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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  November 23, 2024 12:00am-12:16am CET

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have to make up your own mind d, w, made for mines the you're watching, dw, and use live from lane to growing concerns over a new russian width and, and we saw the kremlin, says can hit targets anywhere in europe. president vladimir persian say is russia has the stone pile of the weapon, and aud is the mass production of more, mostly used it to attack you crying for the 1st time, sparking nice to emergency tools. also coming up pages negotiations as the cop 29 climate conference in as advised. john goes into all of the time. rich countries pledge $250000000000.00 a year to help with global warming. but developing nation site. it's not enough general strategy and travel. it dies in
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a popular tourist town and allow soft to reportedly drinking contaminated alcohol. it's just the lightest vitality in a string of cases all of suspected method. all poisoning the welcome to the program. i'm jared rate roches, president flooded me. persian says moscow has a stuff pile. all of the new type of ballistic me solve that. it used to strike you crying on thursday, and that he is ordering the mass production of more pollutants as the kremlin will put the medium range arrest nick me, style into service on the come back conditions natural and you cry and have cold emergency talks over the attack on the eastern city, often the pro, a c, c t, v cop should multiple strikes on the pro ukrainian city where russia says it tested a new medium range, hypersonic ballistic missile, named the arrest snake,
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or hazelnut tree. the kremlin says, the weapon can move 10 times faster than the speed of sound divide air defenses. the missiles at tech targets the speed of the muscle tan and really the, this is 2.5 to 3 kilometers per 2nd. give me the world's most modern air defense systems. and the american empty missile defenses in europe can count on to intercept such marseilles loop in the i get the meeting or whatever, according to ukrainian intelligence. the missile was launched from russia's asked to con region, taking 15 minutes to travel, around 700 kilometers to the pro. the range of the rush, nick has not been confirmed, but reports say it could reach up to 5000 kilometers, allowing brush it to hit most of europe. that's less than an intercontinental missile, which can fly more than 5500 kilometers. i can confirm that russia did launch an
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experimental intermediate range ballistic missile. this i or b m, was based on russia's r, s 26 roo bash intercontinental ballistic missile model. in terms of a notifications to the united states, the united states was pre notified briefly before the launch through nuclear risk reduction channels. for this all launched on the pro was korean conventional warheads was it resembled a ballistic missile costing more than $10000000.00, which was designed to carry nuclear warheads and has never been used in war before . it makes no military sense to use such an expensive missile on ukrainian city were, let's say, is under m would have done the job. let's say the intention was to send a clear signal to ukraine. now let's allies, i think it's more of a nudge to european capitals because this missile would be very much capable of reaching most of them was a substantial payload. the rush,
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nick is the latest russian hypersonic weapon to be tested in baffling ukraine. change all and they're called miss solves already in use. they have proved destructive but not completely unsolvable, as must go claimed ukraine has managed to shoot some of them down earlier. we spike with marianna put jared and military analyst and senior research associate at harvard university. we asked her if she thought this was a decisive moment in the conflict. it is decisive in the sense that there's in a way, a significant date that's approaching and that's an immigration. on january 20th of, of america's new president. donald trump will, has a very, just a distinctive view of the way he wants to handle this war and has promised a swift and decisive miraculous em to it. we'll see, you know,
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these things that are easier to say then to do. but what, what we see on the ground is that both sides are really intensifying their efforts and trying to achieve as much as much gain to preserve as much as possible on ukraine in start before they're forced to some kind of settlement on negotiation. so basically they're improving as much as they can. they're negotiating positions when trump comes to power as marianna, but geron date. now to bach, who as a, by john way, the deadlock to comp 29 climate conference has gone into all the time with criticism over a contested financing proposal. now this would say industrialized countries pay out more to tackle global warming. but developing nations say that it's far from enough, the plan calls for wealthy nations to pay 250 dollars, 1000000000 dollars per you to help developing economies. it also sets
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a broad goal of rising $1.00 trillion dollars annually by 2035. but it doesn't specify where the countries such as china and the oil producing gulf states should pay island states inside the proposal. so is contempt for smaller economies. i'd like to welcome rob jackson now he's a climate scientist professor of 5th science at stanford university and chair of the global carbon project. he's liked his book into the clear blue sky, sky explorers, climate solutions. it's great to have you with us rob. now, 1st off, what do you make all of these $250000000000.00 draft proposal as well? we all had fairly low expectations for the cops, particularly after the election here in united states and based on the previous actions of the trump administration. the, the hope was that this would be the climate cop, the finance comp, if you will. and this increase in, in the,
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in finance is good in principle if it actually happens. but we are very good at making pledges and not very good and wealthy countries and actually making payments that affect with loss and damage waivers that help with climate adaptation and clean power incentives that help developing nations jump across fossil fuels directly to cleaner renewables. so i think we're all hopeful that something might happen, but the cautious about what's coming in the future grow, but i don't want to put words in your mouth, but i sort of get the idea. you think it's, it's, you're not cooling at a bad deal, but you're not calling it a necessarily a good deal either. is this better than no ideal? it's better than no deal if these payments actually happens. but to be honest, we have a history of making commitments or places at the cops that don't actually come to pass. so i'm less interested in pleasures and more interested in action. okay. now
