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Business May 28, 2026

BP Boardroom Turmoil Deepens as Ousted Chair Albert Manifold Denies Conduct Allegations

BP’s former chair Albert Manifold has publicly rejected media reports accusing him of aggressive co…
BP’s boardroom conflict intensified on Thursday when ousted chair Albert Manifold issued a lengthy statement denying allegations of aggressive behaviour and asserting that no concerns were raised about his conduct during his brief tenure.The Boardroom Standoff: Manifold’s Public RebuttalManifold challenged multiple media reports that described his interactions with colleagues as aggressive. He emphasized that “at no point in my tenure as chairman of BP has anyone raised with me any issue about my conduct or my relationship with my colleagues”. He also dismissed claims that he sought to act as an “executive chair”, labeling them “nonsense”.Numbers Behind the Conflict: Tenure Length and Office PresenceTenure: Appointed in October 2025 and departed less than eight months later (May 2026).Office days: Spent only 13 days in BP’s London office during the current year.Career span: Over 40 years in senior roles, including a decade as CEO of Irish building‑materials group CRH.Strategic Implications for BP’s Governance and Cost‑Cutting DriveThe board’s decision to remove Manifold cited “serious concerns” about governance standards, oversight and conduct. BP reaffirmed its commitment to the cost‑reduction programme launched earlier, which includes job cuts and tighter expense controls. Interim chair Ian Tyler (former Balfour Beatty CEO) will oversee the transition while CEO Meg O’Neill, hired in December, continues to steer the strategy.What Lies Ahead for BP’s Leadership and Shareholder ConfidenceBP’s statement underscored a “duty of care” to employees and signalled that the board stands by its earlier remarks. The episode raises questions about the company’s ability to manage board dynamics while pursuing aggressive cost‑cutting and performance targets. Analysts are likely to watch the interim chair’s handling of the fallout and the timeline for appointing a permanent chair, as shareholder confidence hinges on perceived governance stability.
#BP #Albert Manifold #Meg O’Neill
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Entertainment May 28, 2026

Lost Surrealist Masterpiece from Leonora Carrington's Psychiatric Confinement to Debut in London

