tv ZDF Bauhaus Deutsche Welle November 29, 2020 6:00am-7:01am CET
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this is deja vu news live from berlin. protests erupt across france over a new security bill violence flares in paris. protesters say plants to restrict the publication of images showing police officers on duty would allow brutality by authorities to go unpunished. we'll hear from our correspondent in the french capital and the battle for the top slot in the abundantly got it heating up. we'll have all the action from the top 3 contenders on tax day 9.
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welcome to the show. authorities have clashed with protesters in the french capital, paris over a new security bill that would restrict the rights to publish images of police officers. the issue came into focus after footage emerged of police beating up and racially abusing a black music producer. opponents say the law would prevent such images from becoming public and could cover up official misconduct. police and demonstrators clashed violently as night falls and the french capital journalists and participants document the events publish videos and images. some might call this a fitting end to a day of protest for freedom of expression and against a new security bill. this would make it a crime to publish
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a photo or video off the face or any identifying element of a police officer with the intent to cause harm. i. i, the protest began peacefully, media organizations, ensuring rights groups organized marches across the country. tens of thousands gathered in paris alone. there are already rules which provide for the protection of officials, including police officers when they're on duty. and that's entirely legitimate because the police do a very important jobs for, but that's not what we're talking about here. it's about wanting to limit the ability of citizens, including journalists to report to police violence. the government says it wants to protect the police from public abuse. but opponents say the new bill as a drift towards repressive government is good on their own kind in the created a bill that would forbid us from filming at a time when we are filming unbelievable things. it's so that here i am in the
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streets for my freedom. as you can see written on my mosque live, we can still move nobody more concern for me, a law like this is not normal. if this law passes, it would mean that people like the poor guy from the video. i mean, if it hadn't been filmed, she'd be in jail. would you make this a break if you need this video galvanized the opposition. 3 police officers in paris beat up a black man, a music producer in his own studio, unaware they were being recorded at the victim was detained until footage from the security camera was published. protesters started fires in paris. the interior ministry says $37.00 police officers were injured in demonstrations nationwide. the new security bill has already passed the lower house of the french parliament and is now before the senate. to w.'s paris correspondent lisa lu is
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was add the protests here as her assess that. there were some clashes between what we think are troublemakers people dressed in black and we have hoodies actually on their head and they were attacking or what it looked like. they were attacking the police forces and the police have been responding to them. but there were also thousands of thousands of thousands and thousands of peaceful demonstrators here in paris and tens of thousands in other cities across the country from all sorts of backgrounds have been talking to teachers, to students, to musicians, and also to journalists who turned up to defend what they think is the freedom of the press. and one journalist told me that she was actually afraid to show up at this demonstration. she's been demonstrating all her life since, since she was little. but with these new law that could come into force. she now no longer feel safe, and she said that she would only stay at the beginning of the demonstration and
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then leave and go home because she feared to get caught up in the violence. many people here are feeling that the government that i am on my car is moving further to the right. there are a few other laws on the table that will be will go through parliament in the, in the near future. especially wrong actually on separatism on you know, the values of the republic and it's, as it's called now that supposed to crack down on, on islam isn't. and many people feel that he's doing a lot to strengthen security to strengthen the powers of the police, but not enough to protect against discrimination against racism. and they feel that that might actually be a tipping point. and the government might give so much so many powers to police that in the future if there were a far right of, you know, an extremist government in place that government might be able to use these laws and these rules against the population. so they feel that it's really important to
