Morgan Roberts
Welcome to the Tatler Doctors Guide 2026.
In an age where AI promises foolproof recommendations, it’s far too easy to overlook medicine’s unsung heroes. The latest algorithms won’t tell you about the modest, the discreet, and the…

Morgan Roberts
Welcome to the Tatler Doctors Guide 2026.
In an age where AI promises foolproof recommendations, it’s far too easy to overlook medicine’s unsung heroes. The latest algorithms won’t tell you about the modest, the discreet, and the…

Luis Monteiro
Prof Alastair Windsor
One of the UK’s most respected colorectal surgeons, Prof Alastair Windsor combines sharp clinical judgement with an easy assurance born of decades in the field. Specialising in complex inflammatory bowel…

https://www.centralhealthlondon.com/practitioners/dr-james-arkell
Dr Jonathan Garabette
For those navigating mood, anxiety, trauma or relationship-based issues, Dr Jonathan Garabette is the quietly brilliant psychiatrist everyone hopes to find….

BBCA paediatric emergency medicine consultant is seeing the “most severe influenza outbreak” she has experienced.
Flu cases among adults and children across Northern…

Mr Declan Cahill
In a discipline often associated with cutting-edge robotics, Mr Declan Cahill never loses sight of the human being behind the diagnosis. As the Clinical Lead for Urology at The Royal Marsden…

Morgan Roberts
Dr Harsha Kariyawasam
At the helm of the London Nose and Sinus Clinic on Weymouth Street, Dr Harsha Kariyawasam brings rare precision to the art of breathing well. One of the few UK physicians trained in Allergy, Medical Rhinology…

Prof Guy Leschziner
A leading authority on sleep medicine and epilepsy, Prof Guy Leschziner is known for his rare ability to connect the dots between the medical, psychological and lifestyle factors that influence rest. For…

In 2025, China’s energy and emission trends moved closer to the pathways aligned with the goals of the Paris Agreement to limit global temperature rise: its total CO₂ emissions are projected to stay flat, and the power and transport sectors are set to see their emissions fall year-on-year. Clean energy growth is likely to make new records and grid energy storage has taken off. The EV breakthrough has accelerated, delivering a major reduction in transportation sector emissions.
However, despite coal consumption and related emissions being approximately unchanged this year, the country will miss important energy and emissions targets laid out in its current development plan, the 14th Five-Year Plan (FYP), which runs from 2021 to 2025. Specifically, the country will not achieve the target of reducing carbon emissions per unit of GDP, nor the pledges to “strictly control” coal consumption growth and new coal-fired power plants. The country’s determination to meet its 2030 climate targets is unclear, with the commitment to gradually reduce coal consumption in 2026–30, in particular, omitted in the new Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) and the Central Committee’s recommendations for the next FYP. The policy environment and target-setting for the next few years are concerning, raising the risk of an emission rebound after staying stable for two years.
Figure 1 — China’s annual change in CO₂ emissions compared to energy transition pathways.
Earlier this year, China released new climate commitments for 2035 under the Paris Agreement, the first update to its internationally pledged targets since 2021. The new NDC includes the country’s first absolute emission reduction target and the first emission target covering all greenhouse gases (GHG) and sectors. However, the level of ambition falls well short of what China needs to do to enable the world to meet the goals of the Paris agreement. China intends to reduce its GHG emissions from an undefined ‘peak level’ instead of a specific year in the past, which allows emissions to still grow in the near term.
On balance, China’s clean energy boom has a momentum of its own and has gained high economic significance both nationally and on the provincial level, which makes it more likely that the boom will continue. It’s clear that after the impressive growth of the clean energy sectors, China has the capability to keep emissions falling and start making progress towards its carbon neutrality target.

If you exclude certain companies like Peloton, the world of cycling technology is surprisingly open. It’s not perfect by any means, but there are enough open or open-ish standards for many different pieces of technology from…

Aerial sunrise view of Osaka city in Japan
Frank Lee | Moment | Getty Images
Asia-Pacific markets opened mixed Thursday, after Wall Street gained on the latest jobs data that raised hopes the Federal Reserve could cut interest rates next week.
Payroll processor ADP reported that private companies cut 32,000 workers in November, compared with 47,000 additions in October, and well below the 40,000 increase expected by economists polled by Dow Jones.
Markets are pricing in an 89% chance of a cut when the Federal Reserve meets on Dec. 9-10, significantly higher than rate-cut bets just a couple of weeks ago, according to the CME FedWatch tool.
In Asia, Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 index added 0.3% in early trading, and the Topix index advanced 0.33%.
Among the top movers on the Nikkei was Renesas Electronics, which jumped more than 6%, after California-based semiconductor company SiTime Corp was reportedly in talks to acquire the Japanese chipmaker’s timing unit. A deal could value the timing business at up to $2 billion, including debt, Bloomberg said, citing people familiar with the matter.
South Korea’s Kospi index fell 0.45%, while the small-cap Kosdaq climbed 0.12%.
Australia’s ASX/S&P 200 was flat.
Futures for Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index pointed to a higher open, trading at 25,829, against the index’s previous close of 25,760.73.
Overnight, the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 408.44 points, or 0.86%, to finish at 47,882.90. The S&P 500 traded up 0.30% to end the day at 6,849.72, while the Nasdaq Composite added 0.17% to settle at 23,454.09.
Stocks with exposure to the artificial intelligence trade were the biggest drag on U.S. key benchmarks Wednesday stateside, after The Information reported Microsoft was cutting software sales quotas tied to artificial intelligence.
Other major tech names, including Nvidia and Broadcom, pulled the broad-based S&P 500 lower.
Microsoft refuted the claims in the report, which led the stock to recover slightly in after-hours trading.
— CNBC’s Sean Conlon and Pia Singh contributed to this report.