thanks, tomasz. and that s bbc news at six on thursday 23rd march. you can keep up with all the latest developments on bbc website. hello and welcome to sportsday. i m lizzie greenwood hughes. here s quick look at what s coming up on tonight s show. back with a bang england get ready to kick off their euro 2024 qualifying campaign against italy in naples. the premier league s environmental credentials are under the spotlight, with the amount of plane travel questioned after a bbc investigation. and we re live at the hundred draugh where will cricket s stars be heading this year? we ll be looking at the new stance on transgender athletes. we are live at the hundred draught.
roads after numerous washouts and mudslides. new flooding concerns after a levee failed swamping farmland. many still can t go home. i can t be paying rent here and then a hotel $200 something a day. imagine a week. reporter: yosemite is set to reopen tomorrow. california s reservoirs are filling up. the dramatic turn around has ended years of draught for nearly half the state. and california is set to break its 40-year-old snow pack record which is a critical indicator of future water supplies. thank you. straight ahead, nasa debuts the new space suits destined for moon. the latest on busters. and later, why it is the end of the road for an iconic car
Just off an arid stretch of highway in western Arizona, a Saudi dairy company pumps unrestricted amounts of groundwater from underneath its fields, uses it to grow thousands of acres of alfalfa and ships the bales of hay overseas to feed cows more than 8,000 miles away. Arizona officials now want to stop them.
A family has gathered in a park. They're worried about one of their siblings, who has yet to arrive. But it's clear each of them has their own problems,…
duty to rise with inflation, as it normally does from august, but duty frozen on draft products in pubs. draught. full capital expensing introduced for three year, we will get simonjack to explain what that means and 400 million for levelling up means and 400 million for levelling up partnership, as you can see a raft of measures from the chancellor, new apprenticeships for over 505, a £100 million fund announced for charity, a new one hundred £1 million for artificial research and an extra £200 million for pothole funds next year. let us get initial thoughts, from editors before we talk to paul johnson, nick eardley. i suppose the most striking thing was at the beginning when the chancellor said that the uk will swerve, avoid what they call a technical recession, but