Environment 2 April 2026 - 17 May 2026

Hawkins Shares Move as Water-Treatment Play Gets Attention Wednesday

Hawkins Shares Move as Water-Treatment Play Gets Attention Wednesday

Hawkins, Inc. shares traded higher Wednesday, with the Nasdaq stock last seen at $158.64, up $1.70. Investors had weighed growth in the chemical supplier’s water-treatment segment against higher costs from deals. The most recent trade, according to market data, was at 5:35 p.m. EDT. Ticker action turned positive as U.S. stocks pushed to new highs. The S&P 500 was just above flat, up less than 0.1%. The Dow rose 0.4%, while the Nasdaq Composite edged 0.1% higher. Profitable mid-cap industrial and materials stocks got a lift.
May 28, 2026
Lynas Rare Earths Faces a Monday Test After 7.7% Slide as China Curbs Keep Sector in Play

Lynas Rare Earths Faces a Monday Test After 7.7% Slide as China Curbs Keep Sector in Play

Lynas Rare Earths heads into Monday’s ASX session under pressure after a sharp late-week selloff, even as fresh global deal activity keeps investors focused on non-China rare-earth supply. The ASX cash market was still closed at the dateline; normal trading in Sydney runs from 09:59:45 to 16:00. The stock closed at A$17.95 on Friday, unchanged on the day after touching A$17.77, with 4.20 million shares traded. Its heavier move came on Thursday, when it fell 9.8%, leaving the week’s loss well ahead of the broader market’s decline.
May 17, 2026
Shell Plc Reveals $23.8 Billion Government Payments Before AGM Climate Vote

Shell Plc Reveals $23.8 Billion Government Payments Before AGM Climate Vote

Shell Plc reported $23.84 billion in payments to governments for 2025, a new tally of tax, royalty, and production remittances tied to its vast oil and gas operations, just ahead of a high-profile shareholder meeting. Timing comes into play here. Shell’s annual general meeting is set for May 19 in London, where a Follow This climate resolution will go to a vote. Investors are being asked how Shell’s plan stacks up if oil and gas demand drops. The company, though, is telling shareholders to vote it down.
May 14, 2026
Glencore plc Faces Colombia Pressure Over Cerrejón Coal Mine Closure Talks

Glencore plc Faces Colombia Pressure Over Cerrejón Coal Mine Closure Talks

Colombia’s government is turning up the heat on Glencore plc, urging the miner to kick off formal negotiations about eventually shutting down Cerrejón. Authorities want Glencore at the table with officials and local leaders in La Guajira, where the vast coal mine has become a flashpoint over jobs, public funds, and Colombia’s push for an energy transition. The Ministry of Mines and Energy issued its request on May 8. According to Reuters, neither Glencore nor Cerrejón responded to requests for comment. The 2034 deadline, once a distant marker, is now front and center in political debates. Glencore still holds the concession at Cerrejón, securing its mining rights for years yet, but the ministry wants negotiations focused on jobs, retraining workers,
May 9, 2026
Greenland Ice Melt Is Surging Sixfold — Why Scientists Say Sea-Level Risk Is Rising

Greenland Ice Melt Is Surging Sixfold — Why Scientists Say Sea-Level Risk Is Rising

Barcelona—May 7, 2026, 21:04 CEST. Greenland’s ice sheet is now seeing extreme meltwater production at a pace six times higher than in 1990, according to new research led by the University of Barcelona. Nearly all the most intense melt events have happened since 2000, the study reports. Published in Nature Communications, the findings show that extreme summer melt episodes have grown in frequency, scale, and intensity.
May 7, 2026
Norway Reopens Three North Sea Gas Fields, Exposing Europe’s Gas Dilemma

