The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/11/20 at 18:00 EST
Episode Date: November 20, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/11/20 at 18:00 EST...
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from cbc news the world this hour i'm kate mcgilfrey a growing number of canadians are worried about putting food on the table
latest canadian food sentiment index found rising prices in the grocery store are now the top affordability concern philip leishanuck reports
clip for you in a minute. So-called lost Canadians now have a path back to citizenship. In 2009,
the federal government... It'll be gone within the hour.
In 2009, the federal government changed existing rules blocking Canadians born abroad from
passing down citizenship if their child was born outside the country. A judge ruled that move
was unconstitutional. The new law allows citizenship to be passed down to children born or adopted
abroad beyond the first generation.
The parents must have spent a total of three years in Canada before the birth or adoption.
Liberal MP Christia Freeland will move to England next summer to start a new job administering
the Rhodes Trust.
The educational charity is famous for its prestigious Rhodes Scholarship at the University of Oxford.
Freeland herself has not announced plans to resign as a member of Parliament,
though she has said she doesn't plan to run in the next.
election. Her local writing association in Toronto had no details to share on plans for an eventual
by-election, but the Rhodes Trust says she'll start in her new role this coming July.
And I believe we have that clip for you, the Philip Lee-Shanock story. Here he is telling us about the
Food Sentiment Index. It'll be gone within the hour. Christine Nautagar is a Dartmouth community
fridge volunteer. She says the free milk and eggs in the outdoor fridge need restocking at least
three times a day. People are really struggling. Affordability just continues to be a major issue
for a lot of people. The Canadian Food Sentiment Index measures perceptions around food affordability.
The Dalhousie University Survey found four and five say food is their main spending concern.
Lead author Sylvain Charlebois is head of the Agrafoods Analytics Lab. He says food even outranks
housing and transportation. I actually thought that shelter would be much closer, to be honest,
because shelter has been an issue and it is a fundamental need.
The survey found that one in four Canadians say they are food insecure
and cannot afford basic healthy food.
That's up from one and five in the spring.
Philip Lyshanock, CBC News, Toronto.
Environmental groups at the Global Climate Summit in Brazil
have called out Canada for increasing investment in fossil fuel energy.
With less than two days left, the U.N. Secretary General
is urging the countries at COP 30 to agree on environmental measures.
Antonio Guterres says communities on the front lines of climate change need help to adapt.
It is the difference between rebuilding and being swept away,
between replanting and starving, between staying on ancestral lands or losing it forever.
Canada's recent rollbacks of key climate policies and announcement of new resource projects
has led one climate research organization to downgrade Canada's environmental plan
to highly insufficient.
Meanwhile, talks between Ottawa and Alberta
over the future of the oil patch are moving forward,
including how to get a new pipeline built to the BC coast.
And 23,000 lives could have been saved in England alone
had the UK government acted faster at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.
That's the conclusion of a public inquiry
into the government's response in England, Scotland, Northern Ireland, and Wales.
Here's Chair, Heather Hallett.
I can summarize my findings of the response as too little, too late.
All four governments failed to appreciate the scale of the threat
or the urgency of response it demanded in the early part of 2020.
Hallett says clear early warning signs in China and Italy were ignored
and lockdown orders came too late,
which meant they lasted longer and caused more economic damage.
And that is the world this hour.
For CBC News, I'm Kim.
McGilvery.
