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tv   Eco India  Deutsche Welle  January 20, 2020 3:02am-3:30am CET

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our love for the fish on our plate and all the seafood is causing great harm and an imbalance to the marine ecosystem worldwide how can we preserve our oceans and even our rivers so that we can continue to remain a living species that's what we looming on to be a welcome this is eco india and. the metropolis of mumbai it was originally the native land of fishermen as the population spiked the demand for fish spikes to the high protein and low fat quality made them the go to food for the health conscious this put immense pressure on the fisherman to fish during the breeding season or in dangerous waters or even over fish a particular species to meet the rising demand a unique calendar is helping consumers understand this phenomenon so that the fish and the fisherman are better protected.
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and that ok daybreak is still a couple of hours away but business is in full swing at some docks the biggest and oldest wish landing site in mumbai. it is organized kills fisherman have landed their fresh catch hold selfish auctions are underway and fishmongers through the crowd gathering full of bronze salmon and a range over the sea from. long before mumbai became the burgeoning micropolis it is today its original inhabitants the only fishing community lived very different. but you should know when my going to be going for there wasn't fishing for the survivors what they were to. wrongs of laws are whatever we used to write for the
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future consumption and when the modernization started when the bronze business started when the dollars came in $1000.00 sixty's and seventy's it was all mostly for the exports you know and that is why we started catching a lot for others you know. change. is a 7th generation fisherman who operates the fishing boats at the docks he has learned about the change in fish catch only history lessons and witnessing some of it for himself since he began coming out here as china. my grandfather used to always tell me that how he was with the fish you know. couple of walls and good not so strong as in like just one shoulder or something like that and then slowly and slowly today started. in 83 days 90 days was 5 to 6 days in 20072010 fishing days were 10 to 12 days now the telling is almost like 15 to 20
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days. though india accounts to 6.3 percent of global fish production fishing for a living could soon become economically and viable for another fisherman in this community. you know works with a group of marine biologists on bringing more of in this to the screen. there is a massive information gap between. the information gap in terms of what fish to eat in what season in order to minimize their impact on the seafood people are more than willing to do some subtle changes in their seafood eating practices only thing is this information is not available to them. in any fashion. no your fish is the 1st of it's going seafood sustainability guide in india it is a calendar that details the species that can be eaten and which should be awarded in certain seasons. we collected what they would do which was publicly available
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only live rich richer that month rich the fish north is known to breed the months very recent. particular fish should be awarded. to that month very dark fish believes all the fish really gets caught along with their fish. just as the moon by a resident who found out about the gallon a year ago and now strictly follows one cooking for her to. dig so you put on even though i really like i've stopped eating them for me to 3 months of the year because that's the time that they breed situation however this fish is something we can eat now. have also begun to follow the routine like the seafood restaurant in mumbai if we have different kinds of dishes on the menu then we would rather use
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a different fish for every preparation that is on the menu as opposed to those one fish on the end united must be on the entire menu and that cans and that kind of makes it cool for us makes it slightly challenging to come up with dishes in the sense and the challenge is something that we enjoy. the restaurant staff see there has been a remarkable change in their consumer choices to. make the food. we were happy to offer stick on not knowing what was. right and that was the idea of seafood for us and it was exotic but today we want to know where did this come from what is it that i mean thing was that line cord is a farm is that why i like when was this card is this fresh fresh. do team behind the calendar hopes the behavioral change can someday result in a shift in seafood demand and supply. lega nodded mangoes in windows and strawberries in summer similarly we have to understand you can order it. so i think
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this has to come from. and when it comes from going to automatically fisherman i want the consumer to nor the fisherman as they know the fish when they know the fish they even know the fisherman i think it can work like that. with the. gums to interfere with the preparation for the next one in the hope that the gap between the fishing community and finally closes for. a calendar like this which appeals to the better sense of the consumer must have given you an idea of how big the problem is fishing is a huge industry worldwide but remember these natural resources in our oceans are not endless let's take a closer look at the impact overfishing has on our planet. fishing is big business the un's food and agriculture organization estimates the value of trade in
