Friday, 8 December 2023

12-year-old boy dies after falling into 60-ft-deep hole in Jharkhand's Giridih

A 12-year-old boy died in Jharkhand's Giridih district on Friday after he fell into a 60-foot-deep hole, and remained stuck there for at least five hours before being brought out, police said.

Four boys went up a hillock in Bhadua Pahari in Mufassil police station area around 11 am to pluck berries, they said.

While plucking berries, Karan Bhuiyan slipped into the illegal mine pit hole, which was 60 feet deep, they added.

The three other boys said that they could not spot the hole as it was covered with shrubs.

After a rescue operation that went on for five hours, the boy was brought out around 4 pm. When taken to a nearby hospital, he was declared dead, police said.

The incident happened in the command area of the Central Coalfields Limited (CCL), which has been informed of the incident, they said.



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बांग्लादेश के पास इतिहास रचने का मौका, न्यूजीलैंड के खिलाफ होगा चमत्कार?

बारिश से बाधित मुकाबले में मेजबान टीम ने पहले तीन दिन में बढ़त हासिल कर पहली बार कीवी टीम के क्लीन स्वीप का सपनी पूरा करने की उम्मीद जगाई है. पहली पारी में 172 रन पर ऑलआउट होने के बाद बांग्लादेश ने न्यूजीलैंड को 180 रन पर ढेर किया. तीसरे दिन का खेल खत्म होने तक मेजबान टीम ने 30 रन की बढ़त बनाई और अब अगले दो दिन में उसे लगातार दूसरी जीत के लिए जोर लगाना है.

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Thursday, 7 December 2023

"Should Not View Each Other As Rivals": China's Xi Warns Top EU Officials

Chinese President Xi Jinping warned top EU officials on Thursday that China and Europe should not view each other as rivals or "engage in confrontation" due to their different political systems, in the first in-person China-EU summit for four years.

During a meeting to discuss issues ranging from trade imbalances to Ukraine, Xi also said China is willing to make the European Union a key economic and trade partner and to cooperate on science and technology, including artificial intelligence.

He urged the EU in the talks held at Beijing's Diaoyutai State Guesthouse to "eliminate all kinds of interference" in the bilateral relationship, according to state broadcaster CCTV.

Xi said both side needed to develop "a right perception" of each other, and encourage mutual understanding and trust.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, European Council President Charles Michel and EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell also met Chinese Premier Li Qiang during their one-day visit.

Li told the EU leaders that China opposes the "broad politicisation and securitisation" of economic and trade issues in violation of the basic norms of market economies, according to China's state television.

"We hope that the EU will be prudent when introducing restrictive economic and trade policies and when using trade remedy measures to keep its trade and investment markets open," he said.

Thursday's meetings were the EU officials' last chance to get face time with top Chinese officials before the European Parliament election kicks off next year, which will bring changes in the 27-nation bloc's leadership.

In another blow to EU-China relations, member state Italy officially informed China "in recent days" that it is leaving the Belt and Road Initiative championed by Xi, Italian government sources told Reuters on Wednesday.

A number of EU commissioners have visited Beijing since China lifted pandemic border restrictions this year, including the bloc's trade and climate chiefs. However, little progress has been made to resolve core irritants in the relationship.

Most recently, Borrell's chief of staff and senior EU diplomat Enrique Mora visited in November.

Issues

The EU wants Beijing to use its influence on Russia to stop the war in Ukraine, and a major focus of the trip was to urge Xi to stop Chinese private companies exporting European-made, dual-use items to Russia for its military campaign. Brussels initially left these Chinese firms off its latest Russia sanctions package unveiled last month, European officials said.

The bloc is also concerned about what it considers "imbalanced" economic relations, saying its near 400-billion-euro ($431.7 billion) trade deficit with China reflects restrictions on EU businesses operating there.

China has previously pushed back against an EU anti-subsidy investigation into Chinese electric vehicles and the EU's "de-risking" policy to reduce its reliance on Chinese imports, particularly of critical raw materials.

"The Chinese side believes that the investigation... seriously disrupts and distorts the global automotive industry chain... and will have a negative impact on China-EU economic and trade relations," He Yadong, a Chinese commerce ministry spokesperson, told a news conference on Thursday.

Last month, foreign minister Wang told visiting French counterpart Catherine Colonna that the biggest risk is "the uncertainty brought by broad politicisation", and that "the dependency most in need of reduction is protectionism".

