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"Challenges of climate change, Palestinian statehood, Charlie Kirk memorial."

Views expressed in this World and U.S. News update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 22 September 2025, 1517 UTC.

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Russ Roberts (https://trendsingeopolitics.blogspot.com).

The Morning
September 22, 2025

Good morning, and happy autumn equinox. Today, we speak with six world leaders about the challenges of climate change. But first, here’s the latest news:

Paddy fields.
Salt-tolerant rice varieties in BangladeshFabeha Monir for The New York Times

Climate leadership

Author Headshot

By David Gelles

I host the Climate Forward newsletter and live event series.

Climate debates often focus on the world’s largest economies and biggest emitters. But the work of adapting to a hotter planet is happening in countries that have contributed little to the problem but are nevertheless exposed to its consequences.

I spoke with six world leaders from these places and heard some common themes — the ravages of extreme weather, the difficulties posed by the Trump administration’s retreat. (The president withdrew the United States from the Paris Agreement and denies the existence of climate change.)

But the conversations, which you can see in full, also show how varied environmental predicaments can be. Some of the interviews, condensed and edited, are here:

A portrait of William Ruto in a yellow tie with a grid of black spots.
President William Ruto of Kenya. Dina Litovsky for The New York Times

Kenya

President William Ruto has positioned himself as Africa’s climate leader. Kenya’s energy system is powered in large part by biofuels, wind and solar power. But many African countries, including Kenya, have struggled to obtain competitive financing for clean-energy projects. Ruto’s push for climate action has not moved many voters who want improvements in government services, currency stability and living costs.

Talking to your countrymen, how do you explain your focus on something that can seem very abstract to people who are still just struggling to get by? Droughts made millions of Kenyans go hungry. Floods just in the city of Nairobi killed over 30 people. Nobody can persuasively tell any Kenyan that climate change is abstract. It is not.

Do you feel that the effort to coordinate global climate action has been effective? It is generally acceptable now that countries like Kenya should be considered for financing. There was a time when we said this and it looked like a joke.

Does international collaboration on climate change work if the United States is rowing in the opposite direction? I am very confident that the position of the United States, of China, of Europe, of Africa must come together at some point. We may disagree for a moment, we may disagree for a while, but reality is going to beat us into an agreement. The effects of climate change are in every continent. The only difference is that developed countries can cushion themselves.

A portrait of Petteri Orpo, posed on a stool and wearing a textured blue tie.
Prime Minister Petteri Orpo of FinlandDina Litovsky for The New York Times

Finland

This country has done something unusual: It has cut down on carbon emissions while growing its economy. Of course, it helps that the Finnish public is wildly supportive of government action on climate. Finland hopes to be carbon neutral by 2035, but it is still reliant on oil because of shipping fuel. Prime Minister Petteri Orpo describes a nation being transformed: The Arctic is warming nearly four times as fast as the global average, and arable land is moving north as remote regions thaw.

Is China becoming a more powerful partner to Finland with the retreat of the U.S. on clean energy? We have to be careful. We have to get rid of dangerous dependencies, because we have to be autonomous in clean-energy production.

You’ve been working on this issue for many years now. What was the moment when you felt the most personal disillusionment about the politics around climate change? About five to 10 years ago, there was a debate in my own country over whether climate change is true or not. And because I believe it is, and I’m deeply worried about our world and our planet, that debate was frustrating. But we won. Today we have new technologies. We can change our behavior without cutting our welfare. We just have to believe that it’s possible, and we have to continue our work.

A portrait of Hilda C. Heine, in a green pleated top and a necklace of shells.
President Hilda Heine of the Marshall IslandsDina Litovsky for The New York Times

The Marshall Islands

This country, made from islands and reefs in the Pacific Ocean, is a few feet above sea level. Each year, the challenges grow. Mosquito-borne diseases have spread because of more frequent rainfall. Tuna — an economic backbone — are leaving for cooler parts of the Pacific. The water is rising. “We will be submerged by 2050 if the world doesn’t do its part,” says President Hilda Heine, who has spent her career sounding the alarm.