A lost painting by surrealist artist Leonora Carrington, created during her confinement in a Spanis…
A Surrealist Masterpiece Emerges from the Depths of Psychiatric ConfinementA recently discovered painting by the surrealist artist Leonora Carrington, made during her confinement in a Spanish psychiatric hospital during the second world war, will go on public display for the first time in London this summer. Known as Villa Pilar, the work was painted in 1940 while Carrington was a patient at sanatorium Morales in Santander, after fleeing Nazi-occupied France following the arrest of her partner, the German artist Max Ernst.The Unveiling of a Hidden Masterpiece from a Turbulent PeriodCarrington suffered a psychological breakdown in Madrid and was admitted to the institution, where she underwent traumatic psychiatric treatments that she later described in her memoir Down Below. But encouraged by her psychiatrist, Dr Luis Morales, Carrington sketched each day, and created two paintings, Down Below and Villa Pilar, which depict the psychiatric hospital as a symbolic underworld. Carrington described her "down below" period as an experience akin to "being dead."A Life Marked by Rebellion and Artistic InnovationBorn into a wealthy Lancashire family in 1917, Carrington rebelled early against the expectations placed on upper-class women. She studied at the Chelsea School of Art before meeting Ernst at a dinner party in London in 1937, when she was 20 and he was 46. The two began a relationship that scandalised their respective social circles and moved together to Saint-Martin-d'Ardèche in the south of France, where they lived and worked until the German invasion.She found kindred artistic spirits in renowned surrealists like André Breton, Salvador Dalí, and Man Ray, who, like her, were fascinated by dreams, the subconscious and the occult. When she eventually settled in Mexico in the 1940s, she became one of the country's most celebrated artists and part of an influential community of women creatives working outside the male-dominated European surrealist movement – alongside figures including the Spanish painter Remedios Varo and the photographer Kati Horna.Carrington was later embraced as a feminist icon, and she always resisted attempts to reduce her to her gender, once remarking: "I didn't have time to be anyone's muse ... I was too busy rebelling against my family and learning to be an artist." She died in Mexico City in 2011, aged 94.The Rediscovery and Symbolic Meaning of Villa PilarCarrington gave Villa Pilar to Dr Morales when she left the sanatorium, and it remained in his family for decades. It was only rediscovered during research for the exhibition by the Faro Santander team, who persuaded the Morales family to loan it publicly for the first time.Vanessa Boni, curator of the exhibition, said Carrington created the work as "a parting gift" to thank Morales for helping her recovery, despite the "brutal" treatments she endured, including cardiazol injections. "As we know from her memoir, it was really traumatic," she said. "Dr Morales kept the painting his entire life, and when he passed away, it was handed down to his daughter."The work depicts the hospital as being populated by hybrid human-animal figures moving through vivid green gardens – imagery that would become central to Carrington's later practice. "It speaks to ideas of inner transformation, metamorphosis and otherness," Boni said. "Both paintings are set in a verdant green landscape, including a green sky, which was a symbolic colour for her."A Transatlantic Exhibition JourneyVilla Pilar will join the exhibition Leonora Carrington – the Symptomatic Surreal at the Freud museum, where Sigmund Freud spent the final year of his life after escaping Nazi-occupied Vienna. To mark the unveiling, the exhibition has been extended until 10 August before travelling to Faro Santander, a new arts centre in the northern Spanish city, in September.Daniel Vega Pérez de Arlucea, director of Faro Santander, said: "This is not simply a matter of showcasing the work of one of the most important surrealist artists, but of recognising and revisiting a chapter of her life deeply rooted in this city."After leaving Santander, Carrington travelled through Lisbon and New York before settling in Mexico, where she became one of the leading figures of surrealism. In 2024, one of her paintings was auctioned for £22.5m, a record for a UK-born female artist.While in New York, Carrington gave her Santander sketchbooks to the surrealist collector Julien Levy, whose collection was sold at auction and dispersed into private collections in 2004. This exhibition marks the first attempts since then to bring the contents together for a major public display.
#Leonora Carrington #Surrealism #Psychiatric Art
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Entertainment May 28, 2026

'Sexy as Hell': Filthy and Hilarious Heated Rivalry Parody Musical Arrives in New York

