there? absolutely. you can t see it, it is invisible. the there? absolutely. you can t see it, it is invisible. the egg there? absolutely. you can t see it, it is invisible. the egg quality - it is invisible. the egg quality leads to thousands of premature deaths, children having stunted lungs, asthma, cancer, dementia, it is invisible. that is why tackling the climate emergency and air pollution not only is important for our planet now but it leads to potentiallyjobs, wealth and prosperity. we have to look at it with optimism and hope. i prosperity. we have to look at it with optimism and hope.- prosperity. we have to look at it with optimism and hope. i want to talk about your with optimism and hope. i want to talk about your relationship - with optimism and hope. i want to talk about your relationship with i talk about your relationship with the city of london. 0ne talk about your relationship with the city of london. one thing that is emerging is the role of private finance i
we will have an agreement which will really change the world, and we will be able to do what we have to do for our people, and this will be a turning point in global cooperation because the last decades were going into the other direction, now we are going into the right one. the finance ministers will squeeze big global corporations, with a minimum tax rate of at least 15% applying around the world. the crisis means they ve got no choice. but in the fine detail of these negotiations, there s still a question about who gets that bounty. that s why the chancellor has being cautious so far. will it go predominantly, hundreds of billions of dollars, to the coffers of president biden, from the us tech giants, or can they agree that notjust the profits, but the sales in, say, britain, from these global tech giants can be taxed by britain? talks over making it compulsory for major companies to report on their plans for cutting carbon emissions are also on a knife edge. as one minister put it
the finance ministers will squeeze big global corporations, with a minimum tax rate of at least 15% applying around the world. the crisis means they ve got no choice. but in the fine detail of these negotiations, there s still a question about who gets that bounty. that s why the chancellor has being cautious so far. will it go predominantly, hundreds of billions of dollars, to the coffers of president biden, from the us tech giants, or can they agree that notjust the profits, but the sales in, say, britain, from these global tech giants can be taxed by britain? talks over making it compulsory for major companies to report on their plans for cutting carbon emissions are also on a knife edge. as one minister put it, if the west doesn t work together to set the rules for the 21st century, then china will . faisal islam, at the g7 meeting in london. a us government report
minister of ireland? i can understand the difficulty of ireland and some other european countries, but when there is such international impetus, this is in the interests of all 27 european member states to say, yes, we are on board and we are supporting this new international tax system . it is the us leading the charge on this, under president biden s treasury secretary, janet yellen a massive turnaround from the trump administration, and those in the room say this agreement will be historic. we will have an agreement which will really change the world, and we will be able to do what we have to do for our people, and this will be a turning point in global cooperation because the last decades were going into the other direction, now we are going into the right one. the finance ministers will squeeze big global corporations, with a minimum tax rate of at least 15% applying around the world. the crisis means they ve got no choice. but in the fine detail
the finance ministers will squeeze big global corporations, with a minimum tax rate of at least 15% applying around the world. the crisis means they ve got no choice. but in the fine detail of these negotiations, there s still a question about who gets that bounty. that s why the chancellor has being cautious so far. will it go predominantly, hundreds of billions of dollars, to the coffers of president biden, from the us tech giants, or can they agree that notjust the profits, but the sales in, say, britain, from these global tech giants can be taxed by britain? talks over making it compulsory for major companies to report on their plans for cutting carbon emissions are also on a knife edge. as one minister put it, if the west doesn t work together to set the rules for the 21st century, then china will . faisal islam, at the g7 meeting in london. a us government report on sightings of unidentified flying objects has found no evidence of alien activity , but, intriguingly, does not rul