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Israel strikes Tehran: latest developments in Iran war
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Juve stay in Champions League hunt with last-gasp Roma draw
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Sevilla rescue derby draw to deal Betis top four setback
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Arsenal corner Chelsea into submission, Man Utd climb to third
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Arsenal win set-piece battle to sink Chelsea in title boost
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Dortmund captain Can out for season with ACL tear
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Man Utd climb to third, Fulham sink sorry Spurs
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Briton Brennan bursts to Kuurne-Bruxelles-Kuurne triumph
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West Indies post 195-4 against India in T20 World Cup do-or-die clash
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South Africa 'embrace pressure' and favourites tag, says coach
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Tel Aviv residents say ready to withstand more Iranian attacks
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Russia loses key ally leader as Putin slams Khamenei 'cynical' killing
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AC Milan consolidate top-four credentials with win at Cremonese
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Afghanistan warns Iran war will impact whole region
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Trump wants to halt climate research by key agency: reports
The Trump administration, pursuing its deeply skeptical approach to climate change, wants to severely cut back the research arm of a government agency that plays a pivotal role in global climate science, US media reported Friday.
The administration plans to ask Congress, which sets the budgets for federal agencies, to cut funding for research labs and offices overseeing climate studies in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), according to an internal White House document consulted by CNN and the journal Science.
About 75 percent of funding for NOAA's research branch could be eliminated from the 2026 budget -- drastic cuts to the prestigious agency that could be implemented starting this year.
The administration wants to eliminate the jobs of hundreds of federal and academic scientists who study human-driven global warming, Science said.
The cuts would be on top of at least 1,000 NOAA jobs eliminated last month under the drastic downsizing overseen by the so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).
Scientists say the further cuts could have enormous consequences, given NOAA's crucial role both nationally and globally in weather forecasting, climate studies and fisheries conservation.
Researchers and labs around the world rely on data and mathematical models from NOAA, so an end to its research programs could have a drastic impact, scientists say.
It could also affect the US economy, given the heavy dependence of the agricultural sector and fishing industry on NOAA weather predictions and data.
Some conservatives see NOAA as a chief purveyor of what they call "climate alarmism."
The Trump administration has launched a concerted assault on the government's climate-related resources, ordering massive layoffs and deleting websites with data on the weather and climate.
P.Mathewson--AMWN