Saturday, August 30, 2025

 Nearly 1,000 'Workers Over Billionaires' Protests Planned Across US for Labor Day

Thousands of labor union members and activists march in Philadelphia for May Day, on May 1, 2025.

 (Photo by the Philadelphia Democratic Socialists of America)

Nearly 1,000 'Workers Over Billionaires' Protests Planned Across US for Labor Day

"This is about workers showing up and demanding what workers deserve all across the country," said Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers.

Unions and progressive organizations are planning nearly 1,000 "Workers Over Billionaires" demonstrations across the United States this Labor Day to protest President Donald Trump's assault on workers' rights.

The day of national action has been organized by the May Day Strong coalition, which includes labor organizations like the AFL-CIO, American Federation of Teachers, and National Union of Healthcare Workers, as well as advocacy groups like Americans for Tax Fairness, Indivisible, Our Revolution, and Public Citizen.

"Labor and community are planning more than a barbecue on Labor Day this year because we have to stop the billionaire takeover," the coalition says. "Billionaires are stealing from working families, destroying our democracy, and building private armies to attack our towns and cities."

Since coming into office, the Trump administration has waged war on workers' rights. Among many other actions, his administration has stripped over a million federal workers of their right to collectively bargain in what has been called the largest act of union busting in American history and dramatically cut their wages.

He has also weakened workplace safety enforcement, eliminated rules that protected workers against wage theft, and proposed eliminating the federal minimum wage for more than 3.7 million childcare and home workers.

Despite Trump's efforts, Americans still believe in the power of collective action. According to a Gallup poll published Thursday, 68% of Americans say they approve of labor unions, the highest level of support since the mid-1960s.

"Just like any bad boss, the way we stop the takeover is with collective action," the coalition says on its website.

The May Day Strong coalition previously organized hundreds of thousands of workers to take to the streets for International Workers Day, more commonly known as "May Day." On Monday, rallies are once again expected across all 50 states.

Four months later, their list of grievances has grown even longer, with Republicans having since passed a tax cut expected to facilitate perhaps the largest upward transfer of wealth in US history, featuring massive tax breaks for the wealthy paid for with historic cuts to the social safety net.

"There are nearly 1,000 billionaires in the country with a whopping $6 trillion, and that is still not enough for them," said Saqib Bhattie, executive director of the Action Center on Race and the Economy, another group participating in the protests. "They are pushing elected officials to slash Medicaid, [Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program] benefits, and special education funding for schools in order to fund their tax breaks. We need to claw back money from the billionaire. We need to push legislation to tax billionaires at the state and local levels. We need to organize to build the people power necessary to overcome their money."

The group also plans to respond to Trump's lawless attacks on immigrants and his militarized takeovers of American cities.

"This Labor Day," said Lisa Gilbert, co-president of Public Citizen, "we continue the fight for our democracy, the fight for the soul of our nation, the fight against the vindictive authoritarian moves Trump and the billionaire class aimed at stealing from working people and concentrating power."

"This is about workers showing up and demanding what workers deserve all across the country," said Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers. "This Labor Day is really different, because it's not just labor unions, as important as we may be to the workers we represent. It has to be all workers and all working families saying enough. Workers and working families deserve the bounty of the country."

May Day Strong will host a national "mass call" online on Saturday. The locations of the hundreds of protests on Monday can be found using the map on May Day Strong's website.

Can a giant seawall save Indonesia’s disappearing coast?


By AFP
August 27, 2025


Climate experts warn a plan to build a 700-kilometre seawall along Java's coast could make matters worse by pushing erosion elsewhere and disrupting ecosystems - Copyright AFP BAY ISMOYO


Jack MOORE, Taris IMAN

The encroaching ocean laps against a road in Karminah’s village, threatening her home on Indonesia’s Java island, where the government says it has a plan to hold back the tide.

It wants to build an $80-billion, 700-kilometre (435-mile) seawall along Java’s coast to tackle land loss as climate change lifts sea levels and groundwater extraction prompts land to sink.