The unauthorized musical parody of the popular Canadian TV series 'Heated Rivalry' has opened in Ne…
The Rise of Heated Rivalry: From Canadian TV to NYC StageWalking into the Culture Club in West Chelsea, New York, for a performance of Heated Rivalry: The Unauthorized Musical Parody last week, I was met by three ghosts left over from when the space was called the McKittrick hotel and it hosted the immersive spookfest, Sleep No More. The first was the phantom of clever detail: cans of Athletic IPAs for sale, a cute, non-alcoholic nod to the mega-popular series' hockey setting. The second was of unnerving fright, as I realized there would be no booze at this singing satire. Would I be able to make it through 90 minutes of jokes about an overexposed Canadian gay sports romance, with zero quality guarantee and an even lower blood alcohol concentration? At least at the downtown premiere of the popular parody Titanique, long before it proved itself worthy of a handful of Tony nominations, you could stand up and order a bucket of White Claws.But then the third specter materialized, the ghost of immersion and surrender, as this very funny production completely won me over. (I've since learned that a liquor license is forthcoming.) Heated Rivalry, for the uninitiated, is a television show adapted from a series of gay romance novels by Rachel Reid, a straight woman who unwittingly launched a thousand discussions about who gets to be horny over whom, how and when. Fans of the books petitioned for a wider release of the show produced for the Canadian streamer Crave, last November and, some six months later, its formerly unknown stars Connor Storrie and Hudson Williams are in easy contention for the most photographed people alive. Heated Rivalry: The Unauthorized Musical Parody is the latest addition to New York City's musical parody cottage industry, which has led me to a theater lobby where a woman in a branded hockey jersey is telling the stranger next to her that she's seen the series "probably not as many times as you think, but still a lot".The Unauthorized Musical: A Masterclass in ParodyThere was a communal giddiness as everyone filed into the unassuming performance space, where less than 200 folding chairs were arranged around a small stage. Super-fans were giddy that their dreams were coming true, and the more reserved types, perhaps blushing at what they deemed beneath them, were still clearly enjoying themselves. I liked the TV show just fine, a bit underwhelmed at what was broadly discussed as "softcore smut" but felt more in line with the twee "naughtiness" of the romance world. I had worried a musical parody put together in a few months would be a cash-grab; plain fan service for those who can't get enough of those six novels or episodes, not jabbing at the culture so much as stroking its ego. Impressively, as written by Dylan MarcAurele and directed by Alan Kliffer, it satisfies all three camps.Framing is everything, and this romp begins with a faux earnest number, à la Waitress, where three suburban Susans detail their newfound pastime: putting their husbands to bed with some iPad time, knocking back an "Ambien margarita" and reveling in their favorite televised "boy aquarium". From there, "Main Susan" (Ryann Redmond, glorious) recaps the years-long flirtation between the feuding players, innocent Japanese-Canadian "Shane Hollander" (Jimin Moon) and brusque Russian "Ilya Rozanov" (Jay Armstrong Johnson).The obligatory double entendres (a song titled Shane Hollander, Slap that Stick! or a line, by Shane's mom, about the "heavy load" her obviously gay son carries) are expertly delivered right between earnestness and tongue-in-cheek, but it's MarcAurele's ability to mock the story's sillier elements that clinched it for me. Shane, whose thumb-twiddling submissiveness often grated me in the TV show, is played by Moon as a dopey bottom with a hopeless romantic complex. What the series plays out as a forbidden romance writ epic across timelines and borders, MarcAurele presents as Shane's borderline delusion in dealing with an uncaring dom for years on end. "I keep replaying things he said," Shane beams after a hookup, "like, 'Ass up, little whore.'" The score's best number, certainly the one best primed for cabaret nights anywhere, is Liza Minnelli's Maybe This Time send-up where Shane croons, "This fuck felt different from the last fuck. This fuck, he asked if I would stay."If reading that inspires eyerolls – totally – Moon (and the rest of the cast, which includes Cherry Torres and Ryan Duncan) are so winning in their deliveries, so in on the joke without reducing their project into one, that it's impossible to resist. As the icy-hot Ilya, Johnson has the less showy role and plays it mostly straight, which makes his song about an outcast childhood made tragic by his impossibly "big ass, cold heart" that much funnier. And, well, let's face it: Johnson and Moon are sexy as hell, and charming to boot. Kliffer's inventive staging, with choreography by Brooke and Tiffany Engen on a resourceful set by Sully Ross, goes long on bunny-hopping glee.The Off-Broadway Parody Boom: A New RenaissanceThe Canadian Kliffer, previously artistic director of famed improv spots like Second City and Asylum NYC, where he helped launch Titanique's improbable boom, later told me that these parodies rarely come together with such speed, let alone quality. He'd loved MarcAurele's Pop Off, Michelangelo! in London and M3gan spoof stateside, and had just bought into Heated Rivalry, courtesy of its amorously optimistic fifth episode, when the writer texted him with the idea. The resulting work fits attractively between the out-and-out bawdiness of the Titanic send-up and the relentless Millennial nostalgia of Ginger Twinsies, which parodied the 90s Parent Trap remake last summer, and Kliffer notes that this very queer, very funny moment downtown – which also includes Cole Escola's Oh, Mary! – points to "a little bit of an Off-Broadway renaissance."This particular renaissance seems to be defined by parodies that are loving but not saccharine, willing to mock their source material while still celebrating what made it appealing in the first place. The success of these shows suggests a hunger for theater that doesn't take itself too seriously but still delivers genuine theatrical craft. In a city where Broadway ticket prices can be prohibitive, these intimate, affordable productions offer a different kind of theatrical experience – one that feels more accessible and immediate.Cultural Impact: Beyond the ParodyHeated Rivalry exists at the intersection of several cultural conversations. The original series, based on novels by Rachel Reid, sparked discussions about who gets to tell LGBTQ+ stories and how those stories should be represented. The parody doesn't shy away from these questions but instead uses humor to explore them. By exaggerating certain elements of the original series, the musical actually highlights what made it compelling in the first place.The show also represents the growing visibility of LGBTQ+ stories in mainstream entertainment. What began as niche content has become a cultural phenomenon, with the original series gaining international attention and its stars becoming unlikely celebrities. The musical parody capitalizes on this popularity while simultaneously commenting on it, creating a meta-narrative that appeals to both fans and newcomers.Moreover, the success of Heated Rivalry reflects a broader trend in entertainment where audiences are increasingly drawn to content that acknowledges and plays with its own artificiality. In an era of heightened awareness about media consumption, audiences seem to appreciate works that don't pretend to be anything other than what they are – crafted, performed, and enjoyed.The Future of Parody Theater: What's Next?As the Off-Broadway scene continues to evolve with these clever parodies, we can expect to see more adaptations of popular TV shows and movies hitting the small stage. The success of Heated Rivalry, following in the footsteps of Titanique and other parody hits, suggests that there's a sustainable market for this type of entertainment.What's particularly interesting is how these parodies are pushing the boundaries of traditional musical theater. They're more immediate, more self-aware, and more willing to break the fourth wall than many conventional productions. This approach seems to resonate with younger audiences who are accustomed to interactive media and meta-commentary.Looking ahead, we might see parodies of other recent cultural phenomena – perhaps streaming hits, viral social media trends, or even political events. The key to success, as demonstrated by Heated Rivalry, will be balancing genuine affection for the source material with sharp, intelligent humor that offers something new to the conversation.
#Heated Rivalry #Musical Parody #New York Theater
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Entertainment May 28, 2026

