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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  May 17, 2023 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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- [announcer] do you have an invention idea but don't know what to do next? call invent help today. they can help you get started with your idea. call now 800-710-0020. hello and a warm welcome to
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our viewers joining us in the united states and around the world. i'm bianca nobilo. >> and i'm max foster. just ahead on "cnn newsroom" -- >> we're having a wonderful time. everything is going well. >> nothing has been resolved in this negotiation. so let's stop the political games. let's get down. we only have 15 days to go. >> house has overridden the governor's veto and the bill becomes law. >> should we be worried about this for our elections? >> my worst fears are that we cause significant harm to the world. >> live from london, this is "cnn newsroom" with max foster and bianca nobilo. >> it is wednesday, may 17th, 9:00 a.m. in london, 4:00 a.m. in washington where the pressure
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of the debt standoff has the president offering his plans for the g7 summit. >> joe biden will cut his trip short in order to get back as the default line creeps closer. the u.s. has until june 1 to raise its borrowing limit. >> and the latest round of talks between the republicans and the white house resulted in no significant breakthroughs. the top house republicans said the two sides are still far apart but the deal is still possible by the week's end. >> i did think this one was a little more productive. we're a long way apart, but what changed in this meeting is the president has now selected two people from his administration to directly negotiate with us. >> the bottom line is that we all came to agreement that we were going to continue discussions. and hopefully we can come to an agreement. we don't have much time. but default is just the worst, worst alternative.
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>> meanwhile the u.s. president is confidence confident negotiations will lprogress. jeremy diamond reports. >> reporter: president biden emerged from the negotiations saying that the discussions were productive and that they are making progress towards a deal that could avoid the u.s. potentially heading towards defaults. of course there has been some progress in these negotiations that have been held mostly at the staff level in the days leading up to the meeting. talk about a potential spending cap and other areas of potential agreement between democrats and republicans. but make no mistake, there are still huge gaps between the two sides and some major sticking points including for example on the notion of work requirements for some of the safety net programs. disagreement between the two sides on that. and amid some of this progress but also the major sticking points that remain, president biden canceling the second portion of his foreign trip. he is still schedule d to go to japan wednesday, but he is
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canceling the second portion to on us trail i can't and papua new guinea. >> i'm cutting my trip short, postponing the australia portion of the trip and my stop in papua new guinea in order to be back with the final negotiations. there was an overwhelming consensus i think in today's meeting that defaulting on the debt is simply not an option. >> the president has appointed two senior level staffers to now lead these negotiations with the speaker of the house. they are the president's counselor and his director of the office of management and budget. and those two senior advisers will join the white house legislative affairs director who has been leading the staff level negotiations. but it does signal that there is a ratcheting up of this that we're getting to a more serious phase of the negotiations. the president says that he will be in touch with speaker mccarthy over the phone while he is in japan and he will meet
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again with the congress amional leaders when he returns to the united states next week. slow pace of negotiations has business leaders preparing for any outcome. u.s. treasury secretary janet yellen will meet with bank ceos on thursday. >> and business leaders are also warning about the dire consequences about a potential default. about 150 ceos signed a letter that reads although the american economy is generally strong, high inflation has created stresses in our system including bank failures. and much worse will occur if the united states defaults. >> and the senate committee heard from executives from the fa failed silicon valley bang and the criticism was bipartisan. >> you made a really stupid bets that went bad, didn't you. >> senator -- >> and the taxpayers of america
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had to pick up the tab for your stupidity, didn't they. >> do you believe that poor management and decision making were principal factors in your bank's failure? yes or no. >> i believe it was a series of unprecedented events that all came together in the fastest bank run in history. >> are you planning to return a single nickle to what you cost the fund? >> i know that there will be a process review of compensation. >> i'll take that as a no. >> the debt ceiling stalemate banking crisis and recession fears all putting pressure on markets which are looking to rebound today. you can see all the futures are up. dow fell 336 points on tuesday. a lot of about 1%. s&p and nasdaq also finished a bit lower. in north carolina the republican led legislature has moved to ban most abortions after 12 weeks overriding a veto from the democratic governor roy cooper. >> having passed by the three
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fifths vote, the house has overridden the veto and the bill becomes law notwithstanding the governor's objections. so be notified. [ chanting ] >> the vote in the state senate on tuesday was along party lines. and the statehouse also voted 72-48 to do the same. >> and governor cooper slammed the vote saying republicans are unified in their assaults on women's reproductive freedom and vowed to fight back. he had vetoed the abortion ban on saturday. dianne gallagher has more. >> reporter: both chambers of the north carolina general assembly voted tuesday to override a veto from the state's democratic governor roy cooper. cooper signed that veto on saturday just days after the assembly rushed through a bill that would ban most abortions
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after 12 weeks with some exceptions and a slew of other changes to abortion access, paperwork and reporting requirements in just a matter of 48 hours. now, the governor had toured the state trying to put pressure on four republican lawmakers claiming that their vote on this bill, well, wouldn't gel with something that they had said during their campaigns in regards to abortion access. several of those lawmakers pushed back on cooper and on tuesday night every single one of the four republicans that he had put this pressure campaign on over the past week, well, they voted to override his veto. the new law will go into effect in north carolina, the majority of those new stipulations and requirements and restrictions happening on july 1. democrats have no further recourse on this particular bill. it is now law. the democrats have told cnn that they plan to use this as a way
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to energize their base in the state looking ahead to 2024. dianne gallagher, cnn, raleigh, north carolina. and cnn projects daniel cameron will win in kentucky. the state attorney general thanked donald trump for his endorsement saying the trump culture of winning is alive and well in kentucky. >> and he will face andy beshear in november's election. this is seen as an important seat. and kevin mccarthy is pushing for a speedy ethics investigation into george santos. the representative from new york has pleaded not guilty to 13 federal criminal charges ranging from fraud to lying on house disclosure reports. >> house democrats have been trying to force a vote to can expel santos. mccarthy has instead handed the matter to the house ethics committee. he says it will be a quick
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decision once they finish the investigation. new york state supreme court judge has granted a temporary retraining order to orange county, new york blocking new york city mayor adams from sending migrants there. >> it allows almost 200 asylum seekers staying at hotels to remain, but it does not allow any new mmigrants to move in if current occupants leave. and we're learning an american killed in artillery in bakhmut. >> the retired army staff sergeant seen here with an idaho senator served more than 20 years in uniform. he arrived in ukraine in the spring of last year. his uncle said he had gone through as a humanitarian trying to do good for the world. >> and in a video posted, the wagner group appeared to show what he claimed were u.s. identification documents who claim the american was shooting
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back when he was killed in bakhmut. >> and new video from the battered city on the eastern frontline shows how fierce the battle continues to be. take a listen. [ shelling ] >> claire sebastian is joining us here in london with the latest. clare, does it have any impact when nationals of nato countries who go to ukraine to fight voluntarily are killed in the conflict? >> it was interesting that we learned about this through that video from prigozhin. obviously his family have not responded to request for
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comment, but his uncle said that that was his body that prigozhin shows in the video. we're not showing if fot for obs reasons. but this is after reports that prigozhin has been having trouble in bakhmut, making slow and incremental advances by ukraine. and he accused his forces of running away. and so his ability to go and sort of put on this show of viewing the body of an american killed there allows him to project strength, to project authority and superiority in a conflict which we know -- and we don't know if tvideo came from the russian or ukrainian side -- but it is chaotic street by street battles. striking to learn how the american citizen died according to a friend of his who also runs a nonprofit in ukraine. he was in a building that was hit by a barrage of russian artillery and the building started to collapse. and this friend says that lot of the ukrainian soldiers and foreigners fighting there managed to escape but of course
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he didn't. so you really get a sense of the type of battle we're seeing. that is why you see the level of destruction in bakhmut and despite the incremental progress, it continues to be intense and difficult. >> clare sebastian, thank you. later in this hour we'll have a report from nic robertson who spoke with ukrainian soldiers who have fought in bakhmut. hundreds of people are feared dead and rescue groups warn of a large scale loss of life following a strong storm to hit myanmar. at least 400 people are dead and unspecified number are missing after cyclone mocha barreled on to the coast sunday unleashing floods and landslides. >> and human rights watchers say 600,000 members live under government persecution. >> and we've been hearing the
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reports and now we're seeing the pictures. let's go to new delhi. >> reporter: absolutely devastating in so many ways for the people living on the western coast of myanmar. and we've just got to know over the last few hours, that the worst hit are the rohingya community. they are confined there by the authorities and they have been hit the hardest. 400 is the number. we can't verify the figure, but we're told that dozens are still missing and feared dead. this is one of the strongest cyclones to hit the western coast of myanmar in the recent past. and we are also getting to know from ngos on the ground and shadow government there that lot of people are being buried within the rohingya community, that is the custom, the way they go about it, and we're seeing that happen over the last 24 hours. a lot have lost loved ones and
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we're told that lot within these rohingya camps actually died because they drowned in the floods. here is a father who just buried his daughter. and he's not only lost his daughter, but eight others in his family. >> translator: nine out of my 14 family members were killed. only five survived. they were killed because they couldn't resist when strong winds waved them away. >> translator: all of my belonging, rice and dishes are gone. now i have no money to rebuild my house. we are starving. i haven't eaten for two days. how many days does a person have to go hungry. >> reporter: it may take days to know the true impact that the cyclone has had on the western coast of myanmar. one of the least developed countries in asia. max. >> okay, thank you so much for joining us from new delhi.
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still to come, there was a break-in at the home of jake sullivan. details next. and plus why a high school student was suspended for recording her teacher using a racial slur repeatedly. scary at a children's baseball game in florida when a player got caught in a dust devil. you will hear his reaction.
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one president biden's top advisers came face-to-face with a trespasser in his own home in the middle of the nature. >> jake sullivan was unarmed but the secret service is taking the matter seriously. evan perez has the details. >> reporter: the u.s. secret service is investigating how an intruder entered the home of u.s. national security adviser jake sullivan last month without being detected by secret service detail guarding his home. sullivan has 24/7 secret service protection and he was unharmed in the incident which occurred
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in late april. the secret service said in a statement that it is taking the failure seriously. modifications to the protective posture have also been made to ensure additional security layers are in place as we conduct this comprehensive review. sources say sullivan encountered the person inside his home in the early morning hours and he told investigators that he thought the prn erson was intoxicated. no threat made and the source says that the person left the home without the secret service detail noticing. evan perez, cnn, washington. police in new mexico have identified the gunman who killed three people on monday but are still working on a motive. the 18-year-old beau wilson roamed through his neighborhood randomly firing at homes and passing vehicles. >> he killed three women ranging in age from 73 to 98 before responding officers killed him. police say the gunman's family has concern about his men ttal
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health. >> he is a student of farmington high school. he was armed with multiple firearms. we are still investigating how he came into possession of those firearms but we do know he did purchase one legally november 2022. >> the attorney for the family of brown says actions of the security guard who shot and killed brown went, quote, way beyond what was reasonable and necessary. san francisco police say the incident started when a security guard at a walgreen's store stopped brown from leaving accusing him of shoplifting. authorities released surveillance video of the incident. a warning that the images are disturbing. >> brown's family plans to file a lawsuit against the security officer, security company and walgreen's. the district officer will not press charges against the guard. here is how the district attorney explained the decision. >> we had to decide whether or not we had sufficient evidence
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to prove this case to 12 jurors beyond a reasonable doubt. it was our conclusion that we did not have such evidence and that is why we have arrived at this decision. >> at this time there is nothing to rebut his statements regarding the fant that he acted in self-defense. three black former employees are suing a home building company for violating their civil rights. they accuse the group of racial discrimination fostering a hostile work environment and retaliating against black employees. >> one former employee says that he attended a meeting at the company's georgia division in 2019 and an executive openly waved a noose in front of employees including two who were black while warning them not to hang themselves. cnn has asked the pulte group for a response.
