Environment
Meet the history-making astronauts headed for the Moon
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The commander of Nasa’s next mission to the Moon said that he and his crew would “see things that no human has ever seen”.
Reid Wiseman told a news conference that it was likely that his spacecraft would fly over large areas of the Moon that previous Apollo missions had never mapped.
Yesterday, Nasa announced it hoped it would be able to launch the first crewed Moon mission in 50 years as early as February 2026.
Mission specialist Christina Koch explained that the astronauts would be able to study the lunar surface in exquisite detail for a full three hours.
“Believe it or not, human eyes are one of the best scientific instruments that we have,” she said.
“Our geologists are beyond excited for our eyes to look at the Moon, and we’ve been training how to turn those observations into answering some of the biggest questions of our time, questions like ‘Are we alone?’ We can answer that by going to Mars in the future, and this mission can be the first step in bringing that answer back to team humanity.”
The Artemis II mission is the second launch of the Artemis programme, whose aim is to land astronauts and eventually establish a long-term presence on the lunar surface.
Commander Reid told reporters the name the crew had given to their spacecraft and why they chose it.
“Peace and hope for all humankind, that is what we really want. We are bringing together the world, and when you squeeze it all down, it will create magic. So we’re going to fly around the Moon in the spacecraft ‘Integrity’.
All four astronauts said they took inspiration from the Apollo Moon missions of the 1960s and early 1970s.
Read more about the four astronauts below.
Christina Koch decided to become an astronaut after seeing a picture of the Earth taken by Bill Anders, a crew member of the Apollo 8 mission in 1968. For her, the Artemis II flight is literally a dream come true because it, just like Apollo 8, will fly around the Moon to help pave the way for a Moon landing.
Although Christina was born 11 years after the photograph was taken, she kept a poster of the Earth rising above the lunar surface. Just as that moment inspired a generation living through the 1960s, she said in a Nasa interview that she hoped her mission would enable a new generation to live though what they lived through and, as it did at the time, make the world a more optimistic place.
“The fact that it was a human behind that lens made that picture so much more profound and changed the way we thought of our own home,” she said.
“The Moon was not just a symbol for thinking about our place in the universe, it is a beacon for science and understanding where we came from.”
Christina was an engineer who became an astronaut in 2013. She lived and worked on the International Space Station for almost all of 2019, spending a total of 328 consecutive days in space and famously participated in the first all-female spacewalk. Her hobbies include surfing, rock and ice climbing, programming, community service, triathlons, yoga, backpacking, woodworking, photography and travel.
Christina is set to be the first woman to go to the Moon.
This will be the first time Jeremy Hansen will have been in space. He too was inspired by the astronauts on Apollo 8. At the time the world was riven with wars and conflict.
“When they flew around the Moon just before Christmas in 1968 there was a lot going on the world, and people realised it was a really tough time. People were struggling in many different ways and and I think we can all resonate with that today.
“And I remember reading about a postcard that Bill Anders got when he got back, and it just simply, all that was written on it was, ‘you saved 1968’.”
With his Buzz Lightyear-like square jaw and clean-cut appearance, he comes across as the archetypical heroic astronaut. As a Canadian, he is set to become the first non-American to go to the Moon.
His message is one of unity and inspiration not just for the US, but the entire world.
“The Artemis missions have set such an ambitious goal for humanity that is inspiring contributions from around the World, not just one nation is inspired and moved by this, but nations around the globe are coming together”.
Jeremy was a fighter pilot, physicist and aquanaut before he joined the Canadian Space Agency in 2009. During his time with the CSA, he became the first Canadian to lead astronaut training at Nasa’s Johnson Space Centre. He is married with three children and enjoys sailing, rock climbing, and mountain biking.
Those who have met Victor say is the most charismatic of the quartet and the most sharply dressed, with designer brown leather boots making him look good even in an orange flight suit.
“Pushing ourselves to explore is core to who we are,” he says in a Nasa interview. It is part of being human.”
Like is fellow crew, his words hark back to a bygone space age, and the words of then President John F. Kennedy in 1962: “We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard, because that goal will serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills, because that challenge is one that we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one which we intend to win.”
Victor goes on to say: “It is in our nature. We go out to explore, to learn where we are, why we are, understanding the big questions about our place in the universe.”
Victor’s call sign is IKE, which is reputedly short for “I Know Everything”, acknowledging his three master’s degrees: in flight test engineering, systems engineering and military operational art and science.
Victor was selected as a Nasa astronaut in 2013. He has previously served as the pilot of Nasa’s SpaceX Crew-1 mission to the International Space Station as part of Expedition 64.
He was born in Pomona, California, and is married with four children.
Victor is set to be the first black person to go to the Moon.
Reid Wiseman also brings back echoes of the 1960 Apollo Moonshots when he says that he hopes the Artemis II mission will be looked back on as a “tiny step in having humans on Mars and a sustained presence on the Moon”.
His words echo those of another space commander, Neil Armstrong, the first man to set foot on the Moon: “One small step for man, one giant leap for mankind”.
Although Reid is the mission’s commander, he takes care to include his crew.
“When I look at Victor, Christina and Jeremy, they want to go do this mission, they are keenly driven, they are humble to a fault. It is so cool to be around them.”