Norway Reopens Three North Sea Gas Fields, Exposing Europe’s Gas Dilemma

Norway has signed off on plans to restart production at three North Sea gas fields that have been shuttered for years, targeting a boost to European supply as the region looks to replace Russian gas amid war and supply disruptions. According to the Energy Ministry, redevelopment of the Albuskjell, Vest Ekofisk, and Tommeliten Gamma fields is moving ahead, with first gas projected for late 2028. Timing is key here: since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Norway has taken over as Europe’s top pipeline gas supplier. Tensions in the Middle East have only sharpened concerns about energy security. “Norwegian oil and gas output was ‘an important contribution to energy security in Europe,’” Energy Minister Terje Aasland said, emphasizing that
May 7, 2026
Shell Plc Bets Bigger On Gulf Of Mexico As Ineos Tie-Up Puts Fort Sumter Back In Play

Shell Plc Bets Bigger On Gulf Of Mexico As Ineos Tie-Up Puts Fort Sumter Back In Play

Shell Plc and Ineos Energy are moving forward with oil and gas exploration projects close to Shell’s Appomattox platform in the Gulf of Mexico, The Times reported. That includes ongoing work at the Fort Sumter discovery and plans for a potential new exploration well, which could be drilled before the decade wraps up. The effort comes as Shell looks to sharpen its U.S. offshore strategy, landing just ahead of its first-quarter earnings release. Timing is a key issue here. Shell CEO Wael Sawan faces mounting demands to clarify how the company—the biggest in Europe by oil and gas market value—intends to replenish its shrinking reserves without compromising hefty cash returns. Back in February, Reuters flagged that Shell’s reserve life had
May 4, 2026
Lynas Rare Earths CEO Flags Texas Risk as U.S. Supply Push Enters New Phase

Lynas Rare Earths CEO Flags Texas Risk as U.S. Supply Push Enters New Phase

Lynas Rare Earths CEO Amanda Lacaze downplayed the company’s U.S. rare-earth supply agreement, describing it as “important” but saying it doesn't rank among their top five contracts. Speaking with TIME on Sunday, Lacaze framed the deal as a standard customer contract, not a government partnership. She also flagged “significant uncertainty” around the fate and structure of the proposed Texas processing plant. The stakes are higher these days as rare earths shift out of mining obscurity and land squarely in the spotlight of industrial security. These metals—indispensable in tiny doses—turn up in electric cars, personal tech, and military hardware. The magnets built from them wind up everywhere: household appliances, F-35 fighter jets, you name it.
May 3, 2026
Akosombo Dam Flood Alert: VRA Moves as Ada East Flags 2,000 Riverbank Structures

Akosombo Dam Flood Alert: VRA Moves as Ada East Flags 2,000 Riverbank Structures

The Volta River Authority is ramping up emergency measures for areas downstream of the Akosombo and Kpong dams, following new warnings about flood risk and the discovery of over 2,000 illegal structures lining the riverbanks in Ada East. This renewed effort puts the spotlight on Ghana’s dam spill protocols, land-use controls, and alert systems as heavier rains loom. Ghana’s weather agency is projecting heavier-than-usual rainfall between April and June for the East Coast and nearby inland regions—Accra and Tema among them—heightening flood and flash flood risks. GMet has called on district authorities to revisit planning permits and construction approvals in flood-prone and low-lying zones.
April 29, 2026
NatWest Climate Revolt: Why Tuesday’s AGM Could Test Its Chair

NatWest Climate Revolt: Why Tuesday’s AGM Could Test Its Chair

NatWest Group Plc shareholders are set for a showdown this week, with activists urging a vote against chair Rick Haythornthwaite after the bank tweaked its fossil-fuel lending policy. The row puts Tuesday’s annual general meeting in the spotlight, as investors weigh just how tough they’ll get when banks alter climate commitments but stick with net-zero language. Timing’s key here. NatWest lines up its AGM for 11 a.m. Tuesday, April 28, at Gogarburn in Edinburgh—meaning shareholders will confront the dispute head-on, not just watch a policy back-and-forth from afar.
April 27, 2026
Lynas Rare Earths Becomes the Pentagon’s China Hedge as Malaysia Plant Takes Center Stage

Lynas Rare Earths Becomes the Pentagon’s China Hedge as Malaysia Plant Takes Center Stage