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and a student recorded her teacher using the n word during class and was suspended for three days. and adriannd i had dree broadis the story. >> reporter: video shows a hls teacher using the "n" word at least twice in a missouri classroom. mary walton, a 15-year-old student, disturbed, began filming. >> i'm not calling anyone [ bleep ]. i can say the word. >> reporter: the teacher was initially placed on administrative leave. the principal calling the language inappropriate and inexcusable. a week later, that teacher has resigned. a statement from springfield public schools announces that he is, quote, no longer employed. but mary was also punished. suspended for three days over the recording. the harshest penalty for this type of offense under school cellphone rules. her lawyer says -- >> we've asked them to lift the suspension, let her go back to
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school immediately and apologize. mary saw something that she believed needed to be reported. >> reporter: according to a news release from mary's attorney, the geometry teacher interrupted a conversation between students about the slur using the word several times before the recording starts. students explain that it is derogatory context before one cautions that the teacher about using it. >> i can say it right now as a teacher, if you want to keep your job, this is not a threat. >> reporter: about 50 seconds into the short clip given to cnn, the teacher notices the camera recording him. the school district says that its discipline is confidential for federal law. but noted that the student handbook limits inappropriate use of electronics and considers the identification of minor students when disseminating video. the school district also prohibits, quote, recording faculty or staff in the
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classroom without prior approval and recording, quote, acts of violence. the student says that it has a chilling affect looking to hold authority figures accountable. >> they could get in trouble for capturing evidence of a crime. >> reporter: adrienne broaddus, cnn, chicago. still ahead, more than 600 miles someone found safe. and district regulation onmenai, a senate hearing where lawmakers try to plan for the worst. neuriva plus is a multitasker supporting 6 6 key indicators of brain health. to help keep me sharp. neuriva:a: think bigger.
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welcome back to "cnn newsroom." i'm bianca nobilo. >> and i'm hax fos for max fost. let's bring you up-to-date. president biden says he will shorten his summit trip to be back in time for debt ceiling negotiations. lawmakers in north carolina have voted to ban most abortions after 12 weeks flipping a veto by the democratic governor. governor cooper is vowing to continue to fight the legislation. a girl from illinois has been found safe more than 600 miles away in north carolina six years after she was ill legally abducted. kayla was nine in 2017 when authorities say her mother, who did not have custody, took her and never returned. a felony warrant for kidnapping was issued. saturday kayla, now 15, was spotted at a shop in asheville,
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north carolina. police say someone recognized her from the netflix series unsolved mysteries. and a store employee called police. the girl's mother was arrested and kayla is now reunited with her father in illinois. artificial intelligence seems limitless, but it could be possible to minimize dangers with regulations. that was the key takeaway from the hearing. nick watts breaks down the questions that lawmakers had for experts. >> reporter: my worst fears are that we cause significant, we the field, the technology, cause significant harm to the world. today's hearing is a crucial step in an effort to prevent the harm and rein in the handful of players controlling the tech. >> there needs to be incredible scrutiny. >> reporter: his company created chatgpt. it can write a term paper or a song, captured imaginations and
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headlines. >> can artificial intelligence soon put us all out of work. >> reporter: ai has potentially world changing benefits, education, helping eradicate disease, transportation. it can be life enhancing or maybe an existential threat to humanity. we know some of the risks like rampant misinformation. >> these new systems will be destabilizing. they can and will create persuasive lives at a scale humanity has never seen before. democracy is threatened. >> reporter: as it jobs. >> gpt 4 will automate away some jobs and it will create new ones that we believe will be much better. >> reporter: there are risks like automated weapons we can't imagine. >> could ai create a situation where a drone can select a target itself? >> i think we shouldn't allow that. >> well, can it be done? >> sure. >> reporter: and there are risks that we can for now barely even comprehend. >> as the systems do become more capable and i'm not sure how far away that is, but maybe not
