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Tag: Brazil

  • Bolsonaro Tells Brazil Judge Paranoia From Meds Made Him Tamper With Ankle Monitor

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    SAO PAULO (Reuters) -Former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro said on Sunday he had medicine-induced “paranoia” that led him to violate his electronic ankle monitor, a document seen by Reuters showed, one day after the federal police took him into custody as a potential flight risk.

    On Saturday, Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes ordered the detention of the right-wing former leader ahead of a planned supporters’ vigil outside his home, which the judge said could undermine police monitoring of his house arrest. He also noted a police report that Bolsonaro’s ankle monitor was violated.

    In a custody hearing following his detention, Bolsonaro denied any intent to escape house arrest or of trying to remove the equipment, the document showed, as he said he had a “hallucination” that there was a wire inside the monitor.

    The judge overseeing the hearing decided to maintain the police custody as all legal rules were followed during the former president’s arrest.

    (Reporting by Luciana Magalhaes; Writing by Fernando Cardoso; Editing by Bill Berkrot)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Takeaways From the COP30 Climate Summit in Brazil

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    BELEM, Brazil (Reuters) -This year’s U.N. climate change summit ended with a tenuous compromise for a deal that skipped over most countries’ key demands but for one: committing wealthy countries to triple their spending to help others adapt to global warming. 

    Here are some of the takeaways from the COP30 climate summit held in Brazil’s Amazon city of Belem:

    Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva had launched the summit calling for countries to agree on a “roadmap” for advancing a COP28 pledge to shift away from fossil fuels. 

    But it was a road to nowhere at this summit, as oil-rich Arab nations and others dependent on fossil fuels blocked any mention of the issue. Instead, the COP30 presidency created a voluntary plan that countries could sign on to – or not.

    The result was similar to Egypt’s COP27 and Azerbaijan’s COP29, where countries agreed to spend more money to address climate dangers while ignoring their primary cause.

    Nearly three-fourths of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions since 2020 have come from coal, oil and gas. Demand for these fuels is likely to rise through 2050, the International Energy Agency said in a report midway through the COP30 summit that reversed expectations of a rapid shift to clean energy. 

    GLOBAL CLIMATE UNITY ON THE BRINK

    The need to show global unity in climate talks was the main thing countries agreed, along with the idea that long-polluting wealthy countries should do most to tackle the problem. 

    But to get to a final deal, they ditched nearly all ambitions they’d brought – including mandatory tightening targets for reducing climate-warming emissions. 

    Brazil’s COP30 presidency lamented the United States’ snubbing of the talks. The absence of the world’s biggest economy – and biggest historical polluter – emboldened countries with fossil fuel interests.

    Rumbling concerns about a process that allows only a few to effectively veto collective deals grew louder, stoking calls for reform.

    After Brazil had promised a ‘COP of Truth’ that would set countries on course for action, the omission of any agreed implementation plans was glaring. 

    China played a leading role at the summit – but from behind the scenes. 

    President Xi Jinping skipped the talks as he typically does. But his delegation carried a strong message that China was prepared to deliver the clean energy technology the world needs to cut emissions. 

    Executives from Chinese solar, battery and electric vehicle companies were featured at the country’s exhibit pavilion – one of the first things delegates saw on entering the sprawling venue.

    China was not the only fast-developing nation in focus this year. The Indian delegation flexed more muscle in the negotiations, while South Africa rolled out a climate-linked agenda for its own November 22-23 G20 summit.

    FRAUGHT FUTURE FOR FORESTS AND INDIGENOUS RIGHTS

    Holding the summit in an Amazon forest city, Brazil touted the importance of the world’s remaining canopy for fighting climate change – along with the roughly half-billion Indigenous people seen as stewards of natural lands. 

    Many who attended from across the Amazon and the world felt frustrated they weren’t being heard. They staged several protests, and even stormed the COP30 compound gates – clashing with security before being pushed back out. 

    Countries announced about $9.5 billion in forest funding – including almost $7 billion for Brazil’s flagship tropical forest fund and another $2.5 billion for an initiative for Congo.

    But the summit ended on a sour note for many, as negotiators dropped efforts for a roadmap to meet the 2030 zero-deforestation pledge and gave no recognition for the protection of their lands. 

    ATTACKS ON CLIMATE SCIENCE

    While Lula and other world leaders had railed against misinformation and denial, COP30 talks didn’t help much in countering this year’s U.S. government assault on climate science.

    The summit also chipped away at global consensus around climate science by no longer recognizing the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change as the “best available science” to guide policy on climate change and its impacts.

    Instead, the final deal notes the importance of IPCC outputs along with “those produced in developing countries and relevant reports from regional groups and institutions.”

    And by sidelining fossil fuels and emissions targets, COP30 ignored the alarm bells being rung by scientists. 

    (Reporting by Katy DaigleEditing by Ros Russell)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Nov. 2025

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  • Rosie Huntington-Whiteley stuns in new swimsuit photos while on vacation highlighting toned abs

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    Former Victoria’s Secret model Rosie Huntington-Whiteley is not afraid to show off her confidence and style.

    In a Nov. 21 Instagram post, the 38-year-old model shared photos from her recent vacation in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, with the caption, “Rio you stole my heart! ❤️.”

    Many of the photos show Huntington-Whiteley in a white one-piece swimsuit with a large cut-out on the left side, showing off her toned abs against lush green landscape of the city in the background.

    Another image features the model standing outside in the same one-piece underneath an outdoor shower as she rinses off.

    The model posed in a white bathing suit with a cutout. (Rosie Huntington-Whiteley Instagram)

    KATHERINE SCHWARZENEGGER PRATT SAYS SHE’D LEAVE HOLLYWOOD BUT ONLY IF HER FAMOUS FAMILY GOES TOO

    The “Mad Max: Fury Road” star gave fans a closer look at her body with a picture of her reflection in a mirror showing her stomach and legs as she sported a black bikini bottom.

    The slideshow included additional mirror selfies of the actress, including one in which she posed topless with a towel wrapped around her lower half, her arm covering her chest, and another taken from behind as she admired the view from her hotel window.

    A split of Rosie Huntington-Whiteley under an outdoor shower and her reflection in a mirror.

    The model posted a series of photos on her Instagram of her in swimsuits. (Rosie Huntington-Whiteley Instagram)

    “Rosie’s photo dumps are my fav 😍,” one fan wrote in the comments section. Another added, “Perfect as always😍.”

    In an interview with The Times in April, the former Victoria’s Secret model spoke about her decision to move from Hollywood to London with her partner, actor Jason Statham.

    Rosie Huntington-Whiteley sitting in front of a window topless looking out at the scenery in Rio de Janeiro.

    The model enjoyed the scenery as she was photographed topless from behind. (Rosie Huntington-Whiteley Instagram)

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    The two moved to London in 2020 with their son, Jack, and later welcomed their daughter, Isabella, in 2022.

    “We love the schools, the education,” she said “They’re growing up British with their little British accents, which was important for us, and we have a great support system here. Jay’s parents live up the road and see the kids most days. My family come to visit every six or eight weeks. And, in the summer, we go down to Devon, and our children have the same experiences running around on the farm that I had growing up, and it’s very special.” 

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    After moving to London, Huntington-Whiteley admitted it was an adjustment, saying, “For a long time I missed the sunshine and the eternal optimism of Californians. But now I love it here.”

    She added the schools weren’t the only reason they chose to relocate. They also wanted to be closer to Statham, who she called “the human playground,” while he was filming.

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    Rosie Huntington-Whiteley in a plunging dress at the Academy Museum Gala in October 2025.

    Huntington-Whiteley and her partner, Jason Statham, moved from Los Angeles to London with their children. (Valerie Macon/AFP via Getty Images)

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    “He was like, ‘I’m going to be away from you and the kids for big stretches [shooting movies]. If we move to London, I can make everything there.’ So, that was a really big reason,” Huntington-Whiteley explained. 

    “He goes to work and comes home at the end of the day, which is pretty special for somebody in his line of work. Jason is a very involved and super-hands-on dad and such a supportive partner to me.”