Tina Fey's The Four Seasons Season Two: A Brilliant Midlife Comedy Masterpiece

Tina Fey's The Four Seasons returns for a second season that is even more perspicacious, poignant a…
The Lead: A Midlife Comedy Triumph Middle age is a brutal time of life, perfectly suited for mining laughs that are bound up with tears, crisis, and death. Tina Fey's The Four Seasons returns for a second season that is even more perspicacious, poignant and hilarious than the first, proving once again why Fey remains one of comedy's most insightful voices. The Event Details: Season Two's Narrative Structure The second season continues with four fancy holidays split across the seasons, each given two gag-packed episodes. This rigid but neat structural device allows big moments to happen off-screen while we experience the aftermath soundtracked by an avalanche of Vivaldi and bracing jokes about sad lonely donkeys, secret vapes mistaken for thumb drives, and the tragicomedy of being an angry, unravelling fiftysomething man. The three couples have been reconfigured after the death of Nick (Steve Carell) at the end of season one. We follow Kate (played by Fey) and Jack as they workshop their marriage, Danny and Claude as gay, unbearably chic, forever bickering couple, and Nick's ex-wife Anne and the much younger woman for whom he left her, Ginny – now heavily pregnant with his baby. By summer, Anne and Ginny have moved in together with the baby, creating an unconventional but loving family unit. The Critical Analysis: Why This Season Excels The Four Seasons season two delivers moments so hilarious they rival Fey's previous masterpiece, 30 Rock. The show's strength lies in its ability to balance absurd humor with genuine emotional depth. The conversations between Danny and Claude are particularly funny, moving, and sensitively wrought, while Kate and Jack's "freeballing" – their decision to "grow apart on purpose" – evolves into a beautiful meditation on the endurance test of long-term relationships. This season belongs to Anne, who makes a joyous transition from lonely, fearful ex-wife to contented (enough) single woman willing to dress up as a folkloric old witch at an Italian Christmas pageant. She delivers many of the best lines and sports the most fabulous wardrobe, proving that middle-aged women can be both hilarious and fashionable. The Impact Analysis: Redefining Midlife Comedy The Four Seasons stands out in today's television landscape by tackling middle age with honesty and humor. Unlike the aspirational settings of Nancy Meyers movies that the show lovingly mocks, The Four Seasons presents a more realistic – though still beautiful – vision of midlife. The lush lakeside lawns and lobster rolls serve as a lure to reel viewers into the murky depths of actual midlife experience, where good men smash up vintage snack shacks, regrets must be lived with, and people who love each other want completely different things. Fey's special power lies in creating jokes so specific they feel personally tailored to the middle-aged experience. The show's ability to make viewers laugh while simultaneously acknowledging the existential dread that comes with this life stage represents a significant contribution to the comedy genre. The Prediction: The Future of The Four Seasons Given the critical acclaim and the rich narrative possibilities still available, The Four Seasons seems poised for additional seasons. The show has established itself as a worthy successor to Fey's 30 Rock, with the potential to become a modern classic of television comedy. Its unique blend of high-concept settings and low-stakes domestic problems, combined with Fey's signature wit and emotional intelligence, suggests the series will continue to resonate with audiences navigating the complexities of middle age. As streaming platforms increasingly compete for quality content, The Four Seasons represents the kind of smart, character-driven comedy that awards seasons and cultural conversations are built around. If the show maintains this level of quality, it may not only extend its own run but also inspire more television creators to tackle middle age with the same honesty, humor, and heart.
#Tina Fey #The Four Seasons #Netflix
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Music May 28, 2026

