tv [untitled] August 1, 2021 3:30am-4:01am AST
3:30 am
the government says it's regaining control when sending reinforcements including special forces. charlotte bellis out there a couple. ah . this is down to 0. these are the top stories. took his precedence, promising assistance to areas affected by the worst wildfires in recent. he is 6 people have been killed, most fires have not been contained, the heat waves affecting areas across the mediterranean and the a gee and her to show it to mit. we are considering the possibility of sabotage and any other sources of the fire starting. and we will carry out the investigation to provide answers to these. we will not give up until we have all the answers. russell set up as more now from men of got in and tell you province. it feels far away from being under the control because the reports regarding the
3:31 am
new fires erupting in the different places or just come in just a little bit ago. we got a report that in the board room at the tone of both room in the more progress or so there is another fire just erupted there, which is one of the most popular touristic destination in the country. and also, man, i've got know where we are, is also alongside arctic in on the div. place that the districts are the worst he has places. but on the other hand, the most popular touristic destinations as well contain, is declared a 6 month water emergency for the parent river. it's one of the most important waterways in south america, connecting oxen, tina paraguay, and brazil. and to be a drugs affecting agriculture and trade across the region. peruse knew left his precedent. petro custio's, facing anti government protest, his days after taking office supporters of his rival. in last, one selection rallies in the capital lima castillo narrowly beat. the conservative
3:32 am
cake which in order in a piece of the contested boat, the po, to rise, the country african air force has been blamed for bombing a hospital killing at least one person. it happened as taliban flights is pushed further into laska. the ribs also making gains in herat and kandahar. millions of americans faced the risk of eviction as a moratorium put in place during the pandemic expires. the u. s. supreme court ruled by an it cannot be extended without congressional action as lawmakers failed to possible on friday. the u. s. is told each and as he and president case i. e, that stands ready to help the nation move towards democratically a democratic future. national security advisor, jim sullivan underscore the need to rapidly form a new government in order to stabilize the economy and battle against corona virus . those are your headlines. the news continues after inside story quick summary for you at one g. i'll see that me
3:33 am
ah ah, the countries around the world are dealing with devastating wildfires. long periods of driving, excessive heat or contributing. but mortified our rule of human and this climate change now a bigger worry than it's ever been. this is inside story. ah, ah hello and welcome to the program. i'm how am i here in the last few months have seen a number of devastating weather events made worse by climate change. countries around
3:34 am
the world are seeing unprecedented changes last month, a small village in western canada set that countries cleanest records, and marking nearly 50 degrees celsius, signed to se average temperatures are on the rise. wildfires. c, to appear more often, and more destructive and europe has seen its worst floods in a generation. so what's behind all this will put that to our guests in just a moment. first though, let's have a quick look at the global picture. in turkey, areas, hosting popular resorts and tourist estimations have been declared disaster zones. at least a dozen fires burning across its mediterranean coast. emergency crews are struggling to cope because they helped move hundreds of people to safety. similar scenes in italy, southern islands, over sicily, where people have been forced to leave their homes, fires their spreading rapidly destroying houses and forcing hundreds of tourists to
3:35 am
flee the city of kasanya in russia. one of the coldest places on earth far as the burns, nearly a 1000000 hector's forest. scientists are warning the situation in siberia is only going to get worse since the regions. average temperatures continue to rise. in the western us state of oregon thunderstorm, sparking dozens of fires there. while the large one, the one is the bootleg far continues to burn, creating it so weather system and send a huge blooms of smoke thousands of kilometers, all the way to new york city in the east. the well, let's bring in our guests. joining us from seattle is crystal raymonds, a climate adaptation specialist at the university of washington in sydney, mark deezen doff and honory associate professor of environmental sciences at the
3:36 am
university of new south wales. and in so paulo christiane metric d, a senior forest campaigner and greenpeace, brazil one. welcome to all 3 of you know, crystal ravens. you're a fire ecologist given the, the number of wild, far as we're seeing world wide. and i've just outlines some of them looking at the global picture. would you say this is normal? well, i think, you know, we're definitely seeing that warmer temperatures dryer somers associated with climate change are speeding up the wildfires that we have globally. and we're seeing a larger area burned by wildfires and more frequent large fires in many places around the world. and, but we also know crystal raymonds that wildfires can be
3:37 am
a very natural and normal events. it does not fit in. so i think that's what we're seeing because it's difficult to hear while towards a common i'm seeing the scale of the wildfires in place that we wouldn't normally expect to see them. i mean, how married the t yeah, i think that's a very good question. we do have to remember that many systems naturally have wildfire. there's many vegetation types and forest types around the world that are actually adapted to wildfire, the plants, the vegetation there, and in many cases needs wildfire to grow. so we know that's the case and that wildfire can be a natural part of the system. but there are several things that have happened that have caused it to play more of an unnatural role than it might otherwise play. and in addition to climate change, we also know that the way that we have managed for a service location has contributed to getting larger and more severe fires. and one of the main things that's happened is that we've tried to completely remove fire
