
-
UK risks more extreme, prolonged heatwaves in future: study
-
Gosdens celebrate Royal Ascot double as Buick motors home on Ombudsman
-
Oil prices drop following Trump's Iran comments, US stocks rise
-
Musk's X sues to block New York social media transparency law
-
Iran-Israel war: a lifeline for Netanyahu?
-
Gaza Humanitarian Foundation initiative 'outrageous': UN probe chief
-
India's Pant glad of Anderson and Broad exits ahead of England Tests
-
Moth uses stars to navigate long distances, scientists discover
-
Hurricane Erick approaches Mexico's Pacific coast
-
Gaza flotilla skipper vows to return
-
Netherlands returns over 100 Benin Bronzes looted from Nigeria
-
Nippon, US Steel say they have completed partnership deal
-
Almeida takes fourth stage of Tour of Switzerland with injured Thomas out
-
World champion Olga Carmona signs for PSG women's team
-
Putin T-shirts, robots and the Taliban -- but few Westerners at Russia's Davos
-
Trump on Iran strikes: 'I may do it, I may not do it'
-
Khamenei vows Iran will never surrender
-
Bangladesh tighten grip on first Sri Lanka Test
-
England's Pope keeps place for India series opener
-
Itoje to lead Lions for first time against Argentina
-
Oil rises, stocks mixed as investors watch rates, conflict
-
Iran-Israel war: latest developments
-
Iran threatens response if US crosses 'red line': ambassador
-
Iranians buying supplies in Iraq tell of fear, shortages back home
-
UK's Catherine, Princess of Wales, pulls out of Royal Ascot race meeting
-
Rape trial of France's feminist icon Pelicot retold on Vienna stage
-
Khamenei says Iran will 'never surrender', warns off US
-
Oil prices dip, stocks mixed tracking Mideast unrest
-
How Paris's Seine river keeps the Louvre cool in summer
-
Welshman Thomas out of Tour of Switzerland as 'precautionary measure'
-
UN says two Iran nuclear sites destroyed in Israel strikes
-
South Africans welcome home Test champions the Proteas
-
Middle Age rents live on in German social housing legacy
-
Israel targets nuclear site as Iran claims hypersonic missile attack
-
China's AliExpress risks fine for breaching EU illegal product rules
-
Liverpool face Bournemouth in Premier League opener, Man Utd host Arsenal
-
Heatstroke alerts issued in Japan as temperatures surge
-
Liverpool to kick off Premier League title defence against Bournemouth
-
Meta offered $100 mn bonuses to poach OpenAI employees: CEO Altman
-
Spain pushes back against mooted 5% NATO spending goal
-
UK inflation dips less than expected in May
-
Oil edges down, stocks mixed but Mideast war fears elevated
-
Energy transition: how coal mines could go solar
-
Australian mushroom murder suspect not on trial for lying: defence
-
New Zealand approves medicinal use of 'magic mushrooms'
-
Suspects in Bali murder all Australian, face death penalty: police
-
Taiwan's entrepreneurs in China feel heat from cross-Strait tensions
-
N. Korea to send army builders, deminers to Russia's Kursk
-
Sergio Ramos gives Inter a scare in Club World Cup stalemate
-
Kneecap rapper in court on terror charge over Hezbollah flag

Talks kick off on global plastic trash treaty
Despite decades of effort, plastic pollution is only getting worse -- a gloomy fact that representatives of almost 200 nations meeting in Uruguay Monday are determined to change.
Delegates in the seaside city of Punta Del Este began charting a path to the first global treaty to combat plastic pollution.
"We know that the world has a significant addiction to plastic," said Inger Andersen, Executive Director of the Nairobi-based United Nations Environment Programme, at the start of the talks.
"A plastic crisis is also a climate crisis. Plastic has a heavy carbon footprint and a heavy chemical footprint," she said.
The Uruguay meeting comes after the parties at the UN Environment Assembly in Nairobi in March agreed to create an intergovernmental committee to negotiate and finalize a legally binding plastics treaty by 2024.
The decision was seen as the biggest environmental advance since the Paris Agreement to curb global warming was signed in 2015.
By some estimates, a garbage truck's worth of plastic is dumped into the sea every minute. The amount of plastic entering the oceans is forecast to triple by 2040.
At the same time, microplastics have been found in human blood, lung, spleen, and kidney tissue, and even in fetal tissue.
Experts believe it is only an international, legally binding agreement that could truly begin to halt one of the worst environmental scourges on the planet -- if there is enough political will.
The meeting in Uruguay will last for five days, and is only a first step in the negotiations process. Another four global meetings are planned to carry the process forward.
Technical matters, such as how to structure the two years of talks, or even what should be included in the treaty, are up for discussion.
"It is ambitious to end plastic pollution, but it is entirely doable," said Andersen.
She said the delegates would work together to "transform the entire life cycle of plastic," from the production of polymers, to the way brands and retailers use plastic, to the waste that emerges.
"That means working with the private sector, that means working with environmentalists, that means working with communities, that means strong political leadership," said Andersen.
According to the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) the total plastic in the ocean has increased 50 percent in the past five years. This is despite a 60 percent increase in policies to fight plastic pollution on the country level.
"The unique potential of a global treaty is to hold all signatories to a high common standard of action," the WWF said in a report on the treaty published this month.
H.Nasr--SF-PST