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Mexico: At least 44 dead following torrential rains
The government announced on Sunday that at least 44 people died in Mexico as a result of flooding and heavy rains. Tropical storms Priscilla, and Raymond brought torrential rains that triggered landslides in five states. A government statement stated that 18 people were killed in Veracruz, 16 in Hidalgo and nine in Puebla, with one person in Queretaro. The government of President Claudia Sheinbaum managed a response plan for 139 affected communities. The Mexican military posted photos of people being evacuated using liferafts. Homes were covered in mud, and rescue workers had to wade through waist-high water through the streets. In coordination with the Governor and the Governors as well as the various federal authorities, we continue to pay attention to the emergencies in Veracruz and Hidalgo as well as Puebla, Queretaro and San Luis Potosi. Sheinbaum stated on X that the National Emergency Committee was in perpetual session.
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South Carolina Island shooting leaves four dead and at least 20 wounded
The Beaufort County Sheriff's Office reported that four people were killed in the shooting and 20 others injured at a restaurant on an island in South Carolina. The Beaufort County Sheriff's Office said that deputies responded to Willie's Bar and Grill in St. Helena Island shortly before 1 am and found several victims with gunshot injuries. Authorities said that four of the injured are in critical condition. The sheriff’s office stated that it was investigating but refused to give further details. The office refused to reveal the names of those who died pending notification of their families. The sheriff's department said that hundreds of people were present at the time the shooting occurred. The sheriff's department said: "This is a tragedy and a difficult incident for all." St. Helena Island has a reputation as the epicenter of Gullah geechee culture, a group of descendants of African slaves. The bar and restaurant where the shooting took place describes itself as serving authentic Gullah food. Gun Violence Archive defines mass shootings as those where four or more individuals are shot. These incidents have increased in frequency in the U.S. over the last decade. Americans are divided on the issue of possible policy solutions. Democrats support more gun restrictions, while Republicans favor better enforcement of violent crime laws and gun rights. (Reporting from Ted Hesson, Washington; Additional reporting provided by Jasper Ward, Washington; Editing done by Sergio Non and Mark Porter.)
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Taiwan's chip industry is not affected by China's rare earths restrictions
Taiwan's Economy Ministry said that the new Chinese restrictions on rare earths will not have a significant impact on the semiconductor industry as these metals are different from those needed in the chip sector. China tightened its control of the rare earths sector in advance of the talks between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping. Beijing added five new elements to its export controls and increased scrutiny on chip users. Taiwan's Economy Ministry said in a press release about China's new regulations that the rare earth elements covered by the expanded prohibition differ from those required for Taiwan's semiconductor process, and therefore no significant impact is expected on chip manufacture at this time. It added that the majority of products or derivatives for domestic use containing rare Earths are sourced from Europe and Japan. Taiwan is the home of the largest contract chipmaker in the world, TSMC. It produces the vast majority advanced chips which are a critical component for artificial intelligence applications. The ministry said that China's recent expansion of controls may affect global supply chains, including those for electric vehicles and drones. It added that the impact would need to be closely monitored. On Sunday, China justified its restrictions on the export of rare earth metals and equipment by claiming that they were based on concerns about their military applications in a period of "frequent war". (Reporting and editing by Raju Gopikrishnan; Ben Blanchard)
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US intelligence assists Ukraine in targeting Russian energy infrastructure, reports FT
Financial Times reported that the U.S. had been helping Ukraine launch long-range attacks on Russian energy infrastructure for months as part of a joint effort to weaken Russia's economy and force Vladimir Putin to the negotiation table. The newspaper reported that U.S. intelligence helped Kyiv to strike Russian energy assets including oil refineries far beyond the front lines, citing anonymous U.S. and Ukrainian officials familiar with this campaign. Requests for comments were not immediately responded to by the White House, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s office or Ukraine's Foreign Ministry. The Russian Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to requests for comment. This month, Moscow claimed that Washington and the NATO alliance regularly provided intelligence to Kyiv regarding the war Putin started in February 2022. The Kremlin's Dmitry Peskov said that the use and supply of NATO and US infrastructure to collect and transmit intelligence to Ukrainians was obvious. The FT reported that U.S. Intelligence helps Kyiv to shape route planning and altitude decisions, as well as timing and mission choices, enabling Ukraine’s long-range one-way drone attack aircraft to evade Russian defences. Three people with knowledge of the operation said that the United States was closely involved at all stages in planning. According to a U.S. official, Ukraine chose the targets of long-range attacks and Washington provided intelligence about the sites' vulnerability. Two U.S. officials said in early February that Washington would provide Ukraine intelligence on long-range targets of energy infrastructure in Russia as it considers sending Kyiv missiles which could be used for such strikes. Officials from the United States said that they had also asked NATO members to provide similar assistance. Zelenskiy stated on Saturday that he discussed Russian attacks against the Ukrainian energy system during a "positive" and "productive" phone call with U.S. president Donald Trump. "We discussed the opportunities for bolstering our air defense as well as concrete agreement that we are working to ensure." Zelenskiy wrote on X that there are solid options and ideas for how we can truly be strengthened.