3:38 am
from the system that actually needs fire. and in that case, when you do that, the vegetation builds up there becomes a lot more trees, a lot more vegetation there than there might otherwise be. and then when a small fire start, it can get very big, very quickly because there's so much more fuel to burn in that wildfire. and we see that throughout different fires and in the west bridger. that said that, that's an interesting point. and i want to come back to lans managements in a moment, but mark dees and or if you're joining us from a stray leah where we saw those heartbreakingly awful wildfires last year, millions of animals died. i remember seeing the map showing the equivalent areas around the u. k. how much of the land would be covered if those well cars were taking place elsewhere with those far as appeared to be unprecedented. but we also know that wild,
3:39 am
far as are reasonably coleman and often useful to manage the lands. what would you say is behind fires of that size and scale, particularly in australia? i mean, is it down to climate change or are there other factors that play in that, in that example? well, time changes increasing the severity and the frequency of these fires. we now have a new classification of fire intensity, which is catastrophic, which we have never had before. the terrible fires in eastern australia that you mention covered a much, much greater area than size in the past. it is a covered and for the 1st time ever they've been rain forest and that is totally new for australia. so i would say yes, the unprecedented climate change to to global warming is playing
3:40 am
a substantial role. and we really need to act fast. we're running out of time. it's interesting when you say catastrophic is a new classification. certainly in the news we talk about the states in wildfires. you never really hear headlines talking about really good wildfires, but in terms of this new classification of catastrophic how, how does that manifesting if you have not just a straightly but round the world, this new classification. why has it needed to be brought say there are, are there other areas in the world where this is had to be applied? is that something that we are seeing in recent years will as soon as straight classification, i can answer for the rest of the world. but we now know from the firefighters who faced up to the terrible fires of that summer that day considered that these 5 or
3:41 am
unstoppable, and really a large part of sidney would have been wiped out if the wind hadn't changed in the last minute after one of the most huge fires they came down from, the blue mountains just stopped in time to avoid essentially will happening out no, wasn't sidney. so we're facing a new situation and climate change is one of the vi full drivers of, of, of, of this new severity and intensity and frequency of these fires. ok. christiane mazetti, you're joining us from brazil, obviously where the challenges environmental challenges renting the amazon rain forest in particular have been well documented. the fires that are burning in europe, part of the world's. i mean, it's climate change a factor in any way,
3:42 am
or is this entirely man made the destruction that's ongoing where you are i would say that in the amazon, which is our fire safety system, which means that the fire is negative or to buy on the fire started by humans, most are 99 percent of the time. they use it basically for renewing agriculture, land or in the deforestation process. and some time that fire goes and spreads to the forest and becomes a wide fire. and of course climate change happen. it helps to to their current self suppliers. but indeed, by the time that we deforest and burn far as to open way forecast rating agriculture lane, we reduce the resilience of the florists to climate change as well. but if it's not just it for climate change, seems like a big banner,
3:43 am
a big sticker we can put on something to say, this is the reason why this is bad. so this is good at the climate change. it can have other impacts as well. can it not christiane mazetti in terms of when it's, it's too hot and it forces people to move elsewhere to try and, and prove products or the climate change can cause a lack of a possible water. for example, for some people to turn to other means, do you see the side effects of climate change impacts and the way people are having to live their lives in latin america? for example. i would say that looking at the amazon, the combination of climate change and deforestation, and fires evening. deed make the weather dryer. and we already had that our publish showing that use of corn crop. so i crop or reduced due to changing
3:44 am
weather patterns in the local k you due to the for station and climate change. so in the production, you will be reduced and i already being reduced to due to those changes in the local landscape. ok, and let me see, you know, crystal room and because the, again it's, it's not just the fact that the areas are getting warmer than causing these fires to break you had mentioned earlier have fires can be certainly can help regenerate certain areas. but because of the way this lands has been managed, this is having unintended consequences in the united states, in particular in the, the northwest for example, where we are seeing certain challenges when it comes to learn management for president donald trump had been quite critical of the way the land to be managed and he took some slack for that for suggesting that this brush wasn't cleared away,
3:45 am
but there are other things as well which contributes into these fire. specifically where we're building coarser forests and building and places we shouldn't be. do you think there's an appreciation that of the way that we're impacting and living in certain areas that that arguably human shouldn't be? that's helping contribute to the devastating nature of some of these fires. yeah, that's right. i think the way that people are building where we're living is contributing to it. in the western united states, we call it the wild land urban interface and that's where i'm homes and development start to move out further into the forest in the wilderness. and we see that, you know, people are starting to build their homes there and it can, even though fire may occur, there are regularly hazards for a very long time. and so people aren't familiar with their environment. they're not aware that they're moving into a potentially fire prone area. and the way that people are building in those areas
