One of the reporters who broke the news. Good to see you. Tell us more about the deal. ~ good to see you. Tell us more about the deal. , ~ ,. ,. ,. , the deal. Thank you for having me. Basicall , the deal. Thank you for having me. Basically, artificial the deal. Thank you for having me. Basically, Artificial Intelligence basically, Artificial Intelligence was one of the big sticking points in all these negotiations. The writers were very reluctant to cai being used by the studios for fear of theirjobs, the studios felt like this is our script, we need to be able to train ai this is our script, we need to be able to train al to use them, and basically on that Committee Studios from our reporting will be able to do that , the studios. They could do that already, it was not a concession they were going to make. That said, writers will get credited for work even if ai is helping on that work. You have to credit a human being. It is a middle of sorts. There is still so much with al we dont
a recent poll of international climate scientists pointed to growing despair. are we humans bungling our chance to avert disaster? jim skea, welcome to hardtalk. thanks for the invite. it is great to have you in this studio. let s start with a blunt first question. is it time for the international community to junk this idea that there s any possibility of limiting worldwide temperature rise to below the 1.5 degrees celsius? when we produced our landmark report five years ago, we said it was possible within the laws of physics and chemistry, and the biggest obstacle to keeping within the limit was actually on the social and institutional side. we, i think, now need to move to the position, we have to look very hard at whether we will be pushing against technical and economic barriers in terms of limiting warming to1.5. it is not absolutely impossible, but the chances are diminishing. and, really, it s hanging on a thread at the moment. right. isn t that a tactful way of sayin
Midnight in london and seven Peerman Washington where President Trump has announced in the past few hours that he is pulling out the us of the paris Climate Change deal which united the world in efforts to stop global warming. He said united the world in efforts to stop globalwarming. He said he united the world in efforts to stop global warming. He said he wants to negotiate a new deal which is fairer to the american people. The white house rose garden, the most fragrant of settings for what environmentalists will see as toxic president ial decision. One that affects ecosystems all over the planet from Donald Trumps back lawn to the Mightiest Of Oceans and ice sheets. In order to fulfil my duty to protect america and its citizens, the United States will withdraw. From the paris climate accord. He slammed this global agreement, a legacy of barack obama, claiming it gave china and other countries an unfair competitive advantage and penalised american workers. From the first word to its
A bittersweet moment for those who witnessed the tragedy. Its going to help me get rid of all the fears i have now. Im really excited but im still a little bit worried to what is going to happen. And coming up in the sport on bbc news, can englands chase down the 306 target set by bangladesh in their first Champions Trophy Match at the oval . Good evening and welcome to the bbc news at six. The conservatives and labour have both turned their attention to brexit. With exactly a week to go before voters go to the polls, the parties have been underlining their different approaches to life outside the European Union. Labour Leaderjeremy Corbyn argued that the tory pledge to walk away from a bad deal would lead to a jobs meltdown. But theresa may said she saw a fairer and more prosperous britain. Our Political Editor Laura Kuenssberg looks at two competing visions of brexit. You can see who you can see who seems you can see who seems to be enjoying it more. But whoevers in charge next week,
Treated many of the young victims. What we saw was essentially war wounds. War wounds . Yes, so the kind of wounds you would see on a battlefield. And we look at the politics of zero hours contracts and the debate over workers rights. And coming up in sportsday on bbc news, englands Champions Trophy Ambitions take root, as they win their opening match against bangladesh by eight wickets with joe root scoring an unbeaten century. Good evening. President trump has announced that america is to withdraw from the paris climate agreement, the treaty signed by 200 countries just two years ago to reduce Greenhouse Gas emissions worldwide. He said hed taken the decision because of the the economic burdens imposed by the treaty. His predecessor, barack obama, Whose Administration signed the accord, said it was a decision to reject the future. Mr trump made the announcement despite several appeals from the United Nations to respect the future of the planet. Our correspondent nick bryant has more