Global News Podcast - Climate boost as China's CO2 emissions fall

Episode Date: February 12, 2026

China may still be the world's largest emitter of carbon dioxide, but CO2 levels have been falling due to a push for clean energy. New data suggests 2025 was the first full year to show a decline. The... reported drop in emissions is estimated to be around 0.3%, but campaigners say it could represent a milestone. Also: The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has banned Vladyslav Heraskevych for continuing to wear a helmet featuring images of athletes killed during Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Heraskevych, a skeleton pilot, posted "This is the price of our dignity" on social media after being banned. Russia says it is blocking the messaging service Whatsapp. The BBC speaks to Juliette Bryant - a former model from South Africa who was groomed and abused by Jeffrey Epstein. Why spy agencies think North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is handing power over to his teenage daughter. Dozens of people have died in Madagascar, after a tropical cyclone hit the island nation... and we look at the life of Dawson's Creek actor James Van Der Beek, who's died aged 48.The Global News Podcast brings you the breaking news you need to hear, as it happens. Listen for the latest headlines and current affairs from around the world. Politics, economics, climate, business, technology, health – we cover it all with expert analysis and insight. Get the news that matters, delivered twice a day on weekdays and daily at weekends, plus special bonus episodes reacting to urgent breaking stories. Follow or subscribe now and never miss a moment. Get in touch: globalpodcast@bbc.co.uk

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This BBC podcast is supported by ads outside the UK. If there was a big rent button that would just demolish the internet, I would smash that button with my forehead. From the BBC, this is the interface, the show that explores how tech is rewiring your week and your world. This isn't about quarterly earnings or about tech reviews. It's about what technology is actually doing to your work, your politics, your everyday life. and all the bizarre ways people are using the internet.
Starting point is 00:00:33 Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts. This is the Global News Podcast from the BBC World Service. I'm Charlotte Gallagher and at 16 hours GMT on Thursday, the 12th of February, these are our main stories. China's annual carbon emissions have fallen for the first time, raising hope they may have peaked. And a Ukrainian skeleton Bob Racer is disqualified from the Winter Olympics for planning to compete wearing a helmet depicting athletes killed by Russia.
Starting point is 00:01:10 Also in this podcast, a woman abused by Jeffrey Epstein calls on the British royal family to do more. They can contact me and the other victims they can contact. The thing is, I just hope they're not just saying this. I would like to see them actually taking action. And has the North Korean leader Kim Jong-un chosen his team. teenage daughter as his heir. China may still be the world's largest emitter of carbon dioxide, but levels have been falling due to a push for clean energy. And now new data says 2025 was the first full year to show a
Starting point is 00:01:48 decline. The reported drop in emissions is small, but campaigners say it could be a milestone. Our climate editor, Justin Rowlett, spoke to Oliver Conway about the figures. The first year ever, China emissions have actually fallen back. I've fallen back by 0.3%. Now, that really, really doesn't sound much. But what we're seeing it is against a background of level of falling emissions for almost two years now, for 21 months. In fact, they sort of peaked in kind of spring of 2024 and then have fallen back a bit more significantly since then. So what people are saying here is, look, it's couched around with caveats, but it appears we might be seeing the beginning of certainly peaking of emissions in China and possibly even the beginning of a decline. in emissions in China. Set that in context, China is far and away the world's biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, notably coming outside, the biggest greenhouse gas. I mean, overwhelmingly,
Starting point is 00:02:43 a third of all emissions come from China. So what happens in China, literally in this case, could change the weather for the rest of the world. Yeah, you mentioned caveats. There is a margin of error on some of this. But take us through which sectors have contributed to it. So what we're seeing is a fall in emissions in transport, power, cement, so huge sectors of the Chinese economy, balanced against that, we're seeing an increase in emissions from the chemical industry. But overall, the net is a slight decrease. So that gives you a sense, I think, of how finely balanced this is. You know, most sectors in slow decline, one sector increasing quite significantly. So, you know, if one of those other
Starting point is 00:03:26 sectors changed direction, if, for example, there was a bit of a building boom in China, started using a lot more cement because the use of cement has fallen back, you might see emissions push upwards again. So we're not saying, you know, definitively, China's reached the peak and it's going to decline. We're saying, oh, this looks like an interesting moment with the Chinese economy. It looks like an interesting moment for world emissions.
