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First Thing: the US morning briefing

First Thing: Two bodies recovered after Baltimore bridge collapse

Four other construction workers who were on the Francis Scott Key Bridge when it collapsed this week still missing and are presumed dead. Plus: the cost of a burrito

The container ship that hit the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore
Investigators have begun collecting evidence from the container ship that hit the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore. Photograph: Matt Rourke/AP

Good morning.

The bodies of two men trapped in their vehicle have been recovered from the Patapsco River beneath the Francis Scott Key Bridge, which collapsed early on Tuesday when a container ship crashed into it.

Authorities identified the men as Alejandro Hernandez Fuentes, 35, originally from Mexico who was living in Baltimore, and Dorlian Ronial Castillo Cabrera, 26, who was from Guatemala and was living in Dundalk. Four other construction workers who had been on the bridge remain missing and are presumed dead.

“Tragically, six people did lose their lives and a seventh was badly injured. These were workers who went out to work on a night shift, repairing the road service while most of us slept,” said the US transportation secretary, Pete Buttigieg.

  • What will be the economic impact of the crash? Buttigieg warned of “major and protracted impact to supply chains” after the closure of the Port of Baltimore for the foreseeable future. Baltimore is the ninth busiest port in the US, and the busiest for car shipments, handling at least 750,000 vehicles in 2023. “The economic impact that’s going to be felt by Baltimore and the state of Maryland is incomprehensible,” said Mary Kane, the president and CEO of the Maryland Chamber of Commerce.

  • Is there more information about the ship, the Dali? On Wednesday, investigators began collecting evidence from the Singaporean-flagged container ship, which had been heading for Sri Lanka. The ship was carrying 56 containers of hazardous materials including corrosives, flammables and lithium ion batteries, and some containers were breached in the crash, leaving a sheen on the water, but authorities deemed the ship stable and to pose no safety risk.

  • What are lawmakers doing? Lawmakers in Maryland have drafted an emergency bill to cover the salaries of workers who have been affected by the shutdown of the port. Meanwhile, Buttigieg has called for bipartisan support for federal funding to rebuild the bridge and reopen the port.

Joe Lieberman, former US senator and vice-presidential nominee, dies at 82

Joe Lieberman, wearing a red tie and suit, waves as he leaves the White House.
Joe Lieberman leaves the West Wing of the White House after a meeting with Donald Trump in May 2017. Photograph: Olivier Douliery/AFP/Getty Images

The former US senator Joe Lieberman has died at 82. Lieberman ran as the Democratic nominee for vice-president in the 2000 election alongside the presidential candidate Al Gore, becoming the first Jewish candidate on a major-party ticket for the White House. He died from complications from a fall, his family said in a statement.

In a tribute, Gore described the former lawmaker as a “truly gifted leader, whose affable personality and strong will made him a force to be reckoned with”.

In other news …

Hunter Biden departs federal court after a plea hearing.
Hunter Biden, son of Joe Biden, leaves a federal court after a plea hearing. Photograph: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters
  • Hunter Biden has asked a US judge in Los Angeles to toss out the criminal case accusing him of evading $1.4m in taxes, arguing that prosecutors bowed to political pressure from Republican lawmakers investigating his father, Joe Biden.

  • A judge has recommended that the conservative attorney John Eastman lose his California law licence over his efforts to keep Donald Trump in power after the 2020 presidential election.

  • India has summoned a top US diplomat after Washington called for fair legal process for the opposition figure Arvind Kejriwal amid claims that challengers to Narendra Modi are being targeted prior to national elections.

  • A suspect is in police custody after four people were killed and seven were hurt in stabbings in northern Illinois on Wednesday.

  • A Utah children’s book author accused of killing her husband and then publishing a children’s book on grief has been hit with a further charge – for allegedly previously attempting to poison him with a sandwich.

Stat of the day: 3.8 billion people – half the world’s population – were exposed to extreme heat for at least one day last year

The dried-out riverbed of the Jialing River in Chongqing, China.
The dried-out riverbed of the Jialing River in Chongqing, China. Photograph: EPA

Two of the world’s biggest aid agencies are hosting an inaugural global summit on extreme heat on Thursday to warn that the climate crisis is dramatically increasing the probability of a mass-fatality heat disaster. In the US, extreme heat accounts for more deaths than all other climate impacts put together, but this often goes unreported because the scale of fatalities can take months or years to calculate.

Don’t miss this: child labor in India

An Indian laborer stands against the backdrop of red stone in the state of Rajasthan.
An Indian laborer works in a stone mine on the outskirts of Ajmer, in the state of Rajasthan, in 2018. Photograph: Himanshu Sharma/AFP/Getty Images

Lovely natural sandstone tiles adorn countless driveways and gardens across the US, North America, the UK and Europe. Much of that tile is coming from Rajasthan, a mineral-rich state in the north-west of India that attracts mining companies from all over the country. But here, a significant proportion of the mining industry is unregulated – meaning exploitation in this industry remains endemic, with children often doing dangerous work for low pay.

… or this: Nick Cave on love, art and the loss of his sons

Nick Cave sits at a grand piano, singing into a microphone, at the Hammersmith Apollo in London.
Nick Cave performing at the Hammersmith Apollo, London, in May 2015. Photograph: Brian Rasic/Getty Images

The musician and artist Nick Cave spoke to the Guardian about mercy, forgiveness, making and meaning ahead of his new ceramics exhibition in which his grief over the loss of his two sons is deeply present.

“These losses are just incorporated into the artistic flow and they move in a direction that is beyond your capacity to rein in,” Cave said. “They’re just sitting at the end of everything you do. In the end, the ceramics are a story about a man’s culpability in the loss of his child, and addressing that in a way I wasn’t really able to do with music. That’s what happened without any intention.”

Climate check: a surge of new oil and gas activity

Smoke rises from the Valero Houston refinery against a yellow sky and the Houston, Texas skyline in the background.
An aerial view of the Houston skyline from the Valero Houston refinery. Photograph: Brandon Bell/Getty Images

The world’s fossil fuel producers are on track to nearly quadruple the amount of extracted oil and gas from newly approved projects by the end of this decade, despite warnings that there can be no new oil and gas infrastructure if the planet is to avoid careering past 1.5C (2.7F) of global heating – a warming threshold agreed to by governments in the Paris climate. The US is leading the way in a surge of activity.

“Despite the constant and clear warnings that no new oil and gas fields are compatible with 1.5C, the industry continues to discover and sanction new projects,” said Scott Zimmerman, a project manager for the global oil and gas extraction tracker at Global Energy Monitor. “It’s disappointing. It shows a lack of supply-side commitment to climate goals.”

Last Thing: the rising cost of a burrito

A chicken burrito with sour cream and guacamole sits on a white plate, half wrapped in foil, atop a yellow tablecloth with red and white flowers.
Rising ingredient and labor costs have pushed up prices across the menu at La Vaca Birria in San Francisco. Photograph: JooksMedia/La Vaca Birria

La Vaca Birria in San Francisco recently upped the prices of its burritos to $22, a move that rankled with some customers, with one posting a scathing review that expressed disbelief at how the burrito’s price had doubledfrom $11 just two years ago. The Guardian worked with the restaurant’s owner, Ricardo Lopez to break down the rising costs of ingredients – driven by geopolitical events from droughts in the midwest and Texas to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine – behind the price hike.

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