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US House revolt advances Obamacare subsidy extension
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Swiss mining giant Glencore in merger talks with Rio Tinto
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US snowboard star Kim dislocates shoulder ahead of Olympic three-peat bid
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Brazil's Lula vetoes bill reducing Bolsonaro's sentence
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AC Milan scrape a point with Genoa after late penalty howler
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Arsenal miss chance to stretch lead in Liverpool stalemate
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Stocks mixed as traders await US jobs data, oil rebounds
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After Minneapolis shooting, AI fabrications of victim and shooter
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Trump says no pardon for Sean 'Diddy' Combs
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Venezuela begins 'large' prisoner release amid US pressure
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Real Madrid beat Atletico to set up Clasico Spanish Super Cup final
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Heavy wind, rain, snow batters Europe
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PSG beat Marseille on penalties to win French Champions Trophy
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From sci-fi to sidewalk: exoskeletons go mainstream
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Rare genius dogs learn vocabulary by eavesdropping: study
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EU orders Musk's Grok AI to keep data after nudes outcry
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Venezuela announces release of 'large number' of prisoners
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Rare gorilla twins born in conflict-hit DR Congo nature park
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Dolphins fire head coach McDaniel after four seasons
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Three ships head to US with Venezuela oil as capacity concerns grow
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Trump says US could run Venezuela and its oil for years
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Heavy wind, rain, snow to batter Europe
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Morocco coach Regragui aims to shift pressure to Cameroon before AFCON clash
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HRW warns right to protest 'under attack' in UK
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French farmers rage against EU-Mercosur trade deal
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Humanoid robots go for knockout in high-tech Vegas fight night
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Brazil's Lula vetoes law reducing Bolsonaro's sentence
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Macron accuses US of 'turning away' from allies, breaking rules
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Joshua pays tribute to close friends killed in crash
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Protesters, US law enforcement clash after immigration officer kills woman
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French ex-spy chief cops suspended jail term for 15 mn euro shakedown
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Syria bombs Kurdish areas in city of Aleppo
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Confusion reigns over Venezuela's oil industry as US looms
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Stocks retrench as traders eye geopolitics, US jobs data
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US trade gap shrinks to smallest since 2009 as imports fall
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Russia releases French researcher in prisoner exchange
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Spain signs agreement with Church to compensate abuse victims
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Macron accuses US of 'breaking free from international rules'
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US could run Venezuela, tap its oil for years, Trump says
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England to stick with Stokes and McCullum despite Ashes flop
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Nobel laureate Bialiatski tells AFP 'important' to keep pressure on Belarus
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Russia slams Western peacekeeping plan for Ukraine
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Bordeaux's Du Preez wary of Northampton's Champions Cup revenge mission
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Romero apologises for Spurs slump as crisis deepens
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Former Premier League referee Coote gets suspended sentence for indecent image
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New clashes hit Iran as opposition urges protests, strikes
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Stocks retreat as traders eye geopolitics, US jobs data
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'Girl with a Pearl Earring' to be shown in Japan, in rare trip abroad
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Syria tells civilians to leave Aleppo's Kurdish areas
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'Sign of life': defence boom lifts German factory orders
At UN summit, new hope for deal to save nature
Top officials at high-stakes UN biodiversity negotiations said Saturday they were confident of securing a major deal to save the natural world from destruction.
Observers had warned the COP15 talks aimed at sealing a "peace pact for nature" risked collapse due to disagreement over how much the rich world should pay to save ecosystems in developing countries.
But the Chinese chair of the conference said Saturday he was "greatly confident" delegates would reach a deal and his Canadian counterpart said "tremendous" progress had been made.
"I am greatly confident that we can ... keep our ambitions as well as achieve consensus," China's Environment Minister Huang Runqiu told reporters in Montreal, where the COP15 meeting is being held.
His Canadian counterpart Steven Guilbeault echoed his statement, saying: "We've made tremendous progress... I don't know about how many of us thought we could get there."
French President Emmanuel Macron tweeted: "With just a few days to go before the end of the COP 15 Biodiversity Conference in Montreal, my message to our partners is: now is not the time for small decisions, let's go big!
"Let's work together to achieve the most ambitious agreement possible. The world is depending on it."
The negotiations officially run until December 19, but could run longer if needed.
China holds the presidency of COP15, but its strict Covid rules prevented it from hosting, leaving that task to Canada in deep winter.
At stake is the future of the planet: whether humanity can roll back the habitat destruction, pollution and climate crisis that threaten an estimated one million plant and animal species with extinction.
The text is meant to be a roadmap for nations through 2030. The last 10-year plan, signed in Japan in 2010, failed to achieve any of its objectives, a failure blamed widely on its lack of monitoring mechanisms.
Major draft goals now include a cornerstone pledge to protect 30 percent of the world's land and oceans by 2030.
That ambitious objective is being compared to the Paris deal commitment to hold long-term planetary warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius -- or at least to 2.0 degrees.
- Money matters -
The more than 20 targets under discussion include reducing environmentally destructive farming subsidies, requiring businesses to assess and report on their biodiversity impacts, and tackling the scourge of invasive species.
Representatives of Indigenous communities, who safeguard 80 percent of the world's remaining biodiversity, want their rights to practice stewardship of their lands to be enshrined in the final agreement.
The issue of how much money the rich countries -- collectively known as the Global North -- will send to the Global South, home to most of the world's biodiversity, has emerged as the biggest sticking point.
Developing countries say developed nations grew rich by exploiting their resources and the South should be paid to preserve its ecosystems.
Several countries have announced new commitments either at the COP or recently, with Europe emerging as a key leader. The European Union has committed seven billion euros ($7.4 billion) for the period until 2027, double its prior pledge.
But these commitments are still well short of what observers say is needed, and what developing countries are seeking.
Brazil has led that charge, proposing flows of $100 billion annually, compared to the roughly $10 billion at present.
Whether international aid is delivered via a new fund, an existing mechanism called the Global Environment Facility (GEF), or a halfway solution involving a new "trust fund" within the GEF is still up for debate.
With the clock ticking, over 3,000 scientists have written an open letter to policymakers, calling for immediate action to stop the destruction of critical ecosystems.
"We owe this to ourselves and to future generations -- we can't wait any longer," they said.
Beyond the moral implications, there is the question of self-interest: $44 trillion of economic value generation -- more than half the world's total GDP -- depends on nature and its services.
H.E.Young--AMWN