Mouse on Mars on Working with Lee 'Scratch' Perry and 30 Years of Oblique Adventures in Sound

The experimental music duo Mouse on Mars discusses their collaboration with late reggae legend Lee …
Interviewing Mouse on Mars: A Conversation Like No Other Interviewing Mouse on Mars is no easy feat. Not because the duo are hard to find, even though their current studio is hidden in a courtyard deep in Berlin’s Kreuzberg district. Nor because they continue to be notoriously busy, particularly since one half of the band, Jan St Werner (born Jan Stephan Werner), is now a professor in pop music, at the Folkwang University of the Arts in the western German city of Essen. The Collaboration with Lee 'Scratch' Perry After a five-year silence, they are about to release Spatial, No Problem, a collaboration with Lee “Scratch” Perry recorded during the late dub and reggae legend’s whirlwind visit to their former Berlin studio in 2019, two years before his death aged 85. The meeting had been set up by mutual friends, though it was not clear whether it would really happen until Perry arrived at Berlin’s airport – the former Bob Marley producer had a reputation for unpredictability, and dates kept shifting. The Making of Spatial, No Problem The result is a collage-esque fever dream of a record, marrying Perry’s signature free-flowing vocals with a strange, yet warm mix of countless instruments played by friends, all held together by glitchy electronics. They had the idea to record the session as spatial audio, a technology used to mimic a more “natural” hearing experience in 3D. Asking about his familiarity with the technique, Perry answered with a wide grin, and the sentence “Spatial? No problem”. The title to the album was born, which includes recordings that are said to be some of Perry’s last. The Impact of the Collaboration Their reverence for Perry is obvious, every attempt to steer the conversation towards other topics brings the trio back to their time with him. They paint a picture of a creative frenzy: technicians installing microphones whichever corner Perry ended up standing and performing in, friends popping in and out of the sessions, NKishi being proclaimed “God” by Perry in a graffito on the studio’s walls, a general sense of a meeting of minds between artists with a similarly anarchic approach to life and craft. The Future of Mouse on Mars At a moment when the music industry is becoming ever more algorithmic, more optimised, more relentlessly targeting fickle attention-spans on social media, Mouse on Mars remain a genuinely anomalous proposition: a band whose greatest asset is their refusal to be legible. And they have been doing this for 30 years, ending up somewhere entirely different than originally planned – and making it sound, against all odds, exactly where they meant to be.
#Mouse on Mars #Lee Scratch Perry #Electronic Music
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Sports May 28, 2026

