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Record lobby cash shapes EU pro-business agenda, campaigners say
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"I love the inflation": Trump comment on latest price jump sparks backlash
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South Asia monsoon risks both floods and drought: experts
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World Cup blends soccer with global music stars
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Northern Irish police use water cannon on second night of protests
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Raphinha eager to deliver for Ancelotti as Brazil get set for World Cup bid
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Trump brushes off latest US inflation jump
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FIFA boss Infantino defends World Cup ticket prices, brushes off visa row
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Lutkenhaus confirms emergence at Oslo Diamond League, Tebogo beats Gout Gout
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French pop icon Bruel charged with rape, sexual assault
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Sesame Street and 'USA' chants: coach Pochettino rallies World Cup fans
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Stocks slide on US inflation surge, tech weakness
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Pope blesses new tower at Barcelona's Sagrada Familia
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Cape Town becomes first African World Marathon Major
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Pentagon chief visits Guantanamo, warns Cuba against threatening US
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Climate change-fuelled storm decimated world's rarest great ape: study
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FIFA boss Infantino says case of Somali referee 'unfortunate'
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England World Cup warm-up friendly delayed by storm
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Toronto's Bosnians relish improbable World Cup showdown
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Senesi signs up for Spurs rebuild under De Zerbi
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Trump vows 'hard' new Iran strikes for 'playing us for suckers'
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Haiti forced to change World Cup kit over war imagery
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Frasers makes 2-bn-euro offer for Hugo Boss
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Hong Kong files charges over deadliest fire in decades
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McKenna steps down as Ipswich manager to 'dedicate time to family'
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Serena return could be cut short after injury to doubles partner
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FIFA accredits French journalist detained in Algeria: RSF
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Trump says will attend World Cup
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Yamal desperate to make mark on 'his World Cup', says Karanka
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Ancelotti marks birthday as Spike Lee visits Brazil World Cup training
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Haiti hoping to do their country proud and upset odds at World Cup
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Trump vows attacks on Iran for 'playing' US over peace deal
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NASA head defends Artemis 3 crew of all men
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SpaceX's historic IPO by the numbers
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Trump vows fresh Iran strikes after 'playing us for suckers'
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Norm-breaking SpaceX IPO a source of elation, angst on Wall Street
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Odds rising for very strong El Nino: EU monitor
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Olympic chief confident for LA Games despite World Cup 'challenges'
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Struggling German auto supplier Bosch pivots to robots
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Breakaway king Simmons escapes with win at Tour Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes
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World's largest whale graveyard discovered by Chinese sub
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England captain Stokes dropped from second Test after nightclub incident
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Belfast girds for more violence after stabbing suspect held
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Juve, Torino fans given 10-match away ban after derby trouble: media
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Stocks slide as US inflation surges, US and Iran trade strikes
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Surging US consumer inflation hits three-year high in key challenge for Trump
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Vaughan backs Stokes to stay on as England captain
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Bill Gates arrives for questioning in US Congress over Epstein ties
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Amnesty accuses Israel of 'ethnic cleansing' of West Bank Bedouins
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German consortium hopes to build new fighter jet after FCAS collapse
Pace of increase in CO2 concentration has increased three-fold: report
The pace at which the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere is increasing -- due mostly to the burning of fossil fuels -- has jumped three-fold in five decades, an international report said Wednesday.
In 2022, there were on average 417 parts per million (ppm) of the planet-warming gas in the air, up 2.2 ppm from the year before, according to the annual State of the Climate report led by scientists from the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
This is 50 percent more than pre-industrial levels and "the highest in the modern atmospheric record and in paleoclimate records dating back as far as 800,000 years", the report noted.
Annual growth in global mean carbon dioxide averaged across the last decade has tripled since the 1960s, it found.
Throughout 2022, "the climate continued to respond to the ongoing increase in greenhouse gases and resulting warming," it added.
Temperatures reached record-breaking highs during the year across multiple continents, including peaks above 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees Fahrenheit) in Western Australia and 47C in the American southwest.
Sustained heatwaves ravaged South and East Asia, with China enduring the worst heatwave ever recorded anywhere in the world.
Tempered by the impact of a climate-cooling La Nina, a naturally occurring weather phenomenon across the southern Pacific, 2022 was ranked as the fifth or sixth warmest year since reliable records began in the mid-19th century.
The last eight years -- 2015 through 2022 -- are the eight warmest on record, and 2023 is on track to be warmer than any of them, the EU's climate monitoring service said Wednesday.
The increase in global drought area that began in mid-2019 continued into 2022, according to the report.
August 2022 saw a new high for the percentage of global land area -- 20 percent -- experiencing moderate or worse drought conditions.
More frequent and intense heatwaves last year also contributed to the second-greatest loss of mass for mountain glaciers across the globe since satellite tracking began in the 1970s.
Glaciers in the Swiss Alps lost a record six percent of their volume.
Across the two-thirds of the planet covered by seas, nearly 60 percent of ocean surface waters experienced at least one marine heatwave, according to the report.
Oceans have trapped and stored more than 90 percent of the excess heat generated by global warming, keeping Earth's land surface liveable for most of its inhabitants.
F.Moura--PC