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Venezuela twin quakes kill at least 164 with many trapped under rubble
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Dominant Osaka cruises into Bad Homburg semis
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IOC votes to continue ski mountaineering for 2030 Games
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New Zealand frustrate England as Stokes returns for series decider
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Stocks rally on AI optimism after Micron's blowout forecast
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Poland, Ukraine tone down dispute at reconstruction conference
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Tunisia's short-lived World Cup experience lays bare deep dysfunctions
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At-risk UK elderly bid to stay cool as heatwave bears down
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'Everything collapsed': Venezuela region hit hardest by quakes cries for help
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'Need each other': Macron hosts Meloni after Trump rift
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Kenya police turn out in force on protest anniversary
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Stokes straight back into the action as New Zealand bat in 3rd Test
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Baking heatwave gives Europe no respite
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Amazon pledges additional $13 bn in India AI investment
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Trump climate pushback spurs courtroom battles, report says
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Struggling VW to sell majority stake in marine engine unit
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Kenya police in massive show of force on protest anniversary
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Seoul stocks soar in Asia tech rally after Micron's blowout forecast
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USA, Germany in control as Dutch eye World Cup knockouts
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Trump-linked resort shines light on Albania's 'stolen' land
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Violence feared as Kenya marks protest anniversary
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French aversion to air conditioning melts as homes sizzle
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Ukraine recovery summit opens, overshadowed by Kyiv-Warsaw row
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Municipal misery weighs on looming S.African elections
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Chad sees influx of drone victims from Sudan
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Hong takes blame as South Korea's World Cup hopes fade
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'We shut up big mouths,' says South Africa's World Cup coach Broos
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Brazil advance at World Cup, history for South Africa, Canada, Bosnia
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Mothers search, men weep amid debris of Venezuela quakes
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Confirmation still a rite of passage in Denmark but less Christian
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South Africa stun South Korea to make World Cup history
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Seoul stocks soar in Asia tech rally after Micron blowout forecast
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Clarke fears Scotland 'probably going home' after Brazil World Cup loss
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Moriyasu vows Japan will play to win and top group against Sweden
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Secret cameras, mics and AI reveal rare Cambodia wildlife
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Beloved spiritual utopia under threat in Modi's India
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Bulgaria's milk farmers falter in former yogurt empire
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Ancelotti hails Vinicius as Brazil march on at World Cup
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Trump opens US 250th birthday party with rally-style speech
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Morocco have 'ingredients' of World Cup winners, says coach Ouahbi
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TotalEnergies awaits ruling in high-stakes climate trial
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'Master key' vaccine technique may 'prevent next pandemic': researchers
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Spice Girls' debut 'Wannabe' turns 30, amid reunion talk
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Curacao belong on World Cup stage, says Advocaat
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Nagelsmann feels Germany 'punished' for topping World Cup group
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Morocco overcome historic Haiti goals to roll into World Cup last 32
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Bosnia beat Qatar to reach World Cup knockout stages for first time
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Twin earthquakes in Venezuela destroy buildings, sow panic
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Brazil advance at World Cup as Swiss, Canada reach last 32
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Vinicius Junior sparkles as Brazil beat Scots to reach World Cup last 32
Paris climate targets feasible if nations keep vows
If all nations honour promises to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, there is a chance of capping the rise in global temperatures to under two degrees Celsius, the cornerstone target of the Paris Agreement, researchers said Wednesday.
But that is a very big "if", they acknowledge in a peer-reviewed study, published in Nature.
The calculus includes not only carbon-cutting commitments officially registered under the 2015 treaty, but a raft of pledges made on the sidelines of last years COP26 UN climate summit in Glasgow -- to curb deforestation and methane leaks, for example -- that lack means for monitoring or verification.
They also include actions to lower emissions in developing countries that are contingent on financing, something wealthy nations have so far failed to deliver at agreed-upon levels.
The new estimates likewise fold in pledges to become carbon neutral by mid-century that do not detail how that will be achieved.
"Long-term targets should be treated with scepticism if they are not supported by short-term commitments to put countries on a pathway in the next decade to meet those targets," Zeke Hausfather, a researcher at Berkeley Earth, said, commenting on the study.
Most rich countries have announced they will be "net zero" by 2050, while China and India have vowed to reach that point by 2060 and 2070, respectively.
"Is our study a good news story?" lead author Malte Meinshausen, a professor at the University of Melbourne, asked in a briefing with journalists.
"Yes, because for the first time we can possibly keep warming below the symbolic 2C mark with promises on the table," he continued.
- Curb your optimism -
"And no, because we show clearly that increased action this decade is necessary for us to have a chance of not shooting past 1.5C by a large margin."
As deadly and costly climate impacts have increased, most nations have embraced the Paris deal's more ambitious "aspirational" target of holding the rise in global temperatures to 1.5C above preindustrial levels.
The UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said in a landmark report earlier this month that carbon pollution must peak before 2025 and be cut in half by 2030 to have even a chance of reaching that goal.
Recent trends do not suggest the world is headed in the right direction: greenhouse gas emissions last year regained the record levels of 2019 after Covid lockdowns lowered them in 2020.
"Some government and business leaders are saying one thing –- but doing another," UN chief Antonio Guterres said last week when the IPCC report was launched. "Simply put, they are lying."
The new research analyses data from 196 countries from 2015 until the end of the COP26 meeting in mid-November 2021.
It concludes that if all pledges are implemented in full and on time, warming can be limited to 1.9C to 2.0C.
Unless immediate steps are taken to drive down emissions even further, 1.5C will almost certainly remain out of reach, the authors said.
If no additional efforts are made beyond pledges -- know as nationally determined contributions -- submitted under the Paris Agreement, Earth's surface will warm to a catastrophic 2.8C, the IPCC has said.
"Optimism should be curbed until promises to reduce emissions in the future are backed up with stronger short-term action," Hausfather and Frances Moore, a scientist at the University of California, Davis said in a comment, also in Nature.
R.Garcia--AT