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Europe leaders call Trump after Ukraine security guarantees summit
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French museum hit by 9.5 mn euro porcelain heist
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Berlusconi media group takes control of German broadcaster
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European court faults France over sexual consent rules
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Rain adds to misery of Afghan quake survivors
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Rubio eyes tough-security ally in Ecuador
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Afghanistan quake deadliest in decades, killing over 2,200
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China's Xi holds talks with North Korea's Kim in Beijing
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Spence on brink of history as first Muslim England player
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Portugal holds day of mourning as crash toll rises to 17 dead
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Taiwan star Shu Qi channels her childhood trauma into directorial debut
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France's Ozon under the gun with big screen take on Camus classic
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Zelensky meets European leaders on Ukraine security guarantees
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Kolisi returns but won't captain Springboks against All Blacks
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French women's boxing team barred from world champs over late gender test results
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Asia markets mixed as Chinese stocks lose steam
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'Biggest' Women's Asian Cup can help drive change, says top official
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Searchers retrieve bodies as Afghan quake toll expected to rise
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China's Xi at centre of world stage after days of high-level hobnobbing
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Australia's Schmidt warns of 'super tough' Argentina test
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Daniel Craig leads Hollywood stars to Toronto for 50th film fest
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Trump admin asks Supreme Court for 'expedited' ruling on tariffs
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Digital loan sharks prey on inflation-hit Nigerians
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Climate change made heat behind deadly Iberian fires 40 times more likely: study
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Campaign event for Argentina's Milei ends with skirmishes
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Open mic caught Xi, Putin discussing immortality
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Olympic champ Kennedy, Gout Gout headline Australia worlds squad
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Skipper Wilson back as Wallabies face Argentina threat
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Sinner powers into US Open semis, Anisimova gains Swiatek revenge
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'Blood Moon' to rise during total lunar eclipse Sunday night
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Sinner tames Musetti to march into US Open semi-finals
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Gattuso begins Italy salvage operation with World Cup on the line
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Sabalenka in Pegula US Open rematch as Osaka faces Anisimova
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Immigration opposition fuels English national flag frenzy
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Asia markets tick up after Wall Street rebound
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Zelensky to meet European leaders after Putin vows to fight on
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'Pink and green' protests call for a reset in Indonesia
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Peruvian ex-presidents face courts in separate corruption trials
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Wimbledon rewatch inspires Anisimova to US Open revenge
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Ecuador eyes US security accords during Rubio's visit
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Kyrgios predicts easy win over Sabalenka in 'Battle of the Sexes'
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Osaka downs Muchova to reach US Open semi-final
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Anisimova gains Swiatek revenge, faces Osaka in US Open semis
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Colombia coal exports plummet after ban on Israel sales
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Guyana's President Irfaan Ali: oil industry 'puppet' or visionary?

Former federal workers bring back climate portal killed by Trump
First came orders to scrub references to how climate change disproportionately harms marginalized communities. Then demands to erase mentions of the "Gulf of Mexico."
By early summer, the climate.gov front page no longer existed -- the federal portal once billed as a "one-stop shop" for the public to understand global warming had become another casualty of President Donald Trump's war on science.
Now, a group of former employees is working to bring it back to life.
Helping coordinate the effort is Rebecca Lindsay, the site's former managing editor, who was fired in February along with hundreds of others at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
"We all began to just brainstorm about how we could keep and protect climate.gov," she told AFP. The team's new website, climate.us went online a few days ago, though for now it serves only as a placeholder.
The core group includes a handful of science writers, meteorologists and data visualizers, plus "half a dozen" current government employees volunteering under cover of anonymity for fear of retaliation. They have two goals.
First: to republish the taxpayer-funded trove of material that was taken down -- including the legally mandated National Climate Assessments, bedrock scientific studies produced every four years, but paused under Trump's second term.
The second, more ambitious goal -- which hinges on securing enough funding -- is to rebuild the resources and technical tools that made climate.gov, first launched in 2012 under Barack Obama, so indispensable.
These ranged from interactive dashboards tracking sea-level rise, Arctic ice loss and global temperatures, to plain-language explainers on phenomena like the polar vortex, to a blog dedicated to the El Nino Southern Oscillation, the planet's most influential natural climate driver.
In 2024 alone, climate.gov drew some 15 million page views.
"We've been having meetings through the summer that culminated in us writing a prospectus we hope to shop to major philanthropies and funders," Lindsay said. A crowdfunding campaign has also begun to drum up support.
As of Wednesday, their donorbox.org page showed nearly $50,000 raised toward a $500,000 goal. But for Lindsay, what matters more than the sum is the show of interest.
If all goes well, she said, the project could become "an anchor for lots of groups at other federal science agencies where they have content or data that have gone silent or been taken down. We definitely hope we could be a lifeboat for them as well."
The team has already been buoyed by an outpouring of goodwill, from scientists to schoolteachers offering their time.
"This is a problem we can try to solve," Lindsay said. "Even if it's a small thing in the big picture, just knowing that someone is doing something is encouraging to people."
R.Halabi--SF-PST