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  • Jair Bolsonaro, Brazil’s former president, arrested days before starting decades-long prison sentence

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    Brazil’s federal police arrested former President Jair Bolsonaro preemptively on Saturday, days before he was set to begin his 27-year prison sentence for leading a coup attempt, officials said.

    A close aide said the embattled former leader was taken to the police force headquarters in the capital, Brasilia, from his house arrest.

    The force said in a short statement, which did not name Bolsonaro, that it acted on the request of Brazil’s Supreme Court.

    Neither Brazil’s federal police nor the Supreme Court provided more details.

    Bolsonaro’s aide Andriely Cirino confirmed to The Associated Press that the arrest took place around 6 a.m. on Saturday.

    The 70-year-old former president was taken from his house in a gated community in the upscale Jardim Botanico neighborhood to the federal police headquarters, Cirino said.

    Bolsonaro was placed under house arrest in early August, weeks before he was convicted in his coup trial. His lawyers were pleading with Brazil’s Supreme Court to keep him at home to serve his sentence, citing his poor health.

    Former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro waves from his home in Brazil on Sept. 11, 2025.

    SERGIO LIMA/AFP via Getty Images


    Like most of his colleagues, Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes, who oversaw the coup case, rarely carries out decisions on Saturdays, unless there are security risks involved.

    Local media reported that Bolsonaro, who was Brazil’s president from 2019 to 2022, was expected to begin serving his sentence sometime next week after the far-right leader exhausted all appeals of his conviction for leading a coup attempt.

    Saturday’s preemptive arrest does not mean Bolsonaro will remain at the federal police headquarters to serve his sentence. Brazilian law requires that all convicts start their sentences in prison.

    One of the former president’s sons, Sen. Flávio Bolsonaro, has been egging on supporters to take to the streets in defense of his father since Thursday.

    Some of Bolsonaro’s supporters, who claim he is being politically persecuted, are expected to rally outside the federal police headquarters throughout the weekend.

    The former president and several of his allies were convicted by a panel of Supreme Court justices for attempting to overthrow Brazil’s democracy following his 2022 election loss to President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Prosecutors said the coup plot included plans to kill Lula and to encourage an insurrection in early 2023.

    Bolsonaro was also found guilty on charges of leading an armed criminal organization and attempting the violent abolition of the democratic rule of law. Bolsonaro has denied wrongdoing.

    He remains a key figure in Brazilian politics, despite being ineligible to run again at least until 2030, after a separate ruling by Brazil’s top electoral court. Polls show he would be a strong candidate in next year’s vote if allowed to run.

    Bolsonaro is an ally of President Trump, who has called his trial a “witch hunt.” Bolsonaro was mentioned in a July threat by the U.S. administration to raise tariffs on several Brazilian exports by 50%. In late July, Mr. Trump followed through on that threat, raising tariffs by 40%, writing in a July 30 executive order that “Members of the Government of Brazil are also politically persecuting a former President of Brazil.”

    However, on Thursday, Mr. Trump signed an executive order removing tariffs on Brazilian beef, coffee and other goods. 

    Mr. Trump cited “various officials” whom he said advised him that “certain agricultural imports from Brazil should no longer be subject” to the 40% tariff, in part because of progress the U.S. has made in its trade negotiations with Brazil.    

    The order applies to Brazilian imports to the U.S. on or after Nov. 13, according to the order.   

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  • Takeaways from the outcome of U.N. climate talks in Brazil

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    After two weeks of negotiations, this year’s United Nations climate talks ended Saturday with a compromise that some criticized as weak and others called progress.

    The deal finalized at the COP30 conference pledges more money to help countries adapt to climate change, but lacks explicit plans to transition away from the fossil fuels such as oil, coal and gas that heat the planet.

    The conference didn’t do as much as scientists thought the world needed. It wasn’t as meaningful as activists and Indigenous people demanded. Few countries got everything they wanted. And the venue even caught fire.

    But that disappointment is mixed with a few wins and the hope for countries to make more progress next year.

    Here’s what you need to know about the outcome.

    Leaders tried to nail down specifics on fighting climate change

    Leaders have been working on how to fight the impacts of climate change, such as extreme weather and sea level rise, for a decade. To do that, every country had the homework of writing up their own national climate plans and then reconvened this month to see if it was enough.

    Most didn’t get a good grade and some haven’t even turned it in.

    Brazil, host of the climate conference known as COP30, was trying to get them to cooperate on the toughest issues like climate-related trade restrictions, funding for climate solutions, national climate-fighting plans and more transparency on measuring those plans’ progress.

    More than 80 countries tried to introduce a detailed guide to phase out fossil fuels over the next several decades. There were other to-do items on topics including deforestation, gender and farming.

    Countries reached what critics called a weak compromise

    Nations agreed to triple the amount of money promised to help the vulnerable countries adapt to climate change. But they will take five more years to do it. Some vulnerable island countries said they were happy about the financial support.

    But the final document didn’t include a road map away from fossil fuels, angering many.

    After the agreement was reached, COP President André Corrêa do Lago said Brazil would take an extra step and write their own road map. Not all countries signed up to this, but those on board will meet next year to specifically talk about the fossil fuel phase out. It would not carry the same weight as something agreed to at the conference.

    Also included in the package were smaller agreements on energy grids and biofuels.

    Responses ranged from happy to angry

    “Given what we expected, what we came out with, we were happy,” said Ilana Seid, chair of the Alliance of Small Island States.

    But others felt discouraged. Heated exchanges took place during the conference’s final meeting as countries snipped at each other about the fossil fuel plan.

    “I will be brutally honest: The COP and the U.N. system are not working for you. They have never really worked for you. And today, they are failing you at a historic scale,” said Juan Carlos Monterrey Gomez, a negotiator for Panama.

    Jiwoh Abdulai, Sierra Leone’s environment and climate change minister said: “COP30 has not delivered everything Africa asked for, but it has moved the needle.” He added: “This is a floor, not a ceiling.”

    The real outcome of this year’s climate talks will be judged on “how quickly these words turn into real projects that protect lives and livelihoods,” he said.

    Talks set against the Amazon rainforest

    Participants experienced the Amazon’s extreme heat and humidity and heavy rains that flooded walkways. Organizers who chose Belem, on the edge of the rainforest, as the host city had intended for countries to experience firsthand what was at stake with climate change, and take bold action to stop it.

    But afterward, critics said the deal shows how hard it is to find global cooperation on issues that affect everyone, most of all people in poverty, Indigenous people, women and children around the world.

    “At the start of this COP, there was this high level of ambition. We started with a bang, but we ended with a whimper of disappointment,” said former Philippine negotiator Jasper Inventor, now at Greenpeace International.

    Indigenous people, civil society and youth

    One of the nicknames for the climate talks in Brazil was the “Indigenous peoples’ COP.” Yet some in those groups said they had to fight to be heard.

    Protesters from Indigenous groups twice disrupted the conference to demand a bigger seat at the table. While Indigenous people’s rights weren’t officially on the agenda, Taily Terena, an Indigenous woman from the Terena nation in Brazil, said so far she is happy with the text because for the first time it includes a paragraph mentioning Indigenous rights.

    She supported countries speaking up on procedural issues because that’s how multilateralism works. “It’s kind of chaotic, but from our perspective, it’s kind of good that some countries have a reaction,” she said.

    Munich Re, one of the world’s largest reinsurers, has published an analysis showing disasters caused more than $93 billion in damage across the U.S. in the first six months of 2025, and nearly 25% of that damage was uninsured. Meteorologist Chase Cain breaks down how climate change is amplifying disasters.

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    Melina Walling, Anton L. Delgado and Seth Borenstein | The Associated Press

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  • EU Will Not Oppose Proposed COP30 Deal, Sources Say

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    BELEM, Brazil (Reuters) -The European Union would not oppose a proposed deal on the outcome of the COP30 climate talks in Brazil, two sources told Reuters.

