Rabu, 22 September 2021

COP26: Boris Johnson urges humankind to 'grow up' and 'come of age' at Glasgow climate change summit - Sky News

Boris Johnson is urging humankind to "grow up" and "come of age" at the COP26 climate change conference in Glasgow this year.

The prime minister, in an address to the United Nations General Assembly in New York, called on on world leaders to "recognise the scale of the challenge we face" on climate issues.

In a message for the world to "come together in a collective coming of age", Mr Johnson spelt out a need to limit a global rise in temperatures to 1.5 degrees.

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Daily Climate Show: M25 protesters could face jail

"The world - this precious blue sphere with its eggshell crust and wisp of an atmosphere - is not some indestructible toy, some bouncy plastic romper room against which we can hurl ourselves to our heart's content," the prime minister said.

"Daily, weekly, we are doing such irreversible damage that long before a million years are up, we will have made this beautiful planet effectively uninhabitable - not just for us but for many other species.

"And that is why the Glasgow COP26 summit is the turning point for humanity."

Mr Johnson described humanity as "collectively a youngster" in relation to the earth's history, telling the New York gathering: "The adolescence of humanity is coming to an end."

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And he focussed his climate change message on "coal, cars, cash and trees", as he praised China's President Xi Jinping for ending Beijing's international financing of coal but also called on the country to "go further and phase out the domestic use of coal as well".

Yet the prime minister denied that action on climate change was "a pretext for a wholesale assault on capitalism" and said the lesson of the COVID-19 pandemic is that "the way to fix the problem is through science and innovation".

"The breakthroughs and the investment that are made possible by capitalism and by free markets," he added.

"And it is through our Promethean faith in new green technology that we are cutting emissions in the UK."

kermit
Image: Kermit the Frog was wrong to suggest it's 'easy being green', Boris Johnson will say

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Mr Johnson told world leaders that TV character Kermit the Frog was "wrong" when he sang "It's Not Easy Bein' Green", adding: "We have the technology; we have the choice before us."

And, with little more than a month until COP26 begins, the prime minister said: "We are awesome in our power to change things and awesome in our power to save ourselves.

"In the next 40 days we must choose what kind of awesome we are going to be.

"I hope that COP26 will be a 16th birthday for humanity in which we choose to grow up, to recognise the scale of the challenge we face, to do what posterity demands we must.

"I invite you in November to celebrate what I hope will be a coming of age and to blow out the candles of a world on fire."

Watch the Daily Climate Show at 6.30pm Monday to Friday on Sky News, the Sky News website and app, on YouTube and Twitter.

The show investigates how global warming is changing our landscape and highlights solutions to the crisis.

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2021-09-23 00:56:15Z
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White House denies Joe Biden was 'upstaged' by Boris Johnson during meeting - The Independent

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2021-09-22 21:55:25Z
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UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson tells French President Emmanuel Macron to “get a grip” - BBC News - BBC News

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2021-09-22 18:57:53Z
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Killamarsh: Man in court charged with murdering three children and woman - BBC News

Jason Bennett with his children
Facebook

A man has appeared in court charged with the murders of three children and a woman in Derbyshire.

Terri Harris, 35, was found dead along with her children John Paul, 13, Lacey, 11, and friend Connie Gent, also 11, at a house in Killamarsh on Sunday.

Damien Bendall, of Chandos Crescent, has been charged with four counts of murder.

The 31-year-old appeared via video link at Southern Derbyshire Magistrates' Court on Wednesday morning.

He spoke only to confirm his name, address and date of birth and was remanded into custody.

He is due to appear at Derby Crown Court on Friday.

Terri Harris
Facebook

Derbyshire Police said they were called to the house in Chandos Crescent at 07:26 BST on Sunday after concerns were raised about the safety of those inside.

There they found the bodies of Ms Harris and the three children.

It is believed Connie, from Sheffield, was Lacey's friend and was visiting for a sleepover.

The deaths have shocked the community, and seen an outpouring of grief and tributes.

Damien Bendall
Supplied

Outwood Academy City, where the three children studied, said their memories would "live on forever".

In a statement, the Sheffield school said: "The children had bright futures ahead of them but sadly none of us will get to see this."

Jason Bennett, father of Lacey and John Paul, previously told Sky News: "I'm broken, I just want to kiss my babies.

"I just want to kiss them and hold them. TikTok Queen and my beautiful boy, they were beautiful."

