Thursday, March 5, 2026
29.7 C
Belize

Latest Article

How the High Seas Treaty Impacts Climate Change and Biodiversity

Belize became the first Caribbean country to ratify the agreement, helping push the historic ocean governance treaty into force. By Climate Spotlight The first legally...

Mum and Daughter Team Finds Largest Coral Colony on the Great Barrier Reef

by Climate Spotlight Recently, citizen scientist Sophie Kalkowshi-Pope and her mother, Jan Pope, stumbled upon a single coral colony spanning 111 meters during a routine...
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Can Technology Really Help The Caribbean Recover Faster After Disasters?

By: Chalsey Gill Anthony, Environmental Communicator, on behalf of Caribbean Policy Development Centre (CPDC)   In the face of a disaster,...

Belize moves to pass its first Carbon Market Bill

The Carbon Market Bill passed its second and third readings and now moves to the Senate. It is a framework...

COP30: Key outcomes agreed at the UN climate talks in Belém

By Carbon Brief A voluntary plan to curb fossil fuels, a goal to triple adaptation finance and new efforts to...

Why Are Women and Youth Still Mentioned Separately in Climate Conversations?

By: Chalsey Gill Anthony, Environmental Communicator, on behalf of Caribbean Policy Development Centre (CPDC)   When major floods hit Guyana in...

Study finds important Nassau grouper spawning site in Belize near collapse

The Nassau grouper (Epinephelus striatus), a large-bodied top predator, was once the most abundant and commercially important fish in...

‘Marine Protected Areas are Everybody’s Business’

Over the course of six months, Climate Spotlight spoke to representatives from 6 of 7 of Belize’s Marine Protected Area co-managers to learn more about their job and what they believe it will take to meet Belize’s ambitious and contractual goal of expanding its marine protected areas to 30% by the end of 2026.