For residents who have seen the tide come more than a kilometre inland in parts of Java, the plan sounds like salvation.

But with a timeline of decades and uncertain financing, it looks unlikely to arrive quickly enough, and climate experts warn it could make matters worse by pushing erosion elsewhere and disrupting ecosystems.

For Karminah, 50, those concerns feel distant.

“What’s important is that it doesn’t flood here. So that it’s comfortable,” she told AFP in Bedono village, referring to a coastal road that disappears almost daily.

“School can’t happen, the children can’t play, they can only sit on the pavement staring at the water.”

The government calls the colossal wall one of its “most vital” initiatives to help coastal communities in Java, which houses more than half of Indonesia’s 280 million citizens, as well as fast-sinking capital Jakarta.

Bedono residents like village chief Muhammad Syarif currently elevate their homes with clay soil but say a seawall is “very much needed” to avert disaster.

“It is the right solution because the coastline needs wave management,” he said.

Funding remains uncertain, though President Prabowo Subianto has urged Asian and Middle Eastern investment.

This week, he inaugurated a new agency to oversee the project.

“I don’t know which president will finish it, but we will start it,” Prabowo said in June.



– Abandoned villages –



Seawalls and other coastal fortifications have been used globally to keep damaging tides at bay.

In Japan, fortress-like barriers were installed in some places after the 2011 earthquakes and tsunami, while the Netherlands relies on a system of hill-like dikes to stay dry.

Such fortifications absorb and deflect wave energy, protecting coastal infrastructure and populations.

But Indonesia’s needs are urgent, with one to 20 centimetres (0.4 to eight inches) of land disappearing along Java’s northern coast annually.

Large areas will vanish by 2100 on the current climate change trajectory, according to environmental non-profit Climate Central.

The fortifications can also have negative consequences, destroying beaches, pushing erosion seaward, and disrupting ecosystems and fishing communities.

In places like Puerto Rico and New Caledonia, seawalls have collapsed under the constant beat of waves, which also erode sand below.

“They come at considerable environmental and social cost,” said Melanie Bishop, professor at Australia’s Macquarie University.

“Their construction leads to loss of shoreline habitat and they impede movement of both animals and people between land and sea,” the coastal ecologist said.

A 2022 UN report warned seawalls only offer a temporary fix and can even worsen climate change effects.

For Indonesian crab farmer Rasjoyo, coastal erosion is not a theoretical problem.

He and hundreds more once lived in now-abandoned Semonet village, where seawater laps into evacuated homes. It now lies a 20-minute boat ride from land.

“The floods were getting worse. The house was sinking. Every month, the change was drastic,” the 38-year-old told AFP.

He says the seawall — first proposed in 1995 — will come too late.

“If it happens, when will it arrive here? In what year?” he asked.

“It might not be very effective either, because the land has already subsided.”



– ‘Find a solution’ –



Some climate experts believe nature-based solutions like mangroves and reefs would be better alternatives.

“Unlike seawalls that would need to be upgraded as sea levels rise, these habitats accrete vertically,” said Bishop.

“In some instances this vertical accretion can keep pace with sea level rise.”

Another alternative could be a mixture of relocations and more targeted, limited seawalls, said Heri Andreas, a land subsidence expert at the Bandung Institute of Technology.

“The win-win solution is a partial or segmented seawall,” he said, describing the current proposal as like “killing a duck with a bazooka”.

“It is more effective if we do relocation. And then in some parts, maybe only a coastal dike or elevating the coastal infrastructure would be enough.”

He hopes to persuade Prabowo’s administration to switch course before the mega-project begins.

“We need more listening,” he said. “It’s a bit better than before, but it’s not enough yet.”

In Bedono, where a cemetery was recently relocated to save it from the waves, residents simply want a fast fix.

“The solution is to build something, I don’t know, just build a road, a dike or a coastal belt so it doesn’t keep happening,” said Karminah.

“What can we do?” she added. “Please help me find a solution so the water doesn’t rise.”

