good evening. on the eve of a crucial vote for the prime minister on his plan to send illegal migrants to rwanda various factions of conservative mps have been meeting and giving their opinions on whether the plan will work and by extension whether they are likely to vote for it. and in an indication of how divided the party is over the issue, the opinions vary widely. some have given it their backing as long as it doesn t change others say it has to change or be junked altogether. others say it has to change or be junked altogether. our political editor chris mason is in westminster. this plan is something that rishi sunak has made central to his premiership but he s struggling to get his party to back it. he really is. that s the reality tonight. there are few more awkward places for a prime minister to find themselves than one where they are transparently and very publicly at the mercy of their own mps. clumps of conservatives who have been meeting throughout the
and barbenheimmer is back barbie and oppenheimmer lead the nominations at the global globe awards. we re going to start with the cop28 climate summit in dubai. we are getting to the crucial part. the un climate body has published the latest draught of a deal it hopes to pass. what s not in it has caused anger. no commitment to phasing out fossilfuels. so let s take a look. the text includes a range of actions that could be taken by countries to reduce emissions. the word could not should. we will come back to that. this includes a promise to treble renewable energy capacity by 2030. however, it makes no direct reference to phasing out fossil fuel. that was something demanded by the un secretary general, antonio guterres, earlier on monday. take a listen. a central aspect, in my opinion, of the success of the cop will be for the cop to reach a consensus on the need to phase out fossil fuels in line with the tight framework that is in line with 1.5 degrees limit. that doesn t
lower income countries have been demanding some sort of compensation, some acknowledgement that they are the ones who will suffer the most, that there is this egregious justice. most, that there is this egregiousjustice. a most, that there is this egregious justice. a final this has been addressed. they insisted on it this year. it has finally been progressed. that is important. 0n the other hand, there is a central contradiction which is that, no matter what covenant is agreed to in egypt, during the conference, the world in order of magnitude behind of work should be in terms of taking truly progressive actions it will need in order to stay within the 1.5 degrees limit that they are nominally bound to. ~ . . ., that they are nominally bound to. ~ . ., ., , ., that they are nominally bound to. a ., ., to. michael, would you say there is to. michael, would you say there is also to. michael, would you say there is also needed - to. michael, would you say there is also needed for. th
who will suffer the most, that there is this egregious justice. finally, this has been addressed. they insisted on it this year. it has finally been progressed. that is important. 0n the other hand, there is a central contradiction which is that, no matter what covenant is agreed to in egypt, during the conference, the world is still, in order of magnitude, behind of work should be in terms of taking truly progressive actions it will need in order to stay within the 1.5 degrees limit that they are nominally bound to. michael, would you say there is also needed for cautious optimism because what we are hearing at the moment is there was not a forceful enough mention about cutting back fossil fuels? yes, that is been one of the toughest issues.
signed the paris climate agreement, which committed the world to keeping the rise in global temperatures well below 2c while pursuing efforts keep them under 1.5c. at cop26 in glasgow last november, governments re iterated their commitment to keeping 1.5c alive. alok sharma was the president of cop26. here he is speaking to the us about the met office s latest analysis. this is another stark warning of why we need to accelerate taking action on climate change. this is just another reminder of why we have reports from the ipcc, the international government on climate change last year, this year which is saying that actually if we don t take action in immediately over the next period of time then i m afraid were going to be in a position where were going to be in a position where we will breach the 1.5 degrees limit. ithink we will breach the 1.5 degrees limit. i think it s worth reflecting on what that means, the world came