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Italy make history in Six Nations beating England for first time
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Tehran residents keep up semblance of normality amid destruction
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Griezmann 'will continue' with Atletico despite MLS option: sporting director
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Protesters come out for Iran, against war in spots across the globe
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Scotland throw open Six Nations title race with stunning win over France
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Leverkusen held at Freiburg before Arsenal clash
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Trump offers LatAm leaders US missile strikes to hit drug cartels
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Key to Scotland win over France was fast start, says Steyn
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Iran fires at Gulf neighbours as Trump threatens more strikes
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Scotland stun France 50-40 to take Six Nations to wire
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Pogacar begins season with dominant Strade Bianche win
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Failed Israeli commando operation to find airman remains kills 41 in Lebanon
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Bronze and Stanway on target for England in World Cup qualifying
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'No pressure, no fun', says India's Suryakumar ahead of World Cup final
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Women rule the roost atop the Gdansk shipyard cranes
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'Fun day' for Olympic champion Braathen in giant slalom win
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Bayern's Neuer out of Atalanta tie with calf tear
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Arsenal survive FA Cup scare to keep quadruple dream alive
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Ohtani homers again as Japan edge South Korea at World Baseball Classic
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Japan hammer India 11-0 in Women's Asian Cup mismatch
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Trump threatens to escalate bombing as Iran vows no surrender
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Pirovano overtakes Vonn after 'crazy' World Cup downhill double
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Russian strikes kill 11 across Ukraine
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Nepal's rapper politician who took on the old guard and won
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Rapper-turned-politician Shah unseats former Nepal PM in own constituency
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Farrell welcomes bonus-point win over 'tough' Welsh
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Russian strikes kill nine across Ukraine, ravage apartment house
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Nepal's Balendra Shah holds unassailable poll lead for seat
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Hamilton says 'not where we wanted or expected' for Australian GP
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Pole-sitter Russell says his Mercedes more go-kart than 'bouncing bus'
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Google gives CEO new pay deal worth up to $692 million
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Russell leads Mercedes 1-2 for Australian GP as Verstappen crashes
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Russia rains missiles and drones on Ukraine, killing six
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Israel fires 'broad-scale' strikes on Tehran as war hits 2nd week
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Tatum's 'emotional' return, Wemby magic sparks Spurs
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Judge homers as USA cruise past Brazil in World Baseball Classic
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Russian strike on Kharkiv appartment block kills three
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Rising US fuel prices risk sparking domestic wildfire for Trump
European summit looks to boost wind energy production
Nine European countries held a summit on Monday aimed at scaling up wind power generation in the North Sea, spurred by the fallout of the Ukraine war and the push for renewables.
"We've seen over the past months what the impact is if you are too dependent on outsiders for the supply of energy," said Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo, hosting the meeting in the coastal town of Ostend.
The leaders of EU members France, Germany, Ireland, Denmark, the Netherlands and Luxembourg, along with European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen, attended the summit.
Norway and Britain also participated, with the latter represented by UK Energy Security Secretary Grant Shapps.
In a joint op-ed published in Politico, the leaders of the nine nations emphasised the need to build more offshore wind turbines "to reach our climate goals, and to rid ourselves of Russian gas, ensuring a more secure and independent Europe".
Several leaders pointed to the need also to ensure security of offshore wind farms and their interconnectors, in the wake of recent reports of a Russian spy ship in the North Sea and last year's sabotage of the Nord Stream gas pipelines in the Baltic Sea.
De Croo said North Sea infrastructure, including turbines and undersea cables "are prone to sabotage or to espionage" and the topic was "an extremely important one" at the summit.
The summit's collective goal, stated by all the leaders, is to boost offshore wind power generation to 120 gigawatts by 2030 -- from just 30 GW today -- and at least 300 GW by 2050.
They recognised the size of the task requires massive investment, and that standardising equipment is needed to bring down costs and timescales.
A key point, hammered by French President Emmanuel Macron, is to ensure the supply chain for the push for more North Sea wind power is anchored in Europe, rather than elsewhere, and that the jobs created are there.
"We want to secure our industrial chain, because it's important to deploy this offshore wind power but we don't want to repeat the errors we've sometimes committed in the past, of deploying equipment made on the other side of the world," he said.
The comment appeared to be directed at China, which currently dominates the supply of critical elements, such as rare earths. The European Union is seeking to shift away from that reliance on China by bolstering its own industries.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said the "very important" summit underscored the potential to greatly expand renewable energy from the North Sea.
- Industry criticism -
WindEurope, the federation representing Europe's wind energy industry, believes the summit's ambitions are achievable.
But it highlighted a lack of "adequate funding mechanisms" and recruitment in the sector.
The organisation says Europe needs to build the offshore infrastructure to add 20 GW in output per year, yet the sector currently has capacity for just seven GW annually, with supply chain bottlenecks for cables, substations and foundations, and in the availability of offshore wind vessels.
Investment to get Europe where it wants to be is huge: the EU has calculated the cost of reaching 300 GW in offshore energy production by 2050 at 800 billion euros ($900 billion).
Britain has the biggest fleet of offshore wind farms, 45 of them, currently producing 14 GW, with plans to expand capacity to 50 GW by 2030.
Germany's 30 wind farms produce eight GW, followed by the Netherlands with 2.8 GW and Denmark and Belgium both with 2.3 GW.
The other participating countries produce less than a gigawatt from their existing installations but share ambitions to greatly ramp up wind energy capacity.
P.Anderson--BTB