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Sports May 28, 2026

Crystal Palace clinch Conference League triumph, eyeing bigger ambitions

Crystal Palace secured their third trophy in 12 months by beating Rayo Vallecano in the Conference …
Palace's Conference League triumph caps a stellar seasonIn a match billed as a "feel‑good final," Crystal Palace lifted the Conference League trophy, marking their third piece of silverware in a year that also saw an FA Cup victory. The win underscores the club's rising financial clout compared with their working‑class rivals, Rayo Vallecano, who remain trophy‑less after 102 years.Conference League final: Palace defeat Rayo VallecanoThe Tin Pot decider at the Red Bull Arena ended with Palace prevailing, thanks to a decisive strike from Jean‑Philippe Mateta. Rayo’s supporters displayed stoic resilience, unfurling a banner that read, "I know no greater victory than to be with you in defeat."Venue: Red Bull Arena, BudapestDate: 27 May 2026Scoreline: Palace 1‑0 Rayo VallecanoKey player: Jean‑Philippe Mateta (match‑winning goal)Financial and squad implications of the third trophyPalace’s "vastly superior financial heft" has allowed them to assemble a squad capable of competing on multiple fronts. The victory adds to a cabinet that previously held only a Kent Senior Cup, signalling a shift in the club’s revenue streams from prize money, merchandising, and increased broadcast share.Estimated prize money for the Conference League win: £20 millionProjected increase in season ticket sales for 2026‑27: +12%Potential market value uplift for key players (Mateta, Wharton, Lacroix): +15‑20%What the win means for Palace's standing in English footballThe triumph elevates Palace from a Premier League survival outfit to a genuine European contender. Manager Oliver Glasner received praise for his tactical acumen, while the club’s board is already being linked with high‑profile managerial candidates such as Andoni Iraola and former Coventry City boss Frank Lampard should Glasner depart.Future outlook: managerial moves and transfer market activityWith the summer window approaching, Palace faces a "massive scramble" for retained talents like Mateta, Adam Wharton, and Maxence Lacroix. Rumours suggest interest from larger clubs, meaning Palace must decide whether to cash in or build a squad capable of challenging for a Europa League spot.Potential incoming manager candidates: Andoni Iraola, Frank LampardKey transfer targets to retain: Mateta, Wharton, LacroixStrategic goal for 2026‑27: Qualify for Europa League via league position
#Crystal Palace #Rayo Vallecano #Oliver Glasner
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Politics May 28, 2026

Yemen's former leader Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi dies in exile at 80

Yemen's former president Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, who fled house arrest by Houthi rebels and spent h…
Death of Yemen's Exiled Leader Marks End of an EraYemen's former president Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, who fled house arrest by Houthi rebels and spent his final years in exile in Saudi Arabia, has died at age 80. Yemen's presidency confirmed the death, with state-run Yemeni TV reporting that Hadi died at his residence in Riyadh on Thursday.Former President's Life in ExileHadi was the internationally recognized president of Yemen who led a fractured government mostly from exile for eight years as the country descended into civil war and famine before stepping down in 2022. He fled to Saudi Arabia in 2015 as war erupted between the Iran-backed Houthis, who had forced the government from the capital Sanaa, and a Saudi-led coalition.The government announced three days of mourning, during which flags will be flown at half-staff. Hadi is survived by his wife, Hala, and six children.Human Cost of Yemen's ConflictAlthough a UN-brokered ceasefire is largely holding, the war has killed hundreds of thousands of people through direct and indirect causes. Last year, 19.5 million people needed aid, the United Nations reported. Yemen remains divided between the Houthi-controlled north and the government-run south, which includes a patchwork of factions.Political Vacuum in Divided YemenRashad al-Alimi, the head of the Presidential Leadership Council – the leadership body of Yemen's internationally recognized government – said Hadi believed in the Yemeni people's "right to a just state, freedom and human dignity." "He led the battle to defend the republican system," al-Alimi said on social media.Hadi took office in 2012 after a long stint as vice president to Ali Abdullah Saleh, who reluctantly ended his 33 years in power during Arab Spring protests. He handed over his powers – reportedly under Saudi pressure – to the newly formed Presidential Leadership Council in April 2022.Uncertain Path for Peace in YemenHadi, a career military officer, was waved through as the sole candidate in an election in which he won 99.8 percent of the vote. His presidency was thwarted with spells of unrest, with his opponents accusing him of favoring the country's eastern oil-rich provinces at the expense of the mountainous heartlands dominated by Houthis. After the Houthis overran the capital in 2014, they placed Hadi under house arrest in early 2015 before he escaped in February of that year.
#Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi #Yemen #Houthis
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Sports May 28, 2026

