
Celia Bergin
Reporter at Bloomberg News
Agriculture reporter @business. DMs open and on Signal. Former @boarfeatures editor. She/her 🏳️🌈 all views are my own
Articles
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1 month ago |
independent.ie | Celia Bergin |Joe Wertz
Prolonged dry weather across much of Europe, along with predictions of inconsistent rain, have thrown anticipated grain harvests for this year into doubtFarms across wide swaths of Europe are parched after an unusually dry spring, evidence of the increasing threat of climate change to homegrown grains. The sunny stretch follows a winter marked by long periods of low rain and snowfall in key crop-producing regions.
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1 month ago |
bloomberg.com | Celia Bergin |Joe Wertz
A farmer checks the plants in a wheat field in Bremen, Germany, on May 15. (Bloomberg) -- Farms across wide swaths of Europe are parched after an unusually dry spring, evidence of the increasing threat of climate change to homegrown grains. The sunny stretch follows a winter marked by long periods of low rain and snowfall in key crop-producing regions.
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1 month ago |
news.bloombergtax.com | Celia Bergin
Lethargic chickens with swollen heads or cattle with maggots burrowing into their flesh — these are effects of diseases that have been disrupting global trade. Outbreaks of animal diseases across the world are yet another problem for flows of foodstuffs that have been hampered by the pandemic, war and tariffs. They’re driving nations to put up trade restrictions on meat, as well as live animals, as part of efforts to prevent a similar fate for their own flocks and herds.
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1 month ago |
bloomberg.com | Celia Bergin
Lethargic chickens with swollen heads or cattle with maggots burrowing into their flesh — these are effects of diseases that have been disrupting global trade. Outbreaks of animal diseases across the world are yet another problem for flows of foodstuffs that have been hampered by the pandemic, war and tariffs. They’re driving nations to put up trade restrictions on meat, as well as live animals, as part of efforts to prevent a similar fate for their own flocks and herds.
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1 month ago |
dig-in.com | Celia Bergin
(Bloomberg) --The European Union's agriculture industry is losing €28 billion ($31.5 billion) a year due to increasing climate risks, such as droughts and flooding, according to a new study. Those losses from adverse weather equate to about 6% of production, according to a report published Tuesday by the European Investment Bank and the European Commission. Climate-related damages, which are mostly uninsured, could climb to €40 billion by mid-century, it said.
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