Skip to main content

tv   Global Us  Deutsche Welle  July 22, 2024 9:30pm-10:01pm CEST

9:30 pm
a real new deal, but just reimbursing the watch. now. the new technologies help shrink the mountains of tech style waste around the world. the sounding the wildfire is on the rise in the world's largest tropical wetlands and brightening up baghdad to use the skills to shift to mind sets. the violence will dash over the past 20 odd years since the us invaded iraq.
9:31 pm
there's been almost continual conflict among different political and religious groups in the country. poverty and unemployment a wide spread, morales, low autism that determines to change that big buckets of pain to the only indication that those change on the way have impact that's outside the quota. these drop pools are to become history. thanks to alyssa lisa and his office collective with a mysterious name to fly effect. that on a mission to bring life to box thoughts, neglect to districts with colorful murals. nothing's or not. i know what motivates me is getting praise for our work and thank god, so far. we've barely had a negative reaction. it's clearly something new for both older and younger people here. but they all seem to like what we're doing on the dr. watson.
9:32 pm
so kind of bits of color really makes a well to back to place. oh, it has an impact on people. ali says he and his colleagues a certain that when people ask them to paint us the sobs, it's always about more than just what's on the surface. the a good sense. every hole, every crack in these walls stands for a tragic memory. but turning the bullet holes into flowers sends out a message that you can move forward and leave the bad days behind them. and the city has seen too many birthdays. 5 years ago in 2019 ali was just a demonstration in creative best mural. one of his 1st the motif was an appeal to
9:33 pm
the rest of the world. i treated the mural in order to as united nations to do something for us. the moment at that time, there were un observers in the city who put it 1st. they didn't really do much. my painting criticize that, and it got a lot of attention. then something changed. so the artwork was effective was recommended by this. in the meantime, many more murals like this one have sprung up whole lives about stuff. all these colorful, well the no question about the, the drop city has become more vibrant outcome change people's lives of totally for those who create to optimal 7 supply. the people who live around
9:34 pm
the collective has become popular. especially women who are often invisible in iraq's conservative society have an opportunity to put the idea is out that anyone and everyone can join it. so how don't want your money? well, i'm a housewife. i don't have a degree, but i love to paint it how to set up on a some mazda fedex. it was the i got in touch with the group, and ali said, just come along. i want to beautify my home and bring more color into our streets. that's what will encourage us to keep going. it will help us feel a life that help i'll need to not be street in the city center boulevard of august and create tips. it was shut down for yes when terrorist attacks got bought out in turmoil. now the streets is 20 thing again. even his daily life in iraq remains difficult. inflation and the economic crisis of also
9:35 pm
affected ali. but the alters to finance has his collective 3 commissions and small donations refuses to be discouraged. there he gets during lessons and i may, if i call, he wants to inspire people. he believes that pen slow frustrated, come, help change the world. just like the flip to the butterfly's wings. yeah, it's a hard rock. you almost the butterfly effect is a scientific term. my theory. every word, every deed, no more, no matter how small and simple has an effect until the end of time, i must have been such a good deed. something can grow effect last year. now as you and that's why we chose this name and put it back in the outside of districts, alejandra schemes finish them your role. within a few hours, the residents are impressed. backed up is now one painting richer, but the mission to make the city more colorful will continue the so a lot today,
9:36 pm
the turing temperatures droughts move, discuss in brazil has been hauled, change by climate change. mostly shortages are an issue even in the amazon. and that's how they knock on effects elsewhere. it may not look like it, but this is the world's largest tropical whitland. usually green and lush at this time of year. large parts of the pantano and brazil had been reduced to ashes. after months of drought, this dried vegetation has turned into the perfect fuel for wild fires. it's normal for the pantano to have rainy periods where the whitland floods and dry periods where blaze of spread. but this year, the wildfire started earlier and with much more fury firefighters. jose francisco
9:37 pm
morales says it's one of the worst dry periods in his career. pantano punching out urgently, needs rain to see him. otherwise, we're going to see one of the worst routes ever. and we'll have to fight a lot more wildfires in 1st i hundreds of firefighters are working hard to contain the situation. some even came from other parts of brazil and neighboring bolivia. they don't want to repeat of 2020 back then about a 3rd of the content of vegetation burned down. 17000000 vertebrate animals were killed and many more injured. but the 1st half of 2024 is off to a bad start. there were many more blazes done in the same period last year to prevent the flames from spreading. the fire fighters cut a swath through the undergrowth, but much of the ground is pete, meaning fires can continue for days under their feet unnoticed. and at the same time, they have to fight strong winds towards you. today,
9:38 pm
