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Two more suspects charged over Louvre heist
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Pollock shines as England eventually overpower Australia
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Villarreal crush Rayo to move second, Atletico beat Sevilla
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Sinner crushes Zverev to reach Paris Masters final, brink of No. 1
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Pollock shines as England beat Australia in Autumn opener
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Ukraine sends special forces to embattled eastern city
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Arsenal cruise against Burnley as Man Utd held
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Pollock shines as England beat Australia 25-7 in Autumn Nations Series
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Auger-Aliassime downs Bublik to reach Paris Masters final
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Villarreal crush Rayo to move second in La Liga
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Female suspect, 38, charged in Louvre heist: AFP
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US not sending any high-level officials to COP30
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Tanzania president wins 98% of votes after violence-marred polls
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South Korea hosts Xi as Chinese leader rekindles fraught ties
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Canada PM says Xi talks 'turning point', apologises to Trump
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Iranian tech prodigies battle it out with robots
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Explorers seek ancient Antarctica ice in climate change study
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Serbia marks first anniversary of deadly train station collapse
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Bangladesh dockers strike over foreign takeover of key port
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Tanzania president wins election landslide after deadly protests
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Dodgers, Blue Jays gear up for winner-take-all World Series game seven
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China to exempt some Nexperia chips from export ban
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Dodgers hold off Blue Jays 3-1 to force World Series game seven
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Panama wins canal expansion arbitration against Spanish company
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World already 'paying terrible price' for climate inaction: Guterres
Humanity is 'paying a terrible price' for inaction on global warming, with time running out to correct the course and avoid climate disaster, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said Thursday.
A new report by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) says the next decade is critical in the fight against climate change or any hope of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius will be lost.
The current pace of climate action would result in a catastrophic 3.1C of warming this century, UNEP said in its latest Emissions Gap report.
And even if all existing pledges to cut emissions were enacted as promised, global temperatures would soar 2.6C above pre-industrial levels -- a still devastating scenario for humanity.
"Either leaders bridge the emissions gap, or we plunge headlong into climate disaster, with the poorest and most vulnerable suffering the most," said Guterres.
"Around the world, people are paying a terrible price."
The call to action, just weeks before the UN COP29 climate summit, follows a streak of destructive and deadly extreme weather in a year expected to be the hottest in recorded history.
The world's poorest have been particularly hard hit, with typhoons and heatwaves in Asia and the Caribbean, floods in Africa, and droughts and wildfires in Latin America.
- 'Out of time' -
UNEP's latest projections blow well past 1.5C, which nations agreed in Paris in 2015 was the safer bet to minimise the worst consequences of a warming planet.
Guterres said wealthy G20 economies in particular would need to show far more ambition in the next round of climate pledges, known as NDCs, which are due in early 2025.
These commitments, which detail how a country will reduce emissions across their economies, were "our best last chance to change course", said David King of the Climate Crisis Advisory Group.
"To avoid a scenario in which humanity will struggle to survive intact, nations must use the window of opportunity over the coming year," said King, who chairs the expert consortium.
The 1.5C limit was "still technically possible", UNEP said -- but only with enormous reductions by 2035 in heat-trapping gases caused primarily by burning fossil fuels.
Rather than declining, emissions are still rising, hitting a new record high last year.
Guterres said the world was "playing with fire".
"But there can be no more playing for time. We're out of time," he said.
Keeping 1.5C on track would require a collective effort "only ever seen following a global conflict", UNEP said.
Without pulling together "on a scale and pace never seen before... the 1.5C goal will soon be dead," said UNEP executive director Inger Andersen.
To have a hope of meeting that goal, emissions must be slashed 42 percent by 2030 and 57 percent by 2035, UNEP added.
- 'Not too late' -
The world's 20 largest economies were responsible for nearly 80 percent of global emissions in 2023. The bottom 47 countries accounted for three percent.
"These reports are an historical litany of negligence from the world's leaders to tackle the climate crisis with the urgency it demands, but it's not too late to take corrective action," said Tracy Carty from Greenpeace International.
The United States was historically the biggest polluter, accounting for 20 percent of global emissions since 1850, when the burning of fossil fuels for energy began in earnest.
The European Union and China accounted for 12 percent each, UNEP said.
UNEP said advances in solar and wind, two proven and cost-effective technologies, could deliver a steep fall in emissions but investment in such carbon-cutting solutions needed to rise six-fold to meet 1.5C.
The scale of that challenge means a temporary breach of 1.5C is increasingly being seen as inevitable by scientists and policymakers.
But a recent study found that even exceeding 1.5C before bringing warming back down -- a scenario known as an "overshoot" -- could cause irreversible consequences for the planet.
J.Williams--AMWN