Canada's World Cup 2026 Strategy: High Hopes Despite Historical Winless Record

As co-hosts of the 2026 World Cup, Canada enters the tournament with high expectations despite neve…
The Plan for World Cup Glory As co-hosts, Canada enter the World Cup with high expectations, despite never winning a match at a previous tournament. Since a Concacaf Nations League semi-final defeat to Mexico in March 2025 the team have lost one of 15 matches at the time of writing, a run that has included some excellent opponents such as Colombia, Ecuador, Ukraine and the USA, whom they have defeated twice in the past two years, including their first win on US soil in 57 years. The coach, Jesse Marsch, has maintained a consistent 4-4-2 with the emphasis on pressing from the front and pace in wide positions. "Some teams press to win the ball back, we press to punish and think about scoring immediately when we recover the ball," said Marsch, who is American, but has captured the hearts of many Canadians since he took the job in May 2024 and guided the team to the semi-finals of the Copa América. Canada's World Cup Schedule 12 June v Bosnia and Herzegovina, Toronto (3pm local, 8pm BST) 18 June v Qatar, Vancouver (3pm local, 11pm BST) 24 June v Switzerland, Vancouver (noon local, 8pm BST) Success at that tournament, and subsequently in friendlies, is based on a defensive structure Marsch worked on immediately when taking the job and playing against the Netherlands and France in his first two matches in charge. Nine clean sheets in 13 matches before the pre-tournament friendlies is even more impressive considering Moïse Bombito, their star centre-back from Nice, and Bayern Munich's Alphonso Davies did not play in any of those matches because of injury. The Coach's Vision Jesse Marsch's first venture into international management has been a successful one, but not one he found easy to adjust to. "From the moment I worked with this group of players in the first camp, I knew I was going to fall in love with these guys," he says. "They are a unique group of really good people, who are very talented, and when I said goodbye to them it was different from what I was used to as a head coach in the club game." Marsch has enjoyed those gaps in his schedule, using time to visit Canadian players across the world and spending a lot of time in the country at the provincial level to help bring a more united approach to the way the game is developed and governed. Star Player's Return Questioned The captain, Alphonso Davies, has not played for Canada since tearing his ACL against USA in the Nations League third-place match last March. Whether to play him at left-back or on the wing has been one of the biggest questions for years, but under Marsch the Bayern Munich man has predominantly been used at the back and has been excellent. However, another injury setback, against Paris St-Germain in the Champions League semi-final second leg – his third in the past three months – has put his participation for the opening game against Bosnia and Herzegovina in doubt. He has started 12 of 29 internationals in the Marsch-era at the time of writing. One to Watch Few players have received more work and attention from his national coach than the midfielder Ismaël Koné, who was dropped during the Copa América as he struggled to make an impact. Since then he has been excellent for Sassuolo in Serie A and has turned into a dynamic box-to-box midfielder for Marsch, learning valuable lessons defensively in Italy, where his discipline and tactical concentration has improved significantly. Expected to start next to the excellent Stephen Eustáquio in a key double-pivot tandem for Canada. Unsung Hero Norwich's Ali Ahmed has become a favourite of Marsch's because of his selfless work on the pitch. Ahmed is asked to lead the press on the left wing, often cutting inside to increase the midfield numbers and bring intensity and energy off the ball. One of the reasons Marsch has not deployed Davies further forward is because he views his team without the ball more than with it and in that vision the former Vancouver Whitecaps man is crucial. Probable Starting XI Canada's likely formation for the World Cup matches will be based on the 4-4-2 system that Marsch has consistently employed, with specific attention to defensive structure and pressing from the front. Fan Expectations Canada is ready to host the world, but the attention is more on this team than other games happening in the country. Being the only side to start on the east coast and move directly to the west coast allows fans in Toronto and Vancouver to watch their team in the group stages. The supporters group The Voyageurs will lead the noise with their flags and chants of "Ooh, Ahh Canada". Canada is known for its cosmopolitan population and cultural diversity, with people from all over the world, and should benefit from playing three group opponents with relatively diverse fan bases.
#Canada #World Cup 2026 #Jesse Marsch
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Tech May 28, 2026