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Taiwan doesn't depend on China for rare earths
Taiwan's Economy Ministry said that most rare earth materials are imported from Europe, Japan and the United States, but it is still too early to assess the impact of China's new restrictions on the semiconductor industry. China tightened its control of the rare earths sector in advance of talks between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping. Beijing added five new elements to the controls and increased scrutiny on chip users. In a statement on China's new regulations, Taiwan's Economy Ministry said that the majority of rare-earth materials required domestically were supplied by Europe and the United States. The impact of the semiconductor industry on its operation still needs to be assessed and reassessed. "We will continue to monitor any changes in raw materials costs and indirect effects of supply-chain adjustment," the company said. Taiwan is the home of the largest contract chipmaker in the world, TSMC. It produces the vast majority advanced chips which are a critical component for artificial intelligence applications. On Sunday, China had defended its restrictions on the export of rare earth metals and equipment. It said that they were motivated by concerns about their military applications in a period of "frequent war". Ben Blanchard reports.
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Beijing accuses the US of raising trade tensions and defends rare Earth curbs
China called Donald Trump's recent U.S. Tariffs on Chinese Goods Hypocritical on Sunday. It defended its curbs to exports of rare-earth elements and equipment but did not impose new levies against U.S. goods. Trump responded on Friday to Beijing's latest export controls with additional tariffs of 100 percent on China's U.S. bound exports and new export controls for critical software by Nov. 1. Wall Street has been rattled by the renewed trade tensions. They have sent shares of Big Tech tumbling. They are also worried about foreign companies that depend on China's production for processed rare earths or rare earth magnets. And they could even derail a meeting between Trump and Chinese president Xi Jinping scheduled later this month. China's Commerce Ministry said that its export controls for rare-earth metals - described by Trump as "surprising and very hostile" on Friday - were a result of a series U.S. actions since bilateral trade negotiations in Madrid last month. Beijing cited as examples the addition of Chinese firms to a U.S. blacklist of companies and Washington's imposition port fees on China linked ships. These actions have seriously damaged China's economic interests and undermined the climate for bilateral trade and economic talks. China is firmly against them," said the ministry. Beijing did not explicitly link these U.S. measures to its export restrictions on critical minerals. Instead, it said that its curbs had been motivated by concerns about the military applications of these metals in a period of "frequent war". The U.S. also delayed announcing a similar levy on U.S.-bound imports to China, unlike earlier this year when both superpowers gradually increased tariffs against each other, until the U.S. was at 145% and China's rate was 125%. The right way to deal China is to not threaten to impose high-tariffs at the drop a hat. China's stance on tariff wars is consistent: "We don't like to fight but we're not afraid to fight," said the Commerce Ministry. China's refusal to respond immediately to Trump's first salvo could open the door for both countries in negotiating a deescalation.
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Protests in Tunisia's Gabes intensify amid an environmental crisis
Tunisian Police fired tear gas at protesters in front of the Tunisian Chemical Group (CGT) headquarters for phosphates located in the southern city Gabes after residents stormed into the facility to demand its closure due to environmental pollution and respiratory illness. The protest shows the tensions that President Kais Said's government is under, which are already stretched by the deep financial and economic crisis. They must balance the demands of public health with the production phosphate, Tunisia’s most valuable resource. The protest turned violent when the police used tear gas to force the protesters away from the site. They then chased them through the streets of the city. Witnesses reported that protesters had set fire to the branch office in the city of the complex administration. Emergency teams were trying extinguishing the fire. Protesters in the city blocked roads. Witnesses and videos posted on social media said that earlier in the day demonstrators were at the facility, chanting slogans for its dismantling and closure. Saied, in an attempt to calm the anger and protests that were escalating, met with the Ministers for Environment and Energy late Saturday night, and asked them to send a delegation to make the necessary repairs to the phosphate unit of the complex. Khaireddine dbaya, a protester, said: "Gabes is a city that kills. People are struggling to breath, and many suffer from cancer, or have bone fragility, due to the severe air pollution." GABES SUFFERING ENVIRONMENTAL CRISE CGT has not responded to attempts to comment on the situation at Gabes. It has never responded to pollution accusations in the past. Saied claimed last week that Gabes is suffering from an "environmental attack" because of what he called old, criminal policies. He blamed them for widespread illnesses and the destruction local ecosystems. In 2017, the authorities committed to demolish the Gabes Complex and replace it by a facility meeting international standards. They