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  1. To those seeking to blame this on the exam boards: no, this nonsense didn't come from them, but was developed independently by the BBC. I think, as licence payers, we have a right to know how, why and by whom.

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  2. Retweeted
    7 hours ago
    Replying to

    The test on the page is also awful - it has one question on GHG emissions from landfill sites. Seven of eight Q are about natural climate variability, historical climate, or measuring tools. Even the Q on when temperatures started rapidly increasing says nothing about humans.

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  3. Well done Twitter - the BBC has now dropped that ridiculous list of "positive" aspects of our global catastrophe. But two questions remain: why did it think this fossil fuel propaganda was an appropriate teaching tool, and why did it ignore previous requests to change it?

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  4. Not to mention "new tourist destinations becoming available". Birmingham-on-Sea?

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  5. And, apparently, "warmer temperatures could lead to healthier outdoor lifestyles". FFS

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  6. Here is one of the "positive" aspects of the collapse of our life support systems it lists: "more resources, such as oil, becoming available in places such as Alaska and Siberia when the ice melts". Are they actually trying to misdirect and bamboozle GCSE students?

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  7. The BBC has a long and disgraceful history of both-sidesing the greatest threat to life on Earth. Every so often, it puts out a memo claiming it has got its act together. Then it fails again. People who make this content believe "neutrality" = impartiality. It's the opposite.

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  8. This is what is teaching our children about climate breakdown. I'm sorry, but it's an absolute disgrace. You could come away thinking: "on balance, it sounds pretty good". It could have been written by Exxon. (h/t: )

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  9. Retweeted
    Jun 30

    So, was delighted to co-write 'Own The Skies' with illustrated by for the collection. Which you can pre-order here:

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  10. Jun 30

    These new rules are the barest minimum - in fact, woefully inadequate to stop the pollution killing our rivers. If livestock farmers cannot stay in business without poisoning the living world, governments should pay them to get out and do something else.

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  11. Retweeted
    Jun 30
    Replying to

    Yes it was all done manually but we were able to restore it

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  12. Jun 30

    Some photos of the astonishing restoration works, done by hand, by the people of Tigray. Who are now being deliberately starved by the Ethiopian and Eritrean armies.

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  13. Jun 29

    Every death from hunger is on them. A great crime - perhaps the greatest anywhere so far this century - is being perpetrated. And, just as in the approach to the 1984 famine, we look the other way. Why isn't this in the headlines, everywhere?

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  14. Jun 29

    And this beautifully restored, revegetated land is now being attacked from all sides. The Ethiopian and Eritrean armies have destroyed grain stores, turned back food convoys, killed oxen, stolen farm implements and ordered farmers on pain of death not to till their fields.

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  15. Jun 29

    The same thing has happened across the region. Every fit person provides 20 days of community labour per year to restore the land. The programme has a strong sense of local ownership and enthusiasm. It's used around the world as an example of best practice.

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  16. Jun 29

    These are not great photos, but they show the same gulley before, during and after restoration. All done by hand.

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  17. Jun 29

    Because this restoration required a vast amount of human labour. It simply couldn't have happened with a small population. People have shifted, by hand, on steep slopes, millions of tonnes of rock and soil, making terraces, bunds and ponds, stopping gulley and sheet erosion.

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  18. Jun 29

    Tigray is greener now than at any time since 1868 (when records began). It has more wildlife, more trees, more vegetation, less erosion, better crop yields. And the indicators are best where the rural population is greatest. Why?

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  19. Jun 29

    Let's not hear a word from the Malthusians who might be tempted to blame this manufactured famine on "population". The rise in crop production in Tigray has easily outstripped the rise in human numbers. Fascinatingly, land degradation has fallen as the population has risen.

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  20. Jun 29

    The Nobel committee says the rules forbid it to rescind its prizes. But rules are made by humans and can be changed by humans. Yet again, it finds itself complicit in great crimes, by lending credibility to those who oversee them.

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