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Royal Ascot battling 'headwinds' to secure foreign aces: racing director
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Spaun wins US Open for first major title with late birdie binge
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Israel pounds Iran, Tehran hits back with missiles
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'Thin' chance against Chelsea but nothing to lose: LAFC's Lloris
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PSG cruise over Atletico, Bayern thrash Auckland at Club World Cup
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G7 protests hit Calgary with leaders far away
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USA end losing streak with crushing of hapless Trinidad
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UK appoints Blaise Metreweli first woman head of MI6 spy service
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One dead after 6.1-magnitude earthquake in Peru
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Ciganda ends LPGA title drought with Meijer Classic win
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Trump suggests Iran, Israel need 'to fight it out' to reach deal
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Antonelli comes of age with podium finish in Canada
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PSG cruise as Atletico wilt in Club World Cup opener
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US Open resumes with Burns leading at rain-soaked Oakmont
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Hamilton 'devastated' after hitting groundhog in Canada race
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Piastri accepts Norris apology after Canadian GP collision
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Heavy rain halts final round of US Open at soaked Oakmont
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PSG cruise past Atletico to win Club World Cup opener
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Israel pounds Iran from west to east, Tehran hits back with missiles
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Burns leads Scott by one as dangerous weather halts US Open
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Russell triumphs in Canada as McLaren drivers crash
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'Magical' Duplantis soars to pole vault world record in Stockholm
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Trump vetoed Israeli plan to kill Iranian supreme leader: US official
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McIlroy seeks Portrush reboot after US Open flop
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Renault boss Luca de Meo to step down, company says
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Kubica wins 'mental battle' to triumph at Le Mans
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Burns seeks first major title at US Open as Scott, Spaun chase
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Merciless Bayern hit 10 against amateurs Auckland City at Club World Cup
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'How to Train Your Dragon' soars to top of N.America box office
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Tens of thousands rally for Gaza in Netherlands, Belgium
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Duplantis increases pole vault world record to 6.28m
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Israel pounds Iran from west to east in deepest strikes yet
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Gezora wins Prix de Diane in Graffard masterpiece
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Pogacar wins first Dauphine ahead of Tour de France title defence
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Trump due in Canada as G7 confronts Israel-Iran crisis
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Kubica steers Ferrari to third consecutive 24 Hours of Le Mans
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French Open champ Alcaraz ready for Queen's after Ibiza party
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India a voice for Global South at G7, says foreign minister
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Tens of thousands rally in Dutch protest for Gaza
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Sinner had 'sleepless nights' after dramatic French Open final loss
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Gattuso named new Italy coach after Spalletti sacking
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Relatives lament slow support, wait for remains after India crash
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Israel vows to make Iran pay 'heavy price' as fighting rages on
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Macron, on Greenland visit, berates Trump for threats against the territory
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Qualifier Maria completes fairytale run to Queen's title
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Gattuso named new Italy coach
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Tens of thousands rally in Dutch Gaza protest
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Israel-Iran conflict: latest developments
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Israel keeps up Iran strikes after deadly missile barrage
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Ex-president Sarkozy stripped of France's top honour after conviction

UN report to lay out options to halt climate crisis
Nearly 200 nations gather on Monday to confront a question that will outlive Russia's invasion of Ukraine: how do we stop carbon pollution overheating the planet and threatening life as we know it?
The answer is set to arrive on April 4 after closed-door, virtual negotiations approve the summary of a phonebook-sized report detailing options for drawing down greenhouse gases and extracting them out of thin air.
"The science is crystal clear, the impacts are costly and mounting, but we still have some time to close the window and get ahead of the worst of them if we act now," said Alden Meyer, a senior analyst at climate and energy think tank E3G.
"This report will supply the answers as to what we need if we're serious about getting there."
In August 2021, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) laid out the physical science: changes in global warming and sea level rise, along with shifts in the frequency, duration and intensity of cyclones, heatwaves, droughts and other forms of extreme weather.
That was the first instalment of a three-part assessment, the sixth since 1990. It projected that Earth's surface temperature will rise 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels, perhaps within a decade.
A 1.5C cap on global warming -- the aspirational goal of the 2015 Paris climate accord -- has been embraced as a target by most of the world's nations.
Current carbon-cutting commitments under the treaty, however, still put us on a catastrophic path toward 2.7C of warming by 2100.
- A liveable future -
Part two of the more than 10,000-page report -- described by UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres as an "atlas of human suffering" -- catalogued past and future climate impacts on human society and the natural world.
Delaying climate action would severely reduce the chances of a "livable future," it concluded.
Part three -- spread across thousands of pages -- is about how to slow and stop warming, with separate chapters on the key sectors where rapid and deep change is critical: energy, transport, industry, agriculture, among others.
"We are talking about the large-scale transformation of all the major systems," climate economist and co-author Celine Guivarch told AFP.
It also focuses on ways to curb carbon emissions by reducing demand, whether through making buildings more energy efficient or encouraging shifts in lifestyle, such as eating less beef and not flying half-way around the world for a week-long holiday.
The report details more than a dozen techniques for pulling CO2 out of the air, which will be needed to compensate for sectors -- such as aviation and shipping -- that are likely still carbon polluters by mid-century.
"Many things have changed" since the previous three-part report, which came out eight years ago, said Taryn Fransen, an analyst at the World Resources Institute.
The Paris Agreement -- the first climate deal in which all countries pledged action -- was signed.
The world has seen an endless crescendo of deadly climate impacts, from drought to fire to floods.
The price of renewable energy, key to the reducing emissions, has fallen below the cost of fossil fuels in most markets.
- 'Inflamed situation' -
The IPCC "solutions" report draws from hundreds of models projecting development pathways that keep Earth within the bounds of the Paris temperature goals.
"There are scenarios that show high renewables and low nuclear, and scenarios that show the opposite," said Fransen.
"This report lays out those pathways. Now it's up now to our leaders to take that to heart."
Besides feeding into UN political negotiations, which resume in November in Egypt at COP 27, the IPCC findings will also be important "for the conversation going on in the US and Europe around the need to transition away from Russian oil and gas," said Meyer.
The head of the IPCC delegation from Ukraine made this point in a dramatic statement at a closed plenary in February, only days after Russian troops invaded her country.
"Human-induced climate change and the war on Ukraine have the same roots -- fossil fuels -- and our dependence on them," said Svitlana Krakovska, according to multiple sources.
The war in Ukraine will likely come up during the two-week IPCC negotiations starting Monday.
"It's a more enflamed situation," said Meyer. "I don't know how this is gonna play out but it's something to watch."
K.Hassan--SF-PST