Trump son hypes bitcoin on Hong Kong leg of Asia trip


By AFP
August 29, 2025


Eric Trump, son of the US president, urged a Hong Kong crowd to buy bitcoin during a trip to Asia where his crypto company is reportedly seeking acquisitions - Copyright AFP Vernon Yuen

Eric Trump, son of the US president, urged a crowd in Hong Kong on Friday to buy bitcoin during a trip to Asia where his crypto company is reportedly seeking acquisitions.

US cryptocurrency investors were major supporters of Donald Trump’s presidential campaign, contributing millions of dollars toward his victory in hopes of reversing the government’s scepticism toward the sector under his Democrat predecessor Joe Biden.

The US House of Representatives passed three landmark cryptocurrency bills last month, with Trump, 79, making several other moves to bolster the sector.

These regulatory changes have caused the value of bitcoin to soar, with the digital currency hitting a new peak above $124,500 in mid-August before retreating.

Eric Trump, 41, told a Hong Kong conference hall packed with crypto afficionados that bitcoin is the “greatest asset in the world”.

“There’s no question in my mind that bitcoin hits a million dollars,” he said at the Bitcoin Asia conference.

“The bitcoin community embraced my father unlike anything I had ever seen before, and I hope that’s paid off in spades, because we love this community, we believe in this community,” he added.

American Bitcoin, the bitcoin miner backed by Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr., is seeking acquisitions in Asia, the Financial Times reported this month.

“We’re about to go public on the NASDAQ very soon, coming up,” Eric Trump said on Friday.

Asked about US-China competition in digital assets, he said China was “a hell of a power” in the sector.

Eric Trump is set to attend a shareholder meeting of Japanese bitcoin treasury company Metaplanet on September 1, according to Bloomberg News, citing people familiar with the matter.

The US president and his family have been involved in a number of crypto endeavours that have inflated his wealth as his administration lends support to the sector.
Austria orders YouTube to give users access to their data


By AFP
August 29, 2025


Australia's Communications Minister Anika Wells said four-in-ten Australian children have reported viewing harmful content on YouTube, one of the most visited websites in the world. © AFP/File Lionel BONAVENTURE

Austria’s data protection authority said Friday that it has ordered YouTube to comply with EU regulations and respond to requests by users for access to data that it holds on them.

In 2019, prominent Austria-based privacy campaign group Noyb (None of Your Business) lodged complaints against eight online streaming services, including YouTube and Netflix, accusing them of “structural violations” of EU data regulations.

The complaint against YouTube was filed on behalf of an Austrian user with the country’s Data Protection Authority.

The regulator confirmed to AFP on Friday that it has “issued a decision… against Google LLC (YouTube)” regarding the suit brought by Noyb.

In their complaints, Noyb said the services violated the EU’s landmark General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) by not granting users access to data that companies store on them or information about how the data is used.

Google, which owns YouTube, “now has four weeks to comply with the decision but also has the option appeal it”, the NGO said in a statement Friday.

Noyb called the authority’s decision a “win” but regretted that it took the country’s regulator “five and a half years”.

“Making an access request should enable (users) to exercise… rights, such as the right to erasure or rectification” of their data, the group said, but due to delays that “becomes impossible”.

Google did not immediately responded to a request for comment from AFP.

Noyb has launched several legal cases against US technology giants such as Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, and Google, often prompting action from regulatory authorities over violations of the GDPR.

It has filed more than 800 complaints in various jurisdictions on behalf of internet users.
US Spirit Airlines files for bankruptcy again


By AFP
August 29, 2025


Spirit Airlines has filed for bankruptcy again, its second restructuring in 2025
 - Copyright AFP/File Brendan SMIALOWSKI

Budget US carrier Spirit Airlines said Friday that it will file for bankruptcy for the second time in a year, but will continue to fly, sell tickets and operate.

Spirit first filed for bankruptcy in November and announced in March that it had completed a restructuring deal with creditors to trim its debt by nearly $800 million.