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2021-09-22 11:20:56Z
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Injunction granted against protesters blocking M25, amid warning of prison sentence - Sky News

National Highways has been granted an injunction against protesters who have been blocking sections of the M25.

The injunction will come into effect later today and means anyone breaching the order could face a prison sentence, the transport secretary has said.

In a tweet, Grant Shapps wrote: "Invading a motorway is reckless & puts lives at risk.

"I asked National Highways to seek an injunction against M25 protestors which a judge granted last night. Effective later today, activists will face contempt of court with possible imprisonment if they flout."

Speaking to the Transport Committee on Wednesday morning, Mr Shapps said the police are "stepping up their action", adding that sometimes it is the "same protesters going back again a few days later".

"The powers don't allow for police to hold people for more than 24 hours, and that's creating problems".

He added it is "unacceptable" for protesters to block the road and that it is "bloody dangerous" as well as "counterproductive - it actually creates pollution, having traffic standing still".

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The demonstrators are calling on the government to insulate all of "Britain's 29 million leaky homes by 2030 and all social housing by 2025".

Spokesperson Liam Norton added: "The idea that people would suddenly decide insulating our leaky homes is a bad idea as a result of our campaign is frankly laughable.

mage courtesy of LBC showing police officers removing Insulate Britain activists from the M25 between junctions 9 and10 where the climate protesters carried out a further action after demonstrations which took place last week across junctions in Kent, Essex, Hertfordshire and Surrey. Picture date: Tuesday September 21, 2021.
Image: mage courtesy of LBC showing police officers removing Insulate Britain activists from the M25 between junctions 9 and10 where the climate protesters carried out a further action after demonstrations which took place last week across junctions in Kent

"We are simply asking the government to get on the job. The people of Britain understand that climate change is a severe threat to everything they hold dear."

Priti Patel said the "important injunction" would mean "people can get moving again" on the M25.

"We will not tolerate lives being put at risk," the home secretary said. "Those who continue to do so risk imprisonment."

Their comments come after Surrey Police arrested 38 protesters from environmental activist group Insulate Britain who targeted junctions 9 and 10 of Britain's busiest motorway before 8am on Tuesday.

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Police remove eco-protesters blocking M25

Footage circulating on social media showed the activists walking onto the motorway and sitting down on the ground in front of moving traffic.

Some then held up "Insulate Britain" banners and poured blue paint onto the road, before being dragged away by police.

Highways England workers on the exit slip road of the M25 motorway near Leatherhead after protestors blocked the road and left paint on it. Picture date: Friday September 17, 2021.
Image: Highways England workers on the exit slip road of the M25 near Leatherhead after protestors poured blue paint on it

In a column published in the Daily Mail today with Mr Shapps, Ms Patel said the Home Office is working with National Highways to take legal action against the Insulate Britain group in a bid to "ensure they cannot keep disrupting and endangering people's lives".

The pair condemned the tactics of the protesters and said police have their support to take "decisive action" against any future disruptive demonstrations.

They wrote: "(The protesters) have broken the law, undermined the cause they believe in, alienated the public, and created extra pollution, in one of the most self-defeating environmental protests this country has ever seen.

Protesters from Insulate Britain descended on the clockwise and anti-clockwise carriageway of the M25.
Image: Protesters from Insulate Britain descended on the clockwise and anti-clockwise carriageway of the M25

"We are giving (police) powers to better manage such guerrilla tactics in future.

"In the medium-term, the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill will put public nuisance on a statutory footing, ensuring there are appropriate sentences for the harm caused."

Police officers work to free protesters who had glued themselves to a slip road at Junction 4 of the A1(M), near Hatfield, where climate activists carried out a further action after demonstrations which took place last week across junctions in Kent, Essex, Hertfordshire and Surrey. Picture date: Monday September 20, 2021.
Image: Police officers work to free protesters who had glued themselves to a slip road at Junction 4 of the A1(M), near Hatfield

Insulate Britain confirmed it led the demonstration on Tuesday, saying more people had joined its campaign to improve home insulation in addition to the others who have been involved in protests in Hertfordshire, Kent, Essex and Surrey over the past fortnight.

The group added that the recent rise in gas and electricity costs has "increased the urgency" for change and vowed to end its campaign as soon as it hears a "meaningful commitment" to its demands.

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2021-09-22 08:26:15Z
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A couple of wins for Johnson, but no trade deal with the US is a major setback - Sky News

It's been four years since a British prime minister stepped into the White House and during that time the leading characters and the context in which they are meeting have changed greatly.

