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tv   Business - News  Deutsche Welle  February 11, 2022 4:15am-4:31am CET

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chelsea delaney will tell you all about it in business. am lame blue croft, thanks very much for watching and we will have more for you at the top the hour until then check out our website. d w dot com, instagram and twitter at u. w. news extra with shlou, where i come from, we have to file for a free press and was born and raised in a military dictatorship with just one tv channel and a few newspapers with official information. as a journeys, i work all history of many cameras and their problems are always the same for do socially inequality. a lack of the freedom of the bread and corruption, we can afford to stay silent when it comes to the defense of the humans. on seaman
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whitefield roles who have decided to put their trust enough. my name is jenny perez and i work at the w. ah ah o, another u. s. inflation report for the record books. prices are rising at their highest pace and 40 years and the last will red hot inflation lead to economic meltdown. will go to our correspondent in new york and will take you to kentucky cold country where inflation is sitting hard and her region already rocked by poverty. also coming up, the global shipping industry is going back in time to bring down it's climate footprint. a wind power cargo ships could one second. i am
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chelsea delaney welcome to the show. a key gauge of us inflation rows a steeper than expected 7.5 percent and the year through january high energy prices, supply constraints and strong demand have been driving and inflation. prices for used cars and gasoline searched by about 40 percent year over year. according to the labor department consumer price index, bacon prices were up 18 percent. the inflation spike has lasted longer than economist had anticipated, and is increasingly weighing on consumers and businesses. now inflation is proving to be not only an economic threat, but increasingly a political threat for president joe biden. the white house released a statement about the data and with biden's saying, while today is a reminder that americans budgets are being stretched and ways that create real stress at the kitchen table. there are also signs that we will make it through this
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challenge. now for more and less, let's bring against corta our correspondent and new york. so, you know, we have president bite and being a little bit more optimistic there, but inflation clearly running very hot right here. why is inflation continuing to rise at such staggering rates? there are many factors, one big increase was the price of oil, and that at the end also converts into higher prices for gasoline. so transportation costs, for instance, are also hitting companies. they respond to the higher cost with price increases. that by the way, we, for example, heard to just here on thursday from coca cola, they're reacting to higher cost with higher prices or have already done so. but in general, also food prices are up, rent are car prices are up. so there are many factors. so us,
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president joe biden has tried to lower oil prices, for instance, with opening up the strategic reserves. but that has not really done the trick so far. so yeah, everybody is waiting for prices to come down eventually, but we don't know precisely when and by how much we had one of the big questions after this data is will it force the federal reserve to speed up its plans for removing stimulus from the economy i've heard some pretty crazy projections from economist after this data today, some saying they can raise interest rates in the coming days. will we see a much more aggressive federal reserve here? yeah, sure. as chelsea that says specially the big question here on wall street. we heard from james bullard today, who is the head of the fet, in st. louis that he wants to see interest rates to go up by 50 basis points, them at least at the next meeting,
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mid march. and if we really will see any movement from the federal reserve before that next official meeting, i'm a bit doubtful on that ball is also asking for a full percentage increase by july. so that does sound much more aggressive than many economists and also traders on wall street had recently estimate it. and therefore we did also see a lot of pressure on stocks on wall street. and by the way, also, mortgage rates are already on the increase yann's quarter in new york. thanks so much. now, inflation is a burden that falls hardest on the poorest. like those in rural eastern kentucky, you may know it as cold country. the region has become increasingly impoverished as the coal industry declines to w stefan steam under winds there to see how people are dealing with spiraling prices. ah,
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kentucky is not doing too well these days. what is called america's great resignation, as in millions, quitting their jobs and record to inflation are hitting people heart in this part of the so called bluegrass state, running injury, eastern kentucky of the most economically depressed regions in the united states of america. why is that? because he's in kentucky is cold country and the decline of the coleman is treat going on for decades here and left his mark on the region and on the high rollers are not to be found here. people here are making their living by working hard wages, minimum wages, and depress wages and salaries are real thing. so the inflation hurts people here. the mom i and i
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am a 3rd generation or us are working on co lands in 1990 toe. and i absolutely live and i retired then i got diagnosed in 2015 at 2 glucose. danny's 48 years old, who suffers from black lung disease decades of breathing and cold us cost mess and scarring in his love. breathing is difficult working. it's impossible. danny and his family, his wife, jenny, and daughter, malia mostly living off a fixed income and modest monthly federal paycheck he receives for having ruined his health and the coal mines. life was on the lean budget before inflation hit. now it's a struggle then he says, well, we haven't obeying out there. and so that we had rabbit trader, you know, so i was much fuel fuel money for gay s as we can and we try not, don't know, father, they will have to. it's not just danny, and his family is struggling with and juggling rising prices for gas for groceries
