MOBILE APPS T! ckets™ The best way to buy tickets - on your phone! WELCOME! HOMEPAGE SEARCH / BROWSE OUR STORY PRESS KIT CONNECT FACEBOOK TWITTER INSTAGRAM BLOG CONTRIBUTE UPLOAD A PHOTO RATE YOUR SEATS GET HELP CONTACT US ORDER STATUS SAFE SHOPPING PRIVACY GIVE US A CALL (866) 270-7569 is not affiliated with Major League Baseball, the NBA, the NFL, the NHL, the NCAA or any of its members.
The group of leading economies will agree to protect at least 30 per cent of both land and ocean globally by the end of the decade. G7 leaders on Sunday will back new conservation and emission targets to curb climate change, and finalise collective action on several other fronts, as they wrap up a three-day summit aimed at showcasing revived Western unity. The group of leading economies, holding their first in-person gathering in nearly two years due to the coronavirus pandemic, will agree to protect at least 30 per cent of both land and ocean globally by the end of the decade. The "Nature Compact" struck to try to halt and reverse biodiversity loss is also set to see them commit to nearly halve their carbon emissions by 2030, relative to 2010. It includes mandating the use of only so-called clean coal for power "as soon as possible", ending most government support for the fossil fuel sector overseas and phasing out petrol and diesel cars. Hailing the pact, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson — who is hosting the beachside summit in Cornwall, southwest England — said the G7 wanted to "drive a global Green Industrial Revolution to transform the way we live".