wimbledon is back for another year. men s defending champ novak djokovic secured a win in the first round. he s going for a record 24th grand slam. and time now to leave you with ten seconds of panda cuteness. zin zin has been celebrating her 33rd birthday with a specially made apple cake at her home in a mexico city zoo. she is one of the six longest lived pandas in the entire world. and you re all caught up now. see ya later! this is bbc news. we ll have the headlines and all the main news stories for you at the top of the hour, as newsday continues straight after hardtalk. welcome to hardtalk with me, zeinab badawi. the german government has pledged to put fighting climate change at the heart of its agenda. it has just hosted world leaders to help lay the groundwork for international talks in november. but for many, the two week long gathering failed to make sufficient progress on climate finance and the pace of cuts in carbon pollution. my guest isjennifer morgan, germany
working on partnerships. we ve just done one with colombia where we say, ok, on eye level, what are you looking for? what kind of local value creation can we have in your country? what kind ofjob training? we re doing this with kenya, with president ruto, in order to provide those jobs, get the renewables moving, so you can become an expert in green hydrogen. yeah. and they want a clean future. they do. ..but they re saying, in the meantime, we cannot industrialise our countries without using the fossil fuels that we have discovered. i want to put to you this point, same point, by an international energy agency report last year. it said that africa s industrialisation, it says, relies in part on expanding its natural gas use. and even if it were to expand all the gas resources that have been discovered to date, it would only result in 0.5% increase in global carbon emissions.