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fish and fishery products for 2019 at 145000000000 euros the catch of fish and seafood has been growing for decades between 195-1990 the global catch sawed from under $20000000.00 tonnes a year to about 80 the rate of growth then slowed and the catch is now around $19000000.00 tonnes a year. small scale fishing is responsible for close to half the volume the united nations is keen to support sustainable fishing practices and is back to a number of projects. one key factor is using nets with the right size mash if it's too tight baby fish or traps and often perish that contributes to the depletion of stocks industrial bottom trolling with dragnets is also very destructive of the sea floor and did. see regions. and of course all kinds of other species get trapped
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and often die this is called bycatch it shouldn't be caught in the 1st place. it's estimated that close to $30000000.00 tonnes of fish a year now end up as bycatch. it's a terrible waste and the death of juvenile creatures means the stocks of these other species are depleted as well. a huge problem is illegal fishing that is catching more fish than allowed under quota regimes often in marine protected areas. the volume is estimated to have been about 30000000 tonnes in 2019 that means a 3rd of the global catch was fished illegally. for stocks to regenerate illegal fishing has to be stopped as does fishing at spawning grounds during the spawning period marine protected areas need to be expanded and patrolled to enforce
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compliance with fishing restrictions these areas currently covered just 5 percent of the ocean's. marine and course the eco systems are very sensitive and need to be allowed to replicate it and their natural traditional oyster farmers in a small village in the west coast of india who use to harvest oysters in a disorganised manner have learned and adopted a sustainable practice of oyster farming. and they are. the women of the religious rather tired on india's west coast are busy stringing together oyster shells. they used to toil for long hours looking for wild oysters but often returned with a negligible catch. all the hard work did little to increase their. incomes.
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so what a lucky little army earlier to be used to go to the shore and collect naturally formed oysters in the creek might be used to earn very little money and oysters could only be collected for about 8 days a month our hands and legs were always throws by our backs used to hurt the sun was unrelenting to come of the budget a whole lot idol. rising temperatures and the increasingly late rainy season have seen the men's catches of fish constantly dwindle. so the women look for ways to maintain their family's livelihoods in 2013 they were approached by the united nations development program with a plan that would simplify their lives by enabling them to farm oysters in the creek near their homes. they were offered training and
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funding and asked to form a self-help group takao on the cells that are out there but. eventually they set up the process of the women's self-help group and after they were shown how to do it this started oyster farming the ropes are threaded with empty oyster shells oysters feed on plankton and waste and help keep the water clean oyster farming in coastal waters is cheap and environmentally friendly. oyster loudly called spats attach themselves to the empty shelves within 12 to 14 months they grow into oysters big enough to sell and eat in better thought the crops are bountiful. the initial investment of about $75.00 euros to buy bamboos and groups has proved to be very worthwhile similar praja. it's have sprung up in our the religious along the coast ne much about it well
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a much weaker ledge it up my did it while love my used to go to the fish market to so mine catch my friends during would tell me cuz do reviews saw your photo in the news paper and heard about the success of your project telos more and i would say you can do it to you need to form a self-help group to get the project going more me much him at the fish market i hope set up 12 self-help groups i thought day should benefits from this well just like the e.g. unbelievable to my love and prodded that it does our mollett up was in mel does it really but like here the women of other to are among the 1st oyster farmers in the state of my her rashed room do what they only own a few rupees per oyster the money ads are of the end of the year oh they share the profits among them so it's not pollution of the oceans and rivers is one of the biggest problems of the $24.00
