How warming soils mean weaker antibiotics
Last year, global investment in the clean energy transition hit a record $2.3 trillion. Thatâs up a full 8% from 2024, according to BloombergNEFâs latest annual report. Electric vehicles and charging infrastructure led the way at $893 billion, up 21% from the year before. Renewable investment added $690 billion. Grid investment, $483 billion. And for the second consecutive year, clean energy investment outpaced fossil fuel investment, with the gap between them widening. Even in the US, where federal policy has been working against the transition, investment still rose 3.5%. The market is moving forwardâwith or without policy. Is it enough? Not yet. A few years ago, growth was fasterâin 2021, these investments grew by 27% year on year, compared to 8% this past year. Growth needs to accelerate, not coast. But hereâs what this report tells us: The transition is real, itâs resilient, and itâs happening despite political tailwinds. BloombergNEF forecasts that average annual investment in the global energy transition will hit $2.9 trillion yearly by 2031. Simply put, the energy transition is at hand. Climate change may be making antibiotics less effective. New research suggests that warming temperatures and drought could be quietly fueling antibiotic resistance in the soil beneath our feet. In one long-term experiment, soils warmed by just a few degrees showed about a 25% increase in antibiotic resistance genes over time. How does soil connect to the medicines we rely on? As soils heat up, microbes adapt to survive, and resistance traits can spread alongside those advantages. Add drought, and the effect can intensify. As water disappears, antibiotics become more concentrated, killing off weaker bacteria and giving resistant strains room to thrive. That matters because antibiotic resistance makes infections harderâor sometimes impossibleâto treat. Illnesses we think of as routine can become dangerous, linger longer, or require stronger drugs with more side effects. Even modern medicine depends on antibiotics to keep procedures like C-sections, chemotherapy, and transplants safe. This is one more way climate change is reshaping the systems we depend on in ways weâre only beginning to understand. Earth Day may be over, but the chance to connect with the world around us isnât. The Nature Conservancy has created a free Earth Day guide filled with simple, everyday ways to get outside and notice nature again. Learn more about bird-watching close to home, planting for pollinators, or building a scavenger hunt with kids. My personal favourite is finding new ways to âwander and wonder.â These arenât big, complicated actions; theyâre small moments that help us reconnect with the places we live. They also remind us why itâs worth protecting. And when something matters to us, weâre far more likely to act. So, pick one thing, and give it a try this week! IF YOUâRE IN THE UK/IRELAND, THERE ARE SEVERAL CHANCES TO SEE ME IN PERSON NEXT WEEK Tues May 5 at 11am BST - ICARUS seminar at Maynooth University - in person; ICARUS Seminar Room, Laraghbryan House Tues May 5 at 2:15 BST - Kitchen Talk - virtual and in person at Trocaire, Maynooth, Ireland Wed May 6 at 2:30pm BST - McCosh Lecture on Finding Hope in the Climate Crisis - in person at Queenâs University Belfast: Canada Room & Council Chamber, Lanyon Building Fri May 8 at 2pm BST - Why Climate Science is Not Enough at UCL in London - in person; Archaeology G6 Lecture Theatre, University College London, 31-34 Gordon Square
Send this story to anyone â or drop the embed into a blog post, Substack, Notion page. Every play sends rev-share back to Talking Climate.