Reid is widowed and despite a distinguished career as an astronaut, he considers his time as an only parent as his “greatest challenge and the most rewarding phase” of his life.
In one of the very few interviews Neil Armstrong ever gave, I asked him in 1996 whether the dream of humans living and working on the Moon and going on to other planets would ever come back. His reply was:
“The reality may have faded, but the dream is still there, and it will come back in time.”
He would have been heartened to have heard these words from each of the Artemis II crew.
Christina: “We are ready.”
Jeremy: “We are going.”
Victor: “To the Moon.”
Reid: “For all humanity!”
Environment
China, world’s largest carbon polluting nation, announces new climate goal to cut emissions
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Environment
Indigenous women in Peru use technology to protect Amazon forests
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Environment
China makes landmark pledge to cut its climate emissions
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Mark Poynting and Matt McGrathBBC News Climate and Science
China, the world’s biggest source of planet-warming gases, has for the first time committed to an absolute target to cut its emissions.
In a video statement to the UN in New York, President Xi Jinping said that China would reduce its greenhouse gas emissions across the economy by 7-10% by 2035, while “striving to do better”.
The announcement comes at a time the US is rolling back on its commitments, with President Donald Trump on Tuesday calling climate change a “con job”.
But some critics said China’s plan did not go as far as hoped to keep global climate goals in reach.
“Even for those with tempered expectations, what’s presented today still falls short,” said Yao Zhe, global policy adviser at Greenpeace East Asia.
While the year’s big gathering of global leaders will be at COP30 in Brazil in November, this week’s UN meeting in New York has extra relevance because countries are running out of time to submit their new climate plans.
These pledges – submitted every five years – are a key part of the Paris climate agreement, the landmark deal in which nearly 200 countries agreed steps to try to limit global warming.
The original deadline for these new commitments – covering emissions cuts by 2035 – was back in February, but countries are now scrambling to present them by the end of September.
Speaking before the meeting UN Secretary-General António Guterres said the pledges were critical to keep the long-term rise in global temperatures under 1.5C, as agreed in Paris.
“We absolutely need countries to come […] with climate action plans that are fully aligned with 1.5 degrees, that cover the whole of their economies and the whole of their greenhouse gas emissions,” he said.
“It is essential that we have a drastic reduction of emissions in the next few years if you want to keep the 1.5 degrees Celsius limit alive,” he added.
As the world’s biggest emitter, China’s plans are key to keeping this goal in sight.
Back in 2021, President Xi announced that China would aim to peak its emissions this decade and reach “carbon neutrality” by 2060.
Today’s pledge marks the first time that China has set actual emissions reductions targets on that path.
“These targets represent China’s best efforts based on the requirements of the Paris agreement,” President Xi said.
It also covers all greenhouse gases, not just carbon dioxide, and will be measured “from peak levels” of emissions – the timing of which President Xi did not specify.
He added China would:
- expand wind and solar power capacity to more than six times 2020 levels
- increase forest stocks to more than 24bn cubic metres
- make “new energy vehicles” the mainstream in new vehicle sales
Off track for 1.5C
Such is the scale of China’s emissions that any reduction would be significant in climate terms.
China was responsible for more than a quarter of planet-warming emissions in 2023, at almost 14bn tonnes of carbon dioxide-equivalent.
A 10% reduction in China’s emissions would equate to 1.4bn tonnes a year, which is nearly four times the UK’s total annual emissions.
But China’s new target does fall short of what would be needed to meet international climate goals.
“Anything less than 30% is definitely not aligned with 1.5 degrees,” said Lauri Myllyvirta, lead analyst at the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air.
Most scenarios to limit warming to 1.5C – or even well below 2C – would require China to make much greater cuts than that by 2035, he added.
In many cases, that would mean more than a 50% reduction.
It is further evidence of the gap between what needs to be done to meet climate targets and what countries are planning.
Earlier this week, a report by the Stockholm Environment Institute warned that governments around the world are collectively planning to produce more than double the amount of fossil fuels in 2030 than would be in line with keeping to 1.5C.
Ramp-up of renewables
What gives some observers hope is that China has a track record of exceeding many of its international climate commitments.
It had, for example, pledged to reach a capacity of 1,200 gigawatts for wind and solar power by 2030. It smashed through that goal in 2024 – six years early.
“The targets should be seen as a floor rather than a ceiling,” said Li Shuo, director of China Climate Hub at the Asia Society Policy Institute.
“China’s rapid clean tech growth […] could propel the country much further over the coming decade,” he added.
“China’s 2035 target simply isn’t representative of the pace of the energy transition in the country,” agreed Bernice Lee, distinguished fellow and senior adviser at Chatham House.
“There’s a case to be made that Beijing missed a trick in landing a more ambitious goal as it would have won broad global praise – a stark contrast to the US,” she added.
While China ramps up its renewables, it continues to rely heavily on coal, the dirtiest fossil fuel.
Last year saw China’s electricity generation from coal hit a new record – although initial data suggests it has fallen in the first half of 2025 amid a surge in solar electricity.
“There is also mounting evidence that the country’s emissions are plateauing, with this year’s levels expected to be lower than in 2024,” said Li Shuo.
Today’s new target signals “the beginning of decarbonisation after decades of rapid emissions growth”, he added.
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