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century massive quantities of plastic waste ins up in our seems the ocean clean off project which is using the natural forces of the ocean to passively catcher and concentrate plastic in the create with the fig garbage patch has gone old huge attention world quite the lead to project focuses on cleaning up doty rivers the interceptor on we'll 3 simply is a large catamaran which collects plastic weakest from flavors from the saw 1st a longer vireo over of could be a bed and into dumpsters with this simple principle the organization once to preen a paulsen reverse the contribute to or our if people sit of the oceans plastic before 2025 lucky more and more people are coming forward with their unique solutions to tackle water pollution we found yet another interesting approach the right demands to them on how to clean. all kinds of debris swimming in this
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canal in amsterdam ends up in this catchment cage. a crew from the water company rotter net comes by regularly to empty it every week about a 1000 kilograms of stuff accumulates half of it plastic. this is how it works there is pumped into a tube lay diagonally across the bed of the canal and as scapes through holes in the tube the bubbles bring the waste to the surface the waste is then directed with the help of the current into the receptacle near the bank keeping it out of the north sea. boats and fish can pass through the bottle barrier the extra oxygen is also good for the water. the great bubble barrier was devised by an amsterdam startup of the same name yeah right on at this point the great little barrier is responsible for the maintenance of the whole installation but that it is going to start doing research so they will start research on how much their stick is being
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collected they will also do research on how easy it is to be emptied the water company has crews and a fleet of boats that go around and pull trash out of the city's waterways last year that included more than 40000 kilograms of plastic the hope is that bubble barriers will make the job easier and more effective. that's what this test installation in operation since november should determine. the inventors spent years developing the bubble barrier. there were various challenges such as how to position the tube and resulting screen of bubbles so as to direct trash to a collecting point and how to make best use of currents. the diagonal path is key. 4 people set up the company they now have a staff of 10. there's been
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a lot of resonance the technology is not particularly complex or expensive and it should prove to be very scalable philip hall is one of the inventors of the system and he's continuing to develop it he's currently working on improving the catchment part of the process. with catchment system we still want to improve a couple of things to be. maybe doing it more dramatically or calling for even smaller sizes of classic because we know that we can catch down to one millimeter in size of flooding plastics micro plastics are a serious problem worldwide and jeopardize the food chain nonetheless author a to use in the european union for example and yet obliged to clean the waterways of plastic to spike the health risks we do see now with my capacity because that's a more direct threat to our health that something when we start to wake up if it's only already hurting the environment is usually not urgent enough. but they still
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need the budget around to get plastic out of the water so that 70. challenge fires as as. plastic trash is a global plague that bubble barriers could help combat the team see a lot of potential for expansion. move towards europe in this serious in 2020 but also move towards asia once we have a solidified market here with barclays in asia they hope to set up the 1st the bubble barrier in asia by 2023. what do you feel is becoming a bigger problem with every passing day fishermen in southeastern speed was shocked to see thousands of dead fish on their shores while they battle about the causes of this phenomenon with badminton activists and the provincial government it is their livelihood which is in. this league is their life for money
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when martinez and ruben back fishing is not just a job it's a labor of love they ply their trade in the mama nor the smallest sea in the south of spain it's the largest salt water lagoon in europe but i mean if your job. is a lot to me it's more than a good one with a mother in. those waters feed us and provide our daily bread and butter. but the lagoon is in crisis thousands of dead fish washed up on shore recently and it wasn't the 1st must die off. pollution has been a problem here for a long time. it comes from surrounding towns and from farming and the doll ends up in mamma nor this pollution promotes bacterial growth which is harmful to the seabed and that results and low levels of oxygen and the water. you know
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living on. the fishermen of mama no have hung up their nets for now they want to protect the remaining fish population and sales have dropped in any case due to fears of contamination the search for the cause of the mass die off is still underway. like the fisherman environmental activists believe that pollution is to blame pater garcia and when i dared say that over use of fertilizers in the region is causing contaminated water to wash into the lagoon and. intensive farming is contaminating the soil and groundwater with nitrates from fertilizers. a lot of that ground and surface water flows into the lagoon. the agricultural industry is mainly to blame for this pollution doing nothing to fix it and i think that they're going to. have. studies also indicate that industrial farming in the region may be to blame broccoli lettuce and artichokes are grown here some fields