What do developed nations owe countries like the Marshall Islands? The plan for elevating only two of our communities is projected to cost us billions. It’s a lot of money. I wish that the big emitters could step up and put money into that.

What specific steps are you taking in the Marshall Islands? The warming of the ocean is killing our corals, which are building blocks of atoll nations. We are currently doing research to determine species of corals that can survive the warming ocean. We are building a fleet of ships that use wind and solar power to replace our fossil-fuel-run shipping fleet.

What are some of the changes your people have had to make? Seven years ago, Majuro had no sea walls. Now we build sea walls to protect homes and schools. I mean, we used to be able to just walk into the lagoon. Now you have to go over sea walls to get to the lagoon side or to the ocean side. The landscape is different.

Do you think your country will survive? As the leader of the Marshall Islands, I cannot take the view that we cannot survive.

Muhammad Yunus, in a round-collared shirt, buttoned to the top, and a sleeveless jacket.
Muhammad Yunus, the chief adviser of Bangladesh. Dina Litovsky for The New York Times

Bangladesh

With a young population densely packed into a low-lying delta, rising sea levels and extreme heat are major problems. Agriculture is being disrupted. Populations are being displaced. After a popular uprising last year, the country installed Muhammad Yunus as the government’s chief adviser. Yunus won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006 for developing a way to give small loans to low-income people. He called it an example of the way small individual actions can produce widespread change, and he believes that the same is possible with climate.

How is Bangladesh experiencing climate change right now? We have to make use of every little space we’ve got in order to feed ourselves. But not only is our land sinking into the ocean; the water system brings saline water into the land because of the tide. And salinity eats up our cultivable land. So sum total is our land is getting squeezed. It’s not a very happy situation.

How much do you think international efforts on climate action have succeeded? We try to solve everything by pouring money into it. That’s not the solution. I’m saying I have to change myself. That’s how the world will change.

What do you think the developed countries that have historically been responsible for most global emissions owe a country like Bangladesh? All I can do is explain to them: “Look, this is our home. You start a fire in your part of the home, you suffer. But you do something to start a fire in my part of the house — this is not a fair thing to do. You are destroying the whole home. Our life depends on what you do.”

Read more interviews here.

At The Times’s Climate Forward conference this week, we’ll hear from world leaders, Energy Secretary Chris Wright and activists like the actor Rainn WilsonSign up for the livestream here.

News and insights for a warming world.

Sign up for the Climate Forward newsletter

News and insights for a warming world.

Get it in your inbox

THE LATEST NEWS

Palestinian Statehood

  • Australia, Britain, Canada and Portugal formally recognized a Palestinian state. Today, Palestinian statehood is due to take center stage at a United Nations conference hosted by France and Saudi Arabia.
  • Top European officials have condemned Israel’s actions in Gaza, and some have even begun to call the war “genocide,” but their concrete actions remain limited, Jeanna Smialek writes.
  • An essential element is missing for Palestinian statehood: backing by Israel or the U.S.

Charlie Kirk Memorial

An in-stadium screen showing President Trump speaking during Charlie Kirk’s memorial.
At the memorial. Loren Elliott for The New York Times

International

Business

Other Big Stories

  • Today is the September equinox, which means fall in the Northern Hemisphere. At the South Pole, it brings the first sunrise in months.
  • The U.S. could lose to China in a race to return to the moon, former NASA executives say, pointing to difficulties and delays with SpaceX’s Starship rocket. Eric Lipton, an investigative reporter, explains more in this video.

BE QUIET

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth called on reporters for questions during a press briefing after the Iran strike in June.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth Alex Brandon/Associated Press

The Pentagon said on Friday that it would forbid journalists who cover the military from reporting any information that had not been authorized in advance for release. Eric Schmitt, who has spent 35 years covering national security for The Times, recounts some of the stories that might never have come to light under a policy like this.