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for power and for heating gas for well, pretty much everything. historic inflation or not call b hall executive director of sore, which stands for shaping our collection region. and non partisan and non profit organization thinks that to maneuver eastern kentucky and it's people out of misery . the region needs broadband. it is thee, i whatever insert whatever cliche you've heard. it's as important to this region is electricity was in the forty's, the, the aria, the idea here, fast and reliable internet access for the region will bring better jobs, better jobs mean better wages. is that the proverbial light at the end of the tunnel for danny and his family, 4000 more here in cold country kentucky. that tunnel seems to be awfully long and the light at the end of it flickers only dimly, at least for now. now to some of the other global business stories making
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news, twitter reported weaker than expected quarterly advertising revenue and user growth figures. and busters see the results as a sign? the companies turn around plant has yet to gain traction. the twitter shares rose, nonetheless, even after, excuse me, after it announced a new $4000000000.00 share buyback. european commission president or is lavonda lion unveiled the 1st regional plan under the new global gateway strategy and synagogue on thursday. 150000000000 euros have been earmarked for investment in africa. the global gateway strategy was launched in december. it's designed to compete with china's belt and road initiative. ford honda and toyota are halting some production at canadian plans due to supply issues as well as a days long like a blockade of us canada border crossings by canadian truckers. they are protesting against vaccine mandates. meanwhile, both washington and otto are warning of economic damage. now for thousands of
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years, ships carried freight across the high seas. thanks to sales that harness the wind. that was before the age of fossil fuels, which most ships he is to day. but wind power maritime transport could be making a comeback as the industry looks for more sustainable options. stevedores, unload a shipment of colombian, coffee from the 43. meet her dutch schooner of on tour the port of bordeaux. this cargo was not shipped on a kerosene burning freighter. this coffee was ship by sale. it's an experiment by the coffee importer balco to reduce the carbon footprint of maritime transport. vicki coffee objective for 2025 is to achieve more than 50 percent of the coffee imported by balco. using classic sailing techniques he can trans oceanic wind transport says it ship can hold 1000 tons of goods on reckons. it will be built by the summer of 2023. the global shipping industry is
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a big polluter. it mainly uses fossil fuels and a cancer around 3 percent of the world's greenhouse gas emissions. the race is on to come up with alternatives to fossil fuels, to power cargo ships. projects under development include new experimental sale designs, such as hard sales or rotating vertical cylinders then there's hydrogen power, which yields no direct greenhouse gas emissions this week. so the launch of the energy observer to concept this prototype is powered solely by renewable energy on his capable of producing its own hydrogen using salt water. oh, in as of silva, nevada energy observer 2 is a 120 meter long and 22 meter wide ship done which can carry 5000 tons of freight. her owner fish, no one is a 0 direct emissions if the hydrogen fuel that powers the electric engines is
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produced in a carbon free way. it was anna of 20 molten mcdonny goods. the plan is to have the 1st operational 0 emissions cargo ship take to the seas by 2025 carrying up to 240 freight containers. if boats are built on this model, it could de carbonized a 3rd of the world's existing fleet. the revolution and energy technology could c, c o 2 emission cargo vessels make way for a truly sustainable way of transporting goods on the high seas. and a reminder of the top business story we're following for you this. our key u. s. inflation gauge roses, steeper than expected 7.5 percent and the year through january high energy prices, supply constraints and strong demands have been driving inflation. the spike has lasted longer than economist had anticipated, and is increasingly weighing on consumers and businesses as well as the byte administration's popularity. and that's all for me and the business team here in
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berlin. for more from us, check out our website, debbie dot com slash business for also on the d. w. news youtube channel. you can find us on facebook until next time. take care. ah. for the battle against cove, it the only covariance is putting healthcare systems around the world to the test. vaccination campaigns are accelerating while restrictions are intensifying once again. but or these measures enough to stop the spread of omicron fax, data, and reports covey. 19 special next on d w. ah,
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can we transition to green energy without collateral damage? where will the raw materials for future technologies come from? and under what conditions will they be attained? perhaps in the brave new energy world, monthly quote, so green after all in 45 minutes on d, w. o. ah, listen carefully. don't know how to do it, go. ah, feel the magic discover the world
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around you. subscribe to d w documentary on youtube. oh, many countries around the world are using their measures to curb the corona, virus pandemic, with more liberties and fewer restrictions. again, spain is one of them and so is the south africa hopes are rising here, that the pandemic will soon become endemic, promising an end to restrictions. so how many coven 19 become endemic? and what would that mean.

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