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super far, i think that it is important that we all also talk about how we'll confront those challenges. >> so talk in plain english and tell me what if any rules we ought to implement. >> number one, safety review like we use with the fda prior to widespread deployment. >> reporter: suggestions today to licensed developers and/or the most powerful ai systems. >> i think a model that can persuade, manipulate, influence a person's behavior or beliefs would be a good threshold. i think that model that could help create novel biological agents would be a great threshold. >> reporter: there was support in this room for a brand new government agency to oversee ai, but -- >> for every success story in government regulation, you can think of five failures. >> reporter: and the technology is move, very, very fast. google, microsoft and others pouring in billions of dollars. government can be glacial. >> you look at the record of
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congress and dealing with innovation technology and rapid change, we're not designed for that. >> i've come to the conclusion that it is impossible for congress to keep up with the speed of technology. >> reporter: there is of course an election in the u.s. just about 18 months away. and an avalanche of misinformation no doubt on its way. so there is not much time to deal with at least some of the issues at play here. another big question, should the u.s. just create its own agency and then hope that the rest of the world will follow or should people be concentrating on creating a global initiative, a global body to oversee ai? now, listen, three minutes on capitol hill or three minutes on television is not nearly enough to deal with this massive topic. that committee of the senate will be meeting many more times, many brains around the world working on this problem. and experts tell me that we, you, me, all of us, we need to also educate ourselves aboutment a i so that we know what is coming down the pike and how it
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might impact us. ni nick nick watt oig, cnn, los angeles. >> i had two big thoughts. first is that the fact that the actual politics of it was so bipartisan i think speaks to how big of an issue everyone now recognizes it is because there was even complementary exchanges between republicans and democrats about their questioning. but also the fact that there are so many issues with developing autocracies and people abusing state media around the world that this is -- it has the potential to amplify bias and to deepen all those issues as well. >> and what struck me about that was the sort of time frame they are talking about. experts are saying we have to getting across this because the elections next year, they are looking at the u.s. election next year and the amount of progress that will be made before then. >> exactly. alarming. u.s. justice department is cracking down on stolen technology used to help
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authoritarian governments who abuse human rights. prosecutors from the disruptive technology strike force announced five criminal cases on tuesday. one case, a chinese national, accused in a scheme to produce weapons of mass destruction for iran. others involve providing aircraft parts and sensitive technology to russia. a top ukrainian defense official claims that forces have liberated about 20 square kilometers of suburbs around bakhmut from russian fighters. cnn has not verified that, but observers think the gains aremo. nic robertson talked with several fighters. >> reporter: and two ukrainian soldiers bolster lagging spirits with dark humor. oh, that boom boom boom, is that on us one says? oh, no, the other jokes.
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we're enchanted. they are not for us. russia's push for the remaining ukrainian controlled highrises around them has not relented despite recent successes taking ground north and south of the meat grinder town. in a field hospital nearby, troops concussed by heavy russian shelling inside bakhmut. how is the fighting compared to kherson and other places? this 47-year-old former warehouse manager tells us bakhmut is his hardest battle yet. it is hell, he says. how is the morale at the front line? he pauses. sighs. and whispers. it is hard. tanks too are getting chewed up in the bakhmut meat grinder. this soviet era t-72 blasted by shelling. repairs made in hedge rows because workshops are getting
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targeted. the shrapnel holes don't matter, this tank commander tells us. what is important is the engine and the reactive armor. locations of repair hideaways like this one are a closely guarded secret. once the counteroffensive begins, they will be even more vital to keep the military and its machines moving. in a combat bunker buried outside bakhmut, troops have no idea when or where the big offensive will come. we can't show you the screens that they are looking down from drones. as soon as a russian soldier puts his head up and moves, you see it. morale here high because they recently made gains across fields surrounding the town. early success in the coming counteroffensive will be critical. lessons of bakhmut, momentum and motivation is all.
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nic robertson, cnn, eastern ukraine. leader of thailand's move forward party outlines his plan for a new government and it doesn't include military rule. his vision fois coming up nexex.
