Skip to main contentSkip to navigation

James Randerson

James Randerson is a former Guardian science and news journalist

June 2017

  • Tim the elephant.

    Elephant conservation
    'If we stopped poaching tomorrow, elephants would still be in big trouble'

    Poaching is the most immediate, urgent threat to Africa’s elephants. But even if that can be tackled, they will have to fight humans for land, food and water

May 2017

  • hybrid perovskite solar cells

    Rethinking business
    Spray on and printable: what's next for the solar panel market?

    Thin film technology is touted as a gamechanger for the solar panel market, but it’s not without drawbacks

April 2017

  • A wave-power generator

    Innovation
    Marine power: can UK companies rule the waves?

    Despite past failures and high costs, wave power companies are pushing ahead with research trials

December 2016

  • Donald Trump speaks at rally in Baton Rouge

    Nicholas Stern: Donald Trump may not be as bad for the environment as feared

    Environmentalists should be alert but not pessimistic over the impact of Trump’s presidency, says the leading climate economist

May 2016

  • How to be a science journalist with James Randerson.

    Guardian Masterclasses blog
    James Randerson on science journalism and Darwinism: 'The survival of the fittest is replicated on the page'

    The Guardian’s former assistant national news editor gives a taster of what he’ll discuss at his masterclass on science journalism, including the importance of putting the reader first and finding intriguing parallels between the news landscape and the natural world

December 2015

  • The front of the Eiffel Tower bears the message 'Human Energy' as part of a light installation entitled 'Human Energy' by artist Yann Toma drawing attention to human-generated power, on the sidelines of the COP21 Climate Conference, in Paris, France, 06 December 2015. EPA/IAN LANGSDON

    Guardian Live
    Paris COP21: Can politics save the world? - Guardian Live event

  • The Eiffel tower is lit up with a reference to the tougher global warming target of 1.5C that is expected to appear in the final draft Paris climate text.

    Paris climate talks: governments adopt historic deal – as it happened

November 2015

  • A woman holds a balloon as activists participate in the Global Climate March  in Berlin, Germany.

    Global climate march 2015: hundreds of thousands march around the world – as it happened

  • Cambodian fishermen set out at dawn on the Mekong river.

    Keep it in the ground
    The Mekong river: stories from the heart of the climate crisis

October 2015

  • The Nobel Prize in chemistry has been won by Tomas Lindahl, Paul Modrich, and Aziz Sancar.

    Nobel prize for chemistry: Lindahl, Modrich and Sancar win for DNA research

    Tomas Lindahl, Paul Modrich and Aziz Sancar honoured for mapping and explaining how cells repair their DNA and safeguard the genetic information
  • Takaaki Kajita and Arthur McDonald

    Kajita and McDonald win Nobel physics prize for work on neutrinos

    Takaaki Kajita and Arthur McDonald win for discovery of neutrino oscillations, which show that neutrinos have mass
  • Nevada Solar One at sunrise, Boulder City, Mojave Desert, California

    Keep it in the ground
    A story of hope: the Guardian launches phase II of its climate change campaign

    James Randerson
    With crucial climate talks on the horizon, Keep it in the ground turns its focus to hope for the future – the power to change and the solar revolution. Join us and help make that change happen

September 2015

  • US president Barack Obama at the Glacier conference in Anchorage, Alaska.

    Obama's approval of Arctic drilling 'undermines his climate message'

    US president’s call for action on climate change is at odds with letting Shell drill for oil in the Arctic, says Bill McKibben

June 2015

  • An oil rig in Guanabara Bay, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

    Carbon bombs
    Brazil's gamble on deep water oil

  • A labourer works at a coal factory in Baicheng county, northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, in this January 7, 2007 file photo. Chinese coal miners are raising spot prices in a domestic market struggling to recover from seven-year lows, desperate for an edge in annual negotiations to supply power plants, key buyers in the world's biggest consumer of coal, industry sources say. REUTERS/China Daily/Files (CHINA - Tags: ENERGY BUSINESS EMPLOYMENT) CHINA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN CHINA
environmentdaily

    Carbon bombs
    The coal boom choking China

April 2015

  • 140x84 trailpic for Hi Bill: Keep It In The Ground campaign

    Keep it in the ground
    Keep it in the ground: Bill Gates, help stop climate change – video

  • 180,000 campaign interactive

    Keep it in the ground
    Join our tweetstorm for the Guardian's climate change campaign

March 2015

  • Hundreds of 350.org activists brave the rain in Melbourne, Australia ,to spell out their message loud and clear on Global Divestment day,  14 February 2015.

    Keep it in the ground
    Join the Guardian's climate change campaign

    Join us in urging the world’s two biggest charitable funds to move their money out of fossil fuels

November 2014

  • First image from the Rosetta mission's Philae lander

    Across the universe
    Rosetta mission: Esa weighs options for moving Philae lander – as it happened

  • Philae's CIVA instrument captured this image of its landing site

    Philae lander sends back first ever image from comet

About 997 results for James Randerson
1234...
  翻译: