
Rachel Sherrington
Investigative Researcher and Journalist at Freelance
Investigative researcher and reporter with DeSmog. Writing about climate and food politics. Work covered in the Guardian, Vice News, FT, The Hill & others
Articles
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3 weeks ago |
nationofchange.org | Rachel Sherrington
Food firms are inflating their climate targets with carbon removals and weak deforestation claims, according to a report from the NewClimate Institute and Carbon Market Watch. With the COP30 climate summit in Brazil later this year widely expected to focus on agriculture, the report has raised concerns about high levels of corporate greenwashing and a lack of climate credibility in the global food sector.
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3 weeks ago |
ecotopical.com | Rachel Sherrington
Welcome to EcoTopical Your daily eco-friendly green news aggregator. Leaf through planet Earths environmental headlines in one convenient place. Read, share and discover the latest on ecology, science and green living from the web's most popular sites.
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3 weeks ago |
desmog.com | Rachel Sherrington
Food firms are inflating their climate targets with carbon removals and weak deforestation claims, according to a report from the NewClimate Institute and Carbon Market Watch. With the COP30 climate summit in Brazil later this year widely expected to focus on agriculture, the report has raised concerns about high levels of corporate greenwashing and a lack of climate credibility in the global food sector.
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Mar 27, 2025 |
corporateknights.com | Rachel Sherrington
Leading supermarkets are failing to address the methane pollution in their supply chains, a new report has found, putting their own climate pledges at risk. The study from environmental non-profits Changing Markets Foundation and Mighty Earth analysed the climate plans of the U.S and Europe’s top-grossing supermarkets, including the UK’s Tesco and Sainsbury’s, U.S. retail giant Walmart, and German chains Lidl and Asda.
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Mar 18, 2025 |
desmog.com | Rachel Sherrington
Leading supermarkets are failing to address the methane pollution in their supply chains, a new report has found, putting their own climate pledges at risk. The study from environmental non-profits Changing Markets Foundation and Mighty Earth analysed the climate plans of the U.S and EU’s top-grossing supermarkets, including the UK’s Tesco and Sainsbury’s, U.S. retail giant Walmart, and German chains Lidl and Asda.
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RT @DeSmog: 🔴 NEW 🔴 Supermarkets Accused of Major ‘Methane Blindspot’ ✍️@rachel_sher👇 https://t.co/HyBLVnO9XM

NEW: An industry-backed emissions metric could ‘completely derail’ climate action if adopted by governments, campaigners warn It comes the New Zealand government considers whether to adopt new climate goals based on the GWP* measure https://t.co/y8LNd4w118

RT @DeSmog: 🔴 NEW 🔴 Industry-backed Emissions Metric Could ‘Completely Derail’ Climate Action, Campaigners Warn ✍️@rachel_sher https://t…