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[ chanting ] leader of thailand's move forward party says that he will demilitarize the country if elected prime minister. >> unofficial results show the party secured the most seats in the general election over the weekend thanks to a surge in young voters wanting a change from the military government. paula hancock is joining us from seoul with more. interesting how this big turnout translated into this vote. >> reporter: absolutely. the one party that promised the biggest changes in thailand is
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the party move forward that won the most votes and their leader is hoping to be prmg. but the two don't always go hand-in-hand in thailand. he gave his first interview since the election two cnn and he said that thailand has spoken, that he has had a consensus saying that the people have demanded change. the problem though is that he needs 750 mps to vote for him to become prime minister. 250 of those are in a military appointed senate. and in the past they have always voted for a military candidate. but he believes that the unity of the senate is not the same now as it was four years ago. >> if we keep communicating and keep explaining what we're trying to do for the country, how well we mean for the future of this country, i think that will not be a significant roadblock. and the cost of going against 25 million votes here in thailand
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will be very hefty. >> reporter: and pita saying his policies are a restructuring of the economy, restructuring of the military to make sure that the military is taken out of politics. and also reform of the once untouchable monarchy. the youth vote came out in force. peter w pita saying 5 million new voters who came out to vote. but you can't talk about elections in thailand without mentioning military coups. there have been two in the past 17 years, a dozen since 1932. but most experts believe that this time around this probably wouldn't happen because the backlash wooing significant. they predict that there would be social unrest and they believe that there would be penalties both domestically and internationally. the incumbent prime minister though is the former coup
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leader, also a former army chief, and he has said from now on the formation of the new government will be in process giving hope that the military will not intervene this time around. but no expert will say for sure that they believe it will not happen. max, bianca. >> paula, thank you. scientists across the globe are turning to our oceans to develop carbon capture technology that removes dangerous co2 from the atmosphere. >> in a new series, christina in being mcfarland is meeting the scientist with big ambitions to change the world. ♪ >> reporter: with its unique buildings, a mixture of arabic design and modern technologies, the city on the outskirts of abu dhabi claims to be the most sustainable in the world. it is at the forefront of the zero carbon revolution.
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>> the world saying we'll be carbon neutral by 2050. we have a lot of work to do in every area to get there. this is one of the most am ambitious targets the globe has ever set together. >> reporter: and it could hold the keyy to achieving that target. and scientists in los angeles have been investigating its potential. >> so the ocean stores approximately 150 times more carbon dioxide than the atmosphere. so the process removes carbon dioxide from the atmosphere by leveraging the power of the ocean to naturally absorb carbon dioxide from air. >> reporter: and they pull sea water through beakers and test tunes to separate co2 from the sea water. >> this is our solid liquid solution, the captured carbon dioxide. >> reporter: and it is called carbon capture technology. sea water from the ocean is suspected to an electrical charge through electrical reactions that the co2 and water
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with separated. the co2 now trapped in a solid form are pumped back into the ocean and stored on the sea floor. the water which no longer has co2 is sent back into the ocean where it is once again ready to absorb everyone morn more from atmosphere. >> carbon dioxide removal will be the new heavy industry that man kind has to develop in order to remediate the consequences of the first industrial revolution which led to the release of a large amount of carbon dioxide over a short period of time. >> reporter: in the port of los angeles, what began as a simple lab experiment has evolved into a proof of concept project on this 100-foot barge. >> we envision the next step to be a process that is about 100 times the size of this, to be free standing on shore and then the next step would be a process that is 100 times larger than that.