Rigorous reporting on national security often relies on facts that are not publicly known. One of the most important parts of our job is to shine light on classified programs and operations that the American people need to know about. Some examples:

Caribbean boat strikes. My colleagues and I revealed in August that Trump had secretly authorized military force against certain drug cartels. Since then, U.S. strikes against suspected drug boats have killed at least 17 people.

Pentagon Papers. The Times published top-secret documents in 1971 showing how four presidential administrations deceived the public about U.S. involvement in Vietnam. The Nixon White House tried to stop their publication, leading to the court showdown you probably learned about in high-school history class.

Botched mission in North Korea. In 2019, Trump authorized a secret operation to spy on Kim Jong-un. Earlier this month, my colleagues were the first to report on it — and how it failed, leaving unarmed North Koreans dead. These military failures are often kept under wraps, leading the public to underestimate the extreme risks that American forces undertake.

We’ve published thousands more stories based on confidential information. It’s how The Times has done some of its most important reporting: on WikiLeaks, the Iraq War, N.S.A. wiretapping and more.

OPINIONS

Trump prefers his personal relationships to guide diplomacy. But in doing so, he risks misjudging his counterparts’ intentions, Hillary Rodham Clinton and Keren Yarhi-Milo write.

Here’s a column by M. Gessen on the feeling of losing a country.

New: The Times family subscription is here.

One rate. Four individual logins. Savings for all. Now you and three others can enjoy unlimited access to The Times, while personalizing your own experience. Learn more.

MORNING READS

Two women holding the hands of a third, who is lying wrapped in shawls on a bed with flowers strewed around her.
Kay Nicte Cisneros García gave birth in June. Greta Rico for The New York Times

New moms, old rituals: In Mexico, midwives are reviving ancestral practices like shawl-wrapping and herbal baths.

Mad at tourists: Copenhagen is a top spot for destination weddings. That’s becoming a problem for residents who can’t get a booking at the city hall.

Your pick: The most-clicked article in The Morning yesterday was about a middle-school crush that never ended.

Metropolitan Diary: A maraschino cherry conspiracy.

Boundary pusher: Diane Martel, an inventive music video director who worked with stars like Beyoncé, Justin Timberlake and Mariah Carey, died at 63.

SPORTS

N.F.L.: Americans are searching online for football news. Four games had a blocked field goal yesterday. Three came in the final two minutes of play, and two of them swung results.

College football: Clemson is crumbling. Indiana is clicking. Texas Tech is contending. And 17 more takeaways on Week 4.

TOURISM WOES

An underwater photo shows several scuba divers with cameras photographing a large seal.
A photo op in the Galápagos. Todd Heisler/The New York Times

The Galápagos Islands, off the coast of Ecuador, are home to sea lions that sleep at bus stops and birds so tame you can touch them. It’s easy to see why Charles Darwin found the archipelago so special when he visited in 1835.

Since the pandemic, the islands have become more accessible to visitors because of rentals on Airbnb. Critics say that’s altering the ecosystem.

THE MORNING RECOMMENDS …

An open-crumbed yellow cake dusted with sugar.
Christopher Testani for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Yossy Arefi.

Bake a light and zesty carrot, orange and olive oil cake.

Organize your camera roll.

Take our news quiz.

GAMES

Here is today’s Spelling Bee. Yesterday’s pangrams were antiaircraft, frantic, infarct and infract.

And here are today’s Mini CrosswordWordleConnectionsSports Connections and Strands.

Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow.

Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox. Reach our team at themorning@nytimes.com.

Amelia Nierenberg contributed to this newsletter.

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Editor: Adam B. Kushner

News Editor: Tom Wright-Piersanti

Associate Editor: Lauren Jackson

News Staff: Evan GorelickBrent LewisAshley Wu

News Assistant: Lyna Bentahar

Saturday Writer: Melissa Kirsch

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