During Colonna's visit, China also offered visa-free entry to citizens of the EU's five largest economies in a bid to boost post-pandemic tourism and improve China's image in the West, after relations deteriorated during the COVID pandemic.

EU officials say the two sides could cooperate more on action to combat climate change and to promote biodiversity.



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8 क्रिकेटर्स का भारत से गहरा नाता, विदेशी टीमों में जमा रहे धाक

भारत में क्रिकेट के टैलेंट की कमी कभी देखने को नहीं मिली है. इसका सबसे बड़ा गवाह इंडियन प्रीमियर लीग है. इंडियन प्रीमियर लीग इस बात की गवाही दे दी है. हर साल कई खिलाड़ी आते हैं और रातों-रात स्टार बन जाते हैं. भारत के क्रिकेट का अंदाजा विदेशी टीमों को देखकर भी लगाया जा सकता है. आज हम ऐसे 8 खिलाड़ियों की बात करने वाले हैं जो विदेशी टीमों में अपनी धाक जमा रहे हैं.

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Wednesday, 6 December 2023

The Climate Change We Have Caused Is Here For At Least 50,000 Years

In February 2000, Paul Crutzen rose to speak at the International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme in Mexico. And when he spoke, people took notice. He was then one of the world's most cited scientists, a Nobel laureate working on huge-scale problems – the ozone hole, the effects of a nuclear winter.

So little wonder that a word he improvised took hold and spread widely: this was the Anthropocene, a proposed new geological epoch, representing an Earth transformed by the effects of industrialised humanity.

The idea of an entirely new and human-created geological epoch is a sobering scenario as context for the current UN climate summit, COP28. The impact of decisions made at these and other similar conferences will be felt not just beyond our own lives and those of our children, but perhaps beyond the life of human society as we know it.

The Anthropocene is now in wide currency, but when Crutzen first spoke this was still a novel suggestion. In support of his new brain-child, Crutzen cited many planetary symptoms: enormous deforestation, the mushrooming of dams across the world's large rivers, overfishing, a planet's nitrogen cycle overwhelmed by fertiliser use, the rapid rise in greenhouse gases.

As for climate change itself, well, the warning bells were ringing, certainly. Global mean surface temperatures had risen by about half a degree since the mid-20th century. But, they were still within the norm for an interglacial phase of the ice ages. Among many emerging problems, climate seemed one for the future.

A little more than two decades on, the future has arrived. By 2022, global temperature had climbed another half a degree, the past nine years being the hottest since records began. And 2023 has seen climate records being not just broken, but smashed.

By September there had already been 38 days when global average temperatures exceeded pre-industrial ones by 1.5°C, the safe limit of warming set by the UN Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in the Paris agreement. In previous years that was rare, and before 2000 this milestone had never been recorded.

With this leap in temperatures came record-breaking heatwaves, wildfires and floods, exacerbated by other local human actions. Climate has moved centre stage on an Anthropocene Earth.

Why this surge in temperatures? In part, it's been the inexorable rise in greenhouse gases, as fossil fuels continue to dominate human energy use. When Crutzen spoke in Mexico, atmospheric carbon dioxide levels were about 370 parts per million (ppm), already up from the pre-industrial 280 ppm. They're now around 420 ppm, and climbing by some 2 ppm per year.

In part, the warming results from cleaner skies in the past few years, both on land and at sea, thanks to new regulations phasing out old power stations and dirty sulphur-rich fuels. As the industrial haze clears, more of the sun's energy makes it through the atmosphere and onto land, and the full force of global warming kicks in.

In part, our planet's heat-reflecting mirrors are shrinking, as sea ice melts away, initially in the Arctic, and in the last two years, precipitously, around Antarctica too. And climate feedbacks seem to be taking effect, too. A new, sharp rise in atmospheric methane – a far more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide – since 2006 seems to be sourced from an increase in rotting vegetation in tropical wetlands in a warming world.

This latest warming step has already taken the Earth into levels of climate warmth not experienced for some 120,000 years, into those of the last interglacial phase, a little warmer than the current one. There is yet more warming in the pipeline over coming centuries, as various feedbacks take effect.

A recent study on the effects of this warming on Antarctica's ice suggests that “policymakers should be prepared for several metres of sea-level rise over the coming centuries” as the pulse of warmth spreads through the oceans to undermine the great polar ice-sheets.