With the new filing, the Florida-based company said it “expects to double down on its efforts to” redesign its network, “rightsize its fleet,” and pursue further cost efficiencies.

“The Chapter 11 process will provide Spirit the tools, time and flexibility to continue ongoing discussions with all of its lessors, financial creditors and other parties to implement a financial and operational transformation of the Company,” Spirit said in a statement.

In April, former CEO Ted Christie was replaced by Dave Davis, who joined Spirit from Sun Country Airlines.

“As we move forward, guests can continue to rely on Spirit to provide high-value travel options and connect them with the people and places that matter most,” said Dave Davis, Spirit’s president and CEO.

Discount airline Spirit boosted its capacity and market share in the post-Covid aviation market, but has faced increased competition from other carriers.

In 2022, competitor Frontier Airlines attempted a $2.9 billion merger with Spirit. Another rival, JetBlue, then made a potentially more lucrative offer, but the deal fell through after authorities cited antitrust concerns.
Trump moves to limit US stays of students, journalists


By AFP
August 28, 2025


Graduates gather as they attend commencement ceremony at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on May 29, 2025 - Copyright AFP/File Rick Friedman

President Donald Trump’s administration moved Thursday to impose stricter limits on how long foreign students and journalists can stay in the United States, the latest bid to tighten legal immigration in the country.

Under a proposed change, foreigners would not be allowed to stay for more than four years on student visas in the United States.

Foreign journalists would be limited to stays of just 240 days, although they could apply to extend by additional 240-day periods.

The United States, until now, has generally issued visas for the duration of a student’s educational program or a journalist’s assignment, although no non-immigrant visas are valid for more than 10 years.

The proposed changes were published in the Federal Register, initiating a short period for public comment before it can go into effect.

Trump’s Department of Homeland Security alleged that an unspecified number of foreigners were indefinitely extending their studies so they could remain in the country as “‘forever’ students.”

“For too long, past administrations have allowed foreign students and other visa holders to remain in the U.S. virtually indefinitely, posing safety risks, costing untold amount of taxpayer dollars and disadvantaging U.S citizens,” the department said in a press statement Wednesday.

The department did not explain how US citizens and taxpayers were hurt by international students, who according to Commerce Department statistics contributed more than $50 billion to the US economy in 2023.

The United States welcomed more than 1.1 million international students in the 2023-24 academic year, more than any other country, providing a crucial source of revenue as foreigners generally pay full tuition.

A group representing leaders of US colleges and universities denounced the latest move as a needless bureaucratic hurdle that intrudes on academic decision-making and could further deter potential students who would otherwise contribute to research and job creation.

“This proposed rule sends a message to talented individuals from around the world that their contributions are not valued in the United States,” said Miriam Feldblum, president and CEO of the Presidents’ Alliance on Higher Education and Immigration.

“This is not only detrimental to international students –- it also weakens the ability of US colleges and universities to attract top talent, diminishing our global competitiveness.”

The announcement came as universities were starting their academic years with many reporting lower enrollments of international students after earlier actions by the Trump administration.




CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M

Brazil police target network that siphoned billions from fuel sector


By AFP
August 28, 2025


Police raided Sao Paolo's Faria Lima Avenue, where many financial institutions are headquartered - Copyright AFP Tiziana FABI


Louis GENOT

Brazilian police launched a mega operation in several states Thursday to crush a criminal network that sold adulterated fuel to clients and concealed billions of dollars in earnings in cahoots with financial companies, officials said.

The group allegedly laundered money for the First Capital Command (PCC), one of the country’s most powerful gangs engaged in cocaine trafficking from South America to Europe, according to prosecutors.

The network is alleged to have hidden ill-gotten gains of some 52 billion reais (about $9.6 billion) in investment funds and fintech digital companies in four years to 2024, according to the Federal Revenue Service (RFB).

It controlled four refineries and allegedly diluted fuel products to increase yield and cheated clients with dispensers that supplied less fuel than indicated at the pump.

Irregularities were identified at more than 1,000 gas stations in ten states, according to officials.