the wind already turned around a $101.00 degrees. so we're fighting hard through the window change again. and every time it changes, we need a different strategy to stop the engine because these fires are largely started by people burning trash clearing undergrowth and even smoking cigarettes. usually they would be naturally contained by the flooded areas this time of year. but there are several factors that have been making the woodland flammable and sees that we early . one is a natural phenomena in el nino, the water and the pacific is unusually warm as a result with dramatic consequences. in many regions in the pantano lake made conditions hotter and dryer. then there are the effects of human made climate change, which are also making the continent more vulnerable to drought, and increasing ramping deforestation in brazil is having an even more dramatic effect. you put that work up a single punch analysis suffering from
9:39 pm
a lack of water. it's because there is less rain coming from the amazon due to deforestation. there was one and there was less water in the rivers because of deforestation. and us a rod, our regions were called at the goods month. i mean, to say how the water for the pantano actually comes from the amazon rain forest. some of the water that evaporates there normally drift south and cloud form over the set out of bush savannah to the pontoon, not where then rains. but as large areas of the amazon get deforested, there are fewer trees to recycle water into the air. the landscape is drawing out vague, just let us go to the winds, continue blowing these, but they take a smaller quantity of humidity with them. and that reduces the volume of rain generated in other regions that puts the punch and all at a disadvantage. you know, these, those little guys are open to notes as in addition to the amazon rain forest, the trees of the ascent. otto are also vital for the survival of the content on their roots. store the rain and slowly release it into the rivers that flow into
9:40 pm
the pond on, on. if the trees disappear there too, it will have an impact on rivers such as the view of public was an important tributary. at the moment it's about 2 meters too low, but just high enough to protect village those centers as land from the fire. i built a lot. look how it burned on the other side. the fire reached the shore of the river, didn't come close because it made me nervous, but i heard the crackling such, but that was this that i even though she is safe now, she's having a hard time staying optimistic. because over the years she's had to watch her land become dryer and dryer as ever bigger fires consume this unique landscape. oh, the existing not a long time ago. my grandfather told me, i won't live to see you, but you will. the world will end in fire and that's what i'm seeing now. as i'm 54 years old equipment. and now everything is burning. the
9:41 pm
roughly 10 percent of a global carbon emissions stem from the text on industry. it's also incredibly resource intensive. guzzling up some 90000000000 cubic meters of water annually. that's 4 percent of global fresh water usage. unload the water, goes into producing all caves. almost always these videos go through heavy, heavy, chemical processes to make them the way they are today. whether it's finishing, whether it's dying, priyanka, qana collaborates with brands and produces to foster sustainable innovation and fashion, which is why it is mostly not even the nation, but does andre di biodegradable. and it takes sometimes over to 100 years for these materials to buy it as a degraded industrial. and that's a big problem because we produce a lot of textile waste. in the us,
9:42 pm
tex always has grown 80 percent since the year 2000. rachel keeps even set kind of services great, which supports industry and government and reaching sustainability goals is our fastest growing waste stream. we send over 30000000000 pounds of tech styles to landfill every year in the us alone, most of our old clothes and in landfill. what doesn't is frequently bend on sold stock and donated old closing a frequently shipped to the global south for resale, such as here in a crowd gonna with 40 percent of what arrives is actually considered trash the us. and so the 600000000 key, those of use closing abroad every year, largely to the rest of the americans. while you are a big sports, i have a one and a half 1000000000 kilos, much it to us again. often it is dumped, bend old, pollutes oceans and waterways. textile waste isn't just old. well warm toes. it
9:43 pm
also includes excess stock and the scraps generated during production. less than one percent of this video, that's the spiking today. which means all of this is going somewhere. when we collect close there, primarily going to be sorted for reuse, that's the highest value. so some of those clothes may be down cycled into insulation. some may be sold as wiper rags and then a small portion can be mechanically recycled. but mechanical recycling has its limitations. in 2020 full mechanical recycling is the best option. we have close of chops up and spun into a new 5. it's, it's way back to the landfills, but also involves a drop in quantity. and it's read that such materials can be recycled again. but that could soon change. there are a bunch of exciting new recycling companies posting new technology and hoping to tailor up in the future for tech style waste. firstly,
9:44 pm
those chemical recycling tech styles of broken down to the molecular level and then be built into various materials. while some companies only recycle caution, low strategy is blocked. techs can recycle blended material, chemically separating synthetic polyester from natural costs. and 5 is polyester is converted into pellets which can be used for textiles, orders, materials, and construction. while cotton, cellulose is turned into clay that us uses in textiles, agriculture and even packaging. the flexibility is intentional. i would never want to be beholden to my outtakes just to one brand, because i know how badly those those brands can behave. patria and jones co founded blog, tx in 2018. we prefer black text to have it takes. i can be useful to many robs and just be useful to wants. i think that's been a real difference for us in the industry. everybody is,
