
-
Sweden jihadist jailed for life over Jordan pilot burned alive
-
Zelensky signs bill ensuring anti-graft agencies' 'independence'
-
Sleepless in Singapore: Marchand wins gold, day after world record
-
England make early double strike in India series decider
-
Popovici wins 100m freestyle world gold for sprint double
-
Marchand wins 200m medley gold, day after world record
-
Thousands of Afghans scramble for chance to work in Qatar
-
Trump's envoy arrives in Israel as Gaza criticism mounts
-
McIntosh powers to third gold of worlds, 12-year-old Yu fourth
-
Hong Kong sees 3.1% growth in second quarter
-
Stocks, dollar mixed tracking Fed, tariffs, results
-
World Athletics brings in gene tests for female category eligibility
-
Trump says tariffs are making US 'great & rich' again
-
Pakistan opposition leader given 10 years for Imran Khan protests
-
India's Bumrah out of Oval finale as England bowl in fifth Test
-
Rights groups urge Nepal to reverse Telegram ban
-
BMW says can weather tariff storm despite profit plunge
-
Zelensky urges allies to push for 'regime change' in Russia
-
Renault profits slump as competition intensifies
-
Beijing officials admit 'gaps' in readiness after rains kill dozens
-
Macau ex-lawmaker arrested in city's first national security law action
-
Beijing officials admit 'gaps' in readiness after rain kill dozens
-
Japan lifts tsunami advisory after Russia quake
-
Shell net profit retreats on lower energy prices
-
Unilever profit slides ahead of ice cream demerger
-
Trump announces new tariffs as deadline nears
-
US tariffs corrode steelmaker ArcelorMittal's profitability
-
Lions have 'massive responsibility' to finish job against Wallabies
-
BMW profits slump on China woes, US tariffs
-
Russia strikes kill six in Kyiv, Moscow says captured key town
-
Firms in Vietnam walk tightrope as Trump's transshipping rule looms
-
China summons chip giant Nvidia over alleged security risks
-
Veteran White gets fairytale sendoff for 'deflated' Wallabies
-
Trump gets his way on tariffs, but global trade system intact for now
-
Myanmar junta ends state of emergency in election run-up
-
Lions make two changes for final Wallabies Test
-
Puppet ban in Indonesian capital threatens buskers
-
White and Tupou to start for Wallabies in third Lions Test
-
Fritz beats rain, Carballes Baena, to advance in Toronto
-
Laos braced for blow of Trump tariff threat
-
United cruise over Bournemouth in Premier League US friendly
-
Most markets down as Fed holds and Trump announces fresh tariffs
-
McLaughlin-Levrone, Lyles headline US championships
-
Too much too young?: Swimming's dilemma over 12-year-old schoolgirl
-
Swiatek cruises, Osaka battles, Bouchard says goodbye in Montreal
-
China manufacturing sinks again in July as US trade talks stall
-
Vatican embraces social media 'digital missionaries'
-
'Silent killer': the science of tracing climate deaths in heatwaves
-
Seoul breaks century-long record with 22 'tropical nights' in July
-
Wallabies scrum-half Nic White calls time on career
RBGPF | 0.52% | 74.42 | $ | |
SCU | 0% | 12.72 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.26% | 23.06 | $ | |
RYCEF | -3.05% | 13.1 | $ | |
CMSC | -0.04% | 22.6 | $ | |
BCC | -1.47% | 84.89 | $ | |
JRI | 0.38% | 13.11 | $ | |
RIO | -4.67% | 59.49 | $ | |
NGG | -0.47% | 70.19 | $ | |
RELX | -0.27% | 51.78 | $ | |
SCS | -1.74% | 10.33 | $ | |
BCE | -0.55% | 23.53 | $ | |
VOD | -0.45% | 11.06 | $ | |
AZN | 3.41% | 76.59 | $ | |
GSK | 3.34% | 38.97 | $ | |
BTI | 0.73% | 53.16 | $ | |
BP | -2.2% | 32.25 | $ |

EU urged to act on forests' faltering absorption of carbon
The amount of carbon dioxide absorbed by European forests has reduced dramatically in recent years putting the EU's climate targets at risk, researchers said Wednesday, calling for urgent action to halt the decline.
Forests, which cover 40 percent of the European Union's territory, are expected to play a crucial role in efforts to meet targets for overall reductions of the bloc's emissions of planet-warming gases.
But human and climate pressures, from logging to extreme weather and insect attacks, means their ability to absorb CO2 is "rapidly declining", according to an article, led by the European Commission's Joint Research Centre.
"Reversing the decline in European forests' ability to store carbon is essential -- and still possible -- with bold, science-based action today," said co-author Giacomo Grassi, who is a member of the UN's IPCC expert task force on greenhouse gas inventories.
Solutions include rapid reductions in carbon emissions, combined with efforts to improve management to make forests more resilient to climate impacts, and comprehensive monitoring.
Many European countries still rely on periodic inventories, which cannot keep up with rapid changes to forest health.
The authors emphasize the need to better understand forest dynamics.
They call in particular for better measuring of carbon flows between the soil, vegetation, and atmosphere, as well as improving predictions of how extreme weather will affect carbon sinks in the future.
- 'Steeper decline' -
The research looked at official 2024 data showing that the amount carbon absorbed by Europe's forests, ecosystems and changes to land use plummeted by around a third in the 2020 to 2022 period, compared to 2010 to 2014.
The authors said 2025 figures "suggest an even steeper decline".
"This trend, combined with the declining climate resilience of European forests, indicates that the EU's climate targets, which rely on an increasing carbon sink, might be at risk," the authors said.
Earlier this week another study in the Nature journal Communications Earth & Environment found that land accounts for a quarter of global emissions reductions in countries' climate plans and warned that a lack of funding and conservation focus was putting these in jeopardy.
Piers Forster, Director of the Priestley Centre for Climate Futures at Leeds University, who was not involved in Wednesday's study said it underscores the urgent need to slash emissions across the board.
"We can't bet our future on carbon removal -- either from planting more trees, from protecting forests, or from emerging technologies such as direct air capture and storage -- without understanding what is already happening to the land and natural systems," he said.
Scientists have warned that it is still unclear how carbon sinks might behave as the planet warms in future, and exactly how much heat-trapping carbon dioxide they might soak up from the atmosphere.
In April, research by Climate Analytics, a policy institute that independently assesses countries' climate plans, warned that major economies are overstating how much carbon their forests can absorb in a climate accounting fudge that could allow them to use even more fossil fuels.
Z.AlNajjar--SF-PST