Kuantan, Malaysia, April 27, 2026, 03:11 MYT The Pentagon is now looking to Lynas Rare Earths Limited’s facility in Malaysia for its supply of heavy rare earths, as reported by The Wall Street Journal. The Australian company has started processing materials like samarium, terbium, and dysprosium there—elements vital for high-temperature magnets in defense and industrial equipment. Traditionally, refining these minerals has been concentrated in China.
April 26, 2026
Severn Trent Stock Defies FTSE Slide as £15 Billion Water Plan Faces Results Test

Severn Trent Stock Defies FTSE Slide as £15 Billion Water Plan Faces Results Test

Severn Trent Plc shares edged higher on Friday, standing out in a weaker London market as investors looked ahead to the UK water utility’s full-year results next month. The stock rose 0.13% to 3,153 pence, while the FTSE 100 fell 0.75%, AJ Bell data showed. That small gain matters because it came on a risk-off day for UK equities. The FTSE 100 closed down 0.8% at 10,379.08 and posted its first weekly decline in five weeks, as investors weighed oil, geopolitics and warnings from the Bank of England about pressure on global share prices, Reuters reported.
April 26, 2026
United Utilities Group PLC’s £34m River Irwell Works Put Rising Water Bills to the Test

United Utilities Group PLC’s £34m River Irwell Works Put Rising Water Bills to the Test

United Utilities Group PLC is moving forward with more than £34 million worth of sewer and storm-tank upgrades across Bury, Prestwich and Whitefield. The local work carries weight beyond the region, putting Britain’s water industry to the test: can steeper bills actually deliver cleaner rivers? According to the company, these projects aim to reduce the frequency that storm overflows — those pressure-release outlets for excess wastewater and rain when the sewers can’t cope — spill into the River Irwell and its tributaries. Timing is crucial here. With the 2025-30 investment cycle already started, water companies now face intensified scrutiny—not just from regulators, but from politicians and customers fed up with sewage spills. United Utilities has laid out a £13 billion
April 26, 2026
United Utilities Group PLC’s £34 Million River Irwell Cleanup Comes With a Bill-Payer Test

United Utilities Group PLC’s £34 Million River Irwell Cleanup Comes With a Bill-Payer Test

United Utilities Group PLC has kicked off water-quality projects topping £34 million across Bury, Prestwich and Whitefield, targeting the company’s promise to cut storm overflow discharges into the River Irwell and its tributaries. These overflow sites, designed to relieve pressure during heavy rainfall, have drawn scrutiny from regulators and locals alike. Timing is key here. Even as Ofwat’s 2025-30 price review is set to push customer costs higher, figures from the Consumer Council for Water reveal United Utilities’ average household bill jumping to £585 by 2029-30, up from £442 in 2024-25, excluding inflation.
April 24, 2026
Severn Trent Plc Faces Fresh Test as Shropshire Water Outages Hit Amid Bill Hikes

Severn Trent Plc Faces Fresh Test as Shropshire Water Outages Hit Amid Bill Hikes

Some Severn Trent Water customers in the TF6 and WV15 areas of Telford and Bridgnorth lost water or saw pressure drop on Friday, after two pump failures caused yet another headache for Severn Trent Plc. Reports included discoloured water, outages, and low pressure. Engineers were dispatched to reset the equipment once Severn Trent pinpointed the issue, according to Shropshire Live. Timing is key here. Water companies across England and Wales are pushing bills higher, aiming to cover a £104 billion investment plan running through 2030. The government, for its part, has criticized the current state of the privatised sector—calling it broken—and is vowing stricter checks on infrastructure. Looking at the numbers from Water UK, Severn Trent Water’s typical household bill
April 24, 2026
Rio Tinto plc’s ERA Court Fight Puts Ranger Mine Cleanup Back in Focus

Rio Tinto plc’s ERA Court Fight Puts Ranger Mine Cleanup Back in Focus

Energy Resources of Australia said Friday that Rio Tinto’s push to buy out minority shareholders is still with the Federal Court, keeping legal uncertainty hanging over the shuttered Ranger uranium mine in the Northern Territory. The proposed compulsory acquisition—Rio’s attempt to squeeze out the last holdouts—hit a hurdle after objections surpassed the legal threshold, so court sign-off is still pending. Investors are watching closely as Rio pushes to boost production and hold costs in check, all while managing its aging assets. Earlier this week, the company posted a 9% increase in copper-equivalent output from a year earlier—this metric translates all commodity production into copper terms—and left its main 2026 guidance where it was.
April 24, 2026
BP Shareholder Revolt: Climate Vote Blow Puts New CEO Meg O’Neill on the Spot