9:45 pm
is preoccupied with making more textiles. love text recently announced it with expands capacity to $10000.00 tons a year. refresh, global invalid also emphasizes flexibility. good luck to you. yeah. breakdown and sanitize textile waste. creating 3 role materials. nano settlers eval on spanish highs. tex, phone, pope 3 refresh cables. pub is these materials i used to make anything ranging from furniture, to bite frames, to f, an old bass cosmetics refresh. global is a relatively new company plans to develop a network at smaller facilities that can be developed quickly and flexibly with partners. that's quite different to sweden's renew, so one of the world's biggest chemical textile recyclers. it was among the fist to build an industrial scale tech style recycling facility. cotton tech styles
9:46 pm
a shredded into a slurry, separated from contaminants and dried into sheets of what they call secular circular settlers, which can replace virgin materials like cotton oil would in the production of new high quality textiles. going down to the molecular level helps maintain quality. i'm a new so says it's sec you. those can be recycled. 7 times. there are limits. the new cell can know you recycle waste. this 95 percent of costs are no pure, meaning a lot of what goes to a landfill isn't eligible. renew cells. recycling plant opened in 2022 with capacity to recycle 60000 tons annually written to expands to 820000. but in february 2020 full came the shock and the company filed for bankruptcy. just days before and renew sell told the w. they were cycling fall below capacity and fashion brands were hesitant to commit to recycle materials. we could be producing
9:47 pm
a lot more tricia carries the chief commercial officer knew so many of the brands have goals, search for circularity or reduction traceability waterfalls. uh, you know, variety. so it's, we are a solution to their goals. it's how quickly do they want to be able to achieve those? renew, sell partnered with levi's to recycle production waste and include stuck, you know, send the products h and then became a shareholder in 2017. but still, the plant didn't make a profit, and it's 1st. yeah, it has been something that has shoak. most of us work in us has been a relative fix task. theresa dominic research to sustainability management, and t c. l. universities. existing business models in which most of fashion brands are messed it. they don't really have 40 initiatives night when you sell the did
9:48 pm
really while the degree a be able to, to make a while recycling costs reliance on both the hungry kaufman and oil based synthetics. it's more expensive, it would take some 7000000000 year rates to scale up recycling to hit 20 percent of textile wasted us by 2013. there isn't enough push from the legislation side to force the industry to actually adopt these materials. so not the investigation required for thing, but if it's going to be more expensive material, if it's a transition with the house, supplies the thing in nature with all the brands they decided across the board. it really does is a function of information. so have them having access to everything, which is not easily done on to legislation usually takes and o. d u has monday to stop by 2025 member countries begin collecting checks don't
9:49 pm
waste separately just like they do with paper. plastic dos, which should improve on the $0.22. waste is currently separated during proposed legislation in the u. s. e. u is in some modeling a little requiring produces to pay for the processing of that text on waste. and we have to ensure that these laws don't just charge the producers for one portion of that puzzle. like just collection. it has to also facilitate the infrastructure for both reuse and recycling and the innovation around that right now, recycling isn't profitable, stays active, could also set the tone by adopting tockets themselves. but the us to be successful as a result o'clock, we have to have committee that takes and that's where governments and private enterprise has a role to apply in saying that a government the chicks is very large procures of products. meanwhile,
9:50 pm
swedish reflects every new cell has phone to buy. a private equity investor also has both top the companies remaining assets, also invest in industries that help to reduce carbon emissions. text though recycling is one of them. the company is now to be renamed suck, you know, it's like it's fiber. but despite the progress in tex dollar recycling, there's still more to be done. recycling is the only one part of the problem of a current consumption backend of cannot continue if you want to move to what the most sustainable have invested. there is a huge amount of, of production in the industry and to whoever is responsible for that. it's just a lot of the debate around that. bottom line is that it will production needs to, to reduced the 100000000000 governments. we produce each, it means volt teams that every person in the world. if we can't convince function
9:51 pm
victims to stop buying the body weight in clothing, at least we can ensure that as much as possible of what they purchase is recycled. the changes underway include div y and previously unimagined opportunities are turning the labor market upside down. when m o $200.00, for example. never thought she'd be working on a fly farm. steph and covina set up his own business for years ago in urban agriculture. and even the phone is learning to set up carbon projects in the forest of the interior of the country. as part of a pioneering project in cookie. why? what did these 3 young people have in common? they're all working in the green economy as part of the country's ecological transition. when linda 1st started at the fly farm,
