[Bloomberg]( Follow Us [Get the newsletter]( For the global environmental movement, it was a [landmark]( day. A court in the Netherlands [ordered]( Royal Dutch Shell yesterday to slash emissions harder and faster than planned; investors in Exxon Mobil won two board seats and promised [to push]( the energy giant to diversify beyond oil and fight climate change; Chevron shareholders [backed]( a proposal to force the company to cut pollution by its customers. Once limited to waving placards outside annual corporate meetings, the climate movement has gone mainstream, [Kevin Crowley]( writes. Some of the worldâs largest institutional investors are now on board. But itâs a race against time. Last year tied with 2016 as the [hottest]( on record, and accelerating man-made warming is causing rising sea levels, melting ice, and extreme weather events, [Laura Millan Lombrana]( writes. However much the world welcomed U.S. President Joe Bidenâs decision to rejoin the Paris Agreement, the fact is that overall national commitments to cut greenhouse-gas emissions fall [short]( of whatâs needed to fulfill it. Key unresolved issues, such as creating an international carbon market to put a price on emissions, remain. And environmentalists are still facing setbacks: One of Australiaâs top coal producers just won a court [battle]( against a nun and Greta Thunberg-inspired teenagers over a mine expansion. Bidenâs Justice Department is also [defending]( the approval by his predecessor, Donald Trump, of a massive Conoco project in Alaska in federal court. That said, thereâs no longer much doubt that public and institutional pressure is fueling momentum for policy change. The question is whether it translates into action fast enough to stem the damage to the planet. â [Karl Maier]( A protest banner from the environmental organization MilieuDefensie against Royal Dutch Shell in The Hague yesterday. Photographer: Peter Boer/Bloomberg Click [here]( to follow Bloomberg Politics on Facebook and tell us how weâre doing or what weâre missing at balancepower@bloomberg.net. Global Headlines Gloves off | The era of U.S. engagement with China is over, and a period of intense [competition]( is beginning, the White Houseâs top official for Asia said. The shift in U.S. policy comes as President Xi Jinping tightens his grip on the worldâs second-largest economy and the two countries square off in disputes ranging from Beijingâs claims over the South China Sea and human rights in the Xinjiang region to the future of Taiwan and Hong Kong. - Biden called for U.S. intelligence services to redouble efforts to find the [source]( of Covid-19, giving new life to claims that the virus escaped a Chinese lab and reopening a rift with Beijing. In and out | U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken pledged to grant $100 million in aid for Palestinians during his whirlwind visit to Israel, the West Bank, Egypt and Jordan. But, as [Nick Wadhams]( writes, with U.S. foreign-policy interests focused on reviving the Iran nuclear accord and on strategic competition with China, thereâs [little appetite]( in Washington for putting greater efforts into trying to resolve the underlying source of the Israel-Gaza tensions. Competence question | Boris Johnson is battling a major [attack]( on his authority after his former chief adviser declared the U.K. prime minister unfit for his job. During almost seven hours of testimony to lawmakers, Dominic Cummings catalogued the governmentâs âdisastrousâ pandemic failures and what he said were Johnsonâs leadership blunders. âTens of thousands of people died who didnât need to die,â he said. Seychelles became internet-famous as the most [vaccinated]( nation on Earth, yet to the surprise of virologists the infection count has been ticking up. The tiny nation has become a test case for two of the worldâs most widely used vaccines. Graft scandal | Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is facing an uncomfortable truth: His governing party is now dependent on a marginal coalition ally to maintain its dominance. Moreover, a slew of [corruption]( allegations from a fugitive mafia boss could further dent his flagging popularity, [Onur Ant]( reports, as people in Erdoganâs own party back opposition demands for a probe into influence-peddling accusations. Women at work | Keeping women at home is a [luxury]( the worldâs largest exporter of crude can no longer afford. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salmanâs economic overhaul of Saudi Arabia, designed to prepare the kingdom for a post-oil future amid sputtering growth, means families are increasingly dependent on women working, [Vivian Nereim]( explains. What to Watch - U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai and Chinese Vice Premier Liu He held a âcandidâ first [conversation]( today as the two sides try to resolve some of their differences on trade.
- European Union chiefs Ursula von der Leyen and Charles Michel hold their first [summit]( with Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga by videoconference today.
- Maliâs interim president [resigned]( a day after his deputy seized power in the West African nationâs second coup in less than a year.
- Hong Kongâs legislature [approved]( sweeping changes to the cityâs electoral system ordered by the Chinese leadership, dramatically curtailing the ability of dissenting voices to participate in government.
- France unveiled new [restrictions]( for arrivals from the U.K. from May 31 to fend off the coronavirus variant first identified in India. And finally ... The [promise]( of greater safety and economic opportunity, not warmer words from Biden, is what drives Central American migrants to make arduous journeys to the U.S. border, [Mario Parker](, [Maria Eloisa Capurro]( and [Jordan Fabian]( report. Republican lawmakers accuse the president of fomenting a record influx of migrants with a more sympathetic tone than Trump. Yet in El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, crime, privation, natural disasters and human smuggling rings are doing far more to fuel the surge. A migrant is apprehended after entering the U.S. in La Joya, Texas on May 16. Photographer: Jonathan Alpeyrie/Bloomberg   Like Balance of Power? [Get unlimited access to Bloomberg.com](, where you'll find trusted, data-based journalism in 120 countries around the world and expert analysis from exclusive daily newsletters. Â
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