Starting point is 00:03:47 Kind of let's see what happens. Yeah, because it has a goal of reaching peak emissions by 2030. I was going to ask you if this progress could be reversed. Do you suggest yes? But is China broadly on track? Broadly on track in terms of peaking, in terms of carbon efficiency, how much carbon dioxide is emitted per unit of production, it's actually way behind its ambitions and is struggling to meet the target set in its 14th five-year plan. And then we're expecting it to struggle to meet the 15th five-year plan, having missed a 14th five-year plan.
Starting point is 00:04:18 So it's behind on one measure. But in terms of total emissions, we're seeing this leveling potential peak, maybe even the beginning of a fall. So basically on the key measures, you know, that should concern us. sitting back in the world looking at what's happening, yeah, this is, this appears to be possibly a significant moment. So beginning to maybe go in the right direction, what is behind China's push towards clean energy? China, a long time ago, 20 years ago or so, recognized a few things, one of which was that climate change was a really serious threat for China, that China's very water insecure, very big shortage of water, climate change was going to affect his agriculture,
Starting point is 00:04:57 you know, everything in China. It was vulnerable to climate change. It was vulnerable to climate. climate change, they needed to do something about that. China wanted to pioneer new industries, and it saw an opportunity in this kind of nascent, this emerging, clean technology industries. So, for example, solar power, China sent out graduates to places in the developed world that were pioneering solar power and then brought the technology, brought their knowledge back and set up in the early 2000s new companies to build solar panels. China has an amazing expertise at efficient manufacturing. And it brought that to bear on this challenge of producing clean technology and has delivered unbelievable results. And for more on this story, you can go on
Starting point is 00:05:38 YouTube, search for BBC News, click on the logo, then choose podcasts and global news podcast. There's a new story available every weekday. The Ukrainian skeleton racer banned from competing in the Winter Olympics has said he still doesn't understand which rule he violated. The IOC, says it withdrew Vladislav's Hariskevich's accreditation because he intended to wear a helmet featuring athletes killed in Russia's war on his country. Our reporter Sarah Mulcahrens told us more. It's been ongoing since Monday here in Italy when on this first, this initial training, run the Ukrainian skeleton and athlete wore the helmet. It features images of athletes killed during Russia's invasion of his home country. The IOC have been in conversation with Herzegovic and his
Starting point is 00:06:26 Father McIllo since then about reaching a compromise to allow him to race because the IOC says the helmet breaks its rules regarding political statements in the field of competition. He was told he couldn't wear it but he could wear a black arm and instead. However, the
Starting point is 00:06:42 athlete did not agree with this, insisting that his tribute is no different to those that some other athletes have displayed during these games such as figure skater Maxime Nomov. He held up a photo of his parents who were among 67 people killed in a plane crash in Washington, D.C., just over a year ago,
Starting point is 00:06:59 and he held that up while waiting for a score to be announced earlier this week. Now, this morning, the IOC president, Kirstie Coventry, met Erascovic, for more conversations with the athlete just prior to his event, but no agreement could be reached, and so the skeleton racer was banned. He could not compete. Responding to this on social media, he wrote that this is the price of our dignity, and he also spoke to the BBC about the situation. Emptiness, and yesterday was amazing training.