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stand up now and prevent this from happening. w's lisa lewis reporting from paris. there. iran is blaming israel for the killing of its chief nuclear scientists and vowing revenge western and israeli intelligence services had long identified as the mastermind of terror as weapons program. israel has yet to comment on the killing of a group of hardliners in tehran, venting their anger at the assassination of the country's top nuclear scientist, mohsin factories a day. they hold the u.s. and israel responsible for the killing, and a calling for iran's retaliation to be swift and hard. president has some new warning, was also quick to blame israel and said tehran will avenge the death, but only when it sees fit. he told a meeting of the governments that as he puts it,
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all the enemies of islamic iran know that the iranian nation and officials are too brave and zealous to ignore this criminal act. the relevant authorities respond to this crime in a timely and appropriate manner. for terror around the loss of factories a day is a blow. he was said to be the architect of the country's nuclear energy program. western security agencies believe that from 1989 to 2003, his research was focused on the development of an atomic bomb. iran has always denied such allegations, but israel claimed as recently as 2018 that he was leading a project to build a nuclear weapon. no one has admitted to carrying out the attack. but observers say bears the hallmarks of a targeted assassination. with multiple gunmen opening fire, she's been cole and also reports of explosions. the defense minister offered condolences to his widow. she echoed the woods as the country's leaders saying his work must continue, and iran would never back down. so get you up to speed on some of the other stories
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making news around the world. if you hope u.s. military says it has taken full control of mickael of the capital of the tikrit region. the army says it has ceased its offensive and is now hunting for the leaders of the tikrit people's liberation front. it comes after weeks of conflict which has left tens of thousands of refugees in dire conditions. at least 2 people have been killed as heavy rains caused flooding and mudslides on the italian island of sardinia streets. and the main square in the town of beatty were engulfed under metres of mud. emergency crews are still searching for several people reported missing to argentina. now where thousands have joined an anti-abortion rally in the capital when osiris many of the protesters came from religious groups. abortion is illegal in argentina, with exceptions,
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only in cases of rape and danger to the life of the mother. next week legislators i set to debate a government backed aimed at giving women access to safe abortion services. it's the 1st time a sitting president has put forward such a measure. a reporter and a shorter has been following the story and joins me now. and i welcome, let's talk about this bill presented by president. operate a friend and as what's in it. well, the new bill would allow abortions to actually take place and allow them to take place legally in argentina, up until the 14th week of a pregnancy. women would be allowed to have this procedure through the country's health system, and abortion would still be allowed to 14 days, 14 week mark. if the pregnancy is a result of rape or the mother's life is in danger. it's basically president fernando, as he's making good on a promise that he made during his campaign to legalize abortion. and he's framing
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this new bill as a way of making sure all women have access to comprehensive health care. and that some legal abortion unsanitary conditions protects women's health and their lives. most importantly, under this new bill, women who either self-induced an abortion or consent to have one or the people who provide abortion services actually carry out to they would not be committing a crime if that terminations happens. but before the 14th week, abortion has long been a hot topic in argentina, but people seem more divided about it these days than ever don't they? yes, it is a really, really divisive topic. according to a recent survey around 49 percent of the argentine population doesn't support abortion, is against it. and around 3035 percent support some kind of access to it. the restaurant decided and argentina is a mostly catholic country so that those findings on necessarily surprising. the
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catholic church course prohibits abortion, and many of the pro-life will anti-abortion protests as they come from these church . these, these catholic and evangelical groups. and these groups have been particularly upset that this has gotten support from the very top, the president of argentina. you can see them out there on the demonstrations. they carry does light blue scarves. and then on the other hand, there's the, the, the pro-choice demonstrates his support these, they support this new law, this new proposed law. and they were in the streets the capital last week after the president announced this new bill. and they want they, they say this lords urgently needed and wanted to become law soon as possible. but some looking at the light blue camp if you like, and the green camp, if you don't, they just don't see the issue of abortion through the same lens. what is clear though, is that the current abortion ban in argentina just doesn't stop $360000.00,
