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Alarm in Germany as 'dangerous' Maddie suspect set to walk
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Italian fashion icon Giorgio Armani dead at 91
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Pro-Palestinian protests rock Spain's Vuelta cycling race
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Tourists and locals united in grief after Lisbon funicular crash
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Comedy writer at centre of UK free-speech row in court on harassment charge
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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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Coffee and cash: how Hamas pays its civil servants in secret
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Stock markets mixed with eyes on US jobs data
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China's Xi holds talks with North Korea's Kim in Beijing
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Seniors back to work as ageing Germany battles pension burden
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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

Climate: Corporate 'net zero' pledges lack credibility
Nearly half the world's biggest companies have pledged to erase their carbon footprints by around mid-century, but only a handful have credible game plans for doing so, climate policy research groups said Monday.
Without tangible action from firms, the Net Zero Stocktake 2023 report warned, capping global warming at tolerable levels will likely remain out of reach.
Barely one degree Celsius of warming to date has made extreme weather more destructive and deadly, and UN climate experts have said the world could breach the Paris treaty limit of 1.5C above the preindustrial benchmark within a decade.
"The big question is whether existing net zero targets will acquire the measures of credibility quickly enough to keep the Paris Agreement's temperature goals within reach," co-author John Lang from the Energy & Climate Intelligence Unit told AFP.
Taking into account national, regional and corporate pledges, some 90 percent of the global economy has climbed on board the 'net zero' bandwagon, up from 15 percent four years ago.
In business, 929 companies on the Forbes 2000 list have set targets to eliminate their emissions by around 2050, more than twice as many as in December 2020.
But measuring these CO2-purging pledges against the yardstick of half-a-dozen standards for assessing net zero claims shows that almost all fall down badly on the details.
"Most entities that have pledged net zero do not meet minimum requirements for what good net zero looks like," said Lang.
Only four percent of corporate commitments are in line with five "starting line" criteria set out in the UN Race to Zero guidelines, one of the voluntary standards.
These basic benchmarks include setting a specific net zero target; covering greenhouse gases other than CO2, such as methane and nitrous oxide; very limited use of carbon offsets, such as planting trees, instead of emissions reductions; and annual reporting on progress toward both interim and long-term targets.
Arguably no sector is under more pressure to decarbonise than fossil fuel companies, and 75 of the 112 largest of these firms have net zero targets today, 50 percent more than a year ago.
But most of these targets are "largely meaningless," the report said, because they do not include so-called scope three emissions -- downstream impacts such as CO2 released by the burning of the oil, gas or coal.
Overall, barely a third of corporate net zero targets examined included scope three.
- 'No rowing back' -
As pressure mounts, signs of a backlash against net zero commitments has emerged across the corporate landscape.
Last month half-a-dozen members of the Net Zero Insurance Alliance, launched in 2021, backed out of the group, and some large institutional investors have softened their net zero pledges as well.
"People are realising that it's not a fad, and as they turn their attention to the 'how' of net zero we are seeing pushback," said Lang.
"But there's no rowing back from where we are now," he added. "This is now a norm for the corporate world."
Gradually, voluntary compliance schemes will give way to regulations and shifts in market-based incentives, Lang predicted.
Already today, the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) in the United States and the Net Zero Industry Act in the European Union are shifting hundreds of billions of dollars from carbon-polluting to clean energy.
Even the fossil fuel industry is not immune to mounting pressure as decarbonisation of the global economy accelerates.
In 2023, more than $1.7 trillion will be invested in carbon-free energy, compared to $1 trillion going into energy and power from oil, gas and coal, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA). For the first time this year, investment in solar power will outstrip that in oil.
And some incumbent energy firms, such Danish multinational Orsted, have successfully transitioned from fossil fuels to renewables.
"Slowly but surely the narrative is changing," said Lang. "I do think we will live to see the day where the social license to operate of fossil fuel companies will be withdrawn."
The NewClimate Institute, Oxford Net Zero, and Driven EnviroLab also contributed to the Net Zero Stocktake 2023 report.
Th.Berger--AMWN