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Turkey pulls back drilling ship from Cyprus
by Staff Writers
Istanbul (AFP) Oct 5, 2020

A Turkish drilling ship returned to port Monday from contested waters near Cyprus, according to a naval tracking website, as President Recep Tayyip Erdogan prepared to receive the head of NATO.

The Turkish navy had said last month that the Yavuz would stay in eastern Mediterranean waters southwest of Cyprus until October 12.

But the Vessel Finder tracking site said the ship began pulling out of the disputed region on Sunday and entered the Turkish port of Tasucu early Monday.

Turkey issued no official comment.

The apparent de-escalation came as Erdogan prepared to hold talks in Ankara later Monday with NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg about its dispute with Greece and Cyprus about maritime borders and energy rights.

NATO members Greece and Turkey have rattled the military alliance by staging rival war games in August to support their territorial and energy claims.

The conflict began to ease when they agreed last month to resume direct negotiations in Istanbul for the first time since 2016. No date for the talks has been announced.

Last month, Turkey pulled its Oruc Reis energy research vessel back to shore after more than a month-long mission near a Greek island that it supported with naval warships.

Erdogan had said at the time that if Turkey withdrew the vessel, "it means let's give diplomacy a chance."

EU leaders warned on Friday they could sanction Turkey if it failed to stop its unilateral actions and continued drilling activities.

Ankara rejected the threat as "unconstructive".

NATO last week helped the neighbours set up a military hotline to head off accidental clashes.

Announcing the "de-confliction mechanism" on Thursday, Stoltenberg said it would "create the space for diplomatic efforts to address the underlying dispute and we stand ready to develop it further."

Stoltenberg will visit Athens on Tuesday for talks with Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis.


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OIL AND GAS
Cambridge University to scrap fossil fuel investment
London (AFP) Oct 1, 2020
Britain's Cambridge University on Thursday pledged to stop investing in fossil fuels by 2030, bowing to pressure from environmentalists including its own students. The world-renowned seat of learning in eastern England said the pledge is part of its overall goal to slash carbon emissions to zero by 2038 - well ahead of the UK government's 2050 target. The institution will now switch its 3.5-billion pounds ($4.5-billion, 3.8-billion-euro) endowment fund - one of the largest of its kind in Europe - t ... read more

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