This was the ambitious goal agreed by nearly 200 countries at a landmark UN meeting in Paris in 2015, with the hope of avoiding some of the worst impacts of climate change.
"I'm not going to try and get a personal best or anything like that, I'm just going to run and enjoy it and raise awareness for Type-1 Diabetes," she added.Meanwhile, Preston Wilkins, running the half marathon dressed as a banana, said he was raising money for men's mental health.
He said: "I'm doing it for Movember today, mental health charity, so yeah, looking forward to it."The banana symbolises "peeling back the stigma" of mental health, he added.Jack Lambert, running with Mr Wilkins, said he completed his first half-marathon in October to raise awareness of Crohn's disease after his partner was diagnosed with the chronic inflammatory bowel condition.
"[I did it] just to prove to her that we can all go through tough times and push through and do stuff that we don't think we can do," he said.A community says more work needs to be done to crackdown on crime and anti-social behaviour, despite efforts to tackle the problems.
Avon and Somerset Police say targeted work with other agencies alongside regular patrols of Glastonbury, Somerset, are having a positive impact.
However, business owners and residents say issues remain in and around the High Street and Market Cross.The US State Department has been approached by the BBC for comment.
The Romanian government, a key US ally on the Black Sea coast, the south-east flank of Nato, finds itself between a rock and a hard place.Deputy US President JD Vance mentioned Romania no less than three times in his speech to the Munich Security Conference last week - on the fringes of which US special envoy Richard Grenell held his conversation with Romania's top diplomat.
Vance suggested that the evidence cited by the Constitutional Court of Russian interference was "flimsy" and urged Romania not to disqualify the front runner, Calin Georgescu, from running in the 4 and 18 May re-run.The President of the Constitutional Court, Marian Enache, fiercely defended the court decision in an interview published on Wednesday.