Your Wednesday Briefing: The E.U. Agrees to Curb Its Gas Consumption

We’re covering an E.U. agreement to reduce natural gas consumption and warnings of a global recession.

The E.U. agreed to a deal to curb natural gas consumption starting next week, the latest show of solidarity in its efforts to punish Russia for its invasion of Ukraine.

The cuts, which aim for savings of up to 15 percent by the spring, are meant to blunt Russia’s ability to use its energy sources as a political weapon. For now, the reductions will be voluntary, but they could become binding should an energy supply crunch cause an emergency.

Twenty-six of the 27 E.U. states agreed to the deal, diplomats involved in the process said, with the only holdout being Hungary, which had been slow to agree to sanctions before.

The agreement came less than 24 hours after Russia’s state-owned gas monopoly, Gazprom, said that it would further reduce the amount of natural gas it sends to Germany, Europe’s biggest consumer of Russian gas.

The world could soon be on the brink of a global recession as the economies of the U.S., China and Europe slowed more sharply than anticipated, the I.M.F. said in a new report.

It said the probability of a recession starting in one of the Group of 7 advanced economies was now nearly 15 percent, four times its usual level. And it said some indicators suggested that the U.S. was already in a “technical” recession, though most economists didn’t think it yet met the formal definition.

The I.M.F. downgraded its global growth forecasts from its April projections, predicting that output would fall to 3.2 percent in 2022 from 6.1 percent last year. Growth is expected to slow even further next year as central banks around the world raise interest rates in an effort to tame inflation.

“The world may soon be teetering on the edge of a global recession, only two years after the last one,” Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, the I.M.F.’s chief economist, wrote. Put simply, the outlook for the global economy is “increasingly gloomy,” he added.

Related: U.S. Federal Reserve officials are set to make a second abnormally large interest rate increase this week as they race to cool down an overheating economy.


The Biden administration is increasingly worried that China will take military action in or around Taiwan in the next year and a half as Chinese activity around the self-governing island has grown more aggressive.

U.S. officials are particularly concerned that China will act to cut off access to all or part of the Taiwan Strait, through which U.S. naval ships regularly pass. Chinese officials have repeatedly asserted this summer that no part of the Taiwan Strait can be considered international waters, with a spokesman for the foreign ministry stating that “China has sovereignty, sovereign rights and jurisdiction over the Taiwan Strait.”

The anxiety has sharpened in recent days as the administration has quietly attempted to dissuade Nancy Pelosi from going through with a proposed visit to Taiwan next month, which would be the first by a U.S. House Speaker since 1997. Her plans have been repeatedly denounced by the Chinese government, which has threatened to retaliate.

The timing of her visit is particularly worrying, American officials say, as Xi Jinping, China’s leader, prepares in the coming weeks for an important political meeting in which he is expected to extend his rule.

Analysis: American officials said a sea-and-air invasion of Taiwan would be difficult for China to pull off in the near term. Instead, it could do so piecemeal, perhaps by first invoking its recent declaration on the status of the Taiwan Strait and conducting a limited operation to gauge Washington’s reaction.

Nightlife is returning to Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, which is full of young people who have been cooped up for two years, first because of Covid and then because of the war. They yearn for contact. War makes that urge even greater — especially this war, where a Russian cruise missile can take you out, anywhere, anytime.

In February, a team of scientists sent shock waves through the world of paleontology when it posited that Tyrannosaurus rex was actually three distinct species — T. rex, T. imperator and T. regina.

Yesterday, another group of researchers published the first peer-reviewed rebuttal, a counterattack that sets the stage for what is likely to be a king-size taxonomic debate for years to come.

The disagreement highlights a fundamental issue with dinosaur research: It is hard to differentiate prehistoric species. Without dinosaur DNA, the lines between one fossil species and another are messy. Paleontologists measure different traits, like the size and shape of a particular bone. But fossils can be misleading: Bone can distort after spending eons entombed underground.

In the meantime, neither side appears ready to surrender. The first group anticipated the rebuttal, and one author of the original study is already working on another paper.

“I don’t like flat-earthism because the evidence is against it,” he said. “It’s the same here: The evidence indicates very strongly that there are multiple species.”

For all the latest world News Click Here 

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! TechAI is an automatic aggregator around the global media. All the content are available free on Internet. We have just arranged it in one platform for educational purpose only. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials on our website, please contact us by email – [email protected]. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.