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China tells airlines to suspend Boeing jet deliveries: report
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Harvard sees $2.2bn funding freeze after defying Trump
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'Tough' Singapore election expected for non-Lee leader
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Japan orders Google to cease alleged antitrust violation
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Malawi's debt crisis deepens as aid cuts hurt
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Danish brewer adds AI 'colleagues' to human team
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USAID cuts rip through African health care systems
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Arsenal target Champions League glory to save season
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Kane and Bayern need killer instinct with home final at stake
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Mbappe leading Real Madrid comeback charge against Arsenal
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S. Korea plans extra $4.9 bn help for chips amid US tariff anxiety
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Xi's Vietnam trip aiming to 'screw' US, says Trump
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Iran's top diplomat to visit Russia after US nuclear talks
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China accuses US spies of Asian Winter Games cyberattacks
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Cambodia genocide denial law open to abuse, say critics
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Holocaust remembrance and Gaza collide in Brussels schools
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The miracle babies who survived Ravensbruck
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Asian stocks mixed as stability returns, autos lifted by exemption hope
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Disarming Lebanon's Hezbollah no longer inconceivable: analysts
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London hosts talks to find 'pathway' to end Sudan war
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Harvey Weinstein New York retrial for sex crimes to begin
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Meta news ban intensifying Canadians' legacy media break
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All Black wing Tele'a announces Japan switch
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Chinese EV battery giant CATL posts 33% surge in Q1 profit
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China's economy likely grew 5.1% in Q1 on export surge: AFP poll
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S. Korea govt plans $4.9 bn more help for semiconductors as US tariff risk bites
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Palestinian student detained at US citizenship interview
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Argentina's peso sinks after currency controls eased
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LVMH sales dip as Trump tariffs dent luxury tastes
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Israeli demands hostage release for Gaza ceasefire: Hamas
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Sean 'Diddy' Combs pleads not guilty to new sex charges
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Luka Modric becomes co-owner of Championship club Swansea
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Peru mourns its literary giant Mario Vargas Llosa
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Bournemouth beat Fulham to boost European hopes
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Man charged over Tesla arson as anti-Musk wave sweeps US
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US opens door to tariffs on pharma, semiconductors
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Newcastle manager Howe diagnosed with pneumonia
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Alvarez bags penalty double as Atletico beat Valladolid
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Judge to captain USA in World Baseball Classic
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Lukaku stars as Napoli keep pressure on Serie A leaders Inter
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Ukrainians mourn Sumy strike victims as Russia denies targeting civilians
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Pope paves way for 'God's architect' Gaudi's sainthood
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Harvard defies Trump demands for policy changes, risking funding
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13 million displaced as Sudan war enters third year: UN
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Dhoni snaps Chennai's five-match IPL losing streak
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Meta to train AI models on European users' public data
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Mexican president opposes ban on songs glorifying drug cartels
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Trump blames Zelensky for 'millions' of deaths in Russian invasion
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French prosecutor investigates as man confesses to throwing bottle at Van der Poel
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UN warns over Gaza humanitarian crisis as France, Abbas call for truce

COP27 summit racing against the climate clock
The COP27 summit kicks off Sunday in Egypt with nearly 200 countries struggling to outpace increasingly dire climate impacts in a world upended by war and economic turmoil.
Just in the last few months, a cascade of climate-addled weather disasters has killed thousands, displaced millions and caused billions in damages: massive flooding in Pakistan and Nigeria, deepening droughts in Africa and the western US, cyclones in the Caribbean, and unprecedented heat waves across three continents.
"Report after report has painted a clear and bleak picture," said UN chief Antonio Guterres in the run-up to the 13-day conference in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheik.
"COP27 must lay the foundations for much faster, bolder climate action now and in this crucial decade, when the global climate fight will be won or lost."
Concretely, that means slashing greenhouse emissions 45 percent by 2030 to cap global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius above late-19th-century levels.
Warming beyond that threshold, scientists warn, could push Earth toward an unlivable hothouse state.
But current trends would see carbon pollution increase 10 percent by the end of the decade and Earth's surface heat up 2.8C, according to findings unveiled last week.
Promises made under the Paris Agreement would, if kept, only shave off a few tenths of a degree.
"Our planet is on course for reaching tipping points that will make climate chaos irreversible and forever bake in catastrophic temperature rise," Guterres said recently.
"We need to move from tipping points to turning points for hope."
- Conspicuous no-show -
For the UN climate forum, that means transitioning from negotiations to implementation.
It also means a shift from politics to the economy, with government investments in China, the US and the European Union leveraging hundreds of billions of yuan, dollars and euros into trillions.
The already daunting task of decarbonising the global economy in a few years has been made even harder by a global energy crunch and rapid inflation, along with debt and food crises across much of the developing world.
"There have been fraught moments before," said E3G think tank senior analyst Alden Meyer, recalling other wars, the near collapse of the UN-led process in 2009, and Donald Trump yanking the United States out of the Paris Agreement in 2016.
"But this is a perfect storm," dubbed by some a "polycrisis", said the 30-year veteran of the climate arena.
After front-line negotiators set COP27 in motion on Sunday, more than 120 world leaders will put in appearances on Monday and Tuesday.
The most conspicuous no-show will be China's Xi Jinping, whose leadership was renewed last month at a Communist Party Congress.
US President Joe Biden has said he will come, but only after legislative elections on Tuesday that could see either or both houses of Congress fall into the hands of Republicans hostile to international action on climate change.
Cooperation between the United States and China -- the world's two largest economies and carbon polluters -- has been crucial to rare breakthroughs in the nearly 30-year saga of UN climate talks, including the 2015 Paris Agreement.
- 'High expectations' -
But Sino-US relations have sunk to a 40-year low after a visit to Taiwan by House leader Nancy Pelosi and a US ban on the sale of high-level chip technology to China, leaving the outcome of COP27 in doubt.
A meeting between Xi and Biden at the G20 summit in Bali days before the UN climate meeting ends, if it happens, could be decisive.
One bright spot at COP27 will be the arrival of Brazilian president-elect Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, whose campaign vowed to protect the Amazon and reverse the extractive policies of outgoing President Jair Bolsonaro.
More than any other COP, perhaps, this one will be about money -- or how little of it has flowed from countries that got rich burning fossil fuels to mostly blameless poorer nations suffering the worst consequences.
Developing nations have "high expectations" for the creation of a dedicated funding facility to cover loss and damage, UN Climate Change Executive Secretary Simon Stiell said on Friday.
"The most vulnerable countries are tired, they are frustrated," Stiell said. "The time to have an open and honest discussion on loss and damage is now."
The United States and the European Union -- fearful of creating an open-ended reparations framework -- have dragged their feet and challenged the need for a separate funding stream.
M.Carneiro--PC