The group is alleged to have controlled elements of fuel supply all the way from import, production, distribution and marketing to the end consumer, and had about 1,000 fuel delivery trucks of its own.

“Investigations indicate that the sophisticated scheme devised by the criminal organization, by laundering the proceeds of crime, generated significant profits in the fuel production chain,” the statement said.

In what Justice Minister Ricardo Lewandowski said was “one of the largest operations against organized crime in history,” some 1,400 agents were deployed Thursday to execute 350 search and seizure warrants targeting individuals and companies.

The operation was carried out in a dozen of Brazil’s 26 states, including Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo — the South American giant’s financial hub.

In the first hours, police arrested five people and seized 1,500 vehicles, 192 properties, two boats, and more than 300,000 reais ($55,000) in cash.

Brazilian police released images of a mass deployment of officers in Sao Paolo’s Faria Lima Avenue Thursday, where many financial institutions are headquartered.



– ‘Threatened with death’ –



According to the revenue service, the PCC controlled “at least 40 investment funds” worth about $5.5 billion used, among other things, to purchase ethanol plants to produce fuel sold at gas stations controlled by its members.

Some gas station owners who sold their establishments to PCC members, “did not receive the transaction amount and were threatened with death” if they insisted on payment, it said.

According to investigators, the PCC was also involved in illegally importing methanol, a “highly toxic and flammable” substance that was then mixed with ethanol, which Brazil produces mainly from sugar cane, and sold as car fuel.

One of the fintech companies implicated in the fraud acted as a “parallel bank” and received nearly 11,000 suspicious cash deposits in 2022 and 2023, according to the RFB.

The financial companies under investigation allegedly allowed clients to transfer money clandestinely, added the prosecutor’s office.

Organized crime represents an immense challenge for Brazil’s security forces, with a plethora of gangs involved in drug trafficking, illegal logging, extortion and other rackets.

Brazil is South America’s biggest producer of petroleum and other liquid fuels, and the ninth biggest in the world, according to a 2023 report of the US Energy Information Administration (EIA), based on 2021 data.

According to the International Energy Agency, it is the second biggest biofuels producer in the world.
CTHUHLU  CALLS

‘Perfect storm’: UK fishermen reel from octopus invasion



By AFP
August 27, 2025


Fisherman Chris Kelly, 32, shows octopus caught aboard his vessel in Plymouth Harbour, southwest England
- Copyright AFP Joe JACKSON


Joe JACKSON

When veteran fisherman Brian Tapper checked his 1,200 crab pots in waters off southwest England during this year’s crabbing season, he got a series of unwelcome surprises.

At first, in March and April, they were almost entirely empty. Then, starting in May, they were unexpectedly packed with octopuses, before sitting largely empty again over the last month or so.

It has been a similar story along the UK’s Devon and southern Cornwall coastline where the seas are warming, and an octopus bloom — the biggest in British waters in 75 years — has left the shellfish industry reeling.

The tentacled molluscs are notoriously voracious eaters, hoovering up crustaceans such as crab and shellfish.

Tapper’s wife has already shuttered her dockside crab processing factory due to the diminished catch, while he doubts he can keep his side of the business afloat.

“It’s like a perfect storm for us,” Tapper told AFP from Plymouth Harbour, where his three purpose-built crab fishing vessels are idled.

The 53-year-old estimates his catch is down by half, and risks dropping by four-fifths in 2025.

An 18-month marine heatwave in the region and beyond is blamed for causing the bloom in warm water-loving octopus.

Climate scientists say human activity, such as burning fossil fuels, is behind global warming which is driving up ocean temperatures.

“I’ve been fishing here 39 years and I’ve never seen octopus like this,” Tapper said.

“I’ve never seen an instant change like this. It’s so quick. They’re a plague.”



– ‘Scary’ –



Statistics from the Marine Management Organisation, a government agency, show UK fishermen landed more than 1,200 tonnes of octopus in the first six months this year.