    “It’s lacking in ambition, it’s lacking in balance, but we won’t oppose,” a EU negotiator said. “Because it will provide much-needed money for adaptation to the poorest and most vulnerable.”

    (Reporting by Kate Abnett; editing by William James)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Trump’s Tariffs Hand Lula a Political Gift in Brazil

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    The Brazilian president is in a stronger position to win in elections next year following his defiant stance on President Trump’s tariffs.

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  • Turkey and Australia Confirm Agreement on COP31 Split-Hosting Deal

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    BELEM, Brazil (Reuters) -Turkey will host the COP31 climate summit in 2026 with Australia leading the negotiation process, a document released at the COP30 summit in Brazil showed on Friday, confirming an earlier announcement that a split hosting arrangement was expected.

    The statement was issued by Germany after a meeting of the Western European and Others Group, which was tasked with selecting the 2026 host.

    The deal, which resolved a lengthy standoff with both vying to host the U.N. climate talks, set out that Turkey will serve as the venue while delegating negotiating responsibilities to Australia.

    “If there is a difference of views between Türkiye (Turkey) and Australia, consultations will take place until the difference is resolved to mutual satisfaction,” the statement said.

    A pre-COP summit will be held in a Pacific Island country, and Australia will lead the year-long process that shapes the agenda and priorities ahead of COP31.

    (Reporting by William James; Editing by Himani Sarkar)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Bolsonaro Lawyers Seek House Arrest for Coup Plot Sentence

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    SAO PAULO (Reuters) -Lawyers for former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro asked Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes to allow him to serve his coup plot sentence under house arrest, according to a document seen by Reuters on Friday.

    In the request, the lawyers cited Bolsonaro’s health problems. The former president has had recurring intestinal issues since he was stabbed while campaigning in 2018, including several surgeries, the last one a 12-hour procedure in April.

    “It is certain that keeping the petitioner in a prison environment would pose a concrete and immediate risk to his physical integrity and even his life,” the document said, asking for house arrest on “humanitarian grounds”.

    Bolsonaro was sentenced in September to 27 years and three months in prison for plotting a coup to remain in power after losing the 2022 election to leftist President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

    The former right-wing leader has already been under house arrest for violating precautionary measures in a separate case, in which he allegedly courted U.S. interference to halt criminal proceedings against him.

    (Reporting by Luciana Magalhaes and Fernando Cardoso; Editing by Gabriel Araujo)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Meet the company that looks to gain a foothold where China dominates — rare earth elements

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    When it comes to rare earth elements — critical for many industries — it’s all about China. And more and more companies are trying to break the stranglehold the country has over its supply.

    Rare earth elements, or REEs, are a group of 17 elements that are used in many industrial applications, most notably in fighter jets, robots, MRI scanners, and automobiles.

    REEs are split into two categories: hard and soft. And while China is the major industry player in both the mining and refining of these elements, it especially dominates in hard rare earths like dysprosium and terbium, common in permanent magnets for electric motors and wind turbines.

    With news this week that China is allegedly dumping REEs into the market to hurt US and foreign companies, developing an “ex-China” supply chain for companies like automakers and defense contractors is paramount.

    That’s where Brazilian Rare Earths (BRE.XA) comes in. It’s one of many companies looking to meet that demand and provide non-China-based REEs.

    The company acquired land in northeast Brazil, which it claims is a “globally significant … mineral province housing substantial volumes of both heavy and light rare earths.” BRE says its operation will be functional by 2028 for REE production and it will have its processing plant ready in 2030, which is significant. As Jefferies notes, it can take 10 to 15 years to bring a mining operation to viability.

    In an interview with Yahoo Finance, BRE CEO Bernardo da Veiga discussed why it was so important for BRE and other firms to break China’s monopoly as Western governments and China’s other rivals look to “decouple,” as da Veiga puts it.

    China is limiting the supply of raw materials and using those resources to produce its own high-value goods to boost its own economy and get out of the low-cost supply game.

    “China doesn’t want to sell you rare earths, they want to sell you cars,” da Veiga said, meaning China wants to sell higher-margin finished goods to the world, as opposed to cheap materials. China wants to sell more cars in the global market, and that means keeping rare earths away from competitors.

    A mine operated by Serra Verde Mining in Minacu, Goias state, Brazil, Monday, July 28, 2025, produces rare earth elements, including neodymium, praseodymium, terbium and dysprosium which are essential for the production of permanent magnets. (AP Photo/Eraldo Peres) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

    “And that’s where we come in, because you need Western companies that have deposits that are located outside of China, or in friendly countries, to be able to develop these,” da Veiga said.

    BRE isn’t the only operation in Brazil; the US government itself invested in the Serra Verde project in central Brazil.

    “Rare Earth Magnet Demand is expected to grow substantially, driven by electric vehicles (EV’s), robotics, and advanced air mobility,” Jefferies analyst Mitch Ryan wrote in a note last week. “In the US, magnet demand is projected to increase fivefold by 2035 (albeit from a low base), with [EVs,] robotics, and new technologies such as drones and humanoid robots leading the way.”

    Numerous companies in the US, Australia, and other REE-rich areas have announced deals for new fundraising, and even with government backstops or buying equity stakes in companies like MP Materials (MP).

    BRE’s da Veiga argued that what sets his company apart is the high purity, or grade levels of the REEs in its tenements, meaning they’re cheaper and less environmentally intrusive to mine because the company doesn’t have to dig up so much earth to produce a given amount of metal.

    Brazilian Rare Earths workers at the company's site in northheast Brazil.
    Brazilian Rare Earths workers at the company’s site in northheast Brazil. · BRE

    “When we talk about grade, we say, ‘My grade is X percent.’ That is a summation of an entire line of the periodic table, and that’s problematic, because some of those elements are virtually worthless, and some of those elements are worth over $1,000 a kilo,” he said. “So what’s actually important is for you to look at each individual element, and what makes up the total grade to see how these projects compare from an attractiveness point of view.”

    With hard REEs more rare than soft, the key is to make sure the grade of a certain project contains a decent amount of hard REEs, generally a ratio of 20 or 30 to 1 soft to hard.

    BRE says it has one of the highest ratios outside of China. And that’s why BRE’s stock has been on a tear this year, up over 80%. It’s a bet on the company’s ability to viably produce and process REEs at scale.

    That said, victory isn’t assured.

    Headwinds include the possibility that permitting won’t come through on time, or China suddenly deciding to flood the market with REEs to take down its competition — which allegedly just happened.

    Various grades of REEs at BRE's facility in southeast Brazil.
    Various grades of REEs at BRE’s facility in southeast Brazil. · BRE

    Da Veiga doesn’t foresee any issues with the permitting process in Brazil, as the tenements are not in geographically sensitive areas.

    In terms of growth, BRE recently concluded a 120 million AUD ($78 million) fundraise in October and has struck a strategic partnership with French REE mining firm Carester for technical expertise in producing and processing REEs at its site.

    The Carester relationship is a great way to get BRE up to speed and de-risks the company from a technical standpoint, da Veiga said, but the relationship is mutually beneficial.

    “They’re getting a consulting fee, but what they really want is the off-take. So part of the products that we make will go to them, and they will then further process that themselves,” he said.

    It’s that “off-take,” or excess capacity, that Carester wants — and it’s why BRE investors are willing to pay up for the stock of a company that hasn’t mined anything yet.

    Pras Subramanian is the Lead Transportation Reporter for Yahoo Finance. You can follow him on X and on Instagram.

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  • Huge fire at Cop30 forces evacuation as 13 people suffer smoke inhalation

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    A huge fire erupted at the Cop30 venue on Thursday, leaving 13 people suffering from smoke inhalation and forcing evacuations of several buildings.

    The blaze disrupted UN climate talks in Brazil at a critical time, when the host nation was trying to bring 190 countries on board in the final hours of the summit to strike a critical deal with just two scheduled days left.

    The fire spread through pavilions being used for the conference in Belem on Thursday, with videos showing emergency crews battling huge flames, and an eyewitness describing seeing billowing black smoke.

