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Rai wins first major at PGA with back-nine birdie blitz
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Woad bags second LPGA title at Queen City Championship
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Lebanon says Israeli strikes kill 7 as Hezbollah condemns talks
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Revived La Rochelle trounce Top 14 leaders Toulouse
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PSG beaten by Paris FC in Ligue 1 as Lille qualify for Champions League
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Griezmann apologetic on emotional Atletico Madrid farewell
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Raging Neymar forced off by refereeing error as Santos lose
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Sinner extends Masters tournament streak on home turf, eyes French Open
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Canadian cruise passenger confirmed positive for hantavirus
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England see off gutsy France to clinch another Women's Six Nations
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Sevilla safe despite Real Madrid defeat, Mallorca on brink
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UK police detail arrests after far-right rally and counter demo
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Scotland rugby great Scott Hastings dead at 61
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Smalley tees off with PGA lead and stars in hot pursuit
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Trump issues dire warning to Iran to accept peace deal
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West Ham on brink of Premier League relegation, Man Utd seal third
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Bulgaria's Eurovision winner flies home to rapturous welcome
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Starc takes four to keep Delhi alive in IPL
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Kyiv residents protest 'dangerous' civil code, call for LGBTQ rights
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Modiba thunderbolt gives Sundowns victory in African final first leg
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World champions England see off France to clinch another Women's Six Nations
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Taiwan's leader says island will not be 'traded away'
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Sinner wins Italian Open, extends Masters tournament streak
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'Michael' moonwalks back to top of N. America box office
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Putter powers sizzling Kitayama to record 63 at PGA
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Travolta channelled film greats in low-thrust plane movie
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Large-scale Ukrainian drone barrage kills four in Russia
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Scotland rugby great Scott Hastings dead at 61 - SRU
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Fujimori and Sanchez advance to Peru runoff: official results
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Italian PM meets victims of Modena car incident
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'Fight relentlessly': Ukraine commander vows strikes into Russia
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Kitayama fires sizzling 63 at PGA as No.1 Scheffler starts
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Fernandes equals Premier League assist record in Man Utd win, West Ham brace for Newcastle
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Ireland thrash Scotland 54-5 in Women's Six Nations to finish third
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Vingegaard climbs to victory as Eulalio holds firm in pink
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Carrick expects clarity on Man Utd future in 'coming days'
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Eyewitness says Modena tragedy could have been even worse
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Around 10 'new' victims in France's Epstein probe: prosecutor
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Shock threat by billionaire Bollore's Canal+ group rocks French cinema
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Kohli, Venkatesh dazzle as Bengaluru qualify for IPL play-offs
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Probes ongoing into alleged abuse at 84 Paris preschools: prosecutor
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Di Giannantonio wins Catalan MotoGP Grand Prix, Alex Marquez injured in horror crash
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Fernandes equals assist record as Man Utd edge Forest thriller
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Earps to leave PSG, in talks with London City Lionesses
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Roma near Champions League return with derby triumph
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Bowlers, Joy put Bangladesh on top in second Pakistan Test
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Alex Marquez injured in horrific Catalan MotoGP crash
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'Message for friends and foes': Libyan National Army conducts grand exercises
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Bayern's Neuer sidelined again with leg issue
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Adam Driver shuts down question about clashes with Lena Dunham
'Greatest con job ever': Trump trashes climate science at UN
He mocked renewables as a "joke," praised "clean, beautiful coal" and declared climate change the "greatest con job ever."
President Donald Trump used his UN comeback address Tuesday to champion fossil fuels and deride green technologies on the eve of a climate summit called by Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to galvanize countries into issuing updated emission-reduction plans.
The blistering, nearly hour-long speech railed against everything from immigration to what he cast as the UN's failure to help secure peace in Gaza and Ukraine.
But some of his sharpest barbs were reserved for climate change -- seemingly tailored to a political base that sees climate science as another front in America's culture wars, ahead of a major climate announcement expected Wednesday from the United States' chief geopolitical rival China.
"Climate change -- it's the greatest con job ever perpetrated on the world, in my opinion," said Trump, who received hundreds of millions of dollars in campaign donations from Big Oil during the 2024 election.
The "carbon footprint is a hoax made up by people with evil intentions, and they're heading down a path of total destruction."
Carbon footprint refers to the total amount of greenhouse gas emissions caused by a person, group or product, measured in units of carbon dioxide (CO2) or carbon dioxide equivalents.
The term was in fact popularized in the mid-2000s by an advertising firm working for oil supermajor BP, in what critics say was an effort to shift blame for emissions onto individuals rather than corporations.
"We're getting rid of the falsely named renewables, by the way, they're a joke, they don't work, they're too expensive," he said at another point, about his administration's war on solar and wind, bolstered by a new law that ends clean energy tax credits.
The government has particularly targeted wind, attempting to block projects nearing completion and raising new barriers to permits.
Trump called the technology "so pathetic, so bad," and boasted that he had instead "unleashed" massive efforts to drill for new oil, gas and coal reserves.
During his first term, President Trump abandoned the Paris climate accord.
In his second term, Washington has not simply abandoned climate action but has gone on the offensive for oil and gas interests -- threatening to punish countries that participate in the International Maritime Organization's carbon-pricing system for shipping and embedding the sale of US liquefied natural gas (LNG) in trade deals.
China, by contrast, offers a competing pitch, exporting green technologies including solar panels, batteries and electric vehicles to the world.
"President Trump and his administration continue to spew lies and disinformation about climate science and the overwhelming benefits of clean energy, a grave disservice to the American people," Rachel Cleetus of the Union of Concerned Scientists told AFP.
"Climate change is here, it's costly, and people need real solutions, not propaganda designed to boost the profits of fossil fuel polluters."
B.Mahmoud--SF-PST