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have been irrigated illegally. but some farmers such as minnow martinez deny these claims he says that more and more farmers are switching to modern irrigation systems that allow them to reduce the use of fertilizers he says climate and weather conditions are to blame are going to go into other mental old the most are new have to remember that over the last few years we've seen a lot of extremely heavy rainfall. so. for example the rains caused a great deal of water to wash them to the lagoon. there we're a modern man on. the fishermen agree that climate change and flooding is making everything worse that's why farmers have to cut down on fertilizer use it's also a political issue the state needs to impose stricter rules they say which so far it's failed to do. on the local government as no go out for what they've
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done nothing to protect us here we've been telling them for years that conditions and mamma nor are terrible. local administrators say it's up to federal lawmakers in madrid to introduce tougher regulations. but after years of political instability the central government has left south western spain to deal with the issue on its own. and it's not just the reputation of the lagoon or of this region that's at stake here what's at stake is the invite. mental reputation of all of spain we have to learn from this that it's time we found a solution. that. by the time a solution arrives it could be cheaper late for man where martinez and other local fisherman some are already planning to sell their boat it might be years before
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fish stocks return to normal if ever. i don't know what to do. fishing is my life. i've been doing it for 13 or 14 years. my family have fished these waters for 4 or 5 generations that's all i know. some local fishermen have started heading out again even though there's little demand for fish from these waters they feel they have no choice. looking at the past if you laws are implemented and enforced better this is often lead to an improvement in environmental conditions more than 7000 miles away in the city of mumbai to struggle with the implementation of and among other things leaving when you could course like a course like that has a rich biodiversity of marine creatures and environmental activist in the city is
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trying to reassert awareness among its residents in order to preserve and protect this valuable ecosystem before it's too late. he has photographed more than 250 marine species in recent years. including the cube the crab and the blue button jellyfish. he didn't discover them somewhere in the wild but off the coast of mumbai. the foremost goodstein should know helps conserve the rich marine life the tribes along the city's schools line and also conducts sure walks during low tide. more t.v. is lake popular a thing i don't know but ok so more people walk on the beach and if they see and if
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they find such a day with my life i don't wait very definitely not ok and then they'll start respecting or she thinks so or the conservation will happen that will magically. the beaches of mumbai to some of the most polluted waters in the world but the 167 kilometers of coastline us to live treasure troves marine life weeping to be explored. with its photographs but the pitot is drawing attention to waste disposal and environmental degradation. we are planning to document these things then definitely young scientists. approach explored before and of. definitely come forward and do some more studies i don't the theory. is work and preserve mumbai's beaches from further loss of biodiversity .
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simple actions like what fish we choose to eat and how we choose to dispose off takeout container has a life changing impact on marine animals and plants let's call it the responsibility of being a human being i would leave you with that thought we'll be back next week with yet another episode until then.
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what keeps us in shape what makes us sick and how is the mistake of. my name is dr carlson the i talk to medical experts. watch them at work. and then discuss what you can do to improve your health. stay choose and let's all try to stay. in shape next diesel.
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is growing in the sea. in the form of. the super foods that are also good for the their primordial plants but a futuristic resource and they can do even more are. women from 2 continents present their greenbush. global 3060 minutes. every 2 seconds a person is forced to flee their home. the consequences been disastrous our documentary series displaced depicts traumatic humanitarian crises around the world. fuckin thing we don't think that meant i didn't go to university to kill
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people who don't act that way i mean. people feel for their lives and their future so they seek refuge abroad but what will become of those who stay behind. displaced this week on t.w. . welcome to in good shape coming up. the lattes fitness training for core muscles. light therapy special maps for seasonal depression.

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