9:52 pm
her days were difficult. she hated being around the maggots and flies that are bred for animal feed. to dick, i'm send you over, but i was so afraid i didn't want the flies to touch me. i said it was going to wear long sleeves. but the hardest part for linda was dealing with her family's prejudice about the unusual professions she had chosen. to see, they said it was bound to affect my health, the maggots are a dirty thing that everything we do here is practically nothing but dirt to disclose. since we use waste it was a bit difficult. at 1st they didn't really accepted enough. i said that instead of staying at home and being a burden says it's better for me to learn and discover something new. because this was in today, the young woman is proud to call herself an interim ologist and is even convinced her mother to join the company. different covina also dared to make
9:53 pm
a new green start. after studying geography, he couldn't find a job. so he began offering horticulture courses to individuals and schools at the, on all of our advisors, all he set up his own business to cell phone. is there me personally, it was a way of not depending on the traditional employment system in court as well, which is the leave school and you look for a job in the public sector. there was a way of showing that you can create your own job and be financially independent while you're on the call to them. you know, tell them about the fun. and linda are on a green career path, but they are still in the minority with many green job opportunities going on claimed the ivory and government is keen to entice more school leavers in the prophets. and so by the great jobs are not what you might call sub jobs, maybe it's this aspect that we don't manage to make clear enough to those looking
9:54 pm
for work going on. and i bought a new film put on and i to stick to shit. so that, well my direct them towards green jobs to do many refuse on this because they think there are many jobs going and seems, but they're actually normal jobs. so this was on the bus. i thought this was on the block. so there's upfront this phone in 2022, the ministry launch, it's integrated strategy for the promotion of green jobs and cookies. why? in an attempt to promote these sectors, even the full has come all the way from europe. for this, the 26 year old wants to learn how to carry out a forest inventory and cookie, why. she's currently being assisted by an experienced agricultural scientist of the you see, the aim is to calculate the forest c o 2 uptake the nose. if we did that, mississippi, this is, emily fits all the shows. i've never done a forest inventory before. it's all new to me. i've never done this kind of studies
9:55 pm
of vision. so we need to have work together. i'm wondering the quinn is so i know all about carbonate on the carbon market. if i just would not at all about the field we're going to have. so we really need to work hand in hand to achieve our goal. and most of the stuff on also wants to raise awareness of the green economy, but it will be 80 kilometers from be john. he wants his expertise to benefit people in smaller towns as well. it won't let me go into a new file in minutes of the people who live in the interior of the country. you do not have the same opportunities as the people, and i'll be john, couple more samples. that's why i think it's important to create a new ecosystem in my area to gives them access to employment that's beneficial to their environment. so if you don't like you don't give them the green economy and cookie wire is giving young people the chance to work towards a better future. the,
9:56 pm
the, the
9:57 pm
january 2021, the attack on the united states capital, thousands of people took pods and among them some of these manipulative voices are a former high ranking military leaders. why did us veterans tended backs on democracy? and what does this mean for the upcoming next? the enemy within in 75 minutes on d, w, the
9:58 pm
name is the calls back. said wow, thank you so much for joining in. welcome to don't hold the bad. a lot of people do that. is called about saying it aloud. guess what? it means. no say like good everyone to ok. we cheering into the microphone, sorry. check out the award winning outcome. don't hold back. good grief. oh your updates. green innovations, super green and the super green 10. the great off electrical, the green revolution global. so listen to all kinds of problems to fix your thoughts on the topics breast of those channels. we've got new videos every friday tried to plan. it's
9:59 pm
a this video changed the world. it shows us soldiers killing civilians in the rock. optics, hosting it's julia, songs became a wanted man. 14 years later the we can expound it is fine, is the st. jude this done doing the traces, the stories of a soldier under the volunteer of the attack. they speak to each other for the 1st time in your heart to forgive me, but that the 4 ways don't think that i carry any resentment or a grudge in my heart towards a captivating story about this struggle for forgiveness and truth guardians of trees. julian, his sons, and the dog secrets of war starts july 27 on d, w. the
10:00 pm
. this is the, the news line from val and cumberland. irish secure was more high profile support a bit to win the democratic nomination for president. current us vice president is moving fast to secure the packing she needs from leading democrats on monday she needs. but has she done, you know, the rights for the nomination response by president bivens decision not to see the election? many democrats and not having this as a self listen, patry on that. and the secret service is solemn. mission is to protect our nation's leaders. on july 13th, we found the head of a us the service. now congress the attempted assassination of donald trump.

9 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on