amount of coal they burned but a commitment on oil and gas use remains elusive. at the same time a meeting is also due to take those between the biggest oil producers and their allies, collectively known as opec plus of which the host, uae is a member. against that backdrop i have been speaking to david schlossberg, director of the sydney environment institute to remain sceptical about the of this year s climate talks. i think there are two clear problems. the first is the capture of the process by the fossil fuel industry and the second is the process itself. that is just the way it works. it means that petro states or countries that would captured by the fossil fuel industry can object to language and undermine real and strong changes. on the power of the fossil fuel industry, for this meeting we may be disappointed. we have the head of an oil state company setting the agenda and to me, that isjust an illustration of capture. he says it will be good to have the fossil fuel
sunday, we are looking at their possibly some precipitation, rain, snow, i think it will be a little bit warmer than we re seeing right now but it s going to be right on that cusp. po essentialtentially a snow. not that side snow. i can t say that. bring back local warming. what happened to that? you talk about all this cold, it means there s hot somewhere. and temperatures across alaska where you think it should be really cold have been warmer than texas, warmer than new orleans, all week long. they re dipping down to temperatures around 40 degrees in anchorage. wow. it s weird. there s cold someplace, there s too much heat in another place. send the cold back to alaska. yes. speaking of weird, there are numbers you can t fully believe. this may explain why this has gotten so little coverage. you may have heard this week that 3 million people have signed up for obamacare. 3 million. well, that s obviously less than 1% of the american population but it s being touted