NPR News Now - NPR News: 11-24-2024 9AM EST
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Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Joel Snyder.
Contentious negotiations at the Climate Conference
in Azerbaijan came to an end this weekend with a deal that's being sharply criticized.
Wealthy countries agreed to triple a previous pledge to help developing nations cope with a
hotter climate. But NPR's Jeff Brady reports many of those developing countries are not happy.
Jeff Brady Under the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement, rich countries that mostly created climate change
by burning fossil fuels agreed to pay developing nations that are disproportionately suffering
the consequences.
India's representative called the $300 billion a year by 2035 a paltry sum considering the
damage.
Johnni Raina said her country was not even allowed to make a statement before the decision was finalized.
This has been stage managed,
and we are extremely, extremely disappointed
with this incident.
President-elect Donald Trump has vowed to pull the US
from the UN climate accord for a second time.
Jeff Brady, NPR News.
President-elect Trump has tapped Brooke Rollins to lead the Agriculture Department.
Rollins is a longtime ally who co-founded
and leads the America First Policy Institute.
Trump's announcement this weekend completes his choices
to lead executive agencies after a flurry Friday night.
Trump is promising to deport millions of migrants
during his upcoming term.
There's growing concern
that would threaten the $106 billion construction industry in Texas.
Hylian Aguilar reports from El Paso.
Veronica Carrasco, an undocumented immigrant from Honduras, has worked as a painter for
a home remodeling company in Mesquite, Texas for 12 years.
It makes me frustrated and worried.
I am a single mom.
I have three children.
Some economists and industry leaders are worried too.
How things would disappear.
I think they'd lose half their labor.
That's Stan Merrick, the CEO of Merrick, a Houston-based commercial and residential
construction giant.
In 2022, more than a half million immigrants worked in the Texas construction industry,
according to a report by the American Immigration Council.
Almost 60% of that workforce was undocumented.
For NPR News, I'm Julian Aguilar in El Paso.
Northern California wine country residents in Sonoma County got a chance to check on
their homes this weekend following a three-day deluge of rain
from that atmospheric river storm at Windrum as the county's division fire chief.
We have never seen this kind of thing in anybody's recorded experience and certainly in my personal
experience this is by far the most rain in a short period of time that we've had.
The city of Santa Rosa is in Sonoma County, where weather officials are calling that foot
of rain that fell there a once-in-a-thousand-year event.
The flooding is being blamed for two deaths in Washington state.
Tens of thousands remain without power, mostly in the Seattle area.
This is NPR News.
Lebanon's caretaker prime minister is condemning an Israeli airstrike as an assault on U.S.-led
efforts to achieve a ceasefire.
One soldier was killed in the strike that hit an army center in southwestern Lebanon
where there has been heavy fighting between Israel and Hezbollah, the Lebanese military
says.
At least 18 others were wounded.
Meanwhile, ancient temples, castles, and archaeological sites in Lebanon are at risk of damage in
the fighting between Israel and Hezbollah.
And Peresnetta Ulubi reports that UNESCO is calling for enhanced protection for those
places.
The Temple Complex in Baalbek is a marvel.
It contains some of the grandest surviving Roman architecture on the planet.
It's a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and it was nearly hit by recent Israeli
airstrikes. The ancient Phoenician city is among 34 cultural properties that UNESCO has
placed under what it calls enhanced protection, meant to help preserve these fragile, irreplaceable
sites from attacks and use by military forces. The agency is also lending expertise and financial
aid. Other sites on the list include the National
Museum of Beirut and the Mediterranean port city of Byblos, which has been continuously
inhabited for at least 7,000 years. Neda Ulibi, NPR News.
Rick Bauer, NPR News Reporter Voters in Romania going to the polls today
in a presidential election focused on the high cost of living and Romania's support
for neighboring Ukraine. Thirteen candidates on the ballot cost of living and Romania's support for neighboring Ukraine.
Thirteen candidates on the ballot in an election that's expected to go to a second round runoff
next month.
Opinion surveys show Romania's prime minister and her far-right nationalists are likely
to advance.
I'm Joel Snyder, NPR News.