President Donald Trump and Theresa May replaced by President Joe Biden and Boris Johnson.

Brexit has happened; the "forever war" in Afghanistan is over; and the two incumbents in the White House and Downing Street have found common purpose on climate change.

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Is Biden's climate change pledge enough?

Hence the gift to President Biden from Boris Johnson, a signed copy of Tim Peake's Hello, Is This Planet Earth?.

In it an inscription: "I hope this book provides a reminder of what we're fighting to save as our countries tackle climate change together."

And for President Biden's part, he presented Mr Johnson with a framed picture of the pair at Cornwall's Carbis Bay, where he first spent time with his UK counterpart at the G7 and which he told the prime minister he really liked in their 90 minute bilateral meeting on Tuesday.

From No 10's perspective, I'm told the last seven days have delivered more than they hoped for: The UK has participated in a major security partnership with the US and Australia to develop nuclear power submarines, which one insider described to me as "a major milestone' in the strategic shift to the Indo-Pacific as outlined in Mr Johnson's major integrated review of the UK's security, defence, development and foreign policy.

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The PM has also finally secured a deal to allow double-jabbed Britons to travel to the US and seen President Biden commit billions more annually to the $100bn climate aid fund ahead of COP26.

"It gives us huge momentum into the next six weeks, not just the specific commitments from the US, but the way in which this will galvanise other countries, we are working on a shared agenda."

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Biden reveals concern over NI Protocol

But for all the accord, there is a big glaring gap in one key area - the signing of a free trade deal which Boris Johnson has championed as a big Brexit bonus.

President Trump had said Britain was "at the front of the queue" in 2017 but now it seems that the US has signalled to the UK not to even bother to wait in line.

When I pressed the prime minister on getting that post-Brexit deal done by 2024 - a full four years after Brexit - he refused to commit and now one senior source suggests the UK has all but given up on landing its own free trade agreement, considering instead whether to leapfrog into the trade deal between the US, Canada and Mexico or perhaps cut a series of smaller deals instead.

The prime minister has framed it as the US president having "other fish to fry" as he pushes through his big post-COVID infrastructure package through Congress. The PM stressed to me in our interview in New York that he wanted the right deal not a rushed deal.

But, there is a point of tension to all of this, a note of visceral discord and it centres around the post-Brexit arrangements for Northern Ireland.

When I asked this Irish-American president in the Oval Office whether concerns over the Northern Ireland Protocol - designed to protect the peace process in Northern Ireland - was holding back a trade deal, the warning to the man sitting by his side was clear; don't allow tensions over post-Brexit trade rules to destabilise the Irish peace process - something President Biden feels "very strongly" about.

"I would not all like to see, nor would many of my Republican colleagues like to see a change in the Irish Accords, the end result having a closed border again."

Brexit and the fall-out for Northern Ireland will be high on the agenda on Wednesday when the prime minister meets with Democrats on Capitol Hill.

For all the common ground between President Biden and Boris Johnson, Brexit and Northern Ireland are the flies in the ointment and until they're resolved its hard to see whether that trade deal will be taken back off the shelf.

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2021-09-22 01:54:50Z
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Killamarsh deaths: Man charged with murders of three children and woman - BBC News

Jason Bennett with his children
Facebook

A man has been charged with the murders of three children and a woman in Derbyshire.

Terri Harris, 35, was found dead along with her children John Paul, 13, Lacey, 11, and friend Connie Gent, also 11, at a house in Killamarsh on Sunday.

Damien Bendall, of Chandos Crescent, has been charged with four counts of murder.

The 31-year-old will appear at Southern Derbyshire Magistrates' Court later.

Derbyshire Police said they were called to the house in Chandos Crescent at 07:26 BST on Sunday after concerns were raised about the safety of those inside.

There they found the bodies of Ms Harris and the three children.

Terri Harris
Facebook

It is believed Connie, from Sheffield, was Lacey's friend and was visiting for a sleepover.

The deaths have shocked the community, and seen an outpouring of grief and tributes.

Floral tributes at Chandos Crescent
PA Media

Outwood Academy City, where the three children studied, said their memories would "live on forever".

In a statement, the Sheffield school said: "The children had bright futures ahead of them but sadly none of us will get to see this."

Jason Bennett, father of Lacey and John Paul, previously told Sky News: "I'm broken, I just want to kiss my babies.

"I just want to kiss them and hold them. TikTok Queen and my beautiful boy, they were beautiful."

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2021-09-22 07:09:51Z
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