acknowledged that its emissions were a threat to local residents. The plan has not yet been implemented. Gabes' Chatt Essalam Sea receives tons of industrial waste every day. Environmental groups have warned that marine life is severely affected. Local fishermen report a dramatic drop in fish stocks in the last decade. This has hit a vital income source for many in the area. This week, a new wave of protests erupted after dozens schoolchildren suffered from breathing problems caused by toxic fumes coming from a nearby plant. Videos of panicked parents, emergency crews and students struggling to breath fueled public outrage. Calls for the closure of the plant were also sparked. The government wants to revitalize the phosphate sector by increasing production by fivefold, to 14 million tons by 2030. This will allow it to take advantage of a growing global demand. Reporting by Tarek Amar; Editing By Toby Chopra & Alistair Bell
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Iran is open to US nuclear proposal that is 'fair and balanced'
Iran is open to a "fair and balanced proposal" from the United States, but Tehran still hasn't received any negotiation proposal, said Iran's top diplomat on Saturday. Abbas Araqchi, Iran's foreign minister, told state TV that he would consider any American proposal for negotiation if it was reasonable, fair, and balanced. Araqchi, however, said that Tehran would not give up "its right to enrich uranium", but could take confidence-building steps regarding "the peacefulness of its nuclear program." Araqchi added that Washington and Tehran had been exchanging messages via mediators. Israel, the United States and its European allies accuse Tehran, of hiding behind its nuclear program efforts to try and develop the ability to produce weapons. Iran claims its nuclear program is only for peaceful purposes. Before a 12-day conflict between Iran and Israel, in which Washington took part by attacking key nuclear sites, Tehran held five rounds with Washington on nuclear issues. However, there were major obstacles, such as the uranium enrichment of Iranian soil. The West wants to reduce this to zero, to minimize any threat of weaponisation.
Climate Week NYC: UN Climate Leader urges action to match the promises

Climate Week NYC speakers sent a message loud and clear to world leaders Monday. The global energy transition has begun and is accelerating.
The U.N.’s top climate official began a morning session of the annual event with a call for the world to convert promises into concrete solutions.
Simon Stiell is the executive secretary of UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.
Climate change has become an existential threat for countries like Antigua and Barbuda, so the premier of Antigua-Barbuda called on wealthy counterparts.
Gaston Browne, Prime Minister of Antigua-Barbuda said: "It turns every storm for small islands into a financial catastrophe."
Leaders pressed to show climate progress even as aid is cut
This week, world leaders will be pressed by the U.N. General Assembly to demonstrate progress in climate change. This is especially true after recent cuts in development aid. Wealthy countries are also juggling war and economic stability.
G20 members Japan, Australia, and Britain recently announced new climate plans or Nationally Determined contributions (NDCs). This week, China and other countries will likely share their latest updates.
John Podesta - former climate advisor for U.S. president Joe Biden - said, "We look now to China, as the world's largest emitter, to fully embrace the Paris Agreement that it helped to craft by releasing an NDC that charts a realistic path to China's goal of achieving net zero emissions before 2060."
This means that by 2035 they will have reduced their emissions by roughly 30%, covering all greenhouse gasses, compared to the peak levels of 2024, as new data shows.
BENEFITS FROM CLEAN ENERGY BOO 'NOT SHARE BY ALL.'
Stiell took the opportunity to acknowledge and celebrate the progress made in the past decade, with COP30 being held in November.
He said that the clean energy transition was booming in almost all major countries, and it had reached $2 trillion in value last year.
But this boom is not even. Stiell stated that the vast benefits of this boom are not distributed equally. Climate disasters continue to hit every economy and society harder. We need to act quickly."
He said that a new global program called Build Clean Now will help accelerate the clean-industry shift.
On Monday, a group that promotes renewable energy announced plans to invest $7.5 billion into green energy in developing nations, including India.
CLIMATE CHANGE IS STILL A "Systemic Risk" WORLDWIDE
Climate change is a systemic risk that affects the entire world, regardless of political debates, differences in regulations across markets, deregulations emerging and reports about corporations deprioritizing ESG. This was stated by Omar Ali, EY Global Financial Services Leader.
Last week, the High Seas Treaty was ratified by countries, establishing the first legal framework to protect the vast ocean zones that are beyond national jurisdiction.
The treaty includes 75 points that cover areas like protecting, caring for, and ensuring responsible usage of marine resources. It also contains a provision requiring environmental impact assessment for economic activities taking place in international waters.
Director general of WWF International Kirsten Schuijt described it as a "monumental accomplishment for ocean conservation," and "a catalyst for collaboration in international waters." (Reporting and editing by Bernadette B. Baum; Additional reporting and editing by Valerie Volcovici, Virginia Furness and Simon Jessop)
(source: Reuters)