3:46 am
is not as careful as it could be to recognize that they do live in a place that is fire prone. so we know that people need homes, people need to live in these places, but there is a way that that development and that building can be done that can reduce the risk associated with wildfires to these communities. is there an effort on a governmental level to try and, and change the mindset of building homes in certain areas. and so, and because there are view pressures when it comes to housing stalk, certainly in the u. k, where i'm from the big, big pressures and highs in stock. and there's incenses for local authorities to go out and build on greenland or build on flood plains. is that under the same incentives in the united states and it's, they're more of a realization that perhaps we need to think about the way we're housing people. if we want to maintain the environments, right, i think there's not a consistent. so government response to this,
3:47 am
i think it's happening locally. it's happening in places here and there, there's a lot of education about it. but i don't think that there is a consistent messaging or education around it as much as there could be to enable this housing to be built in such a way that would be less at risk or get mark decent or strictly as well known for having white plains of land, vast expanses of land and so on. but are there similar tensions that this human rollins are face where humans choose to, to build their homes if they're having any kind of impact negates as environmental impacts? is there something that is, is coming into policy decisions in any way? will, it should become in 2 policies, decisions because some people feel that some of the towns and villages in the forested areas should not really exist and that people should move. and really,
3:48 am
people have responded in different ways to the fires. some people are trying to rebuild in the same places. other people are leaving these areas. and they're also financial incentives for local governments doing carried as much housing development as possible in the areas. because they get paid rates of income from housing in those areas. and it's the same with flood plains that you alluded to that people are building in flood plains where they, they shouldn't really be building. and it could be mentioned really that in australia, after the terrible fires we then had floods and floods are also partly driven by climate change. because as the atmosphere becomes warmer, it holds more water. and then when it does rain can rain much more heavily than previously. and so we can get floods coming along also as partly caused by global
3:49 am
climate change. and this is certainly something we're seeing in europe with the staggering loss of life in places like belgium and netherlands, germany that we haven't seen before. do you think this is the new normal market season or do you think this is the, the scenes that we're seeing is flooding in urban areas as well as far as covering huge expenses of land. is this thing you normal or is there a way of turning the clock back it's, it's going to get worse before it gets better. and yes, there are solutions, up, 3 quarters of the world's greenhouse gas emissions come from burning fossil fuels. and we now have most of the technologies we need to move away from fossil fuels, to renewable energy and efficient energy use. windham solar, really much cheaper than muscle fields and nuclear power in the vast majority of
3:50 am
the world. and they're still getting cheaper. so we know that these technologies together with some additional storage and some additional transmission lines can substitute fossil fuels. so the 1st thing is to transition all electricity to renewables and then to transit and at the same time to move transport from oil driven cars and trucks. to electric cars and truck. well it will be a phone sample, but if it were that simple, they just switch everything to renewables. what, why is it not happening? well, it is happening with electricity generation very quickly in many parts of the world now. and for example, in one of our states, south australia, 60 percent of annual electricity generation comes from wind and sun already. and
3:51 am
similarly in denmark, the vast majority of electricity generation comes from the wind, with some agricultural wastes used to produce bio energy. and scotland also has the vast majority of its electricity generation already coming from renew. ok. mostly when that's just the question of rolling this out, since it's a larger countries thinking, obviously china the united states and so on and so forth. and let me turn to, you know, christian majority in brazil there are very real tensions when it comes to environmental management and the need to protect the environment and the need to pull people out of poverty. the current president jr. bull scenario. he is criticized by large chunks of the population, but he does still have a significant support base. and the people who are supporting him, the people who are in favor of looking in the amazon and clearing land for
3:52 am
agriculture are in favor, not because they hate the planet because they want to work and earn money. so given this tension between environmental protection and lifting people out of poverty and putting further on the table, i mean i how do you square that circle? where does the solution there lie? ok firstly i would like to point out that there is no is not conservation. we don't need to destroy the environment to promote the value of the region. if you look at the amazon, we have for now like 304050 years of the same developing model being limited there, which is cutting off the florists and bulging. pass relays or the culture lanes. and the region has a lot of over at ortiz, is one of the most poor regions in brazil you now. so what we need is a different concept of development or region development that actually includes
3:53 am