That compares to less than 150 tonnes in the same period in 2023, and less than 80 tonnes in those months last year.

Meanwhile, landings of shellfish such as brown crab are down significantly in 2025.

Sue MacKenzie, whose Passionate About Fish firm sources produce from southwest England, said the octopus are “eating our indigenous species at a rate that nobody can anticipate — it’s quite scary”.

Decent market prices for octopus helped offset losses, but only until their numbers began dropping considerably in July.

“We’re incredibly worried about the impact on shellfish stocks. It’s really significant,” said Beshlie Pool, executive officer at the South Devon and Channel Shellfishermen cooperative association, which represents more than 50 different vessels.

“Some people have done incredibly well on octopus this year. But across our membership we’ve got some vessels who haven’t caught one octopus this whole season.”

Chris Kelly, who fishes “a bit of everything” from his seven-metre vessel “Shadow” using pots, nets and lines, has been among those getting good prices for the unexpected catch.

“But then we’re catching no lobsters, and then long-term, you’re thinking ‘what’s it going to do to the stocks?'” he said.



– Octopus on the menu –



The impact has rippled out to restaurants and food retailers, which have adapted by offering octopus instead of shellfish.

“This is the first year we’ve bought it,” said Caroline Bennett, whose Sole of Discretion company supplies direct-to-consumer food firms from Plymouth’s dockside.

“We didn’t have any crab at all to sell, and are now going a bit further down the coast for it.”

Meanwhile, local and national officials have helped commission an urgent study into the situation. An initial report is due in October.

Bryce Stewart, a University of Plymouth marine scientist leading the probe, noted past blooms in Britain — in 1950, the 1930s and 1899 — were all preceded by similarly “ideal” warmer-than-usual waters.

However, Stewart suspects octopuses are now breeding in local waters — an unprecedented situation that could also explain their sudden disappearance.

Both male and female Atlantic longarm octopus — which typically only live about 18 months — tend to die not long after breeding.

“They eat everything, they’re ferocious, and they start to breed. It’s like the ultimate live fast, die young life cycle,” he explained.

He said he is constantly asked if the octopuses are here to stay. His answer? “Probably.”

Tapper fears as much. “The crab won’t come back in my working lifetime,” he predicted.

“The reproduction of a crab would probably take five to 10 years to get to its marketable size, and I haven’t got five to 10 years (to) pay the bills.”
NGO says starving Gaza children too weak to cry


By AFP
August 27, 2025


Naeema, a 30-year-old Palestinian mother, carries her malnourished 2-year-old son Yazan as they stand in their damaged home in the Al-Shati refugee camp, west of Gaza City, on July 23, 2025 -
 Copyright AFP/File Omar

 AL-QATTAA

The head of Save the Children described in horrific detail Wednesday the slow agony of starving children in Gaza, saying they are so weak they do not cry.

Addressing a UN Security Council meeting on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the president of the international charity, Inger Ashing, said famine — declared by the UN last week to be happening in Gaza — is not just a dry technical term.

“When there is not enough food, children become acutely malnourished, and then they die slowly and painfully. This, in simple terms, is what famine is,” said Ashing.

She went on to describe what happens when children die of hunger over the course of several weeks, as the body first consumes its own fat to survive and when that is gone, literally consumes itself as it eats muscles and vital organs.

“Yet our clinics are almost silent. Now, children do not have the strength to speak or even cry out in agony. They lie there, emaciated, quite literally wasting away,” said Ashing.

She said aid groups have been warning loudly that famine was coming as Israel prevented food and other essentials from entering Gaza over the course of two years of war triggered by the Hamas attack of October 2023.

“Everyone in this room has a legal and moral responsibility to act to stop this atrocity,” said Ashing.

The United Nations officially declared famine in Gaza on Friday, blaming what it called systematic obstruction of aid by Israel during more than 22 months of war.

A UN-backed hunger monitor called the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification Initiative (IPC) said famine was affecting 500,000 people in the Gaza governorate, which covers about a fifth of the Palestinian territory including Gaza City.

