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Paris • The latest from the much-anticipated U.N. climate conference that gets underway in Paris on Monday.

Poland's position

Polish Prime Minister Beata Szydlo says that the EU's position for climate talks in Paris is acceptable to coal-using Poland and she expects the conference will end in a deal.

Szydlo spoke Sunday in Brussels where she attended an EU-Turkey summit that focused on a response to the influx of migrants from war-torn Syria. On Monday, she will attend the opening of the two-week Paris climate talks.

"The position is acceptable to Poland," she said. "We can expect that an agreement will be signed. I would like us to reach an agreement in Paris."

But she hinted she will be bargaining hard, because the deal "must not hurt Poland's economy," which largely depends on black and brown coal.

Eifeel Tower lights

The Eiffel Tower was lit up Sunday night in green and environmentally conscious messages are being projected on the monument as Paris prepares to host critical talks on reducing global warming.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon participated in a ceremony beneath the tower Sunday along with actress Marion Cotillard and artist Naziha Mestaoui to light up the tower like an enormous metallic tree.

Ban will launch two weeks of climate talks starting Monday aiming at a long-term global agreement for all countries to reduce man-made emissions that heat the planet.

In addition to the green lights, artists designed messages being projected on the tower about renewable energy and protecting forests. The tower will remain lit like a tree through Thursday.

Demonstration arrests

France's interior minister says 174 protesters are in detention facing possible charges after clashing with riot police on the eve of a critical climate conference.

Bernard Cazeneuve said Sunday a total of 208 people were arrested after the clashes, but some were later released.

French President Francois Hollande said the violence was "scandalous" both because the clashes were caused by "disruptive elements" that have nothing to do with environmental defenders and because they occurred at Place de la Republique, which has been a memorial square for the 130 victims of the Nov. 13 Paris attacks.

Police said they used tear gas to stop the advance of groups of several hundred people throwing projectiles that included memorial candles.

"These individuals have no place and that's why everything will be done to move them aside," Hollande said from Brussels.

U.S. leadership

President Barack Obama says American leadership is helping the global fight against climate change.

As he left for the climate conference in Paris Sunday, Obama wrote a Facebook that the U.S. has shown it's possible to make environmental gains while creating jobs and expanding the economy.

Obama will try to reassure world leaders in Paris that the U.S. can deliver on its own commitments.

He says the goal in Paris is a long-term framework for more global reductions, with each nation setting targets that other countries can verify.

He says leaders will try to support "the most vulnerable countries" in expanding clean energy and "adapting to the effects of climate changes that we can no longer avoid."

Demonstrations

A well-known climate pressure group took its distance from a violent demonstration in Paris, saying the protesters were "unaffiliated with the climate movement."

There were at least 100 arrests after the clash between riot police and groups of protesters, some wearing masks, but no injuries, police chief Michel Cadot said.

On the eve of a climate conference, protesters threw glass bottles and even candles at police in the Place de la Republique, after two peaceful demonstrations earlier in the day in response to a ban on marches due to France's state of emergency imposed after the Nov. 13 attacks.

In a statement, the climate group 350.org said that the violent protesters violated the "nonviolent pledge that every group involved in the climate coalition" agreed to.

The statement expressed hope that France wouldn't clamp down further on freedoms during the conference following the incident.

Moment of silence

Climate change negotiations in Paris have started with a moment of silence and commemoration for the victims of the attacks in the French capital.

Negotiations started at 5 p.m. local time Sunday in Paris. After the moment of silence, Peruvian environment minister Manuel Pulgar-Vidal, who headed last year's negotiations, said a climate agreement is a good way to overcome the horrors of the Paris attacks.

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, president of the Paris conference, said the goal is an ambitious agreement that all countries can agree on.

"I am confident that you will be able to retrieve a good result," Fabius told negotiators. "Every day we have to make progress. No subject shall be left aside."

He said negotiators owe it to the world to finish negotiations in an orderly time frame.

Violence at protest

The Paris police chief says that about 100 people have been detained after a protest seeking a global climate deal turned violent.

Michel Cadot told reporters that police identified about 200 or 300 people who violated a ban on all protests under the country's state of emergency. The state of emergency was declared because of recent extremist attacks that killed 130 people in Paris.

Cadot said Sunday about 100 people who were found to have projectiles or other suspicious objects were detained.

Police fired numerous rounds of tear gas on protesters to disperse them.

The protesters were gathering ahead of critical global warming talks outside Paris.

U.N. pledge

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon says governments' pledges to cut global warming emissions aren't enough and should be reviewed before 2020.

In an interview on the eve of a U.N. climate summit in Paris, Ban told The Associated Press he has endorsed plans for reviewing targets every five years.

"I would propose that the first such review session should be held before 2020," Ban said.

March in London

Thousands of people are marching through London Sunday aftertnoon, urging world leaders not to blow their chance to take strong action on climate change.

Actress Emma Thompson, designer Vivienne Westwood and Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn are among demonstrators urging politicians to strike a binding agreement at climate talks in Paris.

Corbyn told the crowd that the talks were "an enormous opportunity" to tackle "pollution, climate change, inequality, environmental refugees, war refugees and resources wars. If we are to make a real difference in Paris, all these issues have got to be thought about and addressed."

Thompson said that climate change, once seen as a fringe cause, was now "the issue of the 21st century."

Events are taking place around the world on the eve of the Paris talks.

Numbers at the London march from Hyde Park to the Whitehall government district were swelled by a ban on a protest march in Paris in the wake of Nov. 13 attacks by Islamic extremists that killed 130 people.

Clean Tech Initiative

Multiple sources have told The Associated Press that countries, high-powered companies and business leaders will announce an effort Monday to put tens of billions of dollars toward clean energy technology to fight climate change.

A French source who was not authorized to speak publicly said French president Francois Hollande will attend the event they call the "Clean Tech Initiative" that is going to be launched by Microsoft founder and philanthropist Bill Gates in the presence of U.S. President Barack Obama. The source said France, the U.S., India, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, Australia, Canada and Norway have already decided to participate in the "ambitious" project that will aim at developing clean energies.

Two other sources, including a former U.S. White House official familiar with the initiative, said the amount of money involved, from countries, companies and individuals would be in the tens of billions of dollars. The money would be geared toward research and development of technologies, such as energy storage that could make clean power from wind and solar more usable regardless of weather vagaries.

According to an early draft of the initiative, which at the time was called "Mission Innovation," governments participating were pledging to double their clean energy research and development spending in the next five years.

—By Sylvie Corbet, Karl Ritter and Seth Borenstein