local people and brings development them, brings economic opportunity to them that are many opportunities off economic development with the same the forest using c alls and other things that can be taken from the far as what we need is for leach, co, we'll for in, hastening those alternative. so was there no political will there because the to the, both of our supporters and both not himself would say, you know, we want to lift the people out of poverty if the solutions of already there. why are these people not turning to them? this, the solution, this is sitting there in front of us, the solutions they need, that they are not yet. they do not yet have public policy to actually make them spread around the very sorry. so the person that they're on the ground find their way, much easier if they go to a legal deforestation,
3:54 am
legal mining. and so one rather than if they go to a bank and try to get a loan to start a new business. so we still need a lot of public policies and in seen in that direction. and that's why i say that there is no way to that aim ok. crystal ramon's, do you think our politicians have a handle on how to tackle these problems? because sciences such as yourself are coming forward with solutions. we've heard from mark these and all that. yes, there are solutions as we move forwards. but as christiane was saying, i mean, there needs to be a political will. do you think that there is political will to bring in the measures needs to tackle these wildfires, for example, global warming because there are, there are big costs involved. are there notes and people may not be prepared to pay
3:55 am
those costs when you, when you put it on the breakfast table in front of them? i think that there's some political will around wildfires. we're seeing some increase in funding, but i think there's also still people debating more about the causes, debating whether this is climate change or forest management rather than recognizing its multiple factors and that different factors are playing a role in different places around the u. s. and so the solutions need to be responsive to those different factors that are contributing to wildfire. and so i think that politicians are still not recognizing the complexity of the issue and debating about whether climate change is contributing to it. debating about whether forest management contributes to it rather than looking at how much each of those factors matter in different places. because that can really be a way to get at the right solutions in the right places. so i think that that's starting to change. unfortunately, it's taking multiple years of above average wildfires in order to really motivate
3:56 am
that change. ok, we're down to the last minute and a half years. so i'm going to ask the same question to all 3 of you. given what we've heard, given the complexity of the situation or damaging it is, are you optimistic for the future? and i will start with you, mark decent or for you optimistic of the future given where we are an optimistic that we'll implement the technologies we need to transform the energy system for example. but i'm pessimistic that it will, it too late to stop, even greater climate change and, and, and the reason that it's carrying so late is because the existing industries, the fossil fuel industries, the forestry industry and other industries that have a vested interest in continuing with business as usual, fighting to and resisting the change. ok,
3:57 am
i guess in one sentence please. christy. i'm at that. are you optimistic for the future? right now i am a little bit better miss that because well, our government's weakening the environmental protection, the maximum, the can also the national congress, but i'm optimistic because many people here i've tried to face the agenda. are thinking about a more positive agenda. so ok. yeah. that okay, and the final word to you crystal raymond's, are you optimistic or pessimistic? given the state of the the world doesn't stand. yeah. you know, in my 20 year career, working on climate change, i've always been optimistic, extreme events we've seen in the last year to have definitely started the challenge that but i have very young children. so i feel like i have no choice but to be optimistic because i want to make sure that this world is isn't a good place for them when they're older. cable will finish. oh, not optimistic and uplifted. thank you very much. kristen. ravens like these and
3:58 am
doors and christie, and i said, i'm thank you for watching at home. you can see this program again anytime by visiting our website al jazeera dot com and for further discussion just had so facebook page, facebook dot com, forward slash ha inside story. you can also join the conversation on twitter or handle is a inside story for tonight for me. and the whole thing is by fanatic the news news, news, news, news. there is no channel that covers world news like we do. we revisit
3:59 am
places the state are really invest in that and that's the privilege. as a journalist in 2001 fred round, arab australians accused of being enemies within and a checking or the way of life treated like we were all suspects. we were all struggling to adapt to then you found home out there explored the history of the lebanese community and australia once upon a time and punched on out era me . the conflict between the government and the regional take great people. the duration fund has skills thousands and internally displaced more than $2000000.00 over the past 7 month. 350000 people in the region are facing famine, according to the united nation, which says that star ration is being used as a weapon for those who are managed to cross the border. say it's not because
4:00 am
transitions have improved back home. they say to grants, continue to be targeted because they have and many properties are being reported. and when they come taking refuge here last time. i hello again, peter, they'll be here until the top stories on al jazeera turkey's precedent is promising assistance to areas affected by nearly 100 wildfires. 6 people have died in the blazes. most of the fires are now under control. a heat wave is scorching parts of the mediterranean and the g and the government says the fires may have been started deliberately. heritage shot at t. m. a. we are considering the possibility of sabotage and any other thoughts of the fires darting.
123 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on