
-
German finds 15mn-euro winning lotto ticket in coat
-
Injury retirements hit China Open but Sinner reaches semis unscathed
-
TotalEnergies to boost output, cut $7.5 bn in costs
-
World Rugby unfazed over England dominance of women's game
-
Bruised Real Madrid still defining spirit, personality: Alonso
-
Dolly Parton scraps Vegas shows over health issues
-
Maresca says 'no panic' at Chelsea despite mini-slump
-
FIFPro sounds alarm over 'extreme' conditions at 2026 World Cup
-
Jaguar Land Rover to partly resume output after cyberattack
-
Springboks recall De Jager after Mostert withdraws
-
Alcaraz fights back in Tokyo to emulate Nadal with 10th final of season
-
England bowler Woakes retires from international cricket
-
UK plans tougher rules for migrants seeking to stay in country
-
Jailed Thai ex-PM Thaksin requests royal pardon: lawyer
-
Swiatek says may flout 'crazy' rules to protect health
-
Paris Olympics and Paralympics cost French state 6.6bn euros: audit body
-
Rooney says he has 'no faith' that Amorim can revive Man Utd
-
'Are you watching Donald Trump?': Europe's Ryder Cup golfers taunt president
-
Moldova's pro-EU party hails poll win despite 'dirty' Russian tactics
-
Typhoon Bualoi kills dozens in Vietnam and Philippines
-
Wallabies' big-man Skelton ready to impose himself against All Blacks
-
Robertson wants All Blacks to 'pressure' Wallabies in rematch
-
Sinner cruises into China Open semi-finals as Swiatek moves on
-
GSK switches CEO as Trump tariffs test pharma
-
Trump to push Netanyahu on Gaza peace plan at White House
-
Most markets track Wall St gains after US inflation data
-
Typhoon Bualoi batters Vietnam coast, killing 11
-
Germany's Lufthansa to slash 4,000 jobs by 2030
-
Moldova's pro-EU party wins key polls after Russian meddling claims
-
Mourinho Chelsea return prompts old memories, mixed feelings
-
'Predators': how reality TV explains Epstein obsession
-
Most Asian markets track Wall St higher after US inflation data
-
India, Pakistan trade accusations after Asia Cup trophy debacle
-
Power-packed Australia favourites to rewrite World Cup history
-
Latin artist Bad Bunny to headline Super Bowl half-time show
-
Air France, Airbus back on trial over doomed 2009 Rio flight
-
India's divine designs meld with AI at Durga Puja festival
-
Donald won't rule out Ryder Cup captain return after Europe win
-
Who is Matthieu Blazy, the new man at Chanel?
-
'New chapter': Paris Fashion Week to showcase industry makeover
-
Bradley on US Ryder Cup loss: 'This is no one's fault but mine'
-
Four killed in attack on northern US Mormon church
-
Bradley calls for Ryder Cup rule change for injuries
-
McIlroy slams 'unacceptable' Ryder Cup heckling
-
Embattled Australia telco giant hit by another major outage
-
31 Concept Accelerates Next-Gen DPI Leadership With Strategic Acquisition of Xynthor AI
-
Mahomes leads resurgent Chiefs in Ravens rout, Eagles stay unbeaten
-
Moldova's pro-EU party tops polls hit by Russian meddling claims
-
Europe win emotional Ryder Cup triumph after US fightback
-
Two dead after shooting, fire at US Mormon church

Money, mining and marine parks: The big issues at UN ocean summit
France is hosting world leaders this week to confront what the United Nations calls a global "emergency" in the oceans -- but what is expected, and can the summit make a difference?
There is pressure on the UN Ocean Conference starting Monday in Nice to show that countries can unite and deliver more than just talk for the world's ailing and neglected seas.
- Plundered parks -
Several countries are expected to announce the creation of new marine conservation zones within their national waters, though how protected they really are will come under scrutiny.
Some countries impose next to no rules on what is forbidden or permitted in marine zones. France and other EU states, for example, allow bottom trawling, a damaging fishing practice, in protected waters.
This means just three percent of oceans are considered truly safe from exploitation, far short of a global target to place 30 percent under conservation by 2030.
- High seas -
Key to achieving this goal is enacting the high seas treaty, a landmark global pact signed in 2023 to protect marine life in the vast open waters beyond national control.
France had pinned success at Nice on delivering the 60 ratifications necessary to bring the treaty into force, saying the conference would be a failure without it.
But it could not get the required number, drumming up roughly half ahead of the summit. Those outstanding will be pushed to explain when they intend to do so.
- Uncharted waters -
France will be leading diplomatic efforts in Nice to rope more countries into supporting a moratorium on deep-sea mining, a contentious practice opposed by 33 nations so far.
Bolstering those numbers would send a rebuke to US President Donald Trump, who wants to allow seabed mining in international waters despite concerns over how little is understood about life at these depths.
But it would also carry weight ahead of a closely watched meeting in July of the International Seabed Authority, which is haggling over global rules to govern the nascent deep-sea mining sector.
- Actions not words -
At the summit's close, nations will adopt a pre-agreed political statement that recognises the crisis facing oceans, and the global need to better protect them.
Critics slammed the language in the eight-page document as weak or -- in the case of fossil fuels -- missing altogether, but others cautioned against reading into it too much.
"The end declaration from here isn't really the only output. It's much more important, actually, what governments commit to, and what they come here to say on an individual basis," said Peter Haugan, policy director at the Institute of Marine Research in Norway.
- Money matters -
The conference is not a COP summit or a UN treaty negotiation, and any decisions made between June 9 and 13 in Nice are voluntary and not legally binding.
But countries will still be expected to put money on the table in Nice to plug a massive shortfall in funding for ocean conservation, said Pauli Merriman at WWF International.
"What we lack -- what we still lack -- is the ambition, the financing and the delivery needed to close the gap," she told reporters.
"It's not enough for governments to show up to Nice with good intentions."
D.Schlegel--VB