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women getting seeking an illegal abortion every year and getting that illegal abortion. and even though they risk getting prosecuted and they risk their health by doing so, and pro-choice groups see access to legal abortion services as a women's health issue. whereas the religious groups see it as the unborn fetus having a right to stay alive to be born. and they really want to fight for that and a shorter on this very important debate taking place in argentina. thank you very much. from sports now match day 9 of the bundesliga saw germany's top 3 science and action. but after a midweek, champions league matches the title, contenders were showing some tired legs that left one of them to stumble. dortmund were on the back foot early against cologne. just 9 minutes in, headed enough to being completely on mark for a corner. and dortmund again, left ski on mark after a corner in the 2nd half
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a calamitous defensive performance. as the hosts were twice caught napping at the back post. talk on a sob, did pull one back as the hosts ramped up the pressure in the closing stages. but early on hold and was then uncharacteristically wasteful, as he fluffed his lines late on allowing cologne to claim their 1st win of the season. just like dortmund byan went behind early as stuttgart hit them on the break with a lightning quick counter in the 20 minute mark, silas were among the 2 cats setting up, but the reigning champions hit back before halftime kingsley commom slotting in this effort, after 38 minutes before then, turning provider to robert levin dusky on the stroke of half time. the polish strike, a smashing in his 12th goal of the just 8 matches. to put on the finishing touch as he made it, 31 with just 3 minutes left to play. his effort remarkably similar to bynes 1st,
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as they stay top of the league. leipsic were the only of the 3 contenders to start brightly their man in form and hill in yo got his 4th goal of the season and is looking more like a striker than a wing back. bielefeld then cost themselves a 2nd, just one minutes after the break. danny omo pressing high up the pitch, was able to find half time substitute christopher, for an easy finish. the hosts have the league's meanest defense, but did concede warm slate's own as bielefeld. captain fabiana cool scored his 1st going to sleep. a goal having been the 2nd divisions, top scorer last season, might seek remain, hold on by his heels in 2nd. and a quick reminder of our top story protests have erupted across france against a controversial bill that would place strict a right to publish images to fleece officers on duty. critics say the plan could
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allow brutality by authorities to go unpunished. opposition has grown since video footage emerged of police assaulting a black music producer. you're watching the news live from paralympic. spicer will have more headlines for you at the top of the hour on the call for a link from me and the entire news team. thanks, richard. why are people forced to hide in trucks? there are many reasons. there are many answers and there are many stories
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that is what i call inclusion. being probably the only person in the race with this impairment is no problem that i can take part with people with no impairment. and i picked the event by chance. as rising for years, i've been able to somehow go beyond my physical boundaries. and i know as a joke, someone said i should take part in the tough mudder. coronavirus came and i was the mud master. taking part in the mud masters makes me want to show
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that everything is possible if you want it. maybe i can help a few other people with a similar impairment to something they've never had the confidence to try to fall best of luck on sunday. my daily routine includes a lot of working out. so over 5 days i complete around 30 hours of training. and the mud masters is a classic obstacle race, an obstacle course through mud. there are $37.00 obstacles over 16 kilometers and some in water or much you have to climb up walls, swing along ropes, and cross the bars, hand-over hand and also crawl through mud under wires. with electric shocks,
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but also see if you go, yeah, my feet need to get past the word now. and the team competing with me didn't need persuading they were up for it. and the only question was getting a couple more to complete the team. so we knew we'd need 6 helpers, plus me a team of 7, but it didn't take long. and the one sentence almost half of the team who'd be doing the run with me and my regular help us and the others just participants. we're entering the most common discipline and managing the obstacle course. we haven't set ourselves a time. i just worked out roughly how much time we'd need to take up to 5 hours. of goal is simply to make the finish and achieve something amazing that theoretically no one else in my situation has done after the men as it were and so
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on because ago and as you know better definitely it's looking good. really feel good because it would be bad if you could make it. i'll make my daily target the morning. that's not really fit in with the thought about special techniques. like the best way for the guys to carry the line in physio, and it's going to be 12 kilometers for them. and it needs to be relatively comfortable for me to want to let us know if it's going to be under or we'll use the army technique carried across their shoulders and $100.00 climbing weird.
