tv Business Deutsche Welle January 10, 2020 11:30am-11:46am CET
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intense does it camp. own net trains kimi and. nice to send people to london point to new. island story. is a. must. start in january 27th on d w it's good to feel that the. post really has fires are hitting pocketbooks tourist resorts farms and small towns are seeing their livelihoods burnt to the ground how bad is it getting and what are governments doing. also in the show that are for stake is set now the u.k. and e.u. need to hash out a few close friends their relationship it could get ugly. and love it or leave it
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tech trends like augments and reality are heading your way from the clothing store to the airport we'll take a look. this is your business report i'm stephen beers of the lead it's good to have you with us could seaman's into its involvement in a new coal mine in australia the german industrial giant was selected to supply rail signalling infrastructure for the carmichael mine in the country's north east it's led by indian company adani but campaigners are demanding the german company pull out and siemens says it's reassessing the deal now shows devastating bushfires have only added to the pressure climate change linked to fossil fuels is widely blamed for the disastrous places whose costs continue to mount. sydney's bond beach normally a place of sun sea and sand recently it's smoke that's dominating the world famous attraction casting a haze over the swimmers and sunbathe has. historic bushfires in new south wales perfecting businesses all over the state including
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a bond i supply chains are being disrupted and customers to keeping away. from a tourist point of view it's being probably the worst we've seen because of the foists so we've got. you know reduced numbers so it's the 1st time i've ever seen the like these 1st time i've seen it where i look at my window in a concert or water and that's very ironic i've been here for 47 eans further down the beach it's a similar story that they see the nearest shop taking it down a 5th film out there no would normally expect from this time if you had someone say australia on fire obviously we have experienced more fire than any other year since i've been here. but the problem is when tourist see it that you don't want to come australian prime minister scott morrison is well aware of the problem during a visit to another tourist favorite kangaroo island this week he is told they make is not to be put off by the finest destroyers i've been destroyed your store
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a lot of applies to come and bring your family and enjoy your holidays back upon die they'll be hoping that message gets through with a fire is certain to burn the months to come. now for more on this we have a very familiar face in the studio with us today d w senior business editor ben facility who has just come back from a long trip across australia and can tell us a little bit more about this. ben who's pocket books are these fires hitting. i find it really interesting to hear the prime minister say the stranger is open for business i mean these communities are really hurting that have been affected we've got hundreds of thousands of people who've been evacuated. just as we speak. their lives their livelihoods at stake and yes straight ones the tourists to keep coming but there's not going to be much for the tourists to see i mean we're talking about a 1000000000 adams that have been killed it's going to be hard to find a koala as one expert told me we used to talk about these towns that are trying to
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recover from this or they're suffering right now are we talking about towns that are really focused on tourism their focus on agriculture what are the problems here a lot of them are extremely focused on tourism and this is the tourism season right now and these towns of 22 ghost towns some of them have had the guts ripped out of them i mean there's nothing to go back to. and when i hear the prime minister say we're open for business i mean straight is not just open for business to tourism which is a huge industry and very important it's also extremely open for business to the coal industry coal being a straight a 2nd biggest export and being so important and the government is really being careful about saying what's causing these bushfires because it does not want to link it to climate change it does not want any sort of link or any blame put on the coal industry what about among themselves are they beginning to make that link in putting some pressure on the government there is pressure and there are protests as
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we speak being organized across a stranger in the major cities and across the world but the lobby group in australia that supports the prime minister the christian lobby group and the cold lobby group so powerful they also have a stranglehold on the media through the middle media and that forms public opinion in australia and there are many a strange who is saying right now despite the devastation to spite losing their businesses and their homes and family members that this has nothing to do with climate change briefly you mention livelihoods in the smaller towns what about the big cities like sydney's covered in smoke isn't it this is the crazy thing often these fires only affect rule areas and so you don't really. hear about it much in the cities but canberra the capital sydney. even in new zealand i was in new zealand before getting to australia i could see the ash clouds from they it's a crazy situation and it's affecting productivity in the big cities which the engines of growth in australia and it's going to continue for months they say
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right a grim outlook there from ben facility senior business editor thanks for coming in the studio been. designed by clowns supervised by monkeys that's just one of the scathing comments by boeing employees as they worked on the 737 max airliner newly released internal memos reveal staff were aware of problems with the jets and the simulator training being developed for them and tried to conceal the information from u.s. aviation regulators one says they would not allow their own family to fly on a 737 max who's crew had been trained on a simulator the plane has been grounded worldwide since last march following 2 deadly crashes. of britain is set to leave the european union by january 31st following a crucial vote thursday in the house of commons the terms of approach of the post brags that trade relationship that's the next hurdle it could be one of the most
