Transcripts For BBCNEWS BBC 20240704

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but it could be good news for teams like england, as katie gornall explains. what this means for england potentially is that it opens up that side of the draw for them because they were on course to meet germany in either the quarterfinals or the semi finals if they got that far. and like it or not, for the players and the manager, this is now going to increase the expectations around this england team that they can go all the way in this tournament. of course, for the england camp, they are very much focused on the next game. they are taking it one game at a time. they won't want to look past nigeria. there has been so many shocks and upset in this tournament well, the round of tournament 16 gets underway tomorrow. so so far, england will be determined to avoid another one in brisbane on monday. maz farookhi looks ahead to the first day of knock out games. auckland is going to her spain against saints land. we are here in wellington where we have an eating beef between two former world champions in norway and japan. in terms of the build—up to this match, bath press conferences dominated really in a physical advantage that now we have. they use that to their advantage very much the in the 6—0 thrashing of the philippines in the last group game. they will have the height advantage overjapan tomorrow as well. leave a thing that has brought up a lot in the norway press conference was lots of questions asked to the head coach. it was about the fitness of their star player. she missed the last two group games for norway. is she going to be back? is she going to be fit to be back? is she going to be fit to start tomorrow? well, meanwhile fifa is investigating an official complaint that the zambia head coach bruce mwape sexually assaulted a player at the world cup. mwape is accused of rubbing his hands over the chest of one of his players during a training session in new zealand last month. in response, the football association of zambia says it hasn't received any complaints and that all the sessions were filmed. well, zambia are no longer in the tournament after being knocked out in the group stages. it's day two of the cycling world championships in scotland — the biggest ever multi—discipline cycling event. our correspondent nesta mcgregor is there for us in glasgow and nesta, it was a very strong start for hosts briton with 5 medals on the opening day, what can fans look forward to today? yes, five medals in total yesterday. two golds and one silver and two bronzes. maybe not the gold rush that they were hoping for. the pick of those gold medals had to be for william to double in the main�*s scratch race. with four laps to go, any chance of a medal looked unlikely. but he powered his way through the pack and then timed his sprint finish to perfection. william to double becoming the first male gb rider to win that event since 2012. a britain's of gold went to para cyclist in the women's be one kilometre train trial. lizziejordan pickford runs in the same event. he at the velodrome is where the track and para track events will be taking place. as you mentioned, many models up place. as you mentioned, many models up for grabs today and britain are guaranteed a couple in the sea one 500 metre five trial. also, in the sea to individual pursuit, daphne xue goa is in the gold medal race. so a silver is the least she can expect. 0ne so a silver is the least she can expect. one of the most popular events here is the main�*s team sprint. qualifying is this afternoon and the final four that is tonight. great britain will be hoping for a medal. a strong team led byjack carling. australia are the current world champions, but britain will be looking to upgrade from that brand is that they won in france a year ago. is that they won in france a year auo. . ~' is that they won in france a year auo. . ~ , ., is that they won in france a year auo. . ~ ,, ., is that they won in france a year auo. . ~ i. ., ., is that they won in france a year auo. . ~ ., ., a is that they won in france a year auo. . ~ ., ., u. ago. thank you for that. as always, there is much _ ago. thank you for that. as always, there is much more _ ago. thank you for that. as always, there is much more on _ ago. thank you for that. as always, there is much more on our- ago. thank you for that. as always, | there is much more on our website. of course, the bbc sport app as of course, the bbc sport app as well. for me and the team here, that is all of the sport now. hello there and welcome back. households in the uk could be given compensation payments if new, large electricity pylons are installed near their homes — under proposals to speed up the switch to greener energy. the plans are part of a government commissioned review looking at ways to halve the 12—14 years it currently takes to install new power lines. 0ur political correspondent ione wells has more. they've been dubbed the motorways of power. power lines like this transport electricity from where it is made to where it is used. but the grid that connects them is very congested. the government and labour have pledged to ramp up offshore wind and other forms of renewable energy which needs to get onto land. more electric transport and heating systems are pushing up demand for electricity too. the government commissioned an independent report to work out how to halve the time it takes to build new power lines. energy expert nick winser, who wrote the report, said the planning permission process for them should be streamlined and that households near new large pylons should get payments. he says this is necessary to halve the time it takes to build new pylons. it's becoming very, very urgent. we've been fantastically successful at building offshore wind in particular and solar as well. ministers have not yet said if they will commit to all his recommendations. the bbc has been told they have been well received