The IPC projected that the famine would expand to cover around two-thirds of Gaza by the end of September.

Israel on Wednesday demanded that the IPC retract the report, calling it “fabricated.”

After Wednesday’s Security Council meeting 14 members — all but the United States, Israel’s main ally — issued a joint declaration expressing “profound alarm and distress” over the declaration of famine and saying they trusted the IPC’s work and methodology.

“The use of starvation as a weapon of war is clearly prohibited under international humanitarian law. Famine in Gaza must be stopped immediately,” the declaration says.

 Climate-driven wildfires reversing pollution progress in N. America: study



By AFP
August 28, 2025


A wildfire burns on Mount Underwood near Port Alberni, on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, on August 12, 2025 
- Copyright AFP/File Colby Rex O'Neill


Issam AHMED

Global air pollution is worsening, with the United States and Canada experiencing the sharpest increases due to record-breaking, climate-supercharged wildfires that are undoing decades of progress, a study said Thursday.

The Air Quality Life Index (AQLI) annual report uses satellite data to assess levels of particulate matter worldwide, with records dating back to 1998. It translates concentrations into years of life expectancy lost, based on peer-reviewed science.

“I just don’t think this can be repeated enough: particulate matter remains the greatest external threat to human health on the planet, period,” Michael Greenstone, an economics professor at the University of Chicago who co-created AQLI, told AFP.

“It’s worse than tobacco smoke. It’s worse than child and maternal malnutrition. It’s worse than road accidents. It’s worse than HIV-AIDS, worse than anything in terms of losses.”

According to the report, Canada’s catastrophic 2023 wildfire season drove a more than 50 percent rise in particulate levels compared to 2022, while the United States saw a 20 percent increase.

Although the data currently only extends until 2023, the trend is likely to have continued as both countries face intensifying wildfire seasons, driven by warming temperatures and drought fueled by human-caused greenhouse gas emissions.

The year 2025 already ranks as Canada’s second worst wildfire season.

“The very surprising finding to me is that in parts of the world, certainly Canada, certainly the US and it looks like parts of Europe as well, air pollution is like the zombie that we thought we had killed, and now it’s back,” said Greenstone.

While the most polluted counties in the US have historically been found in California, that’s now shifting to states downwind of Canadian wildfires including Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio but also further south.

More than half of Canadians breathed air with pollution above their national standard of 8.8 micrograms per cubic meter — a dramatic shift from less than five percent in the previous five years.

The hardest-hit regions were provinces of Northwest Territories, British Columbia, and Alberta, where particulate pollution levels rivaled those of Bolivia and Honduras, shortening lifespans by two years.

Globally, fine particulate levels — defined as 2.5 micrometers and smaller — were up from 23.7 micrograms per cubic meter in 2022 to 24.1 in 2023. This is nearly five times greater than the World Health Organization guideline of five.

Latin America saw its highest level since 1998, with Bolivia the worst affected country.

In South Asia — the world’s most polluted zone — pollution increased by 2.8 percent. Even China saw a small rebound of 2.8 percent after a decade of steady declines following under its “War on Pollution.”

There were some bright spots: within the European Union, particulate concentrations fell by six percent, while in Central and West Africa, they dropped by eight percent.


Wildfire mitigation strategies can cut destruction by half, study finds



A new UC Berkeley-led study demonstrates how home hardening and defensible space can have a major impact on wildfire risk.



University of California - Berkeley





Since January’s wildfires flattened entire neighborhoods in Los Angeles, displacing 12,900 households and causing an estimated $30 billion in losses, California’s many other fire-prone communities have been eager for solutions to better protect themselves.

new UC Berkeley-led study provides these communities and their lawmakers with actionable data on how wildfire mitigation strategies can reduce the destructiveness of wildfires by as much as 50%.