This remains the case even in the most optimistic scenario where carbon dioxide emissions are reduced quickly. But emissions continue to rise steeply, to deepen the climate impact.

Controls have been overridden

To see how this might play out on a geological timescale, we need to look through the lens of the Anthropocene. A delicately balanced planetary machinery of regular, multi-millennial variations in the Earth's spin and orbit has tightly controlled patterns of warm and cold for millions of years.

Now, suddenly, this control machinery has been overridden by a trillion tons of carbon dioxide injected into the atmosphere in little more than a century.

Modelling the effects of this pulse through the Earth System shows that this new, suddenly disrupted, climate pattern is here for at least 50,000 years and probably far longer. It's a large part of the way our planet has changed fundamentally and irreversibly, to become comparable to some of the great climate change events in deep Earth history.

So will this particular COP meeting, with fossil fuel interests so strongly represented, make a difference? The bottom line is that attaining, and stabilising carbon emissions at “net zero” is only a crucial first step.

To retrieve the kind of climate optimal for humanity, and for life as a whole to thrive, negative emissions are needed, to take carbon out of the atmosphere and ocean system and put it back underground. For future generations, there is much at stake.

Don't have time to read about climate change as much as you'd like?
Get a weekly roundup in your inbox instead. Every Wednesday, The Conversation's environment editor writes Imagine, a short email that goes a little deeper into just one climate issue. Join the 20,000+ readers who've subscribed so far.The Conversation


(Authors: Jan Zalasiewicz, Professor of Palaeobiology, University of Leicester; Colin Waters, Honorary Professor, Department of Geology, University of Leicester; Jens Zinke, Professor of Palaeobiology, University of Leicester, and Mark Williams, Professor of Palaeobiology, University of Leicester)

(Disclosure Statement: Jens Zinke receives funding for his general research from the Royal Society, NERC and the German DFG. Colin Waters, Jan Zalasiewicz, and Mark Williams do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment)

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
 



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Adani Group Stocks End Up To 20% Higher, 3 Firms Hit 52-Week High

Adani Group shares extended their gains and ended up to 20 per cent higher on Wednesday after billionaire Gautam Adani-led conglomerate said it has plans to invest USD 75 billion on energy transition initiatives by 2030.

Eight of the group firms ended in the green territory, and three in the red.

During the day, some of the group firms also hit their 52-week highs and locked in upper-circuit levels, with the total valuation of group companies reaching near the Rs 15 lakh crore-mark at close.

On the BSE, Adani Total Gas zoomed 19.98 per cent to close at Rs 1,053.65 apiece, Adani Green Energy rallied 16.11 per cent at Rs 1,565.10, Adani Energy Solutions bounced 7.36 per cent to Rs 1,162.30, and NDTV advanced 7.07 per cent to settle at Rs 285.40.

Sanghi Industries shares jumped 4.97 per cent to end at Rs 136.35, Adani Wilmar climbed 4.11 per cent to Rs 396.35, Adani Power gained 4.09 per cent to Rs 560.55, and Adani Ports and Special Economic Zone (APSEZ) rose 0.67 per cent to Rs 1,018.65 apiece.

During the day, scrip of Sanghi Industries, Adani Power and APSEZ also hit their 52-week highs on the bourse.

However, stock of ACC declined 2.59 per cent to finish at Rs 2,128.35 apiece, flagship firm Adani Enterprises fell 2.53 per cent to end at Rs 2,885.20, and Ambuja Cements down by 1.48 per cent to close at Rs 501.15 per share on the BSE.

The combined market valuation of all the 11 firms soared to Rs 14.54 lakh crore at close on Wednesday.

It stood at around Rs 13.91 lakh crore at the close of trading on Tuesday. Thus, the combined market valuation of all the 11 firms, including Sanghi Industries went up by about Rs 63,769 crore on Wednesday.

This was the first time that the group stocks hit nearly Rs 15 lakh crore-mark after facing a rout early this year following a report by US short-seller Hindenburg Research that alleged financial wrongdoing and stock manipulation by the conglomerate.

However, the company denied all allegations.

Adani Group has plans to invest USD 75 billion on energy transition initiatives by 2030, its Chairman Gautam Adani said on Wednesday.

The investments will boost the group's vision to have 45 gigawatt of renewable energy capacity by 2030, he said.

The investments will be executed through Adani Green Energy Ltd (AGEL).

On Tuesday, all 11 Adani Group shares continued their upward movement after a report stated that US agency IDFC had found Hindenburg Research's allegations of fraud against billionaire Gautam Adani-led conglomerate were "not relevant".

