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Italy's spread-out Olympics face transport challenge
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Son of Norway crown princess stands trial for multiple rapes
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Side hustle: Part-time refs take charge of Super Bowl
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Paying for a selfie: Rome starts charging for Trevi Fountain
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Faced with Trump, Pope Leo opts for indirect diplomacy
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NFL chief expects Bad Bunny to unite Super Bowl audience
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Australia's Hazlewood to miss start of T20 World Cup
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Bill, Hillary Clinton to testify in US House Epstein probe
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Cuba confirms 'communications' with US, but says no negotiations yet
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Iran orders talks with US as Trump warns of 'bad things' if no deal reached
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From 'watch his ass' to White House talks for Trump and Petro
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Liverpool seal Jacquet deal, Palace sign Strand Larsen on deadline day
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Trump says not 'ripping' down Kennedy Center -- much
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Sunderland rout 'childish' Burnley
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Musk merges xAI into SpaceX in bid to build space data centers
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Former France striker Benzema switches Saudi clubs
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Sunderland rout hapless Burnley
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Costa Rican president-elect looks to Bukele for help against crime
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Hosts Australia to open Rugby World Cup against Hong Kong
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New York records 13 cold-related deaths since late January
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In post-Maduro Venezuela, pro- and anti-government workers march for better pay
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Romero slams 'disgraceful' Spurs squad depth
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Trump urges 'no changes' to bill to end shutdown
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Trump says India, US strike trade deal
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Cuban tourism in crisis; visitors repelled by fuel, power shortages
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Liverpool set for Jacquet deal, Palace sign Strand Larsen on deadline day
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FIFA president Infantino defends giving peace prize to Trump
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Trump cuts India tariffs, says Modi will stop buying Russian oil
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Borthwick backs Itoje to get 'big roar' off the bench against Wales
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Twenty-one friends from Belgian village win €123mn jackpot
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Mateta move to Milan scuppered by medical concerns: source
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Late-January US snowstorm wasn't historically exceptional: NOAA
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Punctuality at Germany's crisis-hit railway slumps
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Gazans begin crossing to Egypt for treatment after partial Rafah reopening
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Halt to MSF work will be 'catastrophic' for people of Gaza: MSF chief
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Italian biathlete Passler suspended after pre-Olympics doping test
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Europe observatory hails plan to abandon light-polluting Chile project
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Iran president orders talks with US as Trump hopeful of deal
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Uncertainty grows over when US budget showdown will end
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Oil slides, gold loses lustre as Iran threat recedes
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Russian captain found guilty in fatal North Sea crash
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Disney earnings boosted by theme parks, as CEO handover nears
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Sri Lanka drop Test captain De Silva from T20 World Cup squad
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France demands 1.7 bn euros in payroll taxes from Uber: media report
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EU will struggle to secure key raw materials supply, warns report
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France poised to adopt 2026 budget after months of tense talks
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Latest Epstein file dump rocks UK royals, politics
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Arteta seeks Arsenal reinforcement for injured Merino
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Russia uses sport to 'whitewash' its aggression, says Ukraine minister
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Chile officially backs Bachelet candidacy for UN top job
China, US to launch working group on climate action
China and the United States will launch a working group on climate cooperation, both countries said Wednesday, as the two sides work to deepen communication and mend fractured ties with a leaders' meeting in San Francisco just hours away.
Xi Jinping and Joe Biden will huddle on the sidelines of the APEC summit in California for their first encounter in a year as trade tensions, sanctions and the question of Taiwan have fuelled quarrels between Washington and Beijing.
Climate has long been seen as an area where the two can find common ground, with US and Chinese climate envoys John Kerry and Xie Zhenhua meeting November 4-7 at the Sunnylands retreat in California in a bid to restart stalled cooperation.
In a joint statement published in Chinese state media and released by the US State Department following those meetings, the two governments said the group would focus on "energy transition, methane, circular economy and resource efficiency, low-carbon and sustainable provinces/states and cities, and deforestation".
It will see them "engage in dialogue and cooperation to accelerate concrete climate actions", the statement said.
The two sides agreed to "work together and with other parties" to "rise up to one of the greatest challenges of our time for present and future generations of humankind", their statement said.
They will also restart "bilateral dialogues on energy policies and strategies", it pledged, and "deepen policy exchanges on energy-saving and carbon-reducing solutions".
The United States and China will also "immediately initiate technical working group cooperation" on the reduction of methane, of which China is the world's biggest emitter.
Beijing last week unveiled a broad plan to control its emissions of the gas, though it offered no specific target for reducing them.
But in their joint statement, the two sides agreed to "develop their respective methane reduction actions/targets" for inclusion in their 2035 emission-cutting plans, known as Nationally Determined Contributions, or NDCs.
They also re-committed to the 2015 Paris climate accord goals of holding global warming to "well below" 2 degrees Celsius and pursue efforts to limit the increase to 1.5 degrees.
- No decoupling -
Countries are set to meet in Dubai later this month for the COP28 summit.
With temperatures soaring and 2023 expected to become the warmest year in human history, scientists say the pressure on world leaders to curb planet-heating greenhouse gas pollution has never been more urgent.
And success at that summit will hinge on agreement between the United States and China, the world's two largest greenhouse gas emitters.
Asked about what he expected from talks with Xi, Biden on Tuesday characterised the meeting as a chance to right ties that have floundered in recent years.
"We're not trying to decouple from China. What we're trying to do is change the relationship for the better," Biden told reporters at the White House before heading to San Francisco.
He said he wanted "to get back on a normal course of corresponding; being able to pick up the phone and talk to one another if there's a crisis; being able to make sure our (militaries) still have contact with one another".
Ch.P.Lewis--AT