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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
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Anisimova gains Swiatek revenge, faces Osaka in US Open semis
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Colombia coal exports plummet after ban on Israel sales
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Australia skipper Cummins to do 'whatever it takes' to play Ashes
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Car-crash season with Ferrari weighing on Hamilton ahead of Monza homecoming
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Guyanese President Irfaan Ali claims election victory
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Jury tells Google to pay $425 mn over app privacy
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Made in China? The remarkable tale of Venice's iconic winged lion
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Guyanese President Irfaan Ali claims reelection
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At least 15 dead after Lisbon funicular derails
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Judge overturns Trump funding cuts to Harvard
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Argentine police recover Nazi-looted painting spotted in property ad
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Ecuador charges trio in presidential hopeful's assassination
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Anisimova stuns Swiatek to reach US Open semi-finals
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Judge overturns Trump funding cuts to Harvard: ruling
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Former federal workers bring back climate portal killed by Trump
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Auger-Aliassime outduels De Minaur to reach US Open semis
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NFL commissioner opens door for Swift Super Bowl performance
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US strike marks shift to military action against drug cartels
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Trump offers more US troops to Poland's nationalist president
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Florida to scrap all vaccine mandates, West Coast states push back
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Islamic State claims deadly attack on Pakistan rally
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Israel says expecting one million Gazans to flee new offensive
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'Ketamine Queen' pleads guilty over Matthew Perry death
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Florida to end 'slavery' of vaccine mandates
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Clippers dodged NBA salary cap with phony job for Leonard - report
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Gaza drama gets 23-minute ovation at Venice premiere
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Epstein victims compiling list of sexual abusers
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Director Julian Schnabel hits out at boycott calls over Israel
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Bangladesh win T20 series against Netherlands 2-0 after no result
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Trump offers more US troops in talks with Poland's nationalist president
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US West Coast states announce new agency for vaccine guidelines

Treat carbon storage like 'scarce resource': scientists
The amount of carbon dioxide that can be stored underground is vastly overestimated, new research said Wednesday, challenging assumptions about the "limitless" potential this approach holds to reducing global warming.
Carbon capture and storage (CCS) is complex and costly, and critics say it cannot meet the urgent need to slash planet-heating emissions and meet the world's climate targets.
One approach works by avoiding emissions at a polluting source -- such as a factory smokestack. Another, known as direct air capture, pulls CO2 from the atmosphere.
But both require the CO2 captured to be injected into rock and locked away underground for centuries or millennia in deep geologic formations.
At present, carbon capture plays a vanishingly small part in addressing the climate crisis. But scientists and policymakers consider it a necessary tool to help bring future warming down to safer levels.
However, in a new paper published in the prestigious journal Nature, a team of international scientists has sharply revised down the global capacity for safely and practically storing carbon underground.
They estimated a global storage limit of around 1,460 billion tonnes of CO2 -- nearly 10 times below scientific and industry assumptions.
This "reality check" should better inform decision-makers considering carbon capture in their long-term climate policies, the study's senior author, Joeri Rogelj, told AFP.
"This is a study that helps us understand -- and actually really corrects -- the working assumption of how much carbon, or CCS capacity, would be available if one takes a practical and a prudent approach," said Rogelj, an expert in carbon capture from Imperial College London.
- 'Scarce resource' -
To reach this revised figure, the team -- led by the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis -- took existing assumptions about carbon storage and ruled out locations deemed risky or economically unviable.
This included, for example, injecting CO2 below major civilian centres, into zones of known seismic activity, or many hundreds of metres beneath the oceans.
The findings underscored that carbon storage should be treated as "a scarce resource that needs to be deployed strategically to maximise climate benefits rather than... a limitless commodity", the study said.
This storage limit could be breached by 2200, the authors said, noting they could not account for possible advances in carbon capture, or other technologies, in future.
Fully exhausting this capacity could lower global temperatures by 0.7C -- but that should be reserved for future generations who may need it most, the authors said.
The IPCC, the UN's expert scientific panel on climate change, says carbon capture is one option for reducing emissions, including in heavy polluting sectors like cement and steel.
But it remains infinitesimal: Rogelj said the amount of carbon captured every year at present amounted to approximately one-thousandth of global annual CO2 emissions.
M.Thompson--AMWN