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it's hard to turn my hands the right way around and keep swinging as i'm unable to fully stretch my arms. my hold would depend on muscle tension that will so they have to be to help us with me on the bars. and i don't. and in one second, 100, so i head for the interest and ok if it's not working as i expected and it's too risky, then i have the climbing project. i've got planned in a couple of months in the back of my mind. he says kind of way,
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and i will be careful to keep that risk as low as possible. think whining about i don't know. i'll take care of the music. i just have to work out what we're taking. otherwise it's, we're taking johnny to isengard on a continuous loop, which we have anyway. all the sports is my passion and he's ok. so it's not an issue of m.x. loves it. yeah.
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on the however tough it is on sunday, i'm going to make it yeah . it's amazing being here, after not knowing for the last 6 months, whether it take place, it's amazing having this team and the weather's good. we'll get dirty. but that's the point. the guy that got on yeah, i guess last night was the 1st time i was nervous. i didn't go to bed, but i couldn't sleep. but whatever i've got to do it was a god it's cool that i get to take part with people with no impairment. that's what i call
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inclusion. even you know what he went through with plenty of motivation and if i start flagging, the guy says shouts at me. so i have to carry on. and i figured i could do 500 meters sections at a time using my hands. after those 500 meters, i get carried by my 16 mates to one and a half kilometers and we do the obstacles together with the slide. i thought, man, i'd never try that on my own because i need to
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kind of but i wasn't worried because stefan has tons of experience over the impact of the bottom was a surprise. it really hits your back, but it was cool. this month marks this is really good preparation for my climbing project in rio. it's a massive test of my body. giving my all for 5 hours is an incredible strain. even when i'm being carried. even then i have to keep my muscles tense. you know, my issues with the orthorexic won't end as long as i'm dependent on them for
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assistance and i don't, i hope one day that will no longer be the case. then as for the situation at the college, i'm sad to say that nothing has changed in terms of how people treat someone with my impairment. if anything i have the feeling that if you win medals and perform well, then people like that one. again, i think i've seen it as there have been times when i've told myself it was just my subjective opinion. even if i didn't believe that. but there have also been cases where i thought, ok, it can't just be in my head if there's an official inclusion. lecturer says he wants me in his course and asked me
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a few days later if i didn't have the time. but actually i did have the time, i just hadn't been informed. and then i question whether my feelings are really subjective at all. just a not so picked on you don't know, i need help, johnny come on. you said it would be a piece of cake. nice one johnny one. congratulations. we made it through every single obstacle. that's really it. i'm so proud of my team . it was so much fun. i could only have made it with
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a great team and these guys were the real deal. that's you know, people think. oh god, it's fantastic that we made the finish. i do it all again. immediately. everyone clapped when they saw us. it didn't matter where i was being carried. it was down in my hands. no one thought it was stupid. it was a message for the rest of germany. i haven't thought this is integration. it makes me feel like a regular person up on top of that look. oh, shut up phony. you either gold bugs crawling. 6 journey is also fighting for his health has to be paid 12 hours a day. his next adventure scaling sugarloaf mountain in rio in the summer of 2021.
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when food becomes scarce, climate change has put traditional agriculture under massive pressure. over the world, researchers are searching for solutions. can high tech farms help secure our future? next on d, w. the fastest bed in the world drives 110 kilometers an hour. then one needs it, but it's a lot of fun says its inventor and builder head shot. but remember, it gets things moving that shouldn't actually move at all and holds various incentives with his son be a good 16
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global ideas is on its way to bring you more conservation law. how do we make cities greener? how can we protect habitats? we can make a difference to the ingenius fundamental series of game global $3000.00 on g.w. and all mine is this what the future of agriculture looks like vegetables and that is to start on several floors artificially lead, fully automated farming research from drought prostin store. this isn't a futuristic question in japan, this is already the reality for a largely immune system. we can produce food and not optimal conditions with high nutritional content and good taste. good low euro chargeable,
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gentle balance. the big difference to working in the field of a good book by the church on the burke in the fields in brandenburg. these thick dust clouds