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sign to say this year in particular is shaping up to be the hardest on record in addition to the widespread flooding, land slides, drought, and other extreme weather events that side to say on a more common by climate change. what would bomb money concretely mean in, in this context, as well? one thing that this money would do would allow nations to spend funds on climate adaptation, but they can't on their own. and we do need money to slow climate change. yes. but we also need to help countries who didn't cause climate change, reduce the consequences of storms and droughts. hurricanes record floods like those that happened in pakistan and a couple of years ago. and just this website crazy, whether the were experiencing over the, the recent months and years hottest year on record this year. disasters are twice as often in my home country as they used to be a couple of decades ago. so we're seeing the consequences now this money will help countries adapts and reduce the effects of those extreme weather events. and of
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course, more importantly to slow, i think the rise of greenhouse gas emissions and climate change itself. now you've mentioned to us a couple of times donald trump is set to be the next us president. he's set to likely leave the power as agreement. again, how much has all of this possibly influenced comp 29? you see as well. i think it's influence things greatly. the um, the expectation is that the truck administration will withdraw from the paris accord again. it was unfortunate we did this 8 or so years ago in my country and then the by the administration re entered compet immediately. but we're seeing the yeah, the likely the withdrawal of, of the, of that accord and trump has been very aggressive about what he'll do in the united states. he pledged to kill and cancel the environmental protection agency. those are his words, not mine. and we'll target other agencies and monitor
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a clean air and clean water such as our national oceanic and atmospheric administration in the us geological survey. i expect him to, to go after clean car standards, clean power plant standards in clean energy. and this is a terrible idea because all of us, one cleaner air and water for our children, when one and 5 deaths worldwide comes from fossil fuel pollution. and there was another aspect i wanted to ask you about because that as i understand that with questions this year about where the china and india should be treated as developing nations anymore as this classification plays into. she contributes and who benefits and they have quite large economies. could you explain this for us? a good it's, it's complicated. i think china in particular has, is the largest to the world's largest fossil fuel emitter, but on a per capita basis, of course, that's not true. per person, per person, china today has emissions on an average about those near europe. an answer about
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half of ours in the united states. so it's difficult for me to think of china as a new developing nation. they have a great disparities as we do between rich people and poor people is completely different in my mind in the as emissions are 110th or so per person of those of us in the united states. india has a 100000000 people or more who don't have access to reliable electricity yet they need yeah, reliable power even if it has to be fossil power. so the kids can read and do homework at night and things like that. so it is different. they need help. okay. climate scientists, rob jackson, thank you very much for your time. we appreciate it. thank you, jared, my pleasure. so let's take a look now at some of the use of new stories today is ralph has launched a new strikes against the his, the last stronghold of stopping by ruth. these riley issued evacuation warning saying was targeting the militant group, lebanon's health minis, ministry. he says he's riley strikes on the south of the country killed 5 medics
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belonging to his belie related rescue falls. german tech company bar says it will cut its automotive division workforce by as many as 5 and a half 1000 jobs. and the next several years is it flames? stock nice thing. global costs sales, excess capacity, and a slow transition to electric powered vehicles. in recent weeks, german trade unions of set top they protest against the expected costs. and australian teenager has become the 6 foreign tours to die of suspected method. all poisoning and allow the woman who felt ill in the town of young vang and rushed to a hospital in bangkok in neighbouring thailand, who just follows a string of all the tourist who died or believed to be connected to the like alcohol, backpacking and south east asia is the trip of a lifetime for many young rest and as he wants to see the road, that's a 19 year old australians, holly bells, and bank of jones. it was a trip that cut that lifetimes fall to short. they were among the spite of tourist
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in the allow town, a vine being, he fell sick from suspected poisoning by alcoholic gigs laced mess and all the 2 young women were evacuated to bangkok, hospital emergency treatment. but they could not be saved. of the news of that that's made headlines back home. whole. the problem is at this thoughts in this moment. we have family and friends who are grieving. i terrible and cruel loss. this is avery parents very was fee and then not made that no one should have to thank you all the strategies of the med type of sympathy in this time pop brac. tie, please said deluxe causes black alcohol. the source of which is still unclear. inside the likely cause of death is the consumption of medicine, know from fake liquor, its poison, and cannot be consumed. it causes swelling of the brain and depth. methanol
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is used in industrial and household applications like anti freeze paints and, and development. but it is sometimes added to drinks that disreputable boss is a cheap alternative to liquor. sometimes with sites all of this out, the town of vang via and then allows where the tourists felt ill. is it popular stuff off point on the sides, east, asia, back back. a child after louse opened stories and in the late 19 ninety's. bang the and quickly got into a reputation for a while taught to use drunken river tubing and narcotic debauchery are involved. the town has since tried to shed to this image, and rebranded itself as an eco torres tub. despite of towards death, has put vang beings policy culture back into the public eye. after a short break inside banquet, dishes climate specialist,
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the country deals with the rising sea levels and so the flooding is more on the w dot com and on social media on. jared. great, thanks. what's the name is the calls back said loud. thank you so much for joining. welcome to don't hold bad. a lot of people do that. it's all about saying it aloud. that's what it being nosy bay. like good. everyone to king, to check out the award winning called. com. so hold back. i got, i had experience a student from the interim government is now led by nobel peace prize winner. that's all, all the problems by far not countries excuse me, pool and.

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