilometres from 0.2 sq. km. on Thursday. The Nanaimo Regional District on Vancouver Island declared a state of local emergency because of the fire, about 60 kilometres from the City of Nanaimo. Read more on the wildfire situation here. —Tiffany Crawford, The Canadian Press With fires burning across B.C., is it safe to continue with travel plans? If there were a weekend that could be described as peak summer in B.C., this would be it. Local vacation destinations see a surge of visitors as the cities empty out a little. But with forest fires raging across the province, is it advisable to travel? 'The August long weekend feels like the height of summer for us,' says Ellen Walker-Matthews, CEO of the Thompson Okanagan Tourism Association, where a wildfire is burning near Peachland. 'We welcome people to continue with their plans.' The patio at Bliss Bakery in Peachland was busy on Thursday, said owner Barry Yeo. Guests enjoyed baked goods and a water show as helicopters picked up buckets of water from the lake. The bakery has a strong customer base, but business triples in the summer months, he said. 'It should be business as usual this weekend,' he said. Harrison Hot Springs is also open despite a wildfire burning about 20 kilometres away on the eastern shore of Harrison Lake. 'The village and the resort are very much open,' said Erinn Kredba, interim executive-director of Tourism Harrison River Valley. 'This is a long weekend and businesses still need people to come.' Read the full story here. —Glenda Luymes Alberta heat wave brings added wildfire risk With Edmonton and most of north and central Alberta under heat warnings from Environment Canada, Alberta Wildfire officials enter the long weekend on pins and needles. With daytime temperatures expected to exceed 30 C until a predicted break on Sunday, conditions are all too perfect for the ignition and spread of wildfire. And, it's the long weekend, when many Albertans and visitors to this province will be pitching tents and gathering around campfires. 'The hot weather is driving up the fire danger in most of the province,' said Josee St-Onge, an information officer at Alberta Wildfire. She said the only regions not under increased risk are parts of southern Alberta that have recently received a lot of rain, and the Rocky Mountain region. Not only does the hot weather increase the risk of fires starting, it provides optimum conditions for existing blazes to spread. There are currently 53 wildfires burning in Alberta, 11 of them rated as 'out of control.' —Edmonton Journal Trump administration cancels plans to develop new offshore wind projects The Trump administration is cancelling plans to use large areas of federal waters for new offshore wind development, the latest step to suppress the industry in the United States. More than 3.5 million acres had been designated wind energy areas, the offshore locations deemed most suitable for wind energy development. The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management is now rescinding all designated wind energy areas in federal waters, announcing on Wednesday an end to setting aside large areas for 'speculative wind development.' Offshore wind lease sales were anticipated off the coasts of Texas, Louisiana, Maine, New York, California and Oregon, as well as in the central Atlantic. The Biden administration last year had announced a five-year schedule to lease federal offshore tracts for wind energy production. Trump began reversing the country's energy policies after taking office in January. A series of executive orders took aim at increasing oil, gas and coal production. The Republican president has been hostile to renewable energy, particularly offshore wind. One early executive order temporarily halted offshore wind lease sales in federal waters and paused the issuance of approvals, permits and loans for all wind projects. In trying to make a case against wind energy, he has relied on false and misleading claims about the use of wind power in the U.S. and around the world. Read the full story here. —The Associated Press How Trump-vetted scientists are trying to shred the climate consensus A new report from the U.S. Department of Energy says projections of future global warming are exaggerated, while benefits from higher levels of carbon dioxide such as more productive farms are overlooked. It concludes, at odds with the scientific mainstream, that policies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions risk doing more harm than good. Released Tuesday, the report is part of an effort by the Trump administration to try to end the U.S. government's authority to regulate greenhouse gases. It's the output of scientists known for contradicting the consensus embodied in volumes of research by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, whose work is approved by virtually every nation. Publishing an alternate approach to the science of global warming on the same day that the Environmental Protection Agency said it plans to revoke the endangerment finding — a determination that greenhouse gases harm public health and welfare — marks a step up in the administration's war on regulations. Since its adoption in 2009, the endangerment finding has become the bedrock of many US environmental rules. Climate experts say it will hobble the country's efforts to rein in rising temperatures and lessen the impacts, such as more intense storms, droughts and wildfires. The federal government's own research shows climate-fuelled extreme weather is already causing $150 billion in losses a year in the U.S. Read the full story here. —Bloomberg News City of Ottawa four years behind in releasing greenhouse gas emissions reports The City of Ottawa is four years behind in releasing greenhouse gas emissions reports and environment groups are left wondering just how much fossil fuels the city burns. Usually, the city releases public reports tracking the amount of greenhouse gas emissions produced within Ottawa, but the last report was released for the 2020 emissions inventory findings. That 2020 report said community emissions had decreased 15 per cent since 2012, but a further reduction of five to six per cent would be needed to meet Ottawa's climate targets in the next five to 10 years. Angela Keller-Herzog, executive director of the local environmental activist group CAFES Ottawa, says the city has a commitment to make those reports to the public. 'It's really important for countries and cities to be tracking their greenhouse gas emissions,' she said. 'If we're going to do something about the problem, we need to figure out where our emissions are coming from. 'Unfortunately, in the last few years, the city has been somewhat neglectful.' Read the full story here. —Ottawa Citizen High in India's Himalayan mountains, yak herders struggle to survive a warming world Carrying her one-year-old son on her back, Tsering Dolma herds a dozen yaks into a stonewalled corral as evening approaches in the desolate mountains of India's remote Ladakh region. A few herders tending livestock are the only people visible for miles on the windswept plains where patchy grass gives way to gravelly foothills and stony peaks. For generations, herders such as Dolma have relied on snowmelt that trickled down the mountain folds to sustain the high-altitude pastures where their herds graze. But now, herders say, the snow and rain are less predictable, and there is less grass for yaks to eat. 'Earlier, it used to snow and rain, but now it has reduced a lot,' the 32-year-old says. 'Even the winters are getting warmer than before.' Much of the herding, milking and gathering of wool is done by women in Ladakh, an area near Tibet that was part of the ancient Silk Route. It's work mostly done by hand. In another valley, Kunzias Dolma is busy making tea with yak milk and checking her yak butter, while spinning her Buddhist prayer wheel with her right hand. The 73-year-old, who's not related to Tsering Dolma, has spent her life around yaks, working long hours to make products from their milk and sewing blankets from their wool. But that way of life is threatened as climate change makes Ladakh less hospitable to yaks and many in the younger generation seek other jobs. Read the full story here. —The Associated Press Related B.C. Wildfires 2025: Lytton blaze triples in size | Evacuations as wildfire in Peachland spreads | Haze settles over Metro Vancouver Report warns new housing in B.C. high-risk zones could cost billions in damages Arctic plants adapting to climate change faster than scientists thought: study