    Footage shows emergency crews battling a fire that broke out at a pavilion inside the venue of the Cop30 UN Climate Change Conference in Belem, Brazil, on Thursday (AFPTV)

    The local fire department said the cause of the blaze is being investigated, but suggested it was likely sparked by electrical equipment, such as a microwave.

    “Earlier today, a fire broke out in the Blue Zone of the COP30 venue in Belem. The fire department and UN security officers responded swiftly, and the fire was controlled in approximately six minutes. People were evacuated safely,” organisers said in a statement on Thursday evening.

    “Thirteen individuals were treated on site for smoke inhalation. Their condition is being monitored, and appropriate medical support has been provided.”

    “Following a safety assessment, we inform you that the site has been inspected and deemed safe by the Fire Department,” another statement said.

    “Brazilian authorities have restored operating conditions at the conference venue, obtained the Fire Department’s operating permit, and returned the area to the UNFCCC.”

    Flames spread through pavilions being used for the conference in Belem on Thursday (AFP/Getty)

    Flames spread through pavilions being used for the conference in Belem on Thursday (AFP/Getty)

    By 8.40pm, the area where the negotiations were taking place was “reinstated and resumed operations,” the organisers said. But fire officials ordered the entire site evacuated for safety checks.

    “The area affected by the incident will remain isolated until the conclusion of the conference.”

    The fire broke out in the pavilion area of Cop30, a place where participating groups, including countries, showcase their efforts for fighting the climate crisis.

    Brazil’s Tourism Minister Celso Sabino told journalists at the scene that the fire started near the China Pavilion, which was among several pavilions set up for events on the sidelines of the annual talks. The blaze quickly spread to neighbouring pavilions, said Samuel Rubin, one of the people in charge of an entertainment and culture pavilion. He said nearby pavilions include many of the Africa pavilions and one aimed at youth.

    The fire was caused by an overload in the pavilion area, observers said, and it remains under supervision. No serious injuries were reported.

    Para state governor Helder Barbalho told local news outlet G1 that a generator failure or a short circuit in a booth may have started the fire.

    The local fire department said the cause of the blaze is being investigated, but suggested it was likely sparked by electrical equipment, such as a microwave (AFP/Getty)

    The local fire department said the cause of the blaze is being investigated, but suggested it was likely sparked by electrical equipment, such as a microwave (AFP/Getty)

    Much of the summit venue in Belem was still under construction right up until the conference opened, with exposed beams, open plywood floors and metal meshed-in corridors leading nowhere outside the convention centre. During a pre-summit event, drilling and jackhammering could be heard as world leaders delivered speeches and scores of workers in hard hats scurried around unfinished pavilions shrouded in plastic.

    Gabi Andrade, a volunteer with Cop30 from Belem, said she has been working on accreditations at the conference for the last three weeks. She said she had just got off her lunch break for her first free afternoon and was exploring the Singapore pavilion when the fire broke out.

    She described seeing black smoke, before a security guard grabbed her hand and showed her to the exit as she cried and screamed “fire”.

    A security officer directs people to leave the Cop30 venue (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

    A security officer directs people to leave the Cop30 venue (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

    Beneath the shock of the situation, she worried about what this would mean for Brazil’s reputation, hosting the talks. “It’s so sad for us,” she said. “We all worked so hard.”

    Viliami Vainga Tone, with the Tonga delegation, said he had just come out of a high-level ministerial meeting when dozens of people came thundering past him shouting about the fire.

    He was among a crowd pushed out of the venue by Brazilian and UN security forces.

    Officials form a chain to not allow attendees past after fire officials ordered the entire site evacuated for safety checks (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

    Officials form a chain to not allow attendees past after fire officials ordered the entire site evacuated for safety checks (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

    Mr Tone called time the most precious resource at Cop and said he was disappointed it is even shorter because of the fire.

    “We have to keep up our optimism. There is always tomorrow, if not the remainder of today. But at least we have a full day tomorrow,” Mr Tone told The Associated Press.

    The fire has raised concerns over the hard task of striking a deal at the negotiations, as the host already missed a self-imposed deadline to wrap up the first batch of deals on Wednesday evening.

    With just two scheduled days left, negotiatiors will try to arrive a deal that can be accepted by all 190 countries. Every year, the UN climate summit sees world leaders, ministers and all stakeholders involved to come together and sign a global deal.

    The most contentious issues at the conference include how the world can move away from planet-warming fossil fuels and how to finance the world’s efforts to fight the crisis.

    A few hours before the fire, UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres urged countries to compromise and “show willingness and flexibility to deliver results”, even if they fall short of the strongest measures some nations want.

    The blaze left 13 people suffering from smoke inhalation and forced evacuations of several buildings (AFP/Getty)

    The blaze left 13 people suffering from smoke inhalation and forced evacuations of several buildings (AFP/Getty)

    “We are down to the wire and the world is watching Belem,” Mr Guterres said, asking negotiators to engage in good faith in the last two scheduled days of talks, which already missed a self-imposed deadline Wednesday for progress on a few key issues.

    The conference frequently runs longer than its scheduled two weeks.

    “Communities on the front lines are watching, too – counting flooded homes, failed harvests, lost livelihoods – and asking, ‘How much more must we suffer?”‘ Mr Guterres said. “They’ve heard enough excuses and demand results.”

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  • Trump calls six Democratic lawmakers ‘seditious’ and urges arrests

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    President Donald Trump on Thursday accused six Democratic members of Congress of “SEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR, punishable by DEATH!”“It’s called SEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR AT THE HIGHEST LEVEL. Each one of these traitors to our Country should be ARRESTED AND PUT ON TRIAL,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.Trump’s post was referring to lawmakers who previously served in the military or intelligence community who were featured in a social media video posted this week telling service members they do not have to carry out “illegal orders.”“Their words cannot be allowed to stand – We won’t have a Country anymore!!! An example MUST BE SET,” Trump wrote, going on to add in a subsequent Truth Social post: “LOCK THEM UP???”The lawmakers seen in the video are Sens. Elissa Slotkin, of Michigan; Mark Kelly, of Arizona; U.S. Reps. Chris Deluzio, of Pennsylvania; Maggie Goodlander, of New Hampshire; Chrissy Houlahan, of Pennsylvania; and Jason Crow, of Colorado.In that video, they say, “No one has to carry out orders that violate the law or our Constitution. Know that we have your back, don’t give up the ship.”The lawmakers did not specify what orders they were talking about, but they all framed their message as a warning about the rule of law. “We have been in contact with the House Sergeant at Arms and the United States Capitol Police to ensure the safety of these Members and their families. Donald Trump must immediately delete these unhinged social media posts and recant his violent rhetoric before he gets someone killed,” House Democratic leaders Hakeem Jeffries, Katherine Clark and Pete Aguilar said in a statement.

    President Donald Trump on Thursday accused six Democratic members of Congress of “SEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR, punishable by DEATH!”

    “It’s called SEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR AT THE HIGHEST LEVEL. Each one of these traitors to our Country should be ARRESTED AND PUT ON TRIAL,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.

    Trump’s post was referring to lawmakers who previously served in the military or intelligence community who were featured in a social media video posted this week telling service members they do not have to carry out “illegal orders.”

    “Their words cannot be allowed to stand – We won’t have a Country anymore!!! An example MUST BE SET,” Trump wrote, going on to add in a subsequent Truth Social post: “LOCK THEM UP???”

    The lawmakers seen in the video are Sens. Elissa Slotkin, of Michigan; Mark Kelly, of Arizona; U.S. Reps. Chris Deluzio, of Pennsylvania; Maggie Goodlander, of New Hampshire; Chrissy Houlahan, of Pennsylvania; and Jason Crow, of Colorado.

    In that video, they say, “No one has to carry out orders that violate the law or our Constitution. Know that we have your back, don’t give up the ship.”

    The lawmakers did not specify what orders they were talking about, but they all framed their message as a warning about the rule of law.

