- Weakening of Hezbollah allowed Lebanon to fill vacant presidency
- UN says 3 million Sudan children facing acute malnutrition
- UK government says England should play Afghanistan cricket match
- Turkey raps France, says US only counterpart in northeast Syria
- Dupont questions 'logic' of South African travel in Champions Cup
- Body of Israeli hostage identified, two days after father's: army
- Slot wary of Accrington's 'Champions League final' at Anfield
- Global stocks mostly fall before US jobs data
- Ubisoft: the 'Assassin's Creed' maker targeted by suitors
- Scots leader hails opening of UK's first drug consumption facility
- Italian FM meets Syria's new leader in Damascus
- Dalin heading for victory after Vendee Globe rival loses sail
- Navalny lawyers face long sentences in Russian 'extremism' trial
- Neuer returns but Musiala out for Bayern
- 'Real-world harm' if Meta ends fact-checks, global network warns
- Auger-Aliassime belatedly beats Paul to reach Adelaide final
- Stock markets drift lower as US jobs data looms
- Lancet study estimates Gaza death toll 40% higher than recorded
- South Korea's presidential security chief resigns
- Italian FM tours landmark mosque in first Syria visit
- 'Apocalyptic': ghastly remains of Malibu come into focus
- Pakistan flight departs for Paris after EU ban lifted
- Nicolas Maduro: Venezuela's iron-fisted 'worker president'
- Ukraine's French-trained brigade rocked by scandal
- Venezuela's Maduro to take presidential oath despite domestic, global outcry
- Red-hot Gauff vows to keep cool in Australian Open title charge
- Zverev says he has mindset to finally win Grand Slam in Melbourne
- Anti-war Russian theatre in Latvia fights language ban
- Nobel laureate Malala Yousafzai to visit native Pakistan for girls' summit
- Shotgun watch: LA fire evacuees guard against looters
- Los Angeles fire deaths at 10 as National Guard called in
- 'Control freak' Swiatek describes shock and 'chaos' over doping ban
- Vietnam jails ex-lawyer over Facebook posts
- Sinner in dark over verdict as ATP says doping case 'run by the book'
- US President-elect Trump to be sentenced for hush money conviction
- AI comes down from the cloud as chips get smarter
- Englishman Hall grabs share of Sony Open lead
- Olympic champ Zheng says 'getting closer' to top-ranked Sabalenka
- Tajikistan bets on giant dam to solve electricity crisis
- Air tankers fight Los Angeles fires from frantic skies
- Right-wing disinformation targets DEI, 'liberal' policies as LA burns
- Osaka to play Australian Open after 'devastating' injury pullout
- 'Disruptor' Medvedev ready to bring down Sinner and Alcaraz
- Atletico can seize La Liga lead as Osasuna visit
- Navalny lawyers face long sentences in 'extremism' trial
- Sinner declares innocence as ATP chief says doping case 'run by the book'
- India's Kumbh Mela, world's largest religious gathering
- India readies for mammoth Hindu festival of 400 million pilgrims
- Uruguay bucks 2024 global warming trend
- Last 2 years crossed 1.5C global warming limit: EU monitor
Brazil emissions progress erased under Bolsonaro: report
Brazil's emissions surged under far-right ex-president Jair Bolsonaro, erasing recent progress to return to the levels of more than 15 years ago, a report said Thursday, urging the country to increase its carbon-cutting targets.
The South American giant emitted 9.4 billion metric tonnes of greenhouse gases during Bolsonaro's four years in power (2019-2022), breaking the nine billion mark for the first time since 2003-2006, the Climate Observatory, a Brazilian coalition of environmental groups, said in its annual emissions report.
In 2022, Brazil's emissions fell by eight percent, to 2.3 billion tonnes, but that was still the third-highest level since 2005, surpassed only by 2019 and 2021, also under Bolsonaro.
The report attributed much of the fall in 2022 to heavy rains that enabled the country to rely on its vast network of hydroelectric dams for power.
With Brazil, like much of the world, hit by a recent series of environmental disasters, the group said the figures are a wake-up call on the urgency of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, the target of the Paris climate accord.
"The catastrophic extremes of 2023 have shown the world what life looks like above 1.5 degrees. No one wants that," Marcio Astrini, the Climate Observatory's executive secretary, said in a statement.
The emissions figure makes Brazil the world's sixth-biggest greenhouse gas polluter, after China, the United States, India, Russia and Indonesia, it said.
If the European Union is counted as a single unit, Brazil falls to seventh.
The report found that the lion's share of Brazil's emissions last year -- 48 percent -- came from deforestation, especially in the Amazon rainforest, a vital resource against climate change.
The agriculture sector came second, at 27 percent.
Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon rose sharply under Bolsonaro, an agribusiness ally who pushed to develop the rainforest for farming and mining.
President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who took office in January, has vowed to end illegal deforestation by 2030.
With the next round of UN climate talks opening next week, Brazil has room to slash its emissions by far more than it has pledged under the Paris deal (to 1.2 billion tonnes by 2030), the study's authors said.
"If this government is serious when it says it defends the Paris accord... it will have to increase its ambition for 2030, like all the biggest emitters," said David Tsai, the study's coordinator.
D.Sawyer--AMWN