Researchers develop floating solar panels that could dramatically reshape eastern US: 'Doesn't sound like a lot, but it is'
Researchers develop floating solar panels that could dramatically reshape eastern US: 'Doesn't sound like a lot, but it is'

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Researchers develop floating solar panels that could dramatically reshape eastern US: 'Doesn't sound like a lot, but it is'

Researchers develop floating solar panels that could dramatically reshape eastern US: 'Doesn't sound like a lot, but it is' Floating solar panels placed on bodies of water can actually produce more power per square foot than land-based systems. But scientists still have a lot to learn about how this tech affects nature and nearby communities. A study reported by the Cornell Chronicle, published on June 13 in the Cell Reports Sustainability journal, looked at both the benefits and the possible downsides of using floating solar across the U.S. Northeast. The researchers started by figuring out how many waterbodies could realistically support floating solar panels. They found that about 3.5% of existing bodies of water in the region would work. If all of them were used, floating solar could supply 25% of the Northeast's solar energy needs by 2050. That would also make up for all of the land area normally needed for land-based solar. The researchers said floating solar could provide 5% of the region's solar needs while avoiding placing panels in spots important for biodiversity and recreation. Combined with existing solar installations on land, the region's solar production could improve by 194%. "Five percent doesn't sound like a lot, but it is," said senior author Steven Grodsky. "That's 5% less that you would need to generate with terrestrial solar, which equates to thousands of acres and a major boost to solar energy generation with low potential for conflict." In New York State, floating solar could contribute 55% of the state's energy needs by 2030. If areas important to biodiversity are left out, that number drops to 24%. The study also points to a possible trade-off. Grodsky's team found that floating solar increased the amount of planet-warming gases by almost 27% on small ponds. He said, "Freshwater is far rarer than land, and we may wish to consider socioecological impacts of floating photovoltaics concurrent with potential co-benefits like land sparing." Lead author Adam Gallaher said this research gives communities and decision-makers a better way to plan: "This gives policymakers and stakeholders a playbook to take a data-driven, fact-based approach to tackling multiple crises." Do you think we should place solar panels over bodies of water? Absolutely Depends on the place Depends on the cost No way Click your choice to see results and speak your mind. Floating solar means towns and energy providers will have to pay less for land and extra equipment. That can free up money for other local needs like schools and repairs. Plus, these savings can help keep energy prices stable for residents. For individuals wanting to make a difference on their own, installing solar panels is the ultimate home energy hack, because it can bring your cost of energy down to or near $0. EnergySage provides a free service that makes it easy to compare quotes from vetted local installers and potentially save up to $10,000 on solar installations. Join our free newsletter for weekly updates on the latest innovations improving our lives and shaping our future, and don't miss this cool list of easy ways to help yourself while helping the the daily Crossword

