
-
Antonelli comes of age with podium finish in Canada
-
PSG cruise as Atletico wilt in Club World Cup opener
-
US Open resumes with Burns leading at rain-soaked Oakmont
-
Hamilton 'devastated' after hitting groundhog in Canada race
-
Piastri accepts Norris apology after Canadian GP collision
-
Heavy rain halts final round of US Open at soaked Oakmont
-
PSG cruise past Atletico to win Club World Cup opener
-
Israel pounds Iran from west to east, Tehran hits back with missiles
-
Burns leads Scott by one as dangerous weather halts US Open
-
Russell triumphs in Canada as McLaren drivers crash
-
'Magical' Duplantis soars to pole vault world record in Stockholm
-
Trump vetoed Israeli plan to kill Iranian supreme leader: US official
-
McIlroy seeks Portrush reboot after US Open flop
-
Renault boss Luca de Meo to step down, company says
-
Kubica wins 'mental battle' to triumph at Le Mans
-
Burns seeks first major title at US Open as Scott, Spaun chase
-
Merciless Bayern hit 10 against amateurs Auckland City at Club World Cup
-
'How to Train Your Dragon' soars to top of N.America box office
-
Tens of thousands rally for Gaza in Netherlands, Belgium
-
Duplantis increases pole vault world record to 6.28m
-
Israel pounds Iran from west to east in deepest strikes yet
-
Gezora wins Prix de Diane in Graffard masterpiece
-
Pogacar wins first Dauphine ahead of Tour de France title defence
-
Trump due in Canada as G7 confronts Israel-Iran crisis
-
Kubica steers Ferrari to third consecutive 24 Hours of Le Mans
-
French Open champ Alcaraz ready for Queen's after Ibiza party
-
India a voice for Global South at G7, says foreign minister
-
Tens of thousands rally in Dutch protest for Gaza
-
Sinner had 'sleepless nights' after dramatic French Open final loss
-
Gattuso named new Italy coach after Spalletti sacking
-
Relatives lament slow support, wait for remains after India crash
-
Israel vows to make Iran pay 'heavy price' as fighting rages on
-
Macron, on Greenland visit, berates Trump for threats against the territory
-
Qualifier Maria completes fairytale run to Queen's title
-
Gattuso named new Italy coach
-
Tens of thousands rally in Dutch Gaza protest
-
Israel-Iran conflict: latest developments
-
Israel keeps up Iran strikes after deadly missile barrage
-
Ex-president Sarkozy stripped of France's top honour after conviction
-
Iran missiles kill 10 in Israel in night of mutual attacks
-
'This is a culture': TikTok murder highlights Pakistan's unease with women online
-
Families hold funerals for Air India crash victims
-
US Fed set to hold rates steady in the face of Trump pressure
-
Iran launches missile barrage as Israel strikes Tehran
-
Sober clubbing brews fresh beat for Singapore Gen Z
-
Cummins flags Australia shake-up after WTC defeat as Ashes loom
-
Mexico down Dominican Republic to open Gold Cup defence
-
Pochettino defends Pulisic omission: 'I'm not a mannequin'
-
Panthers on brink of Stanley Cup repeat after 5-2 win over Oilers
-
Messi denied late winner in Club World Cup opener

Climate change made fire conditions twice as likely in South Korea blazes: study
Human-induced climate change made the ultra-dry and warm conditions that fanned South Korea's deadliest wildfires in history this March twice as likely and more intense, researchers said Thursday.
Vast swaths of the country's southeast were burned in a series of blazes in March, which killed 31 people and destroyed historic sites, including a some thousand-year-old temple site.
The affected area had been experiencing below-average rainfall for months and was then hit by strong winds, local officials said, following South Korea's hottest year on record in 2024.
The hot, dry and windy conditions that fed the flames were "twice as likely and about 15 percent more intense" due to human-caused climate change, said World Weather Attribution, a scientific network that studies the influence of global warming on extreme weather.
"South Korea's deadliest wildfires were made much more likely by climate change," said Clair Barnes, a WWA researcher from the Centre for Environmental Policy, Imperial College London.
Officials said at the time that the conditions made it very hard for conventional firefighting methods to control the blazes, which leapt from pine tree to pine tree across dried-out hillsides.
"These unprecedented conditions exposed the limits of even well-developed suppression systems," WWA said in a report of its findings.
"With fires increasingly likely to exceed control capacity, the emphasis must shift toward proactive risk reduction," it added.
More than 62 percent of South Korea is covered in forest, the report said, with dense tree cover especially prominent along the eastern coast and in mountainous regions, landscapes that significantly influence how wildfires spread.
Around 11 percent of South Korea's forested areas border human settlements, the study said.
"These areas are particularly susceptible to ignition and have accounted for nearly 30 percent of wildfires recorded between 2016 and 2022."
The researchers' findings were most conclusive regarding the increased likelihood of fire weather -- which is measured by the Hot-Dry-Windy Index (HDWI) -- and higher maximum temperatures.
But they found no attributable link between climate change and rainfall levels during the period surrounding the fires.
- Fires rage -
South Korea has few energy resources of its own and relies on imported coal -- a cheap but dirty fuel -- for around a third of the electricity powering it, according to figures from the International Energy Agency.
The inferno in March also laid bare the country's demographic crisis and regional disparities, as rural areas are both underpopulated and disproportionately home to senior citizens.
Many of the dead were seniors, and experts have warned that it will be hard for people to rebuild their lives in the burn zone.
In the weeks and months since, South Korea has recorded a string of wildfires.
In April, helicopters were deployed to contain a wildfire within the DMZ, the buffer zone separating the South from nuclear-armed North Korea.
This week, more than 2,000 people were forced to evacuate after wildfires occurred in parts of the southeastern city of Daegu, after a blaze broke out on Mount Hamji in the region.
WWA is a pioneer in attribution science, which uses peer-reviewed methods to quickly assess the possible influence of climate change on extreme weather events.
This allows a comparison of observations from today's climate, with some 1.3 degrees Celsius of warming, against computer simulations that consider the climate before humanity started burning fossil fuels in the 1800s.
L.Hussein--SF-PST