RSI is the new AGI — and it's just as hard to pin down

Recursive self-improvement (RSI) has become the latest buzzword in AI, with researchers and startup…
The Rise of Recursive Self-Improvement in AIThe word "recursion" is the latest buzzword in AI circles. Two separate startups have taken on the name, and many more have started referencing recursive self-improvement (RSI) in their roadmaps. Like AGI before it, RSI has become a three-letter byword for a cataclysmic AI takeoff – even if there's still a little disagreement about what it exactly means.In basic terms, RSI refers to an AI system that can continuously upgrade itself. Once AI systems can manage the upgrade cycle better than humans, the process can become a closed loop, limited only by the compute power they can access, and humans are no longer necessary or even helpful.Scary or not, that's a vision that a lot of AI labs are eager to chase.Key Players Pursuing Recursive SystemsEarlier this month, well-known AI researcher Richard Socher launched the aptly named Recursive Superintelligence with RSI as an explicit goal. "Our main focus is to build truly recursive, self-improving superintelligence at scale," Socher told TechCrunch at launch, "which means that the entire process of ideation, implementation, and validation of research ideas would be automatic."A number of other prominent researchers are already chasing that same goal, hoping for a breakthrough that will make recursive self-improvement possible.One of the most prominent is Andrej Karpathy, a legendary figure from Tesla and OpenAI, who is using agent swarms to train LLMs on simple tasks for a project he calls Auto-Research. Karpathy has been unusually open about the project, tweeting about milestones regularly and making the building blocks available through a public GitHub repo. So far, the work has mostly been confined to making minor improvements on a GPT-2 scale model — as Karpathy noted in March, "It's not novel, ground-breaking 'research' (yet)" — but it's been enough to convince lots of other researchers to follow the RSI dream. And with Karpathy now working on pre-training at Anthropic, he will have plenty of opportunity to apply the idea at a larger scale.Adaption — founded by Cohere and Google alum Sara Hooker — recently launched a similar tool called AutoScientist in an effort to automate frontier training. Like Karpathy's auto-researchers, the system trains agents to make incremental improvements — but for Adaption, the goal is to make it easier to train a full-scale frontier model. If those same researchers start to push the frontier forward, the system could quickly spiral into something very much like RSI.Disarray founder Doris Xin drew more specific RSI interest when her self-trained machine learning agent took home 28 medals in a recent Kaggle competition, beating out many human-trained agents. As she sees it, the major challenge is reliability."I would argue, given infinite compute and infinite time horizon, we are already there," Xin told me. "I want to make an argument that this is not a creative endeavor, really. It's just a lot of meat-and-potatoes engineering."The Current State of Self-Improving AIThere's also plenty of evidence that the AI industry isn't very close to recursive systems in any meaningful way — and is still grappling with talking to a wary public about its progress. So Google CEO Sundar Pichai basically admitted in a recent podcast interview."It's a continuum, and we are all definitely making progress," Pichai said. "But in the way people describe RSI, that would represent a next level of acceleration and would have a lot of implications, but we aren't quite there yet."But the continuum includes an awful lot of self-improving AI systems.In January, one of Anthropic's lead programmers for Claude Code estimated that "close to 100%" of his team's code was written by the tool — a frank admission that Claude Code was literally writing itself.Just because engineers are using an AI tool doesn't mean the tool can replace them — but Anthropic seems to be getting close to replacing engineers too. In a recent survey tied to the Mythos preview, five out of 18 Anthropic engineers believed that, with harness improvements, this version of Mythos could soon substitute for an L4 engineer — a midlevel programmer who can take on involved projects without supervision.Still, there were some of the same weaknesses you might expect."Some of Claude's major reported weaknesses compared to an L4 include: self-managing week-long ambiguous tasks, understanding org priorities, taste, verification, instruction-following, and epistemics," the report reads.In other words, its weaknesses are everything involved with self-direction, which is the cornerstone for RSI. But sure, for everything else, Claude is ready to step right in.Expert Perspectives on RSI TimelinesJust like the AGI term before it, the AI industry also can't tell us how far away it is from showcasing a meaningful recursive system. When Georgetown's Center for Security and Emerging Technology assembled a group of experts to study RSI last year, the group found a major split in assessments — some expecting an imminent "superintelligence" style explosion while others expected slower progress and an eventual plateau. But all agreed that recursion made the future especially difficult to predict.Helen Toner, director of CSET and a former board member at OpenAI, told TechCrunch that simply using AI tools to do AI research isn't enough to qualify as RSI. "They're just using AI for as much as they can," Toner told TechCrunch. "And I think that is different from the classic definition of RSI, which is really that there are no humans needed."Toner pointed to a recent post by METR's Ajeya Cotra, which distinguishes different milestones on the path to the AI research takeover. One step, which Cotra calls "adequacy," would come when the system can still perform research after all humans are removed — even if the resulting research isn't as valuable or efficient. "Parity" comes when an AI-only system is as good at research as a human-only system. "Supremacy," the final stage, comes when an AI-only system outperforms a collaborative system between humans and AI.Ultimately, Cotra concludes that AI is very close to the adequacy threshold of being able to produce some work on its own — similar to the incremental changes made by Karpathy's Auto-Research system. "I wouldn't be totally shocked if you told me this milestone had already passed, and I expect it to happen in the next couple years," Cotra wrote.She was less clear on when parity will come, but once it does, she thinks it would "massively accelerate the pace of AI progress, leading to AI research supremacy within another year."The Challenges Ahead for Recursive AIWith so much of AI built on scaling laws, there's a strong tendency to think RSI will follow the same curve. Toner thinks that many of those pursuing AI research and development via RSI "think of it as a pretty smooth ladder, where you can just keep scaling up."But even if AI researchers are able to make incremental improvements like Karpathy's auto-researchers, there will be larger challenges in handing off the whole process of research. Toner put it in terms of the history of computing, which has seen human beings handing off more and more of the process while still directing things from the top."We went from machine languages to assembly language and compiled languages; you're getting further and further from the guts of the computer," Toner said. "But the human is still, in some intuitive sense, running the show."Moving beyond that paradigm will take significant challenges, both in engineering and alignment. But even with the massive investments happening, there's no infinite compute available — and the basic trade-off between human labor and machine intelligence will be hard to overcome.The Future of Recursive Self-ImprovementAs for a total recursive AI system of apocalyptic visions? The only thing researchers essentially agree on is that, like AGI, it's not here yet.
#Recursive Self-Improvement #AGI #AI Research
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Tech May 28, 2026