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difficult parts of brics it the big differences divide the 2 sides for example the time frame for johnson says the deal can be reached by the end of this year you commission president or sort of on the line says that's impossible i consider how many areas need to be negotiated no less than $759.00 in fact coming issues like legal requirements agriculture fishing customs an agreement on services is also important for financial hub london the overarching goal for the u.k. is to get free access to markets without being forced to adhere to regulations and that's something that funded lion and the lead negotiator michel barnier have already rolled out. now for more on this i'm joined by maria them out says she's deputy director of brussels based think tank bruegel and she joins us now from brussels ri it's good to have you on the show. but 1st question would be is this timeline a deal by december 31st is that is that possible it's increasingly
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looking that it's not possible or regionally we had envisaged 2 years for this process to happen but through repetitive extensions that 2 year period was now shrunk to effectively less than a year if you look at the trade deals of the have done over the years across the world the average time length of a trade deal to be done is more than 2 years now they're good reasons why one could think that they're at radio between and no one member of the u.k. and the rest of the you can be done in less than that but one year is is pushing really hard and i think an important point that is becoming increasingly obvious to us is that come the end of january when the u.k. actually leaves they you status will have to change and it's important to understand and hear legal views are crucial whether that u.k. can be still considered an e.u. member for the purposes of these negotiations or it cannot if it can't if it's a 3rd country which is it to my ears even though i'm not a lawyer sounds very logical it implies that it would have to be treated as
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a 3rd country which means that any of the a look can be reached between now and the end of the year will have to go through a national parliaments to be ratified to be recognised for that to be true the deal need to be given to the country parliaments sometime in the spring so effectively we have very little time for negotiate anything and i think i'm beginning to see why mrs online said earlier this week that actually that looks pretty impossible so a big legal question at the beginning of the negotiations that could shape them we talked about some of the hurdles some of the areas they need to agree on what's the biggest area of disagreement in your mind or the biggest hurdle to these negotiations. it it and i think there is really want clear point and i think you mentioned it in your report as well and so you see the u.k. is going to be looking to have access to you markets and he's going to want to have access not only to good spread also to services financial services primarily it's crucial to the a now and these you would be wanting this about say would be pushing the u.k. to agree to basically to all the you laws one reason for the u.k. leaving the u.s.
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because it wants to follow different legal path to the e.u. path so here's a trade off if you want to access to our markets the u.s. says you have to take our rules in the u.k. says i don't want your rules that's why i'm leaving this is going to be the big point that is going to be negotiated very adventure breeds matzos want to leave it there for now thank you very much maria metz is deputy director bruegel. the world's largest consumer tech show is happening right now in las vegas and as usual it's a mixture of the practical fun and baffling. the robots are coming people to turf or fields cannot only play like a human japanese maker says the robot can even reach its opponents emotions 4 and a half 1000 exhibitors show the latest tech gadgets and c.e.'s in las vegas including trends in display technology like this bendable high resolution billet virtual and augment it reality is another hot topic. but in its more than 50
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years long history c.e.'s has changed its focus from the mere consumer electronics to innovative concepts. korea's l.g. wants to make along the lines of changing rooms a thing of the past with electric sensors scanning the customer's body measurements the technology could also be used for online shopping. a consumer has a pain point because if the size is not sure toppled i have to leave town also at the for the b 2 b. area there is some pain points almost because if we return we comes out and spend a lot of money for a town or. to figure out if the aleutian to figure it out if we make the solution here. us airline delta a 1st timer at c.s. has arrived with ideas around easier travel a new display technology is now able to show customized information for each individual passenger after scanning your boarding pass cameras identify your
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position the information on the screen can then be tailored to you. when i get within range all of some parallel reality kicks in and whether 3 of us are walking together on different flights or even on the same flight will all see relative information only to us and not just information in english information in the language of our choice i think that's a game changer. and why carry your suitcase when your suitcase could actually carry you the future of traveling might have a few surprises in store and that was all right and that's it for me and the business team here in berlin you can find out more line of dot com slash business i'm stephen beardsley it's watched.
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people feel for their lives their future so they seek refuge abroad but what will become of fun. to stay behind and see. people my husband went to peru because of the crisis that if he hadn't gone there we would have died of hunger i don't want to. displace stories for january 15th. welcome to arts and culture news and we'll be looking at the latest rift in the british royal household as herion megamall to go their own way also coming up the 2 great surrealist salvador dali and rene magritte face to face in a major exhibition. and the biggest piano in the world is to be found in the
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battlefield. so the big news in britain on wednesday evening was the shock announcement released on instagram by prince harry and mag of the duchess of sussex that they want to step back from royal duty is to a certain extent and the notorious british tabloid press whose harsh headlines about the couple of no doubt contributed to this decision have already given it a name makes it. howie and megan on their wedding day it was thought to be the start of a new chapter for the british royal family but it was not meant to read like this in an instagram post the couple explained they would step back a senior royals and were deemed to become financially independent it seems the cult even the queen off guard she's reported to be heart one commentator said it was
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