BP Shareholder Revolt: Climate Vote Blow Puts New CEO Meg O’Neill on the Spot

BP PLC’s new execs took a hit at the company’s annual general meeting, with shareholders rejecting two resolutions the board had supported—putting fresh scrutiny on Chair Albert Manifold and CEO Meg O’Neill. This vote landed at a crucial moment for O’Neill and Manifold, marking their first big public challenge as they work to move BP back toward oil and gas after pulling away from a wider green-energy push that proved expensive. What started as a climate fight has become a governance issue: who gets to question BP, and just how much information the company owes its investors.
April 24, 2026
Lynas Rare Earths Revenue Jumps 115% as U.S., Japan Lock In Non-China Supply

Lynas Rare Earths Revenue Jumps 115% as U.S., Japan Lock In Non-China Supply

Lynas Rare Earths Ltd delivered gross sales revenue of A$265 million in the March quarter, jumping 115% from the same period a year ago and marking its highest result since late 2022. Buyers continued to seek rare earths outside China, keeping demand robust, the Australian miner said, as customers aimed to lock in non-Chinese supply chains. Timing is key here. The U.S. and allied nations are working to loosen China’s grip on the critical minerals trade, a sector it’s dominated for years. U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said this week that partners should expect to incur a "national security premium" for minerals that don’t come from China. Meanwhile, new Chinese customs figures show U.S. imports of Chinese rare-earth magnets dropped
April 24, 2026
HSBC Holdings Plc Faces New Climate Accounting Fight as Investors Push UK Watchdog

HSBC Holdings Plc Faces New Climate Accounting Fight as Investors Push UK Watchdog

Institutional investors are urging Britain’s Financial Reporting Council to scrutinize HSBC Holdings Plc’s 2025 accounts and audit, turning up the heat on Europe’s biggest bank regarding its climate risk reporting. The FRC, which oversees UK company reporting, audits, and accounting standards, has been asked to act. Timing is key here. HSBC’s first-quarter results land May 5, with shareholders gathering once more for the annual general meeting on May 8. What used to be a sustainability issue—climate accounting—has tightened into a capital story: are losses ahead, asset valuations, and loan exposures showing up where they should in the books?
April 22, 2026
BP PLC Chair Gains Key Investor Backing Before AGM Climate Vote Fight

BP PLC Chair Gains Key Investor Backing Before AGM Climate Vote Fight

At least three major BP PLC shareholders are backing Chair Albert Manifold going into Thursday’s annual meeting, giving the board a lift ahead of a closely watched vote on investor confidence. Timing is front and center here. This marks Manifold’s first AGM as chair, alongside Chief Executive Meg O’Neill’s debut in the role. Against the backdrop: BP grappling with patchy performance, leadership shakeups, and Elliott Management’s activist heat. BP has set the meeting for 11 a.m. BST on April 23 at its International Centre for Business and Technology.
April 22, 2026
Santos Pushes Ahead With Yarrow Gas Wells as Australia’s Tax Fight Intensifies

Santos Pushes Ahead With Yarrow Gas Wells as Australia’s Tax Fight Intensifies

Santos will press ahead with drilling two additional wells at the Yarrow gas field in South Australia's Cooper Basin. The move follows Red Sky Energy's announcement that it has finalized a binding Authority for Expenditure—essentially, a project greenlight—with the Australian producer. Drilling on the first well is set to kick off very soon, according to Red Sky, which maintains its 20% working stake in the field. This move hands Santos a new round of drilling targets in a basin it’s already tapping to shore up domestic supply, just as Canberra mulls stricter gas measures and potential windfall taxes—even after the market operator delayed the projected east-coast shortfall to 2030. Still, AEMO warned that both committed and expected supply projects have
April 2, 2026
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