BSS
  26 Nov 2024, 17:21

Five things to watch in 2025

PARIS, Nov 26, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - From the second stint in the White House for 
Donald Trump to a turbo-charged football calendar, here are five things to 
watch in 2025:

- Trump 2.0 -

In the days after his convincing win in the US presidential election, Donald 
Trump named several of his nominees to form his future cabinet at the White 
House, ahead of his inauguration on January 20.

With a list including vaccine sceptic Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as health 
secretary and Elon Musk co-heading a department of government efficiency, 
there is concern at what a second Trump term could mean for the United 
States, and the world.

His swearing-in ceremony in front of the US Capitol in Washington will see 
Joe Biden, 82, passing the mantle to Trump, who at two years his junior would 
become the oldest US president in history by the end of his four-year term.

- Climate -

Could 2025 be the year when our greenhouse gas emissions stop their steady 
climb around the world?

Researchers are pointing to signs from the world's biggest polluter China, 
responsible for 30 percent of global emissions, where fossil fuel carbon 
dioxide emissions are projected to tick up only marginally this year.

Glen Peters, of the Global Carbon Project, says overall CO2 emitted by 
burning coal, oil and gas across the world could peak in the next few years.

This carbon pollution is the main driver of increasingly dangerous climate 
change.

But even if there is a peak, Ignacio Arr›niz Velasco, of the E3G think tank, 
said countries cannot afford to "relax", and should then quickly decrease 
their emissions to aim for carbon neutrality.

- Football frenzy -

Can there be too much of a good thing? In 2025 the question of football 
overkill and player burnout will likely dominate amid a supercharged 
calendar.

There is the expanded 32-club Club World Cup awaiting players in the summer, 
when usually they would have had time to recover from national leagues.

And this coming after a particularly busy season that sees a much-anticipated 
extended Champions League -- the leading European club competition -- in a 
new format.

All this is part of a trend in football to ramp up the number of high-profile 
matches -- the next World Cup in 2026 will welcome a whopping 16 more 
countries, resulting in 104 games rather than 64.

The spectre of Saudi Arabia will also loom large as the host of the 2034 
World Cup pumps more money into the game, with potentially transformative 
consequences.

Other controversies likely to cause sparks include the continued use of VAR 
technology, currently locked in a love-hate relationship with players, fans 
and pundits.

- Kumbh Mela -

The largest gathering of humanity on the planet will take place from January 
13 to late February with tens of millions showered in rose petals and holy 
ash at a spectacular Hindu festival on India's sacred riverbanks.

Classified by UNESCO as intangible cultural heritage, the mega-festival known 
as the Kumbh Mela takes place every three years.

The venue alternates between four holy places, in the waters of the Ganges 
and Yamuna rivers, considered among Hinduism's most sacred.

In 2025 it will happen in the northern city of Prayagraj. The last time the 
festival took place there, in 2013, it drew 120 million people.

- Oasis and BTS comebacks -

On the one side, the grisly bad boys of Britpop, on the other the fresh-faced 
darlings of K-Pop.

Both Oasis and BTS are set to return in 2025, much to the delight of their 
fans, after stints off the stage for very different reasons.

Led by the Gallagher brothers Liam and Noel, Oasis will return after a high-
profile bust-up in 2009 -- one of many -- led to a 15-year split.

The band behind "Wonderwall" and "Champagne Supernova", songs that achieved 
anthem-like status in the 1990s, go on a world tour kicking off in Britain 
and Ireland then heading to North and South America.

In the initial scramble to buy tickets from official sites, many fans who 
missed out sought alternative sources -- leading to a landslide of ticket 
scams.

It will be a very different vibe in South Korea, where wildly popular K-Pop 
boy band BTS promises to reunite in June after its members finish their 
mandatory military service.

It is the comeback millions of fans and an entire multibillion dollar 
industry has been waiting for.

Experts say the megastars' return to performance and public life could lift 
South Korea's cultural exports juggernaut even higher.