Naomi Osaka’s 6-4 6-3 win over Jennifer Brady in the Australian Open final gave the Japanese juggernaut her fourth Grand Slam crown, with her career still budding at the age of 23 reut.rs/3qzNNmK 1/4
Osaka joined Monica Seles and Roger Federer as winners in their first four Grand Slam finals.
‘I hope that I can have one grain of how their career has unfolded. But you can only wish and you can only just keep going down your own path,’ she said reut.rs/3qzNNmK 2/4
Having added a second Australian Open title to her two U.S. Open crowns, Osaka said she would rather ‘live in the moment’ than set ambitious targets for further Grand Slam glory reut.rs/37AcE2u 3/4
‘Right now, I’m trying to go for five,’ Osaka told reporters after winning a 21st completed match in succession. ‘I like to take things not big-picture. For me, I like to live in the moment’ reut.rs/37AcE2u 4/4
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As Texans cranked up their heaters early Monday to combat plunging temperatures, a record surge of electricity demand set off a disastrous chain reaction in the state’s power grid. Reuters shows how a unique confluence of problems caused the shutdown reut.rs/2OPgY7g 1/4
Texas’ grid operator underestimated its need for reserve power capacity before the crisis, then moved too slowly to tell utilities to institute rolling blackouts to protect against a grid meltdown, energy analysts, traders and economists said reut.rs/2OPgY7g 2/4
Before dawn on Monday, the state’s grid operator was ‘seconds and minutes’ away from an uncontrolled blackout for its 26 million customers, its CEO said reut.rs/2OPgY7g 3/4
It is official: The United States has rejoined the Paris climate agreement, reinvigorating the global fight against climate change reut.rs/3qvsF0Z
Scientists and foreign diplomats have welcomed the U.S. return to the treaty, which became official here 30 days after President Joe Biden ordered the move on his first day in office reut.rs/2OJ552H
Since nearly 200 countries signed the 2015 pact to prevent catastrophic climate change, the United States was the only country to exit. Former President Donald Trump took the step, claiming climate action would cost too much
Sunday is traditionally a quiet day for Chuck Pryor's Houston funeral home, but on this Sunday in February, almost a year after the global pandemic reached Texas, the phone was still ringing reut.rs/3auR9Su 1/6
Pryor took the call: COVID-19 had taken yet another American life - pushing the nation's death toll closer to the half-million mark - and another grieving family required the services of the exhausted funeral director and his staff 2/6
The sheer number of coronavirus deaths has overwhelmed many U.S. funeral homes.
Some family-owned businesses have handled a crushing case load, with some seeing the same number of deaths in a couple of months as they would normally handle in a full year 3/6
A head shorter than his peers, Fallou Diop quickly vanishes into the crowd of jockeys preparing for early morning drills in the western Senegalese village of Niaga reut.rs/2OTrA5h 1/7
When the racing begins, however, his crouched silhouette is far ahead of the field, aided by an effortless riding style. 'When I start riding I get a bit stressed, but after a moment, it's over,' Diop says 2/7
Diop is one of Senegal's most promising jockeys, having won the country's top racing prize when he was just 17.
He hopes to begin racing in France next year, realizing a dream coveted by some of Senegal's foremost riders 3/7
The messy business of sand mining explained: A 21st century construction boom is driving unregulated sand mining around the world - eroding rivers and coastlines, disrupting ecosystems and hurting livelihoods reut.rs/3dtcIou by @TmarcoH@SimonScarr and @katydaigle
Sand is the planet’s most mined material, with some 50 billion tons extracted from lakes, riverbeds, coastlines and deltas each year, according to the United Nations Environment Programme
From Shanghai to Seattle, the world’s cities are built on sand - massive amounts of sand. It’s in the cement and concrete that make the bulk of most buildings. The glass in those buildings’ windows is made with sand, too. So is the tarmac laid onto the roads around them
Why do you think the crypto industry is so anti-transparency? The largest players, like stablecoins like Tether, are very secretive about their operations. Is it because they are not complying with regulations?