    “We have been in contact with the House Sergeant at Arms and the United States Capitol Police to ensure the safety of these Members and their families. Donald Trump must immediately delete these unhinged social media posts and recant his violent rhetoric before he gets someone killed,” House Democratic leaders Hakeem Jeffries, Katherine Clark and Pete Aguilar said in a statement.

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  • Influencer-fueled protein trends are reshaping everyday snacks and weight goals

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    New diets come and go often, but every now and then, some stick around. The latest: protein. Everyone seems to be looking for more ways to add it to their diet.From coffee shops to grocery stores, you couldn’t miss the promotion of protein even if you tried. But how much do you need? Doctors and nutritionists say it’s less than what social media might lead consumers to believe. Prioritizing protein isn’t new, but the number of people doing so is.”Things tend to go to an extreme at first,” said Kim Flannery, director of nutrition at the Wisconsin Athletic Club. “And I think that’s kind of where we are right now.”It’s everywhere, from social media influencers and now in coffee shops.For the first time, Starbucks added protein to its menu of drinks, even allowing customers to add it to their cold foam on top of their coffee.The trend has continued at the grocery store, too.Emilie Williamson with Metro Market said she’s seen a substantial increase in protein-filled snacks. “A big goal of ours is to meet shoppers where they’re at,” Williamson said.Walking down the aisle of your local grocery store, you will quickly find protein in many everyday snacks, like muffins, cereal, pretzels, chips, and even protein pastries.Dr. Lisa Morselli, assistant professor in the division of endocrinology at Froedtert Hospital in Wisconsin, said this is where she gets worried about the quality of the product.”These are all foods that are pretty processed,” Morselli said. “The protein snack marketing probably gives people license to snack without really paying attention to what they put in their mouth.”Morselli believes the trend has been influenced by social media.Morselli said those on GLP-1 weight loss medications need more protein in their diet for muscle gain.Separately, those looking to lose weight can find success in protein, too, according to Dr. Morselli.”Protein is involved in the control of hunger,” Morselli said.Morselli explains that protein-rich foods can make you feel full longer.Protein can also be great for balancing blood sugar levels. But for muscle gain or weight loss, protein isn’t a magic pill, either.”It’s not that if you take a higher protein, or if you have a higher protein intake, it will magically protect your muscles; you still need to exercise them,” Morselli said.Flannery said when talking to nutrition clients, she hopes to emphasize that protein is just one piece of the pie. “People tend to focus so much on the protein that they tend to lose the balance,” Flannery said.Flannery worries the trend of sharing personal protein goals could be going too far.”One number does not by any means apply to everyone,” Flannery said.Flannery said personal protein goals are different for everyone, with age, sex and activity levels all taken into consideration.According to the recommended dietary allowance, when calculating protein goals, the person should take .36 grams of protein per pound of body weight.For example, if the person weighs 150 pounds, a modest protein goal would be around 54 grams of protein.Arguably more importantly than any goal is the quality of protein the person is consuming.”A lot of the health problems that we have are due to the, all the processed foods,” Flannery reminds.A New York Times investigation in October found many popular protein powders and shakes contain dangerous levels of lead.Flannery said this is what worries her about the rise in protein snacks.”We’re just adding protein to junk food,” Flannery said.Flannery recommends getting protein from real foods like beans, tofu, meat, fish, and in some cases, pasta that can be healthy, too.”My opinion is that it’s better to eat real food and get your protein from real food,” Morselli agreed.

    New diets come and go often, but every now and then, some stick around. The latest: protein. Everyone seems to be looking for more ways to add it to their diet.

    From coffee shops to grocery stores, you couldn’t miss the promotion of protein even if you tried. But how much do you need?

    Doctors and nutritionists say it’s less than what social media might lead consumers to believe.

    Prioritizing protein isn’t new, but the number of people doing so is.

    “Things tend to go to an extreme at first,” said Kim Flannery, director of nutrition at the Wisconsin Athletic Club. “And I think that’s kind of where we are right now.”

    It’s everywhere, from social media influencers and now in coffee shops.

    For the first time, Starbucks added protein to its menu of drinks, even allowing customers to add it to their cold foam on top of their coffee.

    The trend has continued at the grocery store, too.

    Emilie Williamson with Metro Market said she’s seen a substantial increase in protein-filled snacks.

    “A big goal of ours is to meet shoppers where they’re at,” Williamson said.

    Walking down the aisle of your local grocery store, you will quickly find protein in many everyday snacks, like muffins, cereal, pretzels, chips, and even protein pastries.

    Dr. Lisa Morselli, assistant professor in the division of endocrinology at Froedtert Hospital in Wisconsin, said this is where she gets worried about the quality of the product.

    “These are all foods that are pretty processed,” Morselli said. “The protein snack marketing probably gives people license to snack without really paying attention to what they put in their mouth.”

    Morselli believes the trend has been influenced by social media.

    Morselli said those on GLP-1 weight loss medications need more protein in their diet for muscle gain.

    Separately, those looking to lose weight can find success in protein, too, according to Dr. Morselli.

    “Protein is involved in the control of hunger,” Morselli said.

    Morselli explains that protein-rich foods can make you feel full longer.

    Protein can also be great for balancing blood sugar levels. But for muscle gain or weight loss, protein isn’t a magic pill, either.

    “It’s not that if you take a higher protein, or if you have a higher protein intake, it will magically protect your muscles; you still need to exercise them,” Morselli said.

    Flannery said when talking to nutrition clients, she hopes to emphasize that protein is just one piece of the pie.

    “People tend to focus so much on the protein that they tend to lose the balance,” Flannery said.

    Flannery worries the trend of sharing personal protein goals could be going too far.

    “One number does not by any means apply to everyone,” Flannery said.

    Flannery said personal protein goals are different for everyone, with age, sex and activity levels all taken into consideration.

    According to the recommended dietary allowance, when calculating protein goals, the person should take .36 grams of protein per pound of body weight.

    For example, if the person weighs 150 pounds, a modest protein goal would be around 54 grams of protein.

    Arguably more importantly than any goal is the quality of protein the person is consuming.

    “A lot of the health problems that we have are due to the, all the processed foods,” Flannery reminds.

    A New York Times investigation in October found many popular protein powders and shakes contain dangerous levels of lead.

    Flannery said this is what worries her about the rise in protein snacks.

    “We’re just adding protein to junk food,” Flannery said.

    Flannery recommends getting protein from real foods like beans, tofu, meat, fish, and in some cases, pasta that can be healthy, too.

    “My opinion is that it’s better to eat real food and get your protein from real food,” Morselli agreed.

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  • Climate protesters march on COP30 in Brazil with costumes and drums demanding to be heard

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    Some wore black dresses to signify a funeral for fossil fuels. Hundreds wore red shirts, symbolizing the blood of colleagues fighting to protect the environment. And others chanted, waved huge flags or held up signs Saturday in Belem, Brazil, in what’s traditionally the biggest day of protest at the halfway point of annual United Nations climate talks.

    Organizers with booming sound systems on trucks with raised platforms directed protesters from a wide range of environmental and social movements. Marisol Garcia, a Kichwa woman from Peru marching at the head of one group, said protesters are there to put pressure on world leaders to make “more humanized decisions.”

    An Indigenous group blocks an entrance to the COP30 U.N. Climate Summit as attendees walk around them, Friday, Nov. 14, 2025, in Belem, Brazil.

    Fernando Llano / AP


    Protestors demand to be heard during climate march

    The demonstrators walked about 2.5 miles on a route that took them near the main venue for the talks, known as COP30. Protesters earlier this week twice disrupted the talks by surrounding the venue, including an incident on Tuesday where two security guards suffered minor injuries.

    A full day of sessions was planned at the venue, including talks on how to move forward with $300 billion a year in annual climate financial aid that rich countries agreed last year to give to poor nations to help wean themselves off fossil fuels, adapt to a nastier, warmer world and compensate for extreme weather damage. Global temperatures, greenhouse gas emissions and sea levels all reached record highs in 2024, the State of the Global Climate report confirmed.

