good evening, everyone. great to have you with us. i m erica hill in tonight for alison camerata. welcome to cnn. tonight we have much more. on the biggest story of this night. the supreme court, of course, protecting access to a widely used abortion drug by freezing lower court rulings that restricted its usage. big victory for the biden administration. it is far from the end, though the ruling means the appeals process now will play out and it is almost guaranteed the case. will eventually land back before the justices. in the meantime, though, the fda approval of medford cristante stands as does current access plus turmoil in the nfl tonight, three players suspended indefinitely to others slapped with a six game ban. so what they do is the punishment fair. and it wouldn t be a friday night here without a news quiz. see, if you know more about what happened this week. they are distinguished panelists. here is my panel tonight. defense attorney mr maris. john avlon, our seni
have reacted with fury to a draft agreement due to be signed in the coming hours. it includes a range of actions countries could take to reduce emissions, but makes no direct reference to phasing out fossilfuels which had been in an earlier d raft. the eu is threatening to walk out, a representative of small island states says it would be like signing their death certificate. our climate editorjustin rowlatt has the latest. when the new draft was released, there was confusion. negotiators and journalists scrolled through the pages. the realisation slowly dawning that the agreement had changed. a landmark deal to get rid of the fossil fuel responsible for climate change had seemed within reach. now it appeared to be being snatched away. eamon ryan is one of the eu s lead climate negotiators. if the text doesn t change, will you walk away from the deal? this text will not be acceptable. would you walk away? if this doesn t change, it will not be accepted as a text. so what
we start this week with a little trip back to the classroom. everybody should be pulling up their presentation on one computer. today s lesson in miss gruetter s science class is something not every student in the us is taught. as the earth s oceans absorb heat due to climate change, sea water expands, leading to an increase in sea levels. how might those emissions from factories have an effect on climate? what are they actually releasing? this is an ap science class here at science park, and today the students have brought in their own group presentations. they re teaching each other about a climate change problem and solution. what s your presentation? our presentation is about the carbon emissions of extreme weather events. while these students study climate change, much of the nation could be learning from them. today s class is part of a unique programme preparing the next generation for our warming planet. this is science park high school in newark, newjersey, where
the cenotaph in london. thousands of veterans and army personnel as well as members of the publicjoined the rest of the uk in a two minute silence at 11am local time. it has just it hasjust gone it has just gone through 30 pm. good afternoon. now, human bbc news, future earth. ever since a certain swedish teenager skipped school for a climate protest, new waves of young people around the world have been making their voices heard on climate change. from school strikes to mass marches, the generation that will be inheriting our planet is calling for change and for a seat at the table. i m carl nasman and this is future earth. welcome to the new series shining a light on the simple, real world solutions we already have to help us solve the biggest challenge of our lifetimes. each week, we ll be taking you on a journey, from our forests to the oceans, examining where we live, how we travel, and what we eat. we ll show you some of the paths for tackling the climate crisis, meeting
thanks forjoining us. these reports coming out of gaza paint a grim picture of the humanitarian situation there. what more can you tell us about how hospitals in gaza are coping? well, with great difficulty. they are all pretty much surrounded in gaza city, because the israelis argue these are places where hamas fighters have based themselves, and consequently there have been intense battles going on around us hospitals. the israelis say they are not targeting hospitals per se, and they are trying to get the civilian populations that are clustered around them to try to leave, and also starting to think about evacuating the hospitals themselves, so that israel can concentrate on dealing with hamas. there is a small development on that front this evening. the israelis said tomorrow they are going to evacuate babies from the shifa hospital to a safer location. we do not know the details, we have not had confirmation from the palestinian side, it is very difficult to get through