The Cat
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Initial release | Italy |
---|---|
Directors | Luigi Comencini |
Composers | Ennio Morricone |
Story by | Rodolfo Sonego |
Screenplay | Rodolfo Sonego |
Augusto Caminito | |
Fulvio Marcolin | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2046022 |
About The Cat
Il gatto is a 1977 Italian giallo-comedy film directed by Luigi Comencini. For this film Mariangela Melato was awarded with a David di Donatello for Best Actress.
The photos that capture Glasgow's cultural melting pot
... He said: " She had shopping to do but allowed me the time to capture a few frames and I tried to get The Cat to look towards camera too...
Speculation about HS2 overwhelms Conservative party conference
... From then, The Cat was out of the bag that the project was at least under review, even if it took more bouts of briefing and leaks for it to become clear that Mr Sunak was leaning towards cancelling the line...
Cat missing for 11 years reunited with owner
... Daisy The Cat failed to return home soon after moving to the Caerphilly area from Dorset with her owner, Sian Sexton, in 2012...
'Worse than death itself': Survivors describe Libya floods
... " More than 5,000 people are now known to have died in The Catastrophic flooding that has hit Libya following Storm Daniel...
Cat and dog influencers help Ukrainians cope with war
... The fundraising feline Stepan The Cat hails from Saltivka, a district in Ukraine s second-largest city of Kharkiv that has been badly damaged by Russian shelling...
Banksy: What it was like to work for anonymous superstar artist
... But have we gone beyond needing to know who he actually is? Peak says Banksy s anonymity " let s him keep doing the campaigning stuff he does unfettered" which, along with loyalty, probably stops the few in the know from letting The Cat out of the bag...
Could Hugo the west end cat change the law?
... The Cat s owner, Jane Rutherford, said: " He was a big wanderer - always crossing roads...
TikTok tracked UK journalist via her cat's account
... " Someone had to do some extra digging to work out that The Cat account was in fact Cristina, " he said...
COP26: World on track for 2. 4C warming despite climate summit - report
Despite Pledges made at the climate summit COP26, The World is still nowhere near its goals on limiting global temperature rise, a new analysis shows.
It calculates that The World is heading for 2. 4C of warming, far More Than the 1. 5C limit nations Committed to.
COP26 " has a massive credibility, action and commitment gap" according to the Climate Action Tracker (CAT).
The Glasgow summit is seen as crucial for curbing Climate Change .
But the prediction contrasts with optimism at the UN meeting last week, following a series of big announcements that included a vow to stop deforestation.
COP26 is expected to finish This Week .
The projection comes as the UK's Met Office warns that a billion people could be affected by fatal heat and humidity if the global average temperature rises by 2C above pre-industrial levels.
The Report by Climate Action Tracker looks at promises made by governments before and during COP26.
It concludes that, in 2030 , The Greenhouse gas emissions that warm The Planet will still be twice as high as necessary for keeping temperature rise below 1. 5C degree.
Scientists say that limiting warming to 1. 5C will prevent The Most dangerous impacts of Climate Change from happening.
The Cop summit held In Paris in 2015 laid out a plan for avoiding dangerous Climate Change which included " pursuing efforts" to keep warming under 1. 5C.
But when governments' actual policies - rather than Pledges - Are analysed, The World 's projected warming is 2. 7C by 2100, suggests Climate Action Tracker. The Tracker is backed by A Number of organisations including the prestigious Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany.
This video can not be played
To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Media caption, Watch how three Kuwaitis cope in their country's " unbearable" heat" This new calculation is like a telescope trained on an asteroid heading for Earth. It's a devastating report that in any sane world would cause governments in Glasgow to immediately set aside their differences and work with uncompromising vigour for a deal to save our common future, " said Greenpeace International's Executive Director Jennifer Morgan .
However, The World 's outlook has improved since the Paris climate summit in 2015 when Climate Action Tracker estimated the policies put The Planet on track to warm by 3. 6C.
Climate Action Tracker blames " stalled momentum" from governments for limited progress towards cutting Greenhouse Gas emissions by 2030 .
It says new promises by the US and China to reach net zero have slightly improved its forecasting on temperature rises. But it concludes that the quality of most government's plans to limit Climate Change is very low.
Reaching net zero involves Reducing Greenhouse Gas emissions as much as possible, then balancing out any remaining releases by, for example, planting Trees - which remove CO2 from the atmosphere.
More Than 140 governments have promised to reach net zero, covering 90% of global emissions.
But Climate Action Tracker says only a handful have plans in place to reach The Goal . It analysed the policies of 40 countries and concluded that only a small number Are rated " acceptable" covering a fraction of The World 's emissions.
" If they have no plans as to How To get there, and their 2030 targets Are as low as so many of them Are , then frankly, these net zero targets Are just Lip Service to real Climate Action , " said Bill Hare, chief executive of Climate Analytics, one of the groups behind The Tracker .
The main driver of The Gap between promises and projections is continued coal and gas production, the organisation concludes.
A false dawnWith one sharp jab, this Climate Action Tracker report has punctured the balloon of optimism that's been swelling since the start of this conference.
For days now, A Number of observers, including the formerly conservative International Energy Agency, have been pushing a narrative that the new net zero goals from countries like India plus the long list of announcements made here in Glasgow had pushed the prospective temperature rise This Century down to 1. 8C.
That seemed like huge progress from the 2. 7C that the UN Environment Programme had announced at the start of The Conference .
So how has The Confusion come about?
The Problem comes from the inclusion of long-term Pledges to reach net zero emissions by 2050.
More Than 140 countries, covering 90% of global emissions have announced a mid-century-ish carbon neutrality Target - China 's is 2060, India's 2070.
According to The Cat , these goals Are giving " false hope".
Based on what countries have put on The Table for 2030 , The World is set to warm by 2. 4C by 2100. That picture gets a bit better if you include the US's and China 's long-term targets, which reduces the temperature to 2. 1C.
If every country implemented their long-term net zeroes, then 1. 8C could indeed be possible.
But the reality is that, without a serious plan for 2030 , most of these longer-term goals will not be realised.
That's why The Real focus for the negotiators here must be on the actions that countries take over The Next nine years.
Any deal agreed here will need to have a strong and credible pathway for The Next decade. Otherwise Glasgow will be judged a failure.
What has been agreed at COP26?The Summit is still negotiating a deal that all 197 countries will agree on. But a series of side deals were announced last week:
More Than 100 world leaders promised to by 2030 , including Brazil, home to the Amazon rainforestThe US and the EU announced a global partnership to by 2030 - Reducing methane in the atmosphere seen As One of The Best ways to quickly reduce global warmingMore than 40 countries Committed - But The World 's biggest users Like China and the US did not sign upSome new pots of money were announced to help developing countries adapt to Climate Change and deal with the damage and loss it Brings - ButSource of news: bbc.com