Los Angeles Times

How badly will Russia's war torpedo hopes for global climate cooperation?

Russia's nuclear-powered icebreaker, touted as the strongest of its kind and a symbol of Moscow's ambition to tap the Arctic' s commercial potential, returned after a two-day test run.

Even before Russia invaded Ukraine, the prospect of industrial nations coming together to quickly enact meaningful cuts to greenhouse gas emissions seemed slim. But with Russia blowing apart the world order, advocates for international climate action say their cause is looking ever more bleak, just as the effects of warming are looking more ominous.

In its latest global climate report, written before the invasion and released last week, the United Nations warned that the world sits on the brink of disaster — with rising waters sure to subsume coastal cities and wildfires increasing in intensity, size and frequency, among other perils.

Yet the report also offered a glimmer of hope — noting that nations could still pull together to reduce emissions,

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