We go through monday and tuesday, but here it is. This High Pressure is set to build through the middle part of the week. We havent had High Pressure with us for quite some time, and that should allow a bit more in the way of dry settled and some sunshine to look forward to. Thanks. And thats bbc news at ten. As new figures emerge about the temperature of the oceans, and whether this countrys infrastructure is up to it, well pull apart our Climate Targets and how we might meet them. The chair of the worlds top body on the science the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is with us in the studio. Why afghan migrants trying to find homes in this country find themselves caught between a rock and a hard place. Were joined by an afghan refugee facing homelessness in southend and the chair of the local government association. Things have changed. And as disney phases out dvds in australia, are Physical Media doomed as people switch to streaming, or do Vinyl Records show us the dangers o
welcome to newsnight and thank you forjoining us. is thisjust welcome to newsnight and thank you forjoining us. is this just an inevitable thing? like the transition from other forms of old style media to new ones, people will gravitate toward streaming, won t they? i will gravitate toward streaming, won t they? will gravitate toward streaming, won t the ? ~ . ., ., , won t they? i think that has already ha ened. won t they? i think that has already happened- it won t they? i think that has already happened. it was won t they? i think that has already happened. it was about won t they? i think that has already happened. it was about five - won t they? i think that has already happened. it was about five or - won t they? i think that has already happened. it was about five or six l happened. it was about five or six years ago, i wanted to take it with dvd to my goddaughter and her mother said we don t have a dvd player, looking at me like i was slightly insane. i think the revolu
rise meant lower risk, activists could use that to try and press them into action. but while 1.5 stuck in people s minds, the science doesn t come with hard limits. it works on probability and risk. you can see that here, risks become higher, or darker, as temperature rises increase, but it s a continuum. 1.6 is more risky than 1.5, less risky than 1.7. every fraction of a degree makes a difference to the chance of negative events. this week, the new chair of the ipcc, jim skea, told german newspapers, the world won t end at 1.5 degrees warming. in doing so, he wasn t saying anything unscientific. he added a 1.5 degree world would be more dangerous, and every action taken to mitigate risks would help. but the comments were interpreted by some as a blunt message for environmental campaigners, by others as underplaying the risks to vulnerable communities. attempts to hit the global 1.5 target are a delicate balance. as our efforts to communicate the climate. let s talk now tojim skea,
most brutal regime on the face of the earth. go back to 1989. the british ambassador sent a secret cable saying at a minimum, 10,000 people massacred. they bayonetted students as they begged for their lives. he said they sent armored personnel carriers in to crush the protesters and run over them until they were pulverized. this is one of the most brutal regimes in the history of man kind. the difference now, there s no images of what happened of what the british ambassador spoke of. today there s millions of cell phone cameras. they re filming it live. if they try to do something like that again, it will be caught on film and they won t the world won t be able to ignore it. the regime is on a precipice right now. if these protests arise and they crackdown the way they did in tiananmen square, it will cost