    Many of the protesters reveled in the freedom to demonstrate more openly than at recent climate talks held in more authoritarian countries, including Azerbaijan, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt. Thousands of people joined in a procession that sprawled across most of the march’s route.

    APTOPIX Climate COP30

    An Indigenous group blocks an entrance to the COP30 U.N. Climate Summit, Friday, Nov. 14, 2025, in Belem, Brazil.

    Fernando Llano / AP


    Youth leader Ana Heloisa Alves, 27, said it was the biggest climate march she has been part of. “This is incredible,” she said. “You can’t ignore all these people.”

    Alves was at the march to fight for the Tapajos River, which the Brazilian government wants to develop commercially. “The river is for the people,” her group’s signs read.

    Pablo Neri, coordinator in the Brazilian state of Para for the Movimento dos Trabajadores Rurais Sem Terra, an organization for rural workers, said organizers of the talks should involve more people to reflect a climate movement that is shifting toward popular participation.

    United States skips talks after Trump calls climate change a scam

    The United States, where President Trump has ridiculed climate change as a scam, is skipping the talks. This is the second time the Trump administration has withdrawn from the 10-year-old Paris Agreement, which is being celebrated as a partial achievement here in Belem.

    Mr. Trump’s actions damage the fight against climate change, former U.S. Special Envoy for Climate Todd Stern said.

    “It’s a good thing that they are not sending anyone. It wasn’t going to be constructive if they did,” he said.

    Two U.S. governors, California’s Gavin Newsom and New Mexico’s Michelle Lujan Grisham, were in Brazil to attend the summit, representing state-level U.S. efforts to curb emissions. Newsom, a Democrat, criticized the Trump administration’s decision not to attend, saying earlier in the week that Brazil is a country the U.S. “should be engaging with, not slapping with 50% tariffs.”

    BRAZIL-CLIMATE-COP30-UN

    California Governor Gavin Newsom answers questions on the sidelines of the COP30 U.N. Climate Change Conference in Belem, Para State, Brazil, Nov. 11, 2025.

    MAURO PIMENTEL/AFP/Getty


    One demonstrator, Flavio Pinto, from Para state, took aim at the U.S. Wearing a brown suit and an oversized American flag top hat, he shifted his weight back and forth on stilts and fanned himself with fake hundred-dollar bills with Trump’s face on them. “Imperialism produces wars and environmental crises,” his sign read.

    Vitoria Balbina, a regional coordinator for the Interstate Movement of Coconut Breakers of Babaçu, marched with a group of mostly women wearing domed hats made with fronds of the Babaçu palm. They were calling for more access to the trees on private property that provide not only their livelihoods but also a deep cultural significance. She said marching is not only about fighting and resistance on a climate and environment front, but also about “a way of life.”

    The marchers formed a sea of red, white and green flags as they progressed up a hill. A crowd of onlookers gathered outside a corner supermarket to watch them approach, leaning over a railing and taking cellphone photos. “Beautiful,” said a man passing by, carrying grocery bags.

    The climate talks are scheduled to run through Friday. Analysts and some participants have said they don’t expect any major new agreements to emerge from the talks, but are hoping for progress on some past promises, including money to help poor countries adapt to climate change.

    Climate COP30

    Attendees wait to get into the venue for the COP30 U.N. Climate Summit after an entrance that was closed during a demonstration has been reopened, Friday, Nov. 14, 2025, in Belem, Brazil.

    Fernando Llano / AP


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  • Analysis-China Finds Bigger Role as US Sidesteps Brazil Climate Summit

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    By Valerie Volcovici and Lisandra Paraguassu

    BELEM, Brazil (Reuters) -With the United States absent from the U.N. annual international climate summit for the first time in three decades, China is stepping into the limelight as a leader in the fight against global warming.

    Its country pavilion dominates the entrance hall of the sprawling COP30 conference grounds in Brazil’s Amazon city of Belem, executives from its biggest clean energy companies are presenting their visions for a green future to large audiences in English, and its diplomats are working behind the scenes to ensure constructive talks.

    Those were Washington’s roles, but they now reside with Beijing.

    “Water flows to where there is space, and diplomacy often does the same,” Francesco La Camera, director general at the International Renewable Energy Agency, told Reuters.

    He said China’s dominance in renewable energy and electric vehicles was bolstering its position in climate diplomacy.

    China’s transformation from a quiet presence at the U.N.’s Conference of the Parties summits to a more central player seeking the world’s attention reflects a shift in the fight against global warming since U.S. President Donald Trump’s return to office.

    Long a skeptic of climate change, Trump has again pulled the United States – the world’s largest historic emitter – from the landmark international Paris Agreement to limit global warming. This year, for the first time ever, he declined to send an official high-level delegation to represent U.S. interests at the summit.

    “President Trump will not jeopardize our country’s economic and national security to pursue vague climate goals that are killing other countries,” White House spokeswoman Taylor Rogers told Reuters.

    But critics warn the U.S. withdrawal from the process cedes valuable ground in the climate negotiations, particularly as China, currently the world’s top greenhouse gas emitter, rapidly expands its renewable and EV industries.

    “China gets it,” said California Governor Gavin Newsom during a visit to the conference earlier this week. “America is toast competitively, if we don’t wake up to what the hell they’re doing in this space, on supply chains, how they’re dominating manufacturing, how they’re flooding the zone.”

    Unlike previous years, when China had a modest pavilion with just a handful of seats available for mostly technical and academic panels, its COP30 pavilion occupies prime space near the entrance next to host country Brazil.

    Cups of sustainable Chinese single-origin coffee, panda toys and branded swag lure in passers-by who can watch presentations by Chinese officials and executives from the world’s biggest renewable energy companies.

    “Let’s honor the legacy and fulfill the Paris [Agreement] vision guided by the vision of shared future,” Meng Xiangfeng, vice president of China’s CATL, the world’s largest battery maker, told an audience on Thursday.

    “Let’s advance climate cooperation and build a clean, beautiful world together.”

    The battery giant already supplies one-third of batteries for EV makers including Tesla, Ford and Volkswagen. It was CATL’s first time hosting an event at a COP, seeking to reach an audience of governments and NGOs.

    Earlier that afternoon, China’s vice minister of ecology Li Gao told a packed audience that China’s status as the world’s leading producer of renewable energy “brings benefits to countries, particularly in the Global South”.

    China’s State Grid, the world’s largest electric utility, and solar giants Trina and Longi also made presentations.

    Chinese electric auto giant BYD introduced a fleet of plug-in hybrid vehicles compatible with biofuel manufactured at its plant in Bahia, Brazil, for use at COP30.

    Both COP President Andre Correa do Lago and COP30 CEO Ana de Toni have praised China’s role as a clean energy technology leader.

    “China has shown leadership not only by carrying out its own energy revolution, but with China’s scale capacity, we can now also buy low-carbon… at competitive prices,” de Toni told Reuters.

    “China is very determined not only to continue to be a very stable leader in the Paris Agreement, strengthening climate governance, but also to take very practical actions to support other countries.” 

    China is playing a more subtle role behind the scenes in the negotiations by filling a void left by the United States, which was known for rallying governments toward agreement, according to current and former diplomats involved in negotiations.

    “Little by little, China is acting as a guarantor of the climate regime,” said one senior diplomat from an emerging economy. “They invested a lot on the green economy. If there’s any kind of involution, they will lose.” 

    One Brazilian diplomat said China played a key role in helping reach an agreement over the COP30 agenda before negotiations even began, whereas in previous years its diplomats would not get involved unless there was some key issue for them. 

    Sue Biniaz, who served as U.S. deputy climate envoy under John Kerry and was a key architect of the Paris Agreement, said China had the ability to bring together the wide-ranging interests of the developing world, from major emerging economies like the BRICS to small developing nations. She worked closely with Chinese counterparts on four bilateral climate agreements, including the one that unlocked the Paris deal.

    “They tend to be very tough, take on tough positions like the U.S. did, but then be pragmatic towards the end,” she told Reuters. “They have to come up with an outcome that nobody thinks is bad enough to block.” 

