a very warm welcome to the programme. austria has introduced a lockdown for two million people who are yet to receive two doses of the coronavirus vaccine. they ve been told to stay at home except for work and essential shopping. the country has one of the highest infection rates in europe, but new restrictions are being brought in or considered across much of the continent, amid rising infections. courtney bembridge has this report. there was a last minute rush at vaccination centres in upper austria, on the eve of new restrictions for those not yet protected. unvaccinated austrians were already barred from visiting restaurants, hairdressers and cinemas, but they re now told to stay home except for work and food shopping. it ll be policed using spot checks with hefty fines for those caught breaking the rules. austria has one of the lowest vaccination rates in western europe around 64% of the population is fully vaccinated, which leaves 2 million people yet to get two d
let s get down to business. a deal that doesn t go far enough that s the conclusion from some business leaders, who side with climate activists following the cop26 climate summit in glasgow. the watered down agreement to phase down the use of coal is seen as a landmark moment, though national governments were not moving aggressively enough. the head of the international chamber of commerce and the cbi both spoke to the financial times and said pressure needs to remain on global leaders to keep the 1.5 degrees celsius target in sight. a large number business leaders attended the glasgow summit. helen mountford is vice president of climate and economics at world resources institute. she was also there. helen, good to have you on the programme. since the deal emerged late saturday, there has been so much analysis. we have heard a lot about various people s disappointment. your reaction to the deal? to the deal? the deal is what it is, it is to the deal? the deal is what it