Starting point is 00:07:30 Before yesterday was also very good training. I could be among the medalists in this event, but suddenly because of some interpretation of the rules, which I'm not agree with, I'm not able to compete, while other athletes in the same situation were able to compete, and they didn't face any sanctions. Vladislav Horeskovich, ending that report from Sarah Mulcahans. The messaging service WhatsApp,
Starting point is 00:07:53 app is very popular in Russia. The company says it has more than 100 million users there, but the Russian authorities have confirmed today that they're blocking it. Critics say the move is aimed at pushing its users onto a state-owned app, which is seen as less secure. Olga Ifshina from BBC Russian has been telling us what the Kremlin says are the reasons for its decision. As always, you know, they say that the companies are not following their regulations,
Starting point is 00:08:20 not cooperating enough with the Russian authorities, honest, WhatsApp has been significantly slowed down for several weeks now. And actually, people were quickly migrating to other messengers, which in turn have been slowed down or blocked as well. So is there a reluctance from a lot of Russians to join this state-backed platform? They want to use other ones that they see as more independent. Yeah. So exactly, as you mentioned, you know, it seems that all this big trouble started after the Kremlin has introduced its approved messenger called Max and they are strongly, strongly, strongly encouraging everyone to join. Also using, so to say, administrative resource. So many like school chats, kindergarten chants
Starting point is 00:09:01 where teachers informed parents about certain things have been moved to Max. So people still have to join. On the other hand, people are very much reluctant because there were a lot of independent reviews about Max and a lot of IT specialists raised significant concerns about, you know, data breaches and it's unclear how much authorities can see. see and sink through that messenger. So yeah, Russians are trying to use alternative messages, but they're being slowdown or blocks. So the biggest news of yesterday for the Russian speakers, for people inside Russia, was the fact that Telegram, another very popular messenger where many people moved after WhatsApp was slowed down. Telegram, it was significantly slowed down
Starting point is 00:09:40 yesterday. And some experts believe that that's all part of the big strategy of the Kremlin. And is there a feeling that since the start of the Ukraine war, people's internet use Russia is being more surveilled? Yes, definitely, you know, since the start of the invasion, Kremlin has introduced draconian laws, restricting sort of freedom of speech, freedom of expression, and also introducing de facto censorship in the media. That's why people migrated to other platforms, including Telegram, where a lot of independent journalists or bloggers were posting the news.
Starting point is 00:10:14 So people trying to diversify their access to information, but they're meeting significant pressure from the Kremlin. Olga Ivshina from BBC Russian. The actions and the friends of the paedophile Jeffrey Epstein continue to make headlines around the world. We've also been hearing from one of his many victims. Juliet Bryant, who's a former model from South Africa, was groomed and abused by Epstein from 2002 to 2004.
Starting point is 00:10:41 She says if the British royal family are concerned for his victims, they should take action by helping to search the emails of Andrew Mountbatten, Windsor, who lost his royal titles over his relationship with Epstein. She's been speaking to the BBC's My Annie Jones. Yeah, that was the model apartment they had. Although it's been over 20 years since she was abused by Geoffrey Epstein, Juliet Bryant still remembers that period vividly. And the recent release of some 3 million files relating to the convicted pedophile
Starting point is 00:11:11 has thrust her into the limelight once more. I feel, I suppose, vindicated in one way, but in other ways I feel dis shattered, because I was almost hoping that it wasn't going to all be true. And also the deeper, you know, it's even darker than what I realized, which has been very, very hard to deal with emotionally. She's also critical of the royal family's response to the crisis, which has led to Andrew Malbatten-Winzer losing his title.
Starting point is 00:11:39 He's denied any wrongdoing. Well, I think it's great that they've made a statement finally, but the thing is, are they going to actually act on it? I'm willing to speak to them any time, you know, any way I can have. help so they can contact me and the other victims they can contact the thing is i just hope they're not just saying this i would like to see them actually taking action giline maxwell is a character that was central to geoffrey upstein's operation she recently made a deposition in the u.s where she pleaded the fifth what was your reaction when you saw that i think it's just ridiculous you know
Starting point is 00:12:11 after they say that she's going to be giving a testimony and everyone's waiting it's much like when they said they were going to release the files before and then they give the testimony and it's just like they may as well have not even done it. Because if someone's going to plead the fifth, why are they even going to bother? Because everyone was waiting for the information. And so I just think they've wasted a lot of people's time. And I think it's really about time that she started speaking out, you know, for her own, you know, personal benefit.