DR Congo’s World Cup Squad Clears U.S. Ebola Protocols, Securing Tournament Spot

The Democratic Republic of Congo’s football federation and FIFA have confirmed the World Cup delega…
DR Congo’s football federation (FECOFA) and FIFA announced Wednesday that the World Cup delegation complies with United States Ebola health protocols, allowing the team to travel and compete in the 2026 tournament co‑hosted by the U.S., Canada and Mexico.Compliance Confirmation Between FECOFA and FIFATalks held early week resulted in the cancellation of a Kinshasa training camp.Preparations moved to Europe, where players will complete the required 21‑day isolation before U.S. entry.Yvette Kapinga Ngandu, DRC Ambassador to the U.S., praised the swift decision.Health Metrics: Ebola Threat and Mitigation MeasuresWorld Health Organization reports a “very high” risk of the Bundibugyo Ebola strain in the DRC.More than 1,000 suspected cases and 246 suspected deaths recorded to date.Most squad members are based in Europe, reducing direct exposure.Implications for the 2026 World Cup Logistics and Fan AccessThe team will be based in Houston, Texas and will open Group K on June 17 against Portugal.Subsequent matches: June 23 vs Colombia in Guadalajara, June 27 vs Uzbekistan in Atlanta.Fans holding U.S. tickets face visa delays; FIFA discussions on possible refunds are ongoing.Outlook: DR Congo’s Performance Prospects and Future Health SafeguardsFirst World Cup appearance in 52 years, raising national morale.Adherence to U.S. health guidelines sets a precedent for future tournaments in regions with infectious‑disease concerns.Continued monitoring of Ebola spread will influence travel policies for upcoming matches.
#DR Congo #FIFA #World Cup 2026
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Environment May 28, 2026

Swimmers Disturb Wildlife at Hampstead Heath During Heatwave

Dozens of swimmers entered wildlife ponds on Hampstead Heath during record 35C temperatures, distur…
The LeadNature groups have pleaded with swimmers to give wildlife a wide berth after dozens of people swam in a nature pond on Hampstead Heath among nests of baby birds during record-breaking temperatures in London.The Wildlife Disturbance IncidentSwans and their 12-day-old cygnets were disturbed by hordes of splashing revellers in the north London park on Monday as London reached record 35C temperatures. In one video, a swan was seen poking an unhatched egg with its beak after it fell into the water during the chaos.Conservationists responded with dismay after a video was shared on social media of the scenes, which the City of London called "utterly appalling". Coots, moorhens and swans were seen guarding their eggs and young as people obliviously splashed around them.There are large signs around the pond urging people not to swim as it is a wildlife conservation area. The unseasonably hot weather has meant that people have been going into water sources en masse to cool off, coinciding with the nesting season for water birds.Conservation ConcernsThe RSPB said it was "a crucial time of year for breeding birds which just want to nest and care for their young in peace". The bird charity urged people to swim in authorised, lifeguarded spaces rather than nature reserves."Along with the dangers of swimming in unauthorised places, there is a significant risk of disturbing wildlife. Many species are already under huge pressure and disturbance can make a parent abandon their nest, putting eggs and chicks at risk. Everyone has a part to play in protecting nature so we'd urge people to be responsible and give birds and other wildlife plenty of space when outdoors this summer," it said.Swans of Hampstead Heath, the Instagram account that raised the alarm about the birds, posted: "We are currently in peak nesting season. There are still eggs waiting to hatch, ducklings and chicks only days/weeks old, and for the first time in years, swans have successfully nested on this pond, with cygnets now just 13 days old. Restricting these birds to a small section at the back of the pond makes it incredibly difficult for them to access the natural food they need to survive."When nests are disturbed, the adult birds often flee, leaving their young to be eaten by predators or die of starvation.Official Response and EnforcementThe chair of the City of London Corporation's Hampstead Heath, Highgate Wood and Queen's Park committee, alderman Gregory Jones KC, said: "The recent conduct of some visitors swimming in non-lifeguarded ponds is utterly appalling. Entering other non-lifeguarded water bodies is extremely dangerous, against our bylaws, and causes significant harm to wildlife habitats.""We always seek to engage with visitors first, but the constabulary will take enforcement action where necessary, including issuing fines or making arrests."Broader Environmental ContextThe nature campaigner and barrister Paul Powesland said: "I am not defending the people in the video, but scenes like this are an almost inevitable consequence of the destruction of outdoor lidos and the poisoning of rivers across London. It's madness for a city the size of London to have only one set of wild swimming ponds; conveniently located in one of the wealthiest areas."There have, however, been warnings of cold water shock and drownings as lakes, rivers and the sea are much colder than the air temperatures at present.
#Hampstead Heath #wildlife conservation #heatwave
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Environment May 28, 2026

