World leaders from over 100 countries have descended on Glasgow for the climate summit. Cop26 is billed by host Boris Johnson as the \u2018last chance\u2019 to limit global warming to 1.5C.
Are headline-grabbing pledges to reduce methane emissions and end deforestation realistic? Emily Tamkin in Washington and Ido Vock in Berlin are joined by New Statesman environment and sustainability editor Philippa Nuttall and executive politics editor Tim Ross directly from Cop26.
Meanwhile, Belarus\u2019s dictator Alexander Lukashenko stands accused of orchestrating massive illegal migration into Poland, precipitating a humanitarian crisis on the EU\u2019s eastern border. Ido Vock speaks about his reporting from the Polish border on the unforgiving conditions facing migrants as winter sets in.
Then in You Ask Us, a listener asks what the Virginia governor\u2019s race means for Joe Biden.
If you have a question on any topic of world news for our international team for You Ask Us, email podcasts@newstatesman.co.uk
Further reading
Ido Vock at Poland\u2019s border where migrants freeze as Belarus pursues its cold war with the EU
Emily Tamkin on what a Republican win in Virginia means for Joe Biden
Tim Ross on Britannia Chained: why the legacy of Brexit threatens Boris Johnson\u2019s Global Britain
Philippa Nuttall on whether we can trust world leaders\u2019 pledges to end deforestation?
Lyndee Prickett on how far Modi will go in ending fossil fuels
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