    Biniaz said she was not yet convinced that China was playing a leadership role beyond the pavilions.

    “If they had wanted to, they would have put in a more ambitious emission reduction target,” she said, referring to China’s announcement in September that it would cut emissions at least 7% from their peak by 2035. 

    Li Shuo, a veteran observer of China at U.N. climate talks who heads the China Climate Hub at the Asia Society Policy Institute, countered that China’s technology position was already a show of political leadership because its companies were making U.N. pledges achievable.

    “The most powerful country isn’t the one with the loudest microphone at COP,” he said, “but the one actually producing and investing in low-carbon technologies.”

    (Reporting by Valerie Volcovici and Lisandra Paraguassu in Belem, editing by Richard Valdmanis and Nia Williams)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Trump lowers tariffs on coffee, beef and fruits, as Americans’ concerns about affordability grow

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    (CNN) — President Donald Trump on Friday signed an executive order that retroactively lowers tariffs on beef, tomatoes, coffee and bananas, among other agricultural imports, backdated to Thursday.

    The order Trump signed excludes the goods from “reciprocal” tariff rates, which start at 10% and go as high as 50%. However, the order doesn’t exempt the goods entirely from tariffs.

    For instance, tomatoes from Mexico, a major supplier to the United States, will continue to be tariffed at 17%. That rate took effect in July after a nearly three-decade-old trade agreement expired. Tomato prices increased almost immediately after those tariffs were put in place.

    Many of the commodities that will no longer face “reciprocal” tariffs have seen some of the biggest price increases since Trump took office, in part because of tariffs he imposed and a lack of sufficient domestic supply.

    For instance, Brazil, the top supplier of coffee to the US, has faced tariffs of 50% since August. Consumers paid nearly 20% more for coffee in September compared to the prior year, according to Consumer Price Index data.

    The move comes after voters expressed frustrations with the state of the economy in exit polls earlier this month, voting for Democrats in off-year elections in several states.

    In previewing Friday’s executive order, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said earlier this week the moves targeted goods “we don’t grow here in the United States,” referring to coffee and bananas. (While coffee is grown in some parts of the country, it’s mostly imported.)

    Earlier on Friday the Trump administration and the Swiss government announced a new trade framework that calls for lowering tariffs on goods from Switzerland to 15% from 39%, a rate that was among the highest across all countries the US trades with.

    This story has been updated with additional context and developments.

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  • Nubank says AI helped boost clients’ credit-card limits

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    Nu Holdings Ltd. said artificial intelligence features it started to deploy in Brazil helped the fintech increase credit-card limits for some clients, boosting third-quarter revenue and profit. Nubank, as the company is known, said its portfolio rose 42% to $30.4 billion through September, according to financial statements Thursday. Chief Financial Officer Guilherme Lago said AI […]

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  • BHP Liable for 2015 Brazil Dam Collapse, UK Court Rules in Mammoth Lawsuit

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    LONDON (Reuters) -BHP is liable for the 2015 collapse of a dam in southeastern Brazil, London’s High Court ruled on Friday, in a lawsuit the claimants’ lawyers previously valued at up to 36 billion pounds ($48 billion).

    Hundreds of thousands of Brazilians, dozens of local governments and around 2,000 businesses sued BHP over the collapse of the Fundao dam in Mariana, southeastern Brazil, which was owned and operated by BHP and Vale’s Samarco joint venture.

    Brazil’s worst environmental disaster unleashed a wave of toxic sludge that killed 19 people, left thousands homeless, flooded forests and polluted the length of the Doce River.

    Judge Finola O’Farrell said in her ruling that continuing to raise the height of the dam when it was not safe to do so was the “direct and immediate cause” of the dam’s collapse, meaning BHP was liable under Brazilian law.

    BHP said it would appeal against the ruling and continue to fight the lawsuit.

    BHP’s President Minerals Americas Brandon Craig said in a statement that 240,000 claimants in the London lawsuit “have already been paid compensation in Brazil”.

    “We believe this will significantly reduce the size and value of claims in the UK group action,” he added.

    CLAIMANTS CELEBRATE MAJOR RULING

    Gelvana Rodrigues da Silva, who lost her seven-year-old son Thiago in the flood, said in a statement: “Finally, justice has begun to be served, and those responsible have been held accountable for destroying our lives.”

    “The judge’s decision shows what we have been saying for the last 10 years: it was not an accident, and BHP must take responsibility for its actions,” she added.

    The claimants’ lawyers accused BHP, the world’s biggest miner by market value, of “cynically and doggedly” trying to avoid responsibility as the mammoth trial began in October.

    BHP contested liability and said the London lawsuit duplicated legal proceedings and reparation and repair programmes in Brazil.

    In the trial’s first week, Brazil signed a 170 billion reais ($31 billion) compensation agreement with BHP, Vale and Samarco, with BHP saying nearly $12 billion has been spent on reparation, compensation and payments to public authorities since 2015.

    BHP said after Friday’s judgment that settlements in Brazil would reduce the size of the London lawsuit by about half.

    A second trial to determine the damages BHP is liable to pay is due to begin in October 2026.

    (Reporting by Sam Tobin. Editing by Kate Holton and Mark Potter)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

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  • At Brazilian climate summit, Newsom positions California as a stand-in for the U.S.

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    The expansive halls of the Amazon’s newly built climate summit hub echoed with the hum of air conditioners and the footsteps of delegates from around the world — scientists, diplomats, Indigenous leaders and energy executives, all converging for two frenetic weeks of negotiations.

    Then Gov. Gavin Newsom rounded the corner, flanked by staff and security. They moved in tandem through the corridors on Tuesday as media swarmed and cellphone cameras rose into the air.

    “Hero!” one woman shouted. “Stay safe — we need you,” another attendee said. Others didn’t hide their confusion at who the man with slicked-back graying hair causing such a commotion was.

    “I’m here because I don’t want the United States of America to be a footnote at this conference,” Newsom said when he reached a packed news conference on his first day at the United Nations climate policy summit known as COP30.

    In less than a year, the United States has shifted from rallying nations on combating climate change to rejecting the science altogether under President Trump.

    Newsom has engineered his own evolution when coping with Trump — moving from sharp but reasoned criticism to name-calling and theatrical attacks on the president and his Republican allies. Newsom’s approach adds fire to America’s political spectacle — part governance, part made-for-TV drama.

    On Wednesday, Newsom’s trip collided with unwelcome headlines at home after his former chief of staff was arrested on federal charges alleging she siphoned $225,000 from a dormant campaign account and claimed business tax write-offs for $1 million in luxury handbags and private jet travel. Newsom had left COP30 before the indictment was revealed, which kept the focus during his whirlwind trip to Belém on his climate policies.

    California’s carbon market and zero-emission mandates have given the state outsize influence at summits such as COP30, where its policies are seen as both durable and exportable. The state has invested billions in renewables, battery storage and electrifying buildings and vehicles and has cut greenhouse gas emissions by 21% since 2000 — even as its economy grew 81%.

    “Absolutely,” he said when asked whether the state is in effect standing in for the United States at climate talks. “And I think the world sees us in that light, as a stable partner, a historic partner … in the absence of American leadership. And not just absence of leadership, the doubling down of stupid in terms of global leadership on clean energy.”

    Newsom has honed a combative presence online — trading barbs with Trump and leaning into satire, especially on social media, tactics that mirror the president’s. Critics have argued that it’s contributing to a lowering of the bar when it comes to political discourse, but Newsom said he doesn’t see it that way.

    “I’m trying to call that out,” Newsom said, adding that in a normal political climate, leaders should model civility and respect. “But right now, we have an invasive species — in the vernacular of climate — by the name of Donald Trump, and we got to call that out.”

    At home, Newsom recently scored a political win with Proposition 50, the ballot measure he championed to counter Trump’s effort to redraw congressional maps in Republican-led states. On his way to Brazil, he celebrated the victory with a swing through Houston, where a rally featuring Texas Democrats looked more like a presidential campaign stop than a policy event — one of several moments in recent months that have invited speculation about a White House run that he insists he hasn’t launched.

