
-
UK vows to speed up asylum claims as hotel protests spread
-
Head, Marsh, Green hit centuries as Australia make 431-2 in 3rd South Africa ODI
-
Pujara announces retirement from Indian cricket
-
Bird call contest boosts conservation awareness in Hong Kong's concrete jungle
-
Kneecap to play Paris concert in defiance of objections
-
Indonesian child's viral fame draws tourists to boat race
-
LAFC's Son, Whitecaps' Mueller score first MLS goals
-
Australian quick Morris out for 12 months with back injury
-
Son scores first MLS goal as LAFC draw 1-1 with Dallas
-
India's Modi dangles tax cuts as US tariffs loom
-
Indonesia turns down ear-splitting 'haram' street parties
-
North Korea test-fires two new air defence missiles: KCNA
-
Sinner, Sabalenka chasing rare repeats as US Open gets underway
-
Venezuela rallies militia volunteers in response to US 'threat'
-
Musk's megarocket faces crucial new test after failures
-
UK's mass facial-recognition roll-out alarms rights groups
-
Home hope Henderson, Aussie Lee share Canadian Women's Open lead
-
Fucsovics holds off van de Zandschulp for ATP Winston-Salem crown
-
Fleetwood, Cantlay share PGA Tour Championship lead
-
Trump Holds the Rescheduling Key: Will Marijuana Reform Follow the Patient's Right to Try Path?
-
Argentina stun All Blacks with historic 29-23 upset win
-
France begin Women's Rugby World Cup with hard-fought win over Italy
-
Barca complete late comeback win as Atletico drop more points in Liga
-
Alcaraz targeting 'unbelievable' Sinner at US Open
-
Swiatek plays down favorite status ahead of US Open
-
De Bruyne strikes in Napoli's strong start as Modric's Milan sank by Cremonese
-
Springboks back in contention after win - Erasmus
-
Cirstea downs Li to claim WTA Cleveland crown
-
Nigeria says killed over 35 jihadists near Cameroon border
-
Sri Lanka ex-president rushed to intensive care after jailing
-
Russia claims more Ukraine land as hopes for summit fade
-
Atletico still without Liga win after Elche draw
-
Schell shock as six-try star leads Canada to 65-7 World Cup hammering of Fiji
-
Gyokeres scores twice but injuries to Saka, Odegaard sour Arsenal rout of Leeds
-
Leverkusen stumble in Ten Hag Bundesliga debut, Dortmund collapse late
-
Man City revamp rocked by Spurs, Arsenal thrash Leeds
-
Gyokeres scores twice as Arsenal rout Leeds
-
De Bruyne strikes in Napoli's strong start to Scudetto defence at Sassuolo
-
Seoul says fired warning shots after North Korean troops crossed border
-
McGhie the hat-trick heroine as Scotland overwhelm Wales in Women's Rugby World Cup
-
'It's in my DNA': Williams relishes US Open return at 45
-
Portugal suffers new wildfire death as Spain beats back blazes
-
Pollard steers Springboks to victory over Wallabies
-
Aubameyang stars as Marseille end chaotic week on five-goal high
-
US govt wants migrant targeted in crackdown deported to Uganda: lawyers
-
Man City revamp rocked by Spurs, Villa beaten at Brentford
-
Philipsen wins Vuelta a Espana opening stage
-
Crystal Palace's Eze returns to boyhood club Arsenal
-
Reyna trades Dortmund for Gladbach chasing 'new chapter'
-
Leverkusen stumble in Ten Hag Bundesliga debut

UN climate summit to run overtime as fury mounts on fossil fuels
UN climate talks in Dubai were set Tuesday to run past a host-imposed deadline for a deal as at-risk nations voiced fury over a proposed compromise that stops short of phasing out fossil fuels.
The Emirati president of the COP28 summit has repeatedly pressed the nearly 200 nations to reach an ambitious deal by the official end of talks at 11 am (0700 GMT), in an effort to force decisions.
But after another late night of haggling, there was no sign that the talks were anywhere near completion, with negotiators waiting for a fresh text after wide criticism of a draft released Monday.
"We have time and we are prepared to stay a little longer," German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said.
The team from the Marshall Islands -- which lies on average 2.1 metres (seven feet) above sea level and is threatened with submersion as ice melts -- vowed to stay until the end.
The Pacific archipelago's negotiator, John Silk, said that his country "did not come here to sign our death warrant".
Campaigners had hoped the COP28 summit -- set in a glitzy metropolis built on petrodollars -- would take the historic step of calling for the first time for a global phase-out of fossil fuels, which account for three-quarters of greenhouse gas emissions blamed for the planetary crisis.
But climate decisions must be made by consensus and Saudi Arabia, the world's largest oil exporter, has led opposition to the threat to its financial lifeblood.
The draft put forward by COP28 president Sultan Al Jaber -- himself head of the UAE's national oil company -- only lists a series of options including reductions in fossil fuel production and consumption.
- 'Broken beyond repair' -
Clive Hamilton, a professor at Australia's Charles Sturt University and veteran watcher of climate negotiations, said the "extraordinarily weak draft" showed the influence of the fossil fuel lobby, which showed up at COP28 in record numbers.
"If anything like the current text is adopted, it will show the COP process to be broken beyond repair," he said.
Scientists say the planet has already warmed by 1.2 degrees Celsius (2.2 Fahrenheit) from pre-industrial times and that 2023 -- marked by lethal disasters including wildfires across the world -- has likely been the warmest in 100,000 years.
The 2015 Paris summit endorsed an ambition of checking warming at 1.5 Celsius -- a goal endorsed in the latest draft, but which critics say is virtually impossible without serious efforts to curb oil, gas and coal.
"I don't think anybody here wants to be associated with the failure to live up to this responsibility. Not a lot of people in public life are asked to make life and death choices historically," said US climate envoy John Kerry, who helped negotiate the Paris accord.
"This is a war for survival," he said in a closed-door session which ended at around 2:30 am.
Kerry has supported calls to phase out fossil fuels, even though the United States remains the world's largest oil producer and much of the rival Republican Party adamantly opposes action on climate.
- Revisions expected -
Former US vice president Al Gore, who won the Nobel Peace Prize for his climate advocacy, said that the "obsequious" draft looked as if it had been written by the OPEC oil cartel.
"In order to prevent COP28 from being the most embarrassing and dismal failure in 28 years of international climate negotiations, the final text must include clear language on phasing out fossil fuels," Gore wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.
Jaber acknowledged Monday there was work to do, and a person familiar with the COP28 presidency's thinking called Monday's text "an opening gambit" that could be built upon.
"This is not a menu in a restaurant. We have to do all of these things," Canada's Steven Guilbeault, part of a group of ministers tasked by Jaber to shepherd negotiations, told AFP.
The latest draft deal also includes calls to accelerate zero- and low-emission technologies -- including renewables and nuclear power -- in language similar to a joint statement reached last month by the United States and China, the world's two biggest emitters.
Ch.Havering--AMWN