Is life widespread throughout the cosmos? Complex organic molecules found in planet-birthing disk
Is life widespread throughout the cosmos? Complex organic molecules found in planet-birthing disk

Yahoo

time8 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Is life widespread throughout the cosmos? Complex organic molecules found in planet-birthing disk

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Astronomers have detected signs of complex organic molecules, the precursors to the building blocks of life as we know it, in a planet-forming disk around a distant star. The findings imply that the chemical seeds of life are constructed in space and are then spread to young or newly forming planets. Using the Atacama Large Millimeter/ submillimeter Array (ALMA), a system of radio telescopes in Chile, the team detected traces of 17 complex organic molecules in the protoplanetary disc of V883 Orionis, a young star located around 1,305 light-years away in the constellation of Orion. V883 Orionis is an infant star, or protostar, that is estimated to be just 500,000 years old, and it's in the active phase of gathering mass and forming planets. If 0.5 million years old seems ancient, consider that our middle-aged sun is about 4.6 billion years old. Complex organic molecules are molecules that have more than five atoms, at least one of which is carbon. They have been seen around sites of star and planet formation previously. However, the compounds discovered around V883 Orionis include the first tentative detections of ethylene glycol and glycolonitrile, compounds that are considered precursors to the building blocks of life. For instance, glycolonitrile is a precursor of the amino acids glycine and alanine, as well as the nucleobase adenine, one of the building blocks of DNA and RNA. The find could therefore provide a missing link in the story of the evolution of molecules around young stars, accounting for the period between the initial formation of stars and the growth of planets in their surrounding protoplanetary disks. "Our finding points to a straight line of chemical enrichment and increasing complexity between interstellar clouds and fully evolved planetary systems," team leader Abubakar Fadul, a scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy (MPIA) in Germany, said in a statement. A cosmic chemical assembly line Stars start life when overdense clumps in vast clouds of interstellar gas and dust collapse under their own gravity. This creates a protostar that continues to gather matter from its natal envelope until it has sufficient mass to trigger the fusion of hydrogen to helium in its core. That's the nuclear process that defines what a main-sequence star is. As this proceeds, material around the budding star flattens out into a swirling donut of gas and dust called a protoplanetary disk, from which planets will eventually emerge. The transition from protostar to a young main-sequence star is a violent one, replete with intense radiation, shocked gas, and gas being ejected from the protoplanetary disk. This is thought to be deleterious to the continued existence of complex chemicals built during earlier stages of the protostar's existence. This has led to the development of a so-called "reset scenario" that sees the chemicals needed for life forming at later stages in the existence of the protoplanetary disk, as planets, asteroids, and comets are formed. However, the new discovery suggests that this reset scenario is unnecessary. "Now it appears the opposite is true," said team member and MPIA scientist Kamber Schwarz. "Our results suggest that protoplanetary disks inherit complex molecules from earlier stages, and the formation of complex molecules can continue during the protoplanetary disk stage." The team theorizes that the period between the energetic protostellar phase and the establishment of a protoplanetary disk would be too brief for complex organic molecules to form in detectable amounts. The upshot of this is that the conditions that predefine biological processes may not be restricted to individual planetary systems, but may be more widespread. Because the chemical reactions that create complex organic molecules proceed better in colder conditions, they could occur in icy dust that later gathers to form large bodies. That means these molecules could remain hidden in dust, rock and ice in young planetary systems, only accessible when heating by the central star warms those materials. This is something seen in our own solar system when comets from the outer region of our planetary system pass close to the sun, creating cometary tails and halos called comas. Though V883 Orionis hasn't yet reached the mass needed to achieve nuclear fusion, there is a heating mechanism available in this young system for a similar thawing to occur: When material falls to the star, facilitating its growth, bursts of intense radiation are triggered. "These outbursts are strong enough to heat the surrounding disk as far as otherwise icy environments, releasing the chemicals we have detected," said Fadul. It's fitting that ALMA, an array of 66 radio telescopes located in the Atacama Desert region of northern Chile, has been integral to probing deeper into the disk around V883 Orionis. It was this array, after all, that first discovered the water snow line in the disk of V883 Orionis back in 2016. "While this result is exciting, we still haven't disentangled all the signatures we found in our spectra," Schwarz said. "Higher resolution data will confirm the detections of ethylene glycol and glycolonitril and maybe even reveal more complex chemicals we simply haven't identified yet." Related Stories: — The mystery of how strange cosmic objects called 'JuMBOs' went rogue — These mysterious objects born in violent clashes between young star systems aren't stars or planets — James Webb Space Telescope dives into the atmosphere of a mystery rogue planet or failed star Fadul suggested that astronomers need to look at light from stars like V883 Orionis and its protoplanetary disk in other wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum to find even more evolved molecules. "Who knows what else we might discover?" Fadul concluded. The team's research is available as a preprint on the paper repository arXiv. Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store