Ambuja Cements Ltd on Tuesday said it had completed the acquisition of Sanghi Industries Ltd (SIL), while another group firm Adani Green Energy announced it has secured funding of USD 1.36 billion from a consortium of international banks as part of its construction financing framework.

Stock prices of Adani group companies have been on the rise since last week after the Supreme Court on November 24 reserved its verdict on a batch of petitions seeking examination of allegations of fraud by US-based short seller Hindenburg Research against the conglomerate.
 



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Adhir Chowdhury Demands Day-Long Discussion On Nehru's Role In Kashmir Issue

Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury, Congress' leader in the Lok Sabha, on Wednesday alleged that when it comes to the Kashmir issue, BJP leaders unnecessarily criticise Jawaharlal Nehru and demanded a day-long discussion specifically on India's first prime minister's role in the matter.

Participating in the debate on the Jammu and Kashmir Reservation (Amendment) Bill and the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation (Amendment) Bill, Mr Chowdhury challenged the government to such a discussion, alleging that BJP leaders always claim the first prime minister was "desh ke liye haanikarak (harmful for the country)"

Responding to this, Union Home Minister Amit Shah said he never said Nehru was "haanikarak (harmful)" for the country and always asked what was the root cause of the Kashmir problem and that the role of the people at that time should be discussed.

"Nobody from our benches states that he was haanikarak," Mr Shah said and added that the BJP is ready to have a debate.

Mr Chowdhury asserted that the Congress leaders were tired of listening to this kind of criticism demanded that a debate be held on Kashmir and Nehru.

Mr Chowdhury's attack on the government came after BJP leader and former Union minister Ravi Shankar Prasad criticised Nehru for his role in the Kashmir issue.

"Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel handled more than 550 princely states except for one and there was no problem... and they are very much a part of India. Nehru handled one such princely state which became a problem till it was resolved in 2019," Mr Prasad said.

A powerful leader like Narendra Modi came and Article 370 became history, he said.

Mr Chowdhury listed various terror incidents during the Modi government's tenure to claim that terrorism was on the rise in the Union territory.

Talking about the Pulwama attack in 2019, the Congress leader said it was the deadliest attack in three decades and it was avoidable. It happened due to the government's incompetence, according to former governor Satya Pal Malik, he said.

Referring to former prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee's 'Insaniyat, Jamhuriyat, Kashmiriyat' remark, Mr Chowdhury asked if the BJP was following it.

"Prime Minister Narendra Modi had said that he wants to eradicate 'Dilli ki Duri as well as Dil Ki Duri', but has 'Dil Ki Duri' been removed. There is a need for some sort of introspection as far as Kashmir is concerned," the Congress leader said.

Referring to Mr Prasad's remarks, Mr Chowdhury said there is a constant attempt to project a rift between Patel and Nehru.

Quoting from a book, Mr Chowdhury claimed that Patel tried to convince Liaquat Ali Khan in the partition Council to take Kashmir and leave Hyderabad.

BJD's Bhartruhari Mahtab intervened and sought tabling of the book in the House, saying the history should not be distorted, as he raised questions over the credentials of the author.

Mr Chowdhury also asked why assembly elections were not being conducted in Jammu and Kashmir, accusing the Centre of "gerrymandering" to win elections.



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विराट के 'दुश्मन' फिर लगाई चिंगारी, कहा- कोहली को आउट करना बाएं हाथ का खेल

टीम इंडिया के स्टार बल्लेबाज विराट कोहली ने बड़े-बड़े गेंदबाजों को संघर्ष करने पर मजबूर कर दिया. लेकिन ऑस्ट्रेलिया के पूर्व पेसर ने विराट को आउट करना बाएं हाथ का खेल बता दिया है. दोनों खिलाड़ियों के बीच एक मैच में तीखी बहस भी देखने को मिली थी.

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Tuesday, 5 December 2023

US Aid Chief Announces New Help For War-Torn Gaza On Visit To Egypt

The US aid chief on Tuesday announced new support for the war-battered Gaza Strip on a visit to Egypt, as a renewed Israeli offensive again puts Palestinians at risk.

Samantha Power, the administrator of the US Agency for International Development, travelled to the Egyptian town of El-Arish, the gateway to Rafah, the border crossing that has been reopened but at limited capacity since the war started.

