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Global plastic pollution treaty talks in a 'haze'
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Bristol sign Wales wing Rees-Zammit after NFL dream ends
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Gauff cruises into Cincinnati quarter-final with Paolini
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Apple rejects Musk claim of App Store bias
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Searchers seek missing after deadly Italy migrant shipwreck
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Air Canada cancels flights over strike threat
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Trump turns history on head with Putin invitation to key US base
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Gauff dominates Bronzetti to reach Cincinnati last eight
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UN warns Russia, Israel of conflict sex crimes listing risk
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Flood kills 46 in Indian Kashmir mountain village
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Germany sacks rail chief with train network in crisis
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Trump says Putin summit could fail, promises Ukraine say
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Lyles v Thompson in re-run of Olympic 100m final in Silesia
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LA 2028 to sell venue name rights in Olympic first
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Solomon Islands says China not influencing diplomatic decisions
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Flood kills 37 in Indian Kashmir mountain village
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US stocks drop as producer inflation surges
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Greenpeace stages Anish Kapoor art protest on UK gas platform
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US producer inflation highest in three years in July
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Greek firefighters beat back wildfires
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Serbia's political crisis escalates into clashes
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Australia recall O'Connor to face champions South Africa
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Kremlin says Putin, Trump to hold 'one-on-one' talks in Alaska
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Stocks diverge as bitcoin hits record high
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Spain suffers third wildfire death, Greece beats back flames
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Liverpool 'agree deal' for Parma prospect Leoni
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Foreign NGOs say new Israeli rules keep them from delivering Gaza aid
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Japan's grand tea master Sen Genshitsu dies at 102: reports
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Water shortages plague Beirut as low rainfall compounds woes
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Germany's Thyssenkrupp cuts targets as US tariffs weigh
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Brady didn't understand football, says Rooney after 'work ethic' jibe
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Greek firefighters make progress against wildfires
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UK economy slows less than feared after tariffs
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Markets mixed as bitcoin hits new high
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PSG begin French title defence as Pogba returns home and Paris FC step up
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At least 40 dead in Sudan's worst cholera outbreak in years: MSF
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Zelensky in London to meet PM ahead of US-Russia summit
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French dictionary gets bad rap over Congolese banana leaf dish
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Alaska: a source of Russian imperial nostalgia
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Last chance saloon for global plastic pollution treaty
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India to bid for Commonwealth Games as part of Olympic push
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North Korea denies removing border loudspeakers
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Despite risks, residents fight to protect Russian national park
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Asian markets mixed as bitcoin surges to new high
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War-weary Ukrainians find solace by frontline lake
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Okinawa a reluctant host for US troops 80 years after WWII
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Alonso's Real Madrid start La Liga with fresh energy
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Liverpool splash out to secure status as Premier League's top dogs
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Hong Kong court postpones closing arguments in Jimmy Lai trial
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Top Japanese fighter retires to support comatose boxer brother

Biden promotes US biotech, cancer fight in new 'Moonshot'
President Joe Biden issued an executive order Monday boosting the US biotech sector as part of his Cancer Moonshot initiative, which invokes the national effort to land a man on the Moon 60 years ago.
The Democrat was in Boston for an address deliberately set to echo John F. Kennedy's famous 1962 "Moonshot speech" in which he called for landing an American on the lunar surface -- something achieved in 1969.
This time, Biden is pushing for government-backed efforts to coordinate and fund a multilayered fight against cancer, with the goal of halving cancer death rates in the next 25 years.
As he set off from Washington, Biden issued an order meant to bolster the trailblazing US biotech sector's efforts to take on growing commercial rivals in China.
The order brings federal support for "areas that will define US biotechnology leadership and our economic competitiveness in the coming decades," a senior Biden administration official told reporters.
The official said that while US biotech research leads the world, the industrial applications are increasingly in the hands of other countries.
"Unless we translate biotechnology innovation into economic and societal benefits for all Americans, other countries, including and especially China, are aggressively investing in this sector," posing a "risk," the official said.
The White House says the US biotech industry is on the cutting edge of medical advances -- recently seen in the rapid development of vaccines, tests and therapeutics to help manage the Covid-19 pandemic -- but that the potential scope goes much further.
The official speaking to reporters cited studies suggesting that "before the end of the decade, engineering biology holds the potential to be used in manufacturing industry that accounts for more than one third of global output. That's equivalent to almost $30 trillion in terms of value."
Growing areas for biotech industry include new plastics and rubbers, jet fuel, and environmentally friendly fertilizers.
- Personal issue for Biden -
The battle against cancer is personal for Biden: his son Beau died of brain cancer in 2015 when Biden was vice president to Barack Obama.
In his speech at the John F. Kennedy Library and Museum in Boston, Biden will lay out how his administration is seeking to slash cancer rates through a systemic revamp of government funding and support for everything from medical research to improving access to healthcare and better environmental conditions.
The linkage to the Moon program will seek to raise public awareness and support ahead of midterm congressional elections where the Democrats face the possibility of a Republican sweep in Congress, something which would severely complicate the next two years of Biden's first term.
Caroline Kennedy, the US ambassador to Australia and daughter of the assassinated JFK, told CNN she approved of the parallels drawn by Biden in the struggle to conquer the deadly disease.
"Sixty years after my father challenged Americans to land on the moon, President Biden is welcoming great challenges as new opportunities by setting us on a bold course to end cancer as we know it," she said.
Biden's focus on the cancer fight comes as NASA is once again looking to return to the Moon.
R.Adler--BTB