    Those questions followed him to Brazil. It was the first topic posed from a cluster of Brazilian journalists in Sao Paulo, Brazil’s largest city and financial hub, where Newsom had flown to speak Monday with climate investors in what he conceded sounded more like a campaign speech.

    “I think it has to,” said Newsom, his talking points scribbled on yellow index cards still in his pocket from an earlier meeting. “I think people have to understand what’s going on, because otherwise you’re wasting everyone’s time.”

    In a low-lit luxury hotel adorned with Brazilian artwork and deep-seated chairs, Newsom showcased the well-practiced pivot of a politician avoiding questions about his future. His most direct answer about his presidential prospects came in a recent interview with “CBS News Sunday Morning” in which he was asked whether he would give serious thought after the 2026 midterm elections to a White House bid. Newsom responded: “Yeah, I’d be lying otherwise.”

    He laughed when asked by The Times how often he has fielded questions about his 2028 plans in recent days, and quickly deflected.

    “It’s not about me,” he said before fishing a malaria pill out of his suit pocket and chasing it with coffee from a nearby carafe. “It’s about this moment — and people’s anxiety and concern about this moment.”

    Ann Carlson, a UCLA environmental law professor, said Newsom’s appearance in Brazil is symbolically important as the federal government targets California’s decades-old authority to enforce its own environmental standards.

    “California has continued to signal that it will play a leadership role,” she said.

    The Trump administration confirmed to The Times that no high-level federal representative will attend COP30.

    “President Trump will not jeopardize our country’s economic and national security to pursue vague climate goals that are killing other countries,” White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers said.

    For his part, Trump told world leaders at the United Nations in September that climate change is a “hoax” and “the greatest con job ever perpetrated on the world.”

    Since Trump returned to office for a second term, he’s canceled funding for major clean energy projects such as California’s hydrogen hub and moved to revoke the state’s long-held authority to set stricter vehicle emissions standards than those of the federal government. He’s also withdrawn from the Paris climate agreement, a seminal treaty signed a decade ago in which world leaders established the goal of limiting global warming to 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) above preindustrial levels and preferably below 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit). That move is seen as pivotal in preventing the worst effects of climate change.

    Leaders from Chile and Colombia called Trump a liar for rejecting climate science, while Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva broadly warned that extremist forces are fabricating fake news and “condemning future generations to life on a planet altered forever by global warming.”

    Terry Tamminen, former California Environmental Protection Agency secretary under Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, contended that with the Trump administration’s absence, Newsom’s attendance at COP30 thrusts an even brighter spotlight on the governor.

    “If the governor of Delaware goes, it may not matter,” Tamminen said. “But if our governor goes, it does. It sends a message to the world that we’re still in this.”

    The U.S. Climate Alliance, a bipartisan coalition of state leaders, said three governors from the United States are attending COP30-related events in Brazil: Newsom, Wisconsin’s Tony Evers and New Mexico’s Michelle Lujan Grisham.

    Despite the warm reception Newsom has received in Belém, environmentalists in California have recently questioned his commitment.

    In September, Newsom signed a package of bills that extended the state’s signature cap-and-trade program through 2045. That program, rebranded as cap-and-invest, limits greenhouse gas emissions and raises billions of dollars for the state’s climate priorities. But, at the same time, he also gave final approval to a bill that will allow oil and gas companies to drill as many as 2,000 new wells per year through 2036 in Kern County. Environmentalists called that backsliding; Newsom called it realism, given the impending refinery closures in the state that threaten to drive up gas prices.

    “It’s not an ideological exercise,” he said. “It’s a very pragmatic one.”

    Leah Stokes, a UC Santa Barbara political scientist, called his record “pretty complex.”

    “In many ways, he is one of the leaders,” she said. “But some of the decisions that he’s made, especially recently, don’t move us in as good a direction on climate.”

    Newsom is expected to return to the climate summit Wednesday before traveling deeper into the Amazon, where he plans to visit reforestation projects. The governor said he wanted to see firsthand the region often referred to as “the lungs of the world.”

    “It’s not just to admire the absorption of carbon from the rainforest,” Newsom said. “But to absorb a deeper spiritual connection to this issue that connects all of us. … I think that really matters in a world that can use a little more of that.”

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    Melody Gutierrez

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  • Traditional acai berry dishes surprise visitors to Brazil climate summit, no sugar added

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    BELEM, Brazil (AP) — Some acai berry lovers visiting Brazil for this week’s U.N. climate summit are in for a surprise when they taste the fruit popular around the world in smoothies and breakfast bowls.

    Acai bowls served by local vendors in Belem — the city hosting the 30th annual United Nations climate summit, the Conference of the Parties, known less formally as COP30 — are true to the dish’s rainforest roots, served unadulterated and without sugar.

    This traditional preparation has been a tough sell for some visitors, used to the frozen and sweetened acai cream sold in other countries and elsewhere in Brazil.

    “I can’t say this is bad and I totally respect the cultural importance of it, but I still prefer the ice creamy version,” said Catherine Bernard, a 70-year-old visitor from France, as she tasted a traditional acai berry bowl in downtown Belem on Thursday.

    “Maybe if we add a little honey, some banana,” she added.

    Not a dessert

    People in the Amazon, where the nutrient-rich berry has been cultivated for centuries by Indigenous populations, don’t treat their acai bowls as a side order or dessert.

    It is often the main course for any meal. They don’t add granola, fresh fruit or nuts. Sugar is forbidden. Served at room temperature, the traditional dish is a thick liquid prepared from whole berries and a bit of water, typically sprinkled with tapioca flour.

    Locals hope that exposing visitors to this original blend will increase awareness about a fruit facing pressure from tariffs and a changing environment.

    “The acai coming from Indigenous people is the food when there’s no food. It was never a drink or an extra. It can be the main course for us,” Tainá Marajoara, an activist and owner of a restaurant, told The Associated Press, wearing an Indigenous headdress.

    As Marajoara poured some of the dark liquid into an Amazon bowl called “cuia,” a vessel traditionally fashioned from gourds and now popular throughout Brazil, she said that acai trees need a protected surrounding in the rainforest so they can be at their best.

    “Acai is also the blood running in the forest,” she added.

    Marajoara’s restaurant at the COP30 pavilion charges 25 Brazilian reais ($5) for a bowl, about the same as bowls in other parts of Brazil that use industrially processed and sweetened acai cream, often with toppings.

    That version was made popular in the mid-1990s by surfers and jiujitsu fighters in Rio de Janeiro, and then exported around the world as millions of tourists developed a taste for it.

    Even in many parts of Brazil, it can be hard to find unsweetened acai. Some Brazilian parents who want their children to have the superfood’s benefits without the sugar look for stores that sell acai cream without added sweeteners. But most popular brands only produce sweetened versions.

    Where the world’s acai comes from

    Nearly all the acai consumed in the United States originates from Brazil, with the state of Para, whose capital is Belem, accounting for 90% of the country’s total production. Many communities in the Amazon depend on its harvest, which largely goes to the industrialized product.

    Prices of acai smoothies look uncertain for U.S. consumers as the product is subject to a 50% tariff imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump on many Brazilian exports.

    The harvesting of acai is a physically demanding job that requires workers known as “peconheiros” to climb tall trees with minimal safety equipment to fill baskets and place them carefully in crates.

    A full crate of acai sells for around $50 at local markets in Brazil, a price that is expected to plummet if U.S. sales slow down. The U.S. is by far the largest acai importer of a total Brazilian output, currently estimated at about 70,000 tons (63,500 metric tons) per year.

    In some coastal areas of the Amazon under little environmental protection, erosion is changing the taste of some of the acai, making them saltier and less colorful. That’s why people like Marajoara keep pushing not only for their original bowls during COP30, but also for higher surveillance for acai trees of the region.

    “The acai berry that belongs in our food culture comes from flood plain areas, from a healthy ecosystem,” she said. “For acai to be healthy, the rainforest needs to be healthy too.”

    ___

    The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

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