Power announced $21 million in new US assistance that will include hygiene and shelter supplies and food for people in Gaza, where water and other basics have been in short supply.

USAID said the assistance was in addition to $100 million announced by President Joe Biden on October 18.

Power accompanied the delivery by the US military of another 16.3 metric tonnes (36,000 pounds) of previously announced assistance that includes medical supplies, winter clothing and emergency food.

"The United States continues to work around the clock to overcome diplomatic and operational hurdles for humanitarian access, present solutions to emerging humanitarian assistance challenges and significantly scale up this response to where it needs to be," USAID said in a statement.

But the United States has also faced strong criticism in the Arab world for its military and diplomatic support of Israel, which has carried out a major offensive in response to an October 7 attack by Hamas, the Islamist militants who control the Gaza Strip.

The United States says it has pleaded with Israel to do more to protect civilians and to allow humanitarian assistance into the Gaza Strip.

The State Department said Monday that Israel, after US appeals, began to let badly needed fuel into the Gaza Strip.

Hamas militants launched an unprecedented attack on southern Israel on October 7, killing about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and taking around 240 hostages, according to Israeli officials.

In response, Israel vowed to destroy Hamas and has carried out air strikes and a ground offensive that have killed around 15,900 people, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.



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'बेहूदा सवाल...' सहवाग से ट्रेविस हेड की तुलना पर भड़का टीम इंडिया का दिग्‍गज

हेड और सहवाग की तुलना को लेकर पूछे गए सवाल पर अजय जडेजा ने कहा, 'उसकी उम्र क्या है? यदि इस शख्‍स ने वीरेंद्र सहवाग को खेलते हुए देखा है तो यह 'बेहुदा सवाल' है. सहवाग की हेड से तुलना करने का कोई तुक नहीं है. एक दाएं हाथ का बैटर है/था और दूसरा बाएं हाथ का बैटर है.'

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Monday, 4 December 2023

कौन रहा 2023 का सबसे बेहतरीन कप्तान? रोहित शर्मा कहां रह गए पीछे

क्रिकेट में आमतौर पर सबसे ज्यादा रन, सबसे ज्यादा विकेट, सबसे ज्यादा जीत.... जैसे आंकड़ों से सर्वश्रेष्ठ तय करने की प्रैक्टिस रही है. लेकिन पैट कमिंस ने 2023 में जो किया है, वह इन मानकों से ऊपर है.

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Sunday, 3 December 2023

Madhya Pradesh Election Results 2023 LIVE: BJP Closes-In On Historic Win

Madhya Pradesh Election Results: Counting of votes in the Madhya Pradesh Assembly election result is in its final stages, and the Bharatiya Janata Party or BJP is closing in on a historic win - An absolute landslide of over 160 seats in the 230-member Assembly.

The Madhya Pradesh Assembly elections were held on November 17, 2023 to elect all 230 members of Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly. Voting was carried out in a single phase.

Madhya Pradesh has been a BJP stronghold for the last twenty years, barring the 15-month tenure of the Kamal Nath-led government when Congress came to power in 2018. Interestingly, though, BJP's Shivraj Singh Chouhan, who has been a four-time Chief Minister, has not been officially declared as the candidate for the top post in 2023.

The Bharatiya Janata Party or BJP is returning to power for another 5 years. Even after two decades in power, there was a pro-incumbency vote in the state.

Here are the LIVE Updates of the Madhya Pradesh Election Result 2023:



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Ind vs Aus: अय्यर ने मुश्किल समय में ठोका पचासा, स्कोर को 160 तक पहुंचाया

Ind vs Aus 5th T20: भारत और ऑस्ट्रेलिया के बीच आखिरी टी20 मुकाबला बेंगलुरु के चिन्नास्वामी स्टेडियम में खेला जा रहा है. श्रेयस अय्यर ने इस मुकाबले में निराश नहीं किया. उन्होंने भारत के लिए इस मैच में मुश्किल समय में बेहतरीन पचासा ठोका.

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Saturday, 2 December 2023

77 People Who Went Missing In Sikkim Flood Presumed Dead

The 77 people who went missing in the flash flood in Sikkim have been presumed dead as they could not be found even after two months of the disaster, Chief Secretary VB Pathak said on Saturday.

To help their families get various kinds of benefits, including compensation, it has been decided to follow the procedure adopted during natural disasters in Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh, and settle the matter, he told reporters.

