the finance ministers will squeeze big global corporations, with a minimum tax rate of at least 15% applying around the world. the crisis means they've got no choice. but in the fine detail of these negotiations, there's still a question about who gets that bounty. that's why the chancellor has being cautious so far. will it go predominantly, hundreds of billions of dollars, to the coffers of president biden, from the us tech giants, or can they agree that notjust the profits, but the sales in, say, britain, from these global tech giants can be taxed by britain? talks over making it compulsory for major companies to report on their plans for cutting carbon emissions are also on a knife edge. as one minister put it, "if the west doesn't work together to set the rules for the 21st century, then china will". faisal islam, at the g7 meeting in london. a us government report on sightings of unidentified flying objects has found no evidence of alien activity , but, intriguingly, does not rule it out. the product of a us military task force established last year to investigate decades of unexplained aerial