Filtrar por gênero

Business Daily

Business Daily

BBC World Service

The daily drama of money and work from the BBC.

4010 - Ferry frustration
0:00 / 0:00
1x
  • 4010 - Ferry frustration

    Islands around the world rely on ships as their lifeline service - for everything from their domestic supplies, to making hospital visits, as well as supporting vital industries like tourism. When the services go down, for weather or technical reasons, these remote communities are cut off from the mainland, with no back-up option.

    We hear from opposite sides of the world - Scotland and New Zealand - where unreliable car ferries disrupt the daily lives of residents and visitors.

    And we hear from a company running one island ferry service that's working to improve its reliability.

    (Picture: Caledonian MacBrayne ferry coming into Brodick harbour, Scotland.)

    Presented and produced by Neil Morrow

    Mon, 07 Oct 2024
  • 4009 - The cities selling homes for one dollar

    Is selling off abandoned homes for a dollar or a pound the answer to invigorating a city?

    We meet some of the people in the port cities of Baltimore in the US and Liverpool in the UK who have taken part in similar housing revival schemes. Is it an easy win, or is solving a city's problems more complicated?

    (Picture: Maxine Sharples, who bought a house in Liverpool for a £1, holding a photo showing her undertaking renovation work in her home.)

    Presented and produced by Rowan Bridge

    Sun, 06 Oct 2024
  • 4008 - Shipwrecks: Business Daily meets a treasure hunter

    Carl Allen is a multi-millionaire former businessman who ran a trash bag company in the US.

    He's now the owner of an island in the Bahamas, a philanthropist and deep-sea treasure hunter, scouring the seabed for sunken Spanish galleons, slave ships and long-lost treasure. He tells us about his relentless search for one Spanish galleon that’s fired his imagination for the past 40 years. We discuss the ethics of treasure hunting and his belief that the best way to bring up relics from the bottom of the ocean is through PPPs - public-private partnerships. Produced and presented by Gideon Long

    (Image: Carl Allen on a boat with some treasure. Image credit: Brendan Chavez at Allen Exploration)

    Thu, 03 Oct 2024
  • 4007 - Shipwrecks: Who owns the sunken treasure?

    There are more than three million vessels on the world's sea beds, and plenty of explorers looking for them.

    But if they find something valuable, do they get to keep it? We talk to an arbitration lawyer about the laws governing the sea, and hear from maritime archaeologists about the perils of rummaging around on the ocean floor, disturbing long-sunken wrecks that offer a priceless glimpse into history. Some say we should leave these ships be, especially when they’re graveyards. Others say we should bring them to the surface, put them in museums to educate people, make money from them and perhaps even sell off some of their treasure.

    Produced and presented by Gideon Long

    (Image: A diver looks at a shipwreck. Credit: Getty Images)

    Wed, 02 Oct 2024
  • 4006 - Shipwrecks: The search for the San José

    In the first of our three part series looking at the money behind shipwrecks, we start with what's been called "the most valuable shipwreck in the world".

    The San José is a Spanish galleon sunk by the British off the Colombian coast more than 300 years ago.

    The treasure onboard is estimated to be worth $18bn, which means plenty of people are looking for it, and trying to lay claim to it.

    A salvage company, the Colombians, the Spanish and a Bolivian indigenous community all say the shipwreck and treasure is theirs.

    We hear their claims and find out more about this "holy grail of shipwrecks".

    Presented and produced by Gideon Long.

    (Image: Wagner's action of Cartagena (depicting the moment the San Jose exploded) by Samuel Scott. Credit: National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London)

    Tue, 01 Oct 2024
Mostrar mais episódios