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>> reporter: he says they plan to deploy the technology commercially within five years and if successful, it could go a long way to achieving the global target of being carbon neutral by 2050. the nba playoffs are down to the final four teams. highlights from game one between the lakers and nuggets are just ahead. moderate-to-severe eczema doesn't care if you have a date, or a day off. get out in front of itit with cibinqo. for those who didn't respond to past treatments... once-dailyly cibinqo proactivelyy treats eczema whether you're flaring or not. cibinqo can lower your ability to fight i infections, including tb. before and during treatment, your doctor should check for infections and do blood tests. tell your doctor if you've had hepatitis b or c, have flu-like symptoms, or are prone to infections. do not take with medicines that prevent blood clots. serious, sometimes fatal infections, lymphoma, lung, skin and other cancers, serious heart-related events, and blood clots can happen. people 50 and older with heart disease risk factors have an increased risk of serious heart-related
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my a1c has never been lower. i lead line dancing three times a week, and i'm just living a great life now. (donna) it's so easy to use. dexcom g7 has given me confidence and control, everything i need is right there on my phone. (female announcer) dexcom is the number one recommended cgm brand. call now to get started on dexcom g7. - [announcer] do you have an invention idea but don't know what to do next? call invent help today. they can help you get started with your idea.
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call now 800-710-0020. nuggets are off to a shining start against the lakers in the nba playoffs. jonikola jokic head the home te to victory in game one with 34 points and 21 rebounds. he nail this had ted this three. >> and a frustrating night for lebron james. he had 26 points and he turned it over in the last 20 seconds of the game. final score 132-126. the spurs are poised to select one of the most highly coveted prospects in years with the first pick in the nba draft. the 19-year-old from france
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stands at 7'4". makes you look piddly. but he plays like a point guard. >> and spurs finished the season with one of the worst records in the league so they have the top pick. the draft set for june 22. the philadelphia 76ers have fired doc rivers two days after the team was eliminated from the nba playoffs. in three stories he led philly to 154 wins and 82 losses with 20 wins in the playoffs. >> but they never made it past the eastern conference semifinals in each of those seasons. rivers is the latest in the growing number of nba head coaches to lose their job after a disappointing season. adam silver says that he is shocked to see video circulating online appearing for show memphis grizzlies star ja morant flashing a gun while in a vehicle. this is just two months after he
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was suspended over a similar video. silver says they are in the process of investigating. >> the grizzlies announced sunday that morant was suspended from all team activities pending the review. the 23-year-old says this is a journey and i recognize there is more work do. my words may not mean much right now, but i take full accountability for my actions. i'm committed to continuing to work on myself. the shock here is obviously that it happened for a second time and he was so apologetic the first tile. >> exactly. >> and kids look up to him. finally, the stories in the spotlight this hour -- a children's baseball game in jacksonville, florida took a scary turn after a dust devil suddenly formed at home plate.
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>> and it engulfed the player before a quick thinking umpire pulled him to safety. here is how he described the experience. >> i can't breathe that much so i held my breathe. and i couldn't touch the ground. i didn't know what to do. so i was thinking about something that was happy, not like that. so i don't get freaked about. >> that is the best part ever. >> amazing. i don't understand how -- i mean, did it literally form by complete coincidence. >> i've spent a lot of time in florida and never seen a dust devil. but it helps you understand why people believen hisity imystica things. apple announced a feature that it can now talk for you.
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>> it is meant to help those with voice impairments or disabilities. apple says the tool can do a lot of good but at a time when artificial intelligence is under intense view the any. a scrutiny. and we've seen where they can create the viceoice of a public figure. >> and you worry how it will be misused. you can't even imagine. and the cannes film festival kicked off with the movie of johnny depp. he walked the red carpet stopping along the way to speak with fans and pose for photos. >> he plays the french king louie xv in the period drama. the hollywood reporter says the audience gave a standing ovation after the screening with depp
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and his co-star and director becoming teary-eyed. sweet. >> yeah. >> he is a great actor. >> he is. very good character actor. thanks for joining us here. i'm max foster. >> and i'm bianca nobilo. "early start" is up next for you. how can you sleep on such a firm setting? gab, mine is almost the same as yours. almost... just another word for not as good as mine. save 50% on the sleep number limited d edition smart bed. plusus, special financing. only at sleep number.
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there was an overwhelming consensus i think from today's meeting. >> nothing has been resolved in

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