attention to the role nature can play in helping to tackle the climate crisis so it is late but at least they have started. you say that nature least they have started. you say that nature can least they have started. you say that nature can help least they have started. you say that nature can help solve - least they have started. you say that nature can help solve the l that nature can help solve the climate crisis. give us an example of how that works in practice. i will give you this thing to think about. please in the name, fossil fuels. every time we burn fossil fuels. every time we burn fossil fuels we are burning dead biodiversity that has been fossilised. to solve the climate crisis we have to stop burning fossil fuels but if we could put nature into recovery that will suck carbon out there again and actually help us reduce carbon over time in the air if we also stop burning fossilfuels and the air if we also stop burning fossil fuels and that is absolutely critical if w
you should expect. there will be a big police presence is a throughout this. that follows on from, as you the youth march yesterday led by greta thunberg you had very strong words about cop26 and what cop26 has achieved, calling it a failure and that passionate response to something we can etch expect to see more of. $5 something we can etch expect to see more of. , something we can etch expect to see more of. . , ., something we can etch expect to see more of. , ., ., more of. as we mentioned, the talks at cop26 today more of. as we mentioned, the talks at cop26 today are more of. as we mentioned, the talks at cop26 today are turning more of. as we mentioned, the talks at cop26 today are turning to - more of. as we mentioned, the talks at cop26 today are turning to the - at cop26 today are turning to the role nature can play and achieving target to tackle climate change. ben boulos is at willington wetlands in derbyshire for us today. that is another broadcast tying in with
in ten, 20 years so i am out here with my mum, gran, grandad. i don t believe it until i see any results and there is no law abiding commitments so we will have to see, i think it is all for sure. those marching here today on a wet and dark november afternoon will be hoping for positive news during the final week of talks but it is not too late to deliver the substantial change they want. lorna gordon, bbc news, glasgow. as talks at cop turn to the role nature can play in achieving those targets our correspondent ben boulos reports from willington wetlands in derbyshire. dark and blustery but still so tranquil here as dusk falls and it feels so far removed from cop26 and the summit 300 miles north from where we are.
talks at cop26 will turn to the role nature can play in achieving those targets. our presenter ben boulos is at willington wetlands in derbyshire for us today. dark and blustery but still so tranquil here and it feels so far removed from cop26 and the summit 300 miles north from where we are. but the point being made as you cannot solve the climate crisis without dealing with the crisis in nature and if we rule the natural ruin the natural world in climates like this but conversely if you support habitats the natural world will help us reach the natural change goals. let s bring in the wildlife trust, craig bennett was in
tonight s focus though needs to be on the families, - and on the lives that we lost, i many of them extremely young, tragically young. organisers said on social media, our hearts are with the astroworld festival family, especially those we lost and their loved ones. they say they are now supporting local officials to find out what went wrong. kathryn stanczyszyns, bbc news. back to one of our main stories now, and talks at cop will turn to the role nature can play in achieving those targets. our presenter ben boulos is at willington wetlands in derbyshire for us today. hello. hello. how peaceful, how tranquil, how calm this places as dusk falls, and it feels so far