The Shift in Enterprise AI: Why Operational Stability Matters

Enterprise organizations are not rejecting AI, but rather operational instability. At TechCrunch Di…
The Lead Enterprise organizations are not rejecting AI. They are rejecting operational instability. The Event Details At TechCrunch Disrupt 2026, taking place October 13–15 at Moscone West in San Francisco, Arsalan Tavakoli-Shiraji, co-founder and SVP of field engineering at Databricks, will discuss the shift in enterprise AI adoption during his AI Stage session, “The Enterprise Isn’t Broken. Your Assumptions About It Are.” The Data Analysis The enterprise AI market is full of successful pilots that never became real deployments. Not because the technology failed. But because the organization could not absorb the operational consequences of adopting it. The Impact Analysis The market is maturing. Enterprise buyers are asking different questions now. They are evaluating whether AI products are safe to deploy broadly, and whether they integrate cleanly into existing systems, create less workflow friction, and are easier to govern. The Prediction The startups that succeed in enterprise AI over the next several years may not necessarily be the ones with the most advanced models. They may be the ones that best understand how enterprises actually absorb change.
#Databricks #TechCrunch Disrupt 2026 #Enterprise AI
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Sports May 28, 2026

Teenager Kouame Matches Nadal's 20-Year Record at French Open

France's 17-year-old tennis player Moise Kouame has become the youngest man since Rafael Nadal in 2…
Kouame's Stunning French Open Win France's Moise Kouame has become the youngest man since Rafael Nadal in 2003 to reach the third round of a Grand Slam with a stunning match tie break victory against Paraguay's Adolfo Daniel Vallejo. Matching Nadal's Record Kouame, 17, became the youngest Grand Slam match winner for 17 years when he beat former US Open champion Marin Cilic in the first round. His feat, matching that of Nadal at Wimbledon 20 years ago, was achieved with a 6-3 7-5 6-3 6-2 6-6 (10-8) defeat of Vallejo. The Match in Detail The 22-year-old Vallejo is ranked 71st in the world – compared to Kouame's 318 listing – and recovered from a narrow second set defeat to storm level from two sets down, then moving to the verge of victory at 5-3 in the fifth, only for his teenage opponent to break back. The Impact of Kouame's Victory Kouame's victory, achieved in front of a partisan Parisian home support at Roland Garros, has sparked a new Parisian love affair with the young player. His showmanship and swagger suggest a star may just have been born. The Future Outlook With this impressive win, Kouame is set to make a significant impact in the tennis world. His ability to perform under pressure and his exceptional skills on the court make him a player to watch in the future.
#French Open #Rafael Nadal #Moise Kouame
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Sports May 28, 2026

