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Curacao firmly on the map after World Cup heroics
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Pro-Trump presidential hopeful takes early lead as Colombia counts votes
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Trump say repairs to begin 'immediately' for Washington pool renovation
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Yamal off the mark at World Cup in Spain rout as Iran hold Belgium
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Rune 'not ready' to put a date on tennis return
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Argentina weaknesses? Austria's World Cup coach can't find any
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Polls close in Colombia runoff pitting pro-Trump hardliner against leftist
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A nation divided over Team Melli as Iran faces Belgium
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McIlroy races for exit after weekend US Open fade
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Belgium held 0-0 by Iran as Ngoy sent off
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Mbappe ready for 'special' 100th cap for France at World Cup
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Watkins ready for England super-sub role at World Cup
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Yamashita tops Woad in playoff to win Meijer LPGA Classic
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Clark leads Burns by one as US Open back-nine drama begins
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Syria president denies wanting to intervene in Lebanon after Trump remarks
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Timeless Messi eyes World Cup record as Argentina face Austria
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Saudi critics must be 'realists', says Donis after Spain lesson
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Brazil must adapt to loss of injured Raphinha at World Cup, says Paqueta
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Serena Williams given Wimbledon singles wildcard
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'Absurd' to doubt Spain, says De la Fuente after Saudi Arabia rout
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Iranians walk out of talks venue after Trump threat
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Iraq's Arnold promises to have a go against France at World Cup
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'Toy Story 5' rakes in $160 mn in year's best opening weekend
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Legendary Cuban spy chief Ramiro Valdes dies at 94
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Yamal off the mark at World Cup as Spain thrash Saudi Arabia
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Clark and Scheffler begin final-round drama at US Open
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Yamal off mark at World Cup as Spain thrash Saudi
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Yamal scores on injury return as Spain thrash Saudi Arabia
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Noskova overpowers Pegula to win Berlin WTA
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Iran warns US to 'be careful' after Trump threat
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Gakpo savours 'freedom' to fire Dutch in World Cup title bid
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Cerundolo outlasts Paul to win marathon Queen's Club final
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Pogacar wins final stage to seal Tour of Switzerland success
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Henry the hero for New Zealand as England bring back Stokes
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Bolivia removes roadblocks after emergency decree
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Vance hopes US, Iran can turn 'new leaf' with talks
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Europe sweats through new heatwave, with worse to come
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Trump-backed hardliner faces leftist senator as Colombia votes
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Japan striker Ueda channels frustration to send World Cup warning
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Dominant Tiafoe swats aside Fritz to win Halle Open
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France hosts street music festival despite worsening heatwave
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India hails Sooryavanshi after record 11-ball half-century
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Swiss US-Iran talks venue a playground of world leaders, movie stars
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Yamal returns to kickstart Spain attack against Saudi Arabia
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Colombians vote in presidential runoff
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Nigerian twins Taiwo and Kehinde marry... Taiwo and Kehinde
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Marc Marquez wins Czech MotoGP to close gap on banned Bezzecchi
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France presses ahead with street music festival despite extreme heat
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Marc Marquez wins Czech MotoGP as Bezzecchi banned
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'Historical justice': Dutch PM makes formal apology to Moluccans
Facing climate 'overshoot', world heads into risky territory
The spectre of humanity's failure to curb heat-trapping emissions hangs over climate negotiations in Brazil, after the UN confirmed the planet is now certain to "overshoot" 1.5C of warming and faces a tough battle to bring temperatures back down.
Global tensions, economic uncertainty and a US administration under Donald Trump that is hostile to climate science have snatched political focus away from tackling the fossil fuel pollution and environmental destruction driving warming.
With tepid climate ambition and emissions still rising, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres recently acknowledged that crossing 1.5C in the coming years was now inevitable.
But he insisted the world must not give up on the Paris Agreement's safer goal.
"The path to a livable future gets steeper by the day. But this is no reason to surrender," he said this week as countries prepared to meet for the COP30 summit in the Amazon city of Belem.
Scientists say every tenth of a degree over 1.5C magnifies dangerous and costly impacts -- such as drought, heat, fire and floods -- while increasing the risks of passing large-scale tipping points.
Climate scientist Johan Rockstrom, director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, said humanity now faces perhaps 50 to 70 years above 1.5C before possibly dragging temperatures back down.
"It means with essentially a hundred percent certainty that we will have a very rough time before it potentially gets better," he told AFP.
- 'Declare failure' -
The 2015 Paris climate deal aimed to limit global warming to "well below" 2C from pre-industrial (1850-1900) levels -- and 1.5C if possible.
While overshoot -- temperature trajectories that go beyond 1.5C before coming back down -- is not a new concept in science, many leading climate figures have been uneasy talking about it.
"I didn't want to give the impression that it's okay if we overshoot," Patricia Espinosa, the former head of UN Climate Change, told AFP earlier this year.
"I wanted to keep very, very firm."
To minimise or avoid overshoot, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said emissions needed to peak around 2020 and be essentially halved by 2030.
At the midway point of the decade, emissions continue to rise and so do temperatures, with 2024 the first full year above 1.5C.
So the message is shifting.
"The first thing we need to honestly communicate to humanity, but also to all political leaders in the world gathering in Belem, is that we have to declare failure," said Rockstrom, who was among the scientists consulted by Guterres ahead of COP30 in Brazil.
But this only adds to the urgency for action, he said, with higher warming raising risks for food systems, fresh water and global security.
"There's no evidence that we can adapt to anything beyond two degrees Celsius," Rockstrom said. Beyond 3C would mean "disaster mode" for billions, he added.
The IPCC has warned that crossing 1.5C threatens the widespread melting of mountain glaciers and ice sheets containing enough frozen water to ultimately lift the ocean by metres.
Tropical coral reefs, the nursery for a significant share of marine life and crucial to the livelihoods of some 200 million people, are likely already reaching a tipping point, according to recent research.
But there are still many unknowns, including how long these systems might be able to endure with overshoot.
- Negative emissions -
To turn the situation around, Guterres said the world needed to peak emissions "immediately", speed up the transition to renewable energy, and protect forests and oceans, which play a crucial role in absorbing carbon from the atmosphere.
After reaching net zero by 2050, the world will also need to swiftly deploy strategies to remove carbon from the atmosphere.
Research by Climate Analytics suggests that the huge rollout of cheap green technologies like solar and wind mean fossil fuels could be phased out sooner than expected, with warming ultimately brought back to 1.2C by 2100.
But they said the most ambitious global climate action likely means an overshoot of at least 1.7C for decades.
Lowering temperatures will require the use of controversial technologies -- to capture carbon emissions at source or permanently remove CO2 from the air -- which are not yet operational at scale.
It also relies on forests and the ocean to continue absorbing half of all CO2 pollution.
But that may already be changing.
In October the World Meteorological Organization reported a record jump in the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere and voiced "significant concern" that the land and oceans were becoming less able to soak up carbon dioxide.
"The whole picture points towards an increasing difficulty with relying on the Earth system to take up the carbon," said Bill Hare of Climate Analytics.
"We're now in a very risky space."
A.Gasser--BTB