a bunch of low hanging fruit. so, like, solar power turned out to be really cheap really fast. electricals. but industrial policies, flying, there s all this stuff. her problems to solve differently. are we throwing the right amount of resources and brains at those hard problems? i mean, probably not yet. we are starting to make investments a lot of those areas, do a lot of our andy. the thing i would keep in mind is that in order to keep temperatures to 1.5 degrees, which is, i think, vanishing leon likely, maybe even not possible at this point. it means getting to zero emissions by 2050. staying below two degrees, which will be a lot worse but, you know, still a better outcome than three or four, staying below two degrees only requires us to get there by 2070 or 2080. there is a lot more that we can do in the next 50 or 60 years than we can imagine doing in the next 28 years. and so we need to be making those investments much more aggressively for sure. we can t just be doing the b
earthquakes are. so, what we mostly do is to check up on our electricals, the buildings. right now, there is no electricity right now. we experienced a lot of aftershocks, actually, last night, i slept and woke up with an aftershock and just this morning at four a:m., there was also a five magnitude aftershock that was really strong. so i guess we really need to check up so i guess we really need to check up on the engineering of our houses and all of that. and all of that. theodora, thank you so much for and all of that. theodora, thank you so much for talking and all of that. theodora, thank you so much for talking to and all of that. theodora, thank you so much for talking to us. and all of that. theodora, thank you so much for talking to us. i - and all of that. theodora, thank you so much for talking to us. i hope - so much for talking to us. i hope you continue to remain safe. firefighters have finally started to control the wildfires in california after nearly 3,700 peop
second flood. yes, and it is those experiences, - second flood. yes, and it is those experiences, i - second flood. yes, and it is i those experiences, i suppose, that prepares you for the next time this sort of thing happens but you get a sense, you ve talked about the damage and cost already, this time around how much is damage costing you? with all the hard work that we, the directors and membership and community put in, we are probably looking at 20, 30, $40,000 worth of damage this time around but again, we have no power so there is no electricity, you can t really get a good bearing on the actual total damage until we can get the services back in but it s too dangerous to restore power at the moment. what i was almost over my head so a lot of the electricals went under. but yes, time will tell, but i think this time around the damage result is going to be far less for us, but still, catastrophic.
the united nations has said over 2.3 million people have fled ukraine since the war began. many of those fleeing travel through neighbouring poland. our reporter danjohnson is at a train station in krakow, near the polish ukrainian border. this is krakow s main station. we are three hours here from the ukrainian border and we are two weeks into this crisis, to get a sense ofjust how prolonged it is and how far reaching it is, that it is notjust pressure along the border. loads of people here, it is really busy. some of them are picking up sim cards so that they can make calls on their phones. there are people charging their electricals to make sure that they have got power to last. and through here, you get a real sense of the voluntary effort. there is food being handed out, there are people getting provisions like toothbrushes, nappies, that sort of thing, and there are people camped here, essentially. some have been sleeping here in the station concourse while they try and find out