Starting point is 00:12:34 Because I think anyone who was involved in this will be going to hell. Juliet was just 20 years old when she met Jeffrey Epstein and says she was abused by him from 2002 to 2004. She says she kept going back to him because she feared for her life. He was a mastermind criminal. It was, you know, he was highly manipulative. And for a 20-year-old meeting someone who was, he was 49 at the time, you know, I wasn't able to, you know, deal with the situation as many of the other young girls weren't. You know, it was also a lot of girls created a sort of Stockholm syndrome where they believed that he, like, cared about them and was going to help. It was like being like a scared mouse around a snake, being around him. And, you know, he had a way of manipulating people. And he also made me feel like it was my fault. victims will come forward and that those mentioned in the files will testify before the US authorities. King Charles has expressed concern over the allegations against his brother and says his thoughts remain with the victims. Mione Jones reporting from South Africa.
Starting point is 00:13:34 Still to come in this podcast, we remember the life and career of Dawson's Creek star James van der Beek. He took this character that was not, you know, a jock, was not the cool kid in high school and made him lovable. and that was not afraid to be emotional. North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has never officially confirmed how many children he has. But since 2022, a young daughter has been seen attending public events like banquets and missile launches. Now South Korea's intelligence agency says that daughter, believed to be 13 or 14 years old, has been selected as his heir and is in the process of becoming the country's next leader. Our correspondent in Seoul, Jake Kwon, told me more.
Starting point is 00:14:25 She is the only known child of North Korea's leader Kim Jong-un, and she is probably one of the most privileged teenager in the world right now. Anytime we see her on television, she's wearing her hair long, which is usually forbidden for school age young women in North Korea. She's wearing designer clothes, which is out of reach for most North Korean people. And she is on the line to inherit this country that is really dedicated, entirely dedicated for the well-being of just one person at the top. And now what we're hearing from South Korea's spy agency
Starting point is 00:14:57 is that she was seemed to be, she was grooming to be a next heir, but now she seems to be internally decided to become the heir and inherit North Korea from her father. Now, her father is only around in his early 40s, likely 42, but it has been a big mystery and a lot of a matter of space, who is going to take over North Korea when he passes. Now, this question of who is going to inherit, of course, is something that the spy agency has been talking about for the past years,
Starting point is 00:15:32 and now we're getting even more definitive answer on what their latest belief is. But this also raises a lot more question. One question is, of course, why now? When Kim Jong-un was selected as the heir, this was just before his father, Kim Jong-il, was going to pass. So it really seems a lot early. And also, it also leaves us ask the question of, what about Kim Jong-un's other children? We understand he also has a son who hasn't been seen on television.
Starting point is 00:15:59 So what is going to happen to this older, elder son who is, you know, widely speculated to be the next heir in a country like North Korea where male heirs are more valued than a female, a daughter? So just like a lot of things in North Korea, when one question is answered, a lot more questions. start popping up. Jake Juan, reporting from Seoul. In Madagascar, more than 35 people have died after a tropical cyclone with winds of 250 kilometres per hour hit the island nation. The country's president has visited the country's second biggest city, Tomassin, also known as Tamatavi, and said 75% of its infrastructure has been destroyed. One of those affected is Denise, whose family home was damaged in the storm. Tamatavi is almost destroyed by the cyclone, and we had almost six hours of strong winds and heavy rain.
Starting point is 00:16:59 I was with my family in the house. The house, I can't say it's a strong house, but the house were trembling, like trembling, really, really trembling. And the windows, bricks and a lot of water, a lot of water in the house. Almost the house are destroyed, the university, the school, the hospital, everything. Our correspondent, Richard Kugoy, gave us this update from Nairobi. The city, Tomasin, which you just mentioned, a city of about 400,000 people, has been devastated. Roads have been cut off. If you look even at people's homes, they're not habitable.