Serena Williams Eyes Grand Return at Queen’s Club at Age 44

Serena Williams, the 23‑time Grand Slam champion, is weighing a return to elite tennis at the Queen…
Serena Williams, 44, is contemplating a return to the professional circuit at the upcoming Queen’s Club WTA 500 tournament, targeting a doubles wildcard alongside Canadian rising star Victoria Mboko. The plan, confirmed by The Served Podcast, comes after six months in the drug‑testing pool and could reignite global interest in women’s tennis.Williams Targets a Grass‑Court Return with a Doubles WildcardThe former world No. 1 will aim for a wildcard entry in the doubles draw of the second edition of the Queen’s Club event, scheduled to start on 8 June 2026, a day after the French Open concludes. Partnering with Mboko, ranked No. 9 in singles, would give Williams a low‑key re‑entry while still delivering marquee appeal.Key Numbers: Age, Rankings, and Tournament TimelineAge: 44 years oldGrand Slam titles: 23 singles titlesDrug‑testing pool: 6 months completedVictoria Mboko: 19 years old, world No. 9 in singlesEvent start date: 8 June 2026Potential Ripple Effects on Women’s Tennis and Global AudiencesPeers such as Naomi Osaka and Madison Keys have voiced excitement, noting that Williams’ presence historically drives TV ratings and ticket sales. A successful comeback could attract new sponsors, increase WTA 500 event visibility, and inspire younger players worldwide.What a Successful Return Could Mean for the WTA CalendarIf Williams competes and performs well, the WTA may consider more high‑profile wildcard entries for veteran stars, potentially reshaping tournament marketing strategies ahead of the grass‑court season. Conversely, a modest showing would still reinforce her status as a draw‑card, encouraging broadcasters to allocate premium slots for women's matches.
#Serena Williams #Queen’s Club #Victoria Mboko
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Politics May 28, 2026

Why has Trump threatened to bomb Oman, amid Iran war escalation?