UN Warns Record‑Breaking Hot Year Likely by 2030

The UN’s World Meteorological Organization says a record‑breaking hot year is almost certain betwee…
The World Meteorological Organization, in a UN‑commissioned report, warns that a record‑breaking hot year is almost certain by 2030, with climate‑driven risks accelerating across the globe.UN WMO Warns of Near‑Certain Record‑Hot Year by 2030The report, produced by the UK Met Office for the WMO, highlights an 86 % chance that at least one year between 2026‑2030 will outstrip 2024 as the hottest on record. An El Niño expected later this year could push the global temperature record as early as 2027. Lead author Dr Leon Hermanson notes the El Niño will raise the odds of a 2027 record year.Probability Metrics Highlight Escalating Heat Risks86 % chance of at least one year 2026‑2030 surpassing 2024’s temperature.75 % chance that the five‑year average (2026‑2030) exceeds 1.5 °C above pre‑industrial levels.Less than 1 % chance of any single year in that span exceeding 2 °C.96 % chance of an El Niño event Dec 2026‑Feb 2027 (NOAA forecast).35 % chance of a “super” El Niño, amplifying heat extremes.Implications for Human Health, Economies and Climate PolicyGlobal heating already claims one life per minute, a toll set to rise without rapid emissions cuts.Extreme heatwaves are battering the UK, Europe, India and broader Asia, threatening lives and economic productivity.The Arctic is projected to warm 2.8 °C above recent averages over the next five winters—more than three times the global rate.Rainfall patterns will shift: northern Europe, the Sahel, Alaska and Siberia likely to become wetter, while the Amazon is expected to dry out.Outlook: El Niño, Policy Action and the Race to Stay Below 2°CUN climate chief Simon Stiell stresses that protecting lives and economies hinges on “kicking the fossil‑fuel addiction much faster.” Clean power is now cheaper than fossil fuels, but scaling it quickly is essential to keep the 2 °C target within reach and to avoid the catastrophic impacts of exceeding 1.5 °C.
#World Meteorological Organization #UN climate chief Simon Stiell #El Niño
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Politics May 28, 2026

Iran and US Trade Attacks as Trump Rejects Hormuz Deal Report

A fragile ceasefire between the US and Iran has shattered into direct military exchanges near the S…
The conflict between the US and Iran has entered a critical phase, with a fragile ceasefire shattering into direct military exchanges near the Strait of Hormuz. The exchange of fire highlights the deepening strategic deadlock and the high stakes involved in the ongoing negotiations.Escalation Near the Strait of HormuzThe Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) launched a counterattack at 4:50 am local time, targeting an American air base in response to a US strike on a location near Bandar Abbas Airport. The US military confirmed shooting down four Iranian attack drones and striking a ground control station preparing to launch a fifth drone. This marks the third direct engagement since the ceasefire was announced, raising serious questions about the durability of the truce.Market Volatility and Oil Price ReboundGeopolitical tensions have directly impacted global markets. Following a 5% drop in oil prices on Wednesday, US crude futures rebounded by more than 3% on Thursday. Concurrently, US stocks fell and the dollar rose, signaling investor anxiety regarding the stability of energy supplies and trade routes.Trump's Diplomatic Deadlock and ThreatsPresident Donald Trump rejected a report suggesting a compromise deal with Tehran, specifically denying claims that the US would lift sanctions or allow joint management of the Strait of Hormuz by Iran and Oman. Trump characterized the waterway as international waters and issued a stark warning to Oman, stating, "They understand that, they’ll be fine," implying military consequences if they do not comply.The Inevitability of a DealExperts suggest that despite the rhetoric, a resolution is becoming increasingly likely. Doug Bandow of the Cato Institute argues that Trump has inadvertently empowered Iran by closing the strait and is unwilling to risk US ships to reopen it. Consequently, analysts believe Trump is in a "very difficult position" where he will likely be forced to negotiate a settlement to Iran's satisfaction to avoid further escalation.
#Iran #United States #Donald Trump
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