Starting point is 00:17:39 The roofs are blown off. You know, the port, which is the main core activity of the area, has been, you know, quite destroyed. as a result of this. We also hearing that villages, which were literally on the path of the cyclone, have also been devastated. The only thing is that the authorities have not been able to carry out a full assessment just to paint a picture in terms of the scale, in terms of human loss, and also the devastation that was caused to, you know, residents and, you know, institutions around there. And how are the authorities responding and getting help into the area? It's really difficult because at the moment the national response,
Starting point is 00:18:17 sponsor has just been focused on the town of Tamasina. They are just using whatever they can, you know, at their disposal with rescue and emergency services that just been mobilized around the city, trying to reach as many people as they can. The only challenge is that roads have been destroyed, you know, major, major roads. So access is actually very difficult. And even for those that have been affected, even getting relief supplies to them, food, water, and medicine has really been quite difficult. So that's why actually the president appeal for international support just to help them with visa process.
Starting point is 00:18:54 Richard Kagoy. Now, we're going to talk about all things AI, artificial intelligence, a subject about which vast numbers of words are written every week. So many that it's hard for most of us to work out what to think. Will AI lead to the end of the world? Or will it make most of our lives much better? Well, one particular article this week seems to have struck a chord with more than 70 million views and counting. It's by someone called Matt Schumer, the chief executive of an AI company,
Starting point is 00:19:24 and he's warning of the profound impact AI is already having on many jobs, including in the field of AI. Essentially, AI can do those jobs just as well or better and much, much faster. And it'll start doing them not in 10 or 20 years, but one or two. So how alarmed should we be? Stephanie Hare is presenter of AI Decoded at the BBC and broadcasts and writes on all things tech. She's been telling James Menendez
Starting point is 00:19:52 why she's not too worried by the letter. You can tell that he used AI, which he has acknowledged, by the way, to write this letter. So it's really, really long, first of all, which is like a telltale mark. A human who had to pass this year, an actual editor, would have been told, you know, lose 50%.
Starting point is 00:20:10 So it's long, it's bulky, it's a nalistical style that we're used to reading when we're told, you know, here's the 10 things you need to do to get a beach body for summer, right? So you can go immediately down to the bottom of the article and see where the cell is. And his solutions for any of your AI anxiety are as follows. One, more AI. He wants you to sign up for a paid version of a tool, $20 a month, he says. Two, spend an hour a day using AI to build things for the next six months. The payoff, he promises you is that you will then understand what's happening with AI better than 99% of people around you, which personally, I think you could get a lot more bang for your book, doing something
Starting point is 00:20:52 for an hour a day for six months and, you know, save that $20 a month. There are ways that you can be using AI in your life and experimenting with it that are not so hysterical and breathless as what you're going to read in this article. So what's interesting is why did it go viral? Yeah, well, why do you think it's got so much traction? Well, I think we're in this. period, very much like in U.S. politics, have flood the zone when it comes to the AI industry. So they've got to keep the party going because loads of people have invested in AI, right? It's just enormous eye-watering sums of money. And it really hasn't delivered the return on investment that they need as investors and as companies to keep this going. That's why people are worried that there's a bubble that could burst and whether or not
Starting point is 00:21:36 that would percolate into the wider economy. So that's reason one that I think it's gone so viral. is people are like, make sense for me. Is there an AI bubble or an AI apocalypse, which is it's coming for our jobs. We're all going to need to be on universal basic income. When is it coming? He's giving you a nice little timeline there. He's riffing on previous people who've written essays like this. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:22:00 But is that basic diagnosis wrong, though, that it is going to do a lot of our jobs for us? I mean, that was my takeaway. It's going to do a lot of tasks for people, but it's not going to be taking everybody's job, and it's definitely not going to be doing it in this sort of short, even to medium-term time frame that Anthropics CEO Dario Amo Dei warned about in his 50,000 word essay two weeks ago. There's a habit of people writing these essays and then people engage with them, and it's all very exciting. But we have to actually look at what's happening out in the world.