President Trump has threatened longtime ally Oman with military force over potential involvement in…
The LeadUnited States President Donald Trump has threatened longtime ally Oman with military force if it gets involved in the dispute over shipping access to the Strait of Hormuz, as Washington's war on Iran once again risks engulfing the Middle East. Trump's threat to "blow up" Oman came as Muscat reportedly held talks with Iran about overseeing passage through the strategic waterway that handles more than 20 percent of the world's global oil traffic.Trump's Unprecedented Threat Against a Key Ally"Nobody is going to control it," Trump said of the strait during a cabinet meeting in Washington. "It's international waters, and Oman will behave just like everybody else, or we will have to blow them up." This direct threat against a country with which Washington has had relations for more than 200 years has sent shockwaves across the region and drawn international criticism.While Hormuz is an international strait, most of it is located solely in Iranian and Omani territorial waters – not international waters – with parts of its outlying areas reaching United Arab Emirates (UAE) territorial waters. This geographical reality complicates Trump's assertion that the waterway is purely international.The Strategic Importance of the Strait of HormuzAs the only route for Gulf oil producers to ship exports to the open ocean, the strait has served as a free international maritime route for decades. Following the US-Israeli joint attacks on Iran on February 28, however, Tehran closed the waterway and began to assert sovereignty over it, including charging tolls of as much as $2m per ship at times.Under international maritime law, countries are not permitted to charge tolls to shipping passing through natural straits such as Hormuz, even where they are not in international waters. Countries can, however, provide services to shippers, such as insurance, maintenance and docking assistance.Regional Implications of Trump's ThreatShortly before Trump's comment, Iran's state television reported that Iran and the United States were close to agreeing on a memorandum of understanding (MOU) under which Tehran and Muscat would jointly control the strait. The proposal designates payments for passing vessels, framed as "fees for services" rather than "tolls."While the Trump administration has called the claims of such an MoU "a complete fabrication," analysts say his threat suggests that an understanding between Iran and Oman is precisely what the US president is trying to avoid."What Washington wants to prevent is the normalisation of Iranian control over Hormuz, dressed in administrative and legal clothing and given Arab cover by a US ally," Muhanad Seloom, non-resident senior fellow at the Middle East Council on Global Affairs, told Al Jazeera.International Reaction and Legal ConcernsCritics called the threat reckless. Raed Jarrar, the advocacy director at the US-based rights group DAWN, likened the US president's comments to those of a "mafia boss.""The UN Charter prohibits the threat of force against any state, and that prohibition binds the United States exactly as it binds everyone else," Jarrar told Al Jazeera. "Threatening to 'blow up' an Arab country because its waters happen to sit along an oil route Washington wants reopened is the same lawless logic that produced this war in February."Samir Puri, a visiting lecturer in war studies at King's College in London, said Trump's threat to Oman was "really surprising" and warned that it would "send shockwaves across the region."Oman's Diplomatic Role in the US-Iran ConflictOman has played a unique role in the region as a mediator between the US and Iran. Omani Foreign Minister Badr Albusaidi was a key mediator in US-Iran nuclear talks before the war on Iran began. Just before the US-Israeli joint attack on Tehran in February, Albusaidi had been meeting US officials, including Vice President JD Vance, to facilitate negotiations about the future of Tehran's nuclear programme.Unlike other US allies in the Gulf, such as Qatar, Bahrain and the UAE, Oman does not host US forces. It was nevertheless dragged into the conflict when Iran launched attacks on US military assets and energy infrastructure across the Gulf region in the early days of the war.Future Outlook for the RegionSeloom, from the Middle East Council on Global Affairs, said Oman is "one Gulf state that is simultaneously a US security partner and Iran's most trusted Arab interlocutor.""In peacetime, that ambiguity is an asset. In wartime, it becomes a liability, which is precisely the inversion now playing out," he told Al Jazeera.The analyst argued that joint Iran-Oman control over Hormuz was "more posture than probability." "Oman's real interest is not co-owning Iran's blockade; it is brokering the strait's reopening," he said.Still, according to Seloom, the prospect of Iran and Oman jointly shaping the future of the Strait of Hormuz alarms the US president for three reasons: "It would turn Iran's grip on the chokepoint into a permanent post-war fact rather than a temporary act of war; it would set a precedent that littoral states can metre and monetise an international waterway, eroding the freedom-of-navigation principle the United States underwrites worldwide; and it would hand Tehran a strategic win that outlasts any ceasefire."
#Donald Trump #Oman #Iran
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Environment May 28, 2026

UN Warns Hottest Year on Record Likely by 2030 Amid Accelerating Climate Crisis

The World Meteorological Organization says there is an 86% chance that one of the next five years w…
The United Nations' weather agency has warned that the planet is on track to experience its hottest year on record by the end of the decade, with climate risks intensifying across the globe.WMO Forecast Signals 86% Likelihood of New Hottest Year Within Five YearsIn a report released on Thursday, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) stated there is an 86% chance that one of the next five years will surpass 2024 as the warmest year since records began. The agency also highlighted a 75% probability that the five‑year average temperature from 2026 to 2030 will exceed the 1.5 °C increase above pre‑industrial levels.Statistical Outlook: Probabilities, Temperature Gaps, and Regional Shifts86% chance of a new record year within the next five years.75% chance that the 2026‑2030 average exceeds 1.5 °C (2.7 °F) above pre‑industrial levels.Arctic winter temperatures projected to be 2.8 °C (5 °F) above the 1991‑2020 average, more than three‑and‑a‑half times the global rate.Rainfall expected to rise in the Sahel, Northern Europe, Alaska and Siberia, while the Amazon is forecast to become drier.Implications for the Paris Agreement and Global Climate PolicyAlmost 200 countries signed the Paris Agreement in 2016, pledging to limit warming to 1.5 °C. The WMO’s findings suggest the target is becoming increasingly unattainable unless emissions are cut dramatically. Michael Jacobs, professor of political economy at the University of Sheffield, warned that nations must accelerate renewable‑energy deployment and electrification. Simon Stiell, the UN climate chief, called recent European heatwaves a “brutal reminder” of the stakes.Looking Ahead: What 2030 Could Mean for Extreme Weather and Mitigation EffortsIf the projected trends materialise, the world can expect more frequent and intense heatwaves, stronger storms, and heightened stress on water resources. Policymakers will face pressure to tighten emissions‑reduction commitments, expand climate‑resilient infrastructure, and secure financing for adaptation in vulnerable regions. The next five years will be a decisive window for translating climate pledges into concrete action before the 2030 temperature threshold is crossed.
#World Meteorological Organization #United Nations #Paris Agreement
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