-
Russell resists Antonelli in Canadian GP F1 sprint race
-
Defending Champions Cup title 'special' for Bordeaux's Tameifuna
-
Hull promoted to Premier League after McBurnie strikes late in play-off final
-
Buse outlasts Paul for Hamburg title to end Peruvian drought
-
Thousands gather in Serbian capital to call for elections
-
Vingegaard takes Giro lead after storming to victory in 14th stage
-
American Tien warms up for Roland Garros with Geneva Open win
-
Fils pulls out of home Grand Slam with painful injury
-
Bielle-Biarrey, Lucu inspire Bordeaux-Begles past Leinster to Champions Cup defence
-
French court hands man 25-year term for torture, rape of ex-partner
-
China authorities report 82 dead in coal mine blast, serious violations
-
Navarro downs Mboko to win Strasbourg clay title
-
Vingegaard takes Giro lead after storrming to victory in 14th stage
-
Russian war drama among favourites for top Cannes film prize
-
England's Bethell leaves IPL after finger injury
-
Ukrainian strike on college in Russian-occupied town kills 18: officials
-
Five first-round matches to watch at French Open
-
Iran and US say could be close to talks breakthrough
-
France bans Israeli security minister Ben Gvir from country
-
Roland Garros organisers, players have 'positive' meeting over dispute
-
Dos Santos at the double, Jackson and Russell shine in Xiamen
-
Man Utd's Fernandes named Premier League Player of the Season
-
Iran chief negotiator vows 'crushing' response if US returns to war
-
EU automated border system suspended at Dover amid bank holiday chaos
-
F1 legend Alain Prost's Swiss home robbed: reports
-
De Zerbi demands 'blood and spirit' from Spurs on survival Sunday
-
Guardiola reveals Hart snub was biggest Man City regret
-
Roland Garros organisers, players have 'encouraging' meeting over dispute
-
French mother of boys abandoned in Portugal remanded in custody
-
Uganda confirms new Ebola cases, linked to DR Congo
-
Pope condemns environmental harm in Italy's 'Land of Fires'
-
Auckland FC become first New Zealand team to win A-League title
-
Russian war drama among favourites for top Cannes prize
-
North Korean women crowned Asian club champions in South
-
China coal mine blast kills at least 90, more missing
-
Full steam ahead for Milei's Andean mining revolution
-
Iran weighs peace proposal, accuses US of 'excessive demands'
-
Rubio in India to renew ties after Trump's China lovefest
-
Pope visits Italy's 'Land of Fires'
-
China set for latest space launch, with Hong Kong astronaut aboard
-
Police, protesters clash in new marches against Bolivian leader
-
US jury finds Boeing not guilty in 737 MAX grounding lawsuit
-
'Humans want to optimize': Enhanced Games founder embraces doping row
-
Rubio starts first visit to India on heels of US-China summit
-
The Asian workers keeping Greenland in business
-
'Never going back': Cartel attack decimates Mexican Indigenous town
-
Cannes highlights as film festival wraps up
-
The movies vying for the Cannes Film Festival's top prize
-
Russian war drama among favourites for Cannes top prize
-
Banned ex-100m champ Kerley to compete clean at Enhanced Games
Senegal not giving up on oil and gas
The new offshore gas terminal appears through the morning mist cloaking the Atlantic Ocean near Saint Louis, where Senegal meets Mauritania.
It has been hailed as a new economic beginning in developing Africa, and condemned as a new source of pollution in a world suffocating from global warming.
On the beach, a dugout canoe is hauled up the wet sand after a night's fishing.
"Not a lot of fish," scowls El Hadji Gaye, his eye catching the giant structure nearly 10 kilometres (six miles) out at sea.
Senegal, like the Democratic Republic of Congo, has discovered oil and gas reserves, raising hopes of future riches and industrialisation.
They have no intention of yielding to appeals to leave lucrative oil and gas in the ground in the name of fighting climate change.
Senegalese President Macky Sall says it would be "an injustice" and he has launched a diplomatic counter-offensive to justify extracting the resources, starting next year.
"Not being the greatest polluters since we are not industrialised, it would be unfair in the search for a solution (to global warming) to ban Africa from using the natural resources which are underground," Sall told visiting German Chancellor Olaf Scholz in May.
And the message seems even more likely to be heard now that Europeans, facing a major energy crisis following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, are looking to diversify their oil and gas supplies.
- 'Exacerbate' global warming -
Niger, the world's poorest country according to the UN's Human Development Index, is also building Africa's longest oil pipeline -- a nearly 2,000-kilometre (1,250-mile) link to Benin that will enable it to export crude from as early as next year.
Greenpeace Africa's ocean campaign manager Aliou Ba stressed that exploiting fossil fuel deposits will further "exacerbate" the climate crisis, with efforts to limit the temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius looking increasingly forlorn.
Francois Gemenne, an expert with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, said: "When you are poor it is very difficult to give up on treasure, so something more interesting has to be on offer.
"What's at stake is that these countries can and do choose a decarbonised economy.
"And that requires the transfer of technology and investment in renewables, which is still generally lacking."
The pre-COP27 talks held in Kinshasa at the start of October heard calls for alternative technologies and major financing to sustain a green transition.
But the government of the vast, rainforest-covered DRC is standing by its right to exploit petrol and gas, despite criticism from environmental groups warning against the release of huge quantities of carbon.
At the pre-COP gathering, Congolese Prime Minister Jean-Michel Sama Lukonde pointed out that some European nations have returned to burning highly polluting coal due to gas shortages triggered by the Russian invasion.
He warned against "discrimination", "with certain states free to carry on or even increase their emissions, and others prevented from exploiting their natural resources".
DRC senior climate negotiator Tosi Mpanu Mpanu sees a positive outcome. "Paradoxically, it's the oil money that is seen as dirty which will allow us to have sufficient means to take back our environmental sovereignty and reduce emissions caused by deforestation," he said.
- 'Radical change' -
Senegal's oil and gas discoveries account for only 0.07 percent and 0.5 respectively of world reserves.
But Energy and Oil Minister Sophie Gladima said "they are important enough to radically change the economy and industrial fabric of our country and thereby its future prospects."
"Just exploiting our hydrocarbons will enable us to accelerate public access to electricity and above all to lower the cost of production and encourage industrialisation."
She underlined the legal framework needed to bring thousands of Senegalese jobs into the sector, and the setting up of the National Institute of Oil and Gas to turn out a highly qualified workforce.
But fishermen say they are being excluded from the future planned out by the state.
As the launch of gas production draws closer, the authorities are stepping up their control over the offshore platform.
A security perimeter has been set up and a boat patrols the coastline to block any seafarer tempted to cross an invisible barrier.
"This place was where we found most fish," says El Hadji.
"Now we are caught in a trap because we can no longer go there or further north into Mauritanian waters," the 39-year-old fisherman adds.
Behind him more than a dozen of his comrades chant rhythmically as they push their multicoloured canoe over the sand, following centuries-old traditions on a narrow strip of land separating the Senegal river from the Atlantic Ocean.
"I only know how to fish. My parents fished, my grandparents also. What will I become? What will my children do?" El Hadji asks.
He turns and looks at his friends, the waves crashing. In the distance, the gas platform looms above the ocean.
A.Mahlangu--AMWN