Starting point is 00:22:32 You've got 8 billion people on this planet. I guarantee that the majority of them are not even using AI today, right? Including white-collar workers around the world. That's just not happening. So it might be happening in Silicon Valley, but it's not happening around the world. So that's point one for us all to calm down. Point two, it can do some things really well, but it also does a lot of things not so well. And right now, companies can't take the risk on it getting things wrong, right?
Starting point is 00:22:58 Because they've got liability risks. They have to train everybody up. They're doing a lot of stages at the moment where they're still experimenting and trying to figure out where is AI actually useful and where is it not. Stephanie Herr. Finally, the American actor James Van DeBeek has died at the age of 48 after being diagnosed with bowel cancer. He played the title character in the popular drama Dawson's Creek alongside Katie Holmes, Joshua Jackson and Michelle Williams. Lee Milner has been looking back at his life. For many people, James Van der Beek was one of the defining faces of late 90s television.
Starting point is 00:23:40 You're Dawson, Dawson, yeah, I know. We met before. I'm Jen. Oh, the granddaughter from New York, okay. Born in Connecticut, he found fame at just 21, playing Dawson Leary in Dawson's Creek. His intense eye contact and emotional speeches made him the teen heartthrob when the show first aired in 1998.
Starting point is 00:24:02 Dawson. Joe, go, I'm telling you, before I take it all back, all right? Just go. Nearly three decades later, his famous cry face is still one of the internet's most iconic memes. After his teen drama days, he took on a mix of roles from big Hollywood films like Varsity Blues. This is your opportunity here. Playing football at West Canaan may have been the opportunity of your lap time.
Starting point is 00:24:27 But I don't want your life. To comedy roles, including appearances in shows like overcompensating. Taking to social media to announce his death, his wife, Kimberly van der Beak, wrote on Instagram that the star passed peacefully and met his final. days with courage, faith and grace. The father of six revealed in 2024 he had bowel cancer. Since his diagnosis, he's used his platform to promote cancer screening. A life spent on screen across decades, ending at just 48.
Starting point is 00:25:02 Lee Milner. Emily Longeretta from Variety Magazine told us more about James Van der Beek and how the role he created on Dawson's Creek was so important to the era-defining TV show. James Vanderbeek is best known for playing Dawson Leary and the show was built around him. And the creator, Kevin Williamson has said many times, you know, he wanted to tell the story of his life. And Dawson was based on him. And he had to find the right person to do that. And James immediately stepped into that role and broke through and became such a mainstay in so many TVs and so many living rooms around the world.
Starting point is 00:25:35 He took this character that was not, you know, a jock, was not the cool kid in high school and made him lovable in this filmmaker. and someone that people fell in love with. And that was not afraid to be emotional, something that a lot of men on TV, especially young men on TV, it's frowned upon. And James Vanderbeek was able to do that with such eloquence. And his emotion and connection and authenticity
Starting point is 00:25:59 really came through the screen as Dawson and really catapulted his career. You know, instead of just being a 90s heartthrob, he ended up going on to do many, many TV shows and films. And he became, you know, one of the mainstays of the entertainment world and something that is why this past. Passing is so devastating for so many. That was Emily Longeretta.
Starting point is 00:26:19 And that's all from us for now. If you want to get in touch, you can email us at global podcast at BBC.co. You can also find us on X at BBC World Service. Use the hashtag Global NewsPod. And don't forget our sister podcast, The Global Story, which goes in-depth and beyond the headlines on one big story. This edition of the Global News podcast was mixed by Holly Smith and the producers were Charles Sanctuary and Stephen Yeneli.
Starting point is 00:26:43 The editor is Karen Martin. I'm Charlotte Gallagher. Until next time, goodbye. I've spent the last three decades trying to better understand money across the border room, the newsroom and the trading floor. That's longer than most podcasts hosts have been alive. But even though I've got questions. Join me, Maren's Upset Web, every week for my show Maren Talks Money from Bloomberg podcasts, where I have in-depth conversations with fund managers, strategists and experts about her markets really work. And join me for a separate episode where I answer listener questions and how to make. make those markets work for you. Follow Merritt Talks Money on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen.

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