One option to reduce wildfire damage is home hardening, which describes a variety of structural modifications that homeowners can use to make their houses less susceptible to fire. These include using fire-resistant siding and roofing materials, covering vents to prevent embers from entering the home, and upgrading to double-paned tempered glass windows that are less likely to break in a fire. Another strategy, defensible space, refers to a vegetation-free “buffer zone” around a home or structure. Because renovating existing homes is not always easy or cheap, data on the effectiveness of these measures is key to justifying future investment. 

In the study, the researchers used state-of-the-art wildfire simulation tools, combined with real-world data from five of the most destructive fires that occurred in California before 2022, to quantify the impact of these strategies.

It found that home hardening and defensible space together can double the number of homes and other structures that survive a blaze. Notably, they also demonstrated that just removing the vegetation within a 5-foot perimeter of homes — the subject of California’s proposed Zone Zero regulations — could reduce structure losses by 17%.

“I view this as really powerful evidence that the mitigation measures that are available to us,  hardening and defensible space, actually have some real-world effectiveness,” said study senior author Michael Gollner, associate professor of mechanical engineering at Berkeley. 

These strategies may further prevent loss and death by slowing the spread of fire, giving residents more time to evacuate and emergency responders more time to arrive at the scene, Gollner said.

“We can't always change the spacing between structures or the exposure from flames and embers,” Gollner said. “But even within those limitations, we still have the power to cut the destruction in half, if not more. That is very powerful.” 

The study was published online today (Aug. 28) in the journal Nature Communications, and was supported by grants from the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) through the Forest Health program, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation and the National Science Foundation. 

Investment in mitigation pays off

To measure the impact of wildfire mitigation strategies, a research team led by Gollner and Berkeley postdoctoral scholar Maryam Zamanialaei took advantage of CAL FIRE’s unique damage inspection database (DINS), which includes data from on-the-ground surveys of all structures that were damaged or destroyed in major California wildfires since 2013. The study focused on the 2017 Tubbs and Thomas fires, 2018 Camp fire, 2019 Kincade fire and 2020 Glass fires. To build a comprehensive data set, researchers then added information from a variety of other geospatial sources to better define the spacing between each building, the construction materials used and the density of vegetation surrounding each structure. 

A unique aspect of the study was the use of state-of-art simulation tools to model how wildfire might have spread through each community, allowing researchers to account for fire exposure to each structure. 

By applying advanced machine learning techniques to the combined dataset, they developed a data-driven model that predicts structure survivability with 82% accuracy and disentangles how factors such as structure spacing, fire exposure, construction materials and defensible space combine to influence risk. 

“We wanted to identify the risk factors that make a structure susceptible to loss,” Zamanialaei said.

“It’s possible that a well-protected home may have a low chance of survival because of everything around it,” Gollner added. “The model allows us to tune in to see the impact of each factor and how they interplay.”

Their research identified structure separation distance as the most influential factor driving structure loss, especially in densely built areas where wildfire is spread from building to building. Flame length also emerged as a critical contributor.

In addition, construction features such as exterior siding and window materials substantially contributed to the vulnerability of structures. The findings highlight how building arrangement and exposure to flames, combined with ignition resistance, all contribute to wildfire risk. 

However, for mitigation strategies to work best, they need to be adopted by everyone in a fire-prone community, Gollner said. As the fierce debates over Zone Zero regulations illustrate, it can be challenging to cultivate the social and political will to implement these changes on a large scale. 

“Much of what you can do to prevent these fires from spreading through the whole community happens on an individual's property and depends on what your neighbor does,” Gollner said. “This is a really challenging social, economic and political problem that requires a lot of groups working together.”

He hopes that the study further highlights the importance — and positive impact — of this challenging work. 

“We need to justify the investments we're making in mitigation, and I was glad to see that for many of them, we do see significant payback in terms of risk reduction,” Gollner said.

Additional co-authors of the study include Daniel San Martin of the Universidad Técnica Federico Santa María; Maria Theodori and Dwi Purnomo of UC Berkeley; Ali Tohidi, Arnaud Trouvé and Yiren Qin of the University of Maryland; and Chris Lautenberger of Cloudfire.