A total of 77 people went missing in the flash flood that struck the state on October 4. Two bodies were later found, but their identities could not be ascertained, he said.

The state government is providing compensation assistance of Rs 4 lakh, while Rs 2 lakh is being provided from the Prime Minister's Relief Fund.

"We have decided to adopt the procedures followed in Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh to settle the matter of missing persons," VB Pathak said.

The families will be able to avail of the benefits only after the issuance of the death certificates, he said.

"We expect to settle all missing persons' cases by January," he added.

The families will first need to file a missing complaint at the police station, and then it will be thoroughly examined at different levels before being published in newspapers, social media and government gazette as per process, VB Pathak said.

In case, a person from outside Sikkim went missing, the family has to lodge a complaint with the police in their state, which will then be transferred here for examination, he said.

The flash flood in the Teesta river basin created chaos in the state on October 4, killing at least 46 people, besides the 77 missing persons. 



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Friday, 1 December 2023

UN Chief, COP28 President Clash Over Future Of Fossil Fuels

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres urged world leaders at the COP28 climate summit to plan for a future without fossil fuels, saying there was no other way to curb global warming.

Speaking a day after COP28 president Sultan Ahmed al-Jaber proposed embracing the continued use of fossil fuels, Guterres said: "We cannot save a burning planet with a fire hose of fossil fuels."

"The 1.5-degree limit is only possible if we ultimately stop burning all fossil fuels. Not reduce. Not abate," he said, referring to nascent technologies to capture and store carbon emissions.

The competing visions summed up the most divisive issue facing world leaders at this year's UN climate summit in the oil-producing United Arab Emirates.

King Charles III of Britain pleaded with world leaders to make progress in the global climate agenda.

"Scientists have been warning for so long, we are seeing alarming tipping points being reached," he said.

"Unless we rapidly repair and restore nature's economy, based on harmony and balance, which is our ultimate sustainer, our own economy and survivability will be imperilled," said the king, who has spent most of his adult life campaigning on the environment.

The comments from Charles, whose role as Britain's head of state is largely ceremonial, appeared to be at odds with his government.

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who was expected at COP28 on Friday to announce 1.6 billion pounds ($2.02 billion) in climate finance, has rolled back several domestic measures set by previous governments to help the country meet its 2050 net-zero targets.

Later on Friday, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi appeared to admonish wealthy countries for their role in releasing the most climate-warming emissions since the Industrial Revolution.

"We do not have much time to correct the mistakes of the last century," Modi said. "Over the past century, a small section of humanity has indiscriminately exploited nature. However, entire humanity is paying the price for this, especially people living in the global south."

A former Marshall Islands president, whose country faces inundation from climate-driven sea level rise, resigned from the main COP28 advisory board on Friday in objection to the UAE's support of continued use of fossil fuels.

Hilda Heine said in her resignation letter that she was "deeply disappointed" that the UAE had reportedly used its COP28 role to broker oil and gas deals. The UAE has strongly denied the accusations.

"These actions undermine the integrity of the COP presidency and the process as a whole," she wrote, adding that restoring trust meant delivering "an outcome that demonstrates that you are committed to phasing out fossil fuels."

The UAE's COP28 presidency said it was "extremely disappointed" by Heine's resignation.

"We have been completely clear, open, and honest throughout this process, and it is a shame to see unverified reporting affect our team and undermine the world's best chance to keep 1.5 within reach," the statement said.

Options For COP28 Deal

Away from the main stage, delegations and technical committees set to work on Friday on the mammoth task of assessing their progress in meeting global climate targets, specifically the Paris Agreement goal of limiting global warming to within 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit), above pre-industrial temperatures.

Scientists say that a global temperature rise beyond this threshold will unleash catastrophic and irreversible impacts worldwide.

The United Nations on Friday published its first draft for what could serve as a template for a final agreement from the COP28 summit, which ends Dec. 12.

The draft offers "building blocks" for a political outcome and includes several options to address the central problem of whether, and to what extent, fossil fuels should play a role in the future.

One of the options involves including commitments to phase down or phase out the use of fossil fuels, to quit coal energy and to triple renewable energy capacity by 2030.

Also on the table for discussion is whether to phase out fossil fuel subsidies, which totaled some $7 trillion last year, and whether to include provisions for carbon capture and removal technology.

On Thursday, the UAE's Jaber urged countries to work together with oil companies to reach common ground.

The summit also clinched an early victory by adopting a new fund to help poor nations cope with climate disasters.



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