in government, but building new lines could cause tensions with some conservative mps and campaigners who have rallied against planned pylons in their areas. i will have a pylon situated about a50 metres from my front door, so that will be obviously visually intrusive. it's probably going to have an effect on property values here. there are close neighbours who run businesses, bed and breakfast, things like that, who will also have adverse effects from the pylons being close by. 0ur campaign is no to the pylons, but it also has a positive aspect. we're saying yes to an integrated offshore grid which will give a cleaner, quicker and cheaper and easier solution. the report argues paying people to live near overhead lines would still be cheaper than building them underground and would have a lower environmental impact. supporters say there may be trade—offs needed between green energy and green spaces, arguing if the proposals aren't adopted, clean energy will be wasted and bills could stay higherfor longer. the energy secretary is due to confirm in the autumn what recommendations they may adopt. until then, where they go, who benefits and how many are built is a political debate that continues to grow. ione wells, bbc news. retailers are trying to tackle a surge in cases of shoplifting as staff say they have concerns about safety as they face more violence and abuse. the welsh retail consortium is now calling for greater support from police. the home office says policing has received record investment and it expects forces to take the issue seriously. jordan davies has this report. this person is stealing from thejohn lewis store in cardiff. it's brazen. they're filling a black bag full of goods. but they've been caught by security. they were convicted. and there's been a lot more of this across wales in the last year. adrian works in the retail giant's security team. he's just dealt with an incident. ijust had an incident with a female and unfortunately the female escalated the situation and it required one of my team to intervene and escort the lady from the shop having explained to her what our policies are. how often does that happen? fairly often. more often than you would like. i would like to say daily, but we're probably not far off a daily occurrence. wales's largest retail centre cardiff saw more than 30% rise in violence and abuse towards staff from 2021 to 2022 and a nearly 70% rise in shoplifting, with one industry body saying there were more than a million thefts from shops reported last year. shops likejohn lewis are using these body worn cameras to stop people stealing from their stores and abusing their staff. but they say they've seen a huge rise across wales, across the uk in these kinds of incidents. alcohol, perfumes, cosmetics are among the most targeted items. prolific repeat offenders, organised crime and gangs and the cost of living have been cited as reasons. this is the kind of thing retail staff have to put up with. you stupid little bleep. all right. i'm going to ask you to take your stuff out of the bag and leave. retailers say people are less tolerant and patient in general after the pandemic. some shops are now training staff to predict when a situation may become violent, known as de—escalation training. so we're investing across the board in a suite of solutions, whether that be investing in our cctv, we have now rolled out body worn cameras to every single shop, both across waitrose and john lewis. we're investing heavily in training not just for our security teams, but for partners across the board. so they're able to, should they want to, take part in some de—escalation training so they'd be able to handle an incident should it arise. the losses are costing shops £1 billion a year across the uk, which may be passed on to us, the customer. sara represents retailers in wales and says she's writing to the south wales police and crime commissioner to ask for more help. we're asking for more resources. we understand the challenges that the police face and we're also asking the home office to look at some of the legislation that's in place, like the police crime, sentencing and courts act. we want that to be bolstered and better reporting around the data in that which will hopefully help our retailers in the long run. these are not victimless crimes. it affects retail staff and consumers. there's concern if it's not tackled now, it'll only get worse. live from london — this is bbc news. the temperature of the world's oceans reaches a record high, prompting new warnings about the dangers of climate change. donald trump claims he's the victim of political persecution — after his latest court appearance. and new plans are unveiled to expand the use of the private sector in tackling the health service backlog in england. hello, i'm maryam moshiri. welcome to bbc news now — three hours of fast—moving news, interviews and reaction. a very warm welcome. we start with new, dire warnings about global climate change. scientists say the average surface temperature of the world's oceans has hit a record high. it rose to 20.96 celsius — that's nearly 70 degrees fahrenheit — in august. that's far above the average for this time of year. the european union climate change service has warned the upward trend in temperatures has been caused largely by global warming. researchers say there may be serious consequences for biodiversity. 0ur climate editorjustin rowlatt has more details. they've been taking measurements of ocean temperatures here in plymouth for more than a century. and for the last 50 or so years, they've showed a slow but steady increase, up about a third of a degree a decade. have we got a reading for today yet, do you know? i heard them say something around 18 or 19, which is four degrees higher than it should be. it's been a similar pattern globally. rising sea temperatures and increasing numbers of marine heatwaves.

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