former adviser to george w bush. welcome to the programme. rishi sunak has ordered an inquiry into the tax affairs of nadhim zahawi, the man he appointed as chair of the conservative party. the ethics adviser sir laurie magnus, a former investment banker, has been asked to get to the bottom of everything , following reports mr zahawi was forced to pay a fine and millions of pounds in unpaid taxes to hmrc. it is quite the turn around. on wednesday the prime minister told the commons there was nothing further to investigate. mr speaker, my honourable friend has already addressed this matter in full, and there is nothing more i can add. but there are plenty of questions that remain unanswered. number 10 says, it was only this weekend the prime minister became aware of penalties mr zahawi had paid to the tax office, while serving as chancellor. in that role, mr zahawi was nominally, overseeing the work of the tax office. a complicating factor. integrity and accountability is rea
the hydrogen is stored in tanks underneath the carriages along with the hydrogen fuel cell which converts the hydrogen back to electricity which powers the train. all that is emitted is steam and water. the hydrogen needed to power the train is made on site. electricity from renewable sources is used to split water, creating hydrogen. that is then compressed, compressed again, and then stored ready for refuelling the train. but if most of the uk rail network is electrified, what part will hydrogen play? some commentators say that hydrogen is actually a distraction and what we should be focusing on is fully electrifying our railway lines. if you have a route where you cannot do overhead electrification and the route is too long or there is not time to charge, then the hydrogen train fills that gap. you can get a range approaching diesel, you can refuel quickly and you can transport hydrogen multiple ways. so the hydrogen train fulfils some operational requirements you cannot m
in the 1970s as one of the creative forces behind the punk rock scene. you are watching bbc news. now on bbc news, click. rock version of: the twelve days of christmas. well, ho, ho, ho! and merry clickmas! it s the first one from our new glasgow base. so we are here in the middle of pacific quay, in the studio. yeah. yoo hoo. good, innit? and we ve got all the latest tech decks. ..low carbon log fire. ..cgi baubles. ..and sustainable signage. now, this is our last show of 2022, and i think we can all agree it s been a year, hasn t it? it s been a year. here we go. so he s doing the launch sequence now. seven, six. ..four, three, two, one. i started it with the maddest idea i ve heard of in ages launching satellites into space by throwing them into orbit. right. eating on camera is always very messy. i had some cocoa free chocolate. but is that still chocolate? it s really good. lovely. i beg your pardon? you had help- from the likes of me. the trimmer, younger looking, vir
iran has been widely condemned after executing two more anti government protesters. mohammad mahdi karami and seyed mohammad hosseini had appealed against their sentences for killing a member of the security forces, saying they had been tortured into making false confessions. military helicopters in western australia airlift more than 200 people cut off by devastating floods. the state s emergency services minister describes the damage as a once in a century event. prince harry reveals that he felt guilty for being unable to show any emotion in public after the death of his mother, princess diana. in an interview due to be aired later, the duke of sussex says he only cried once and describes meeting mourners whose hands were wet with tears. you re watching bbc news. now it s time for click. as cop27 winds up in egypt, this week we ll look at some of the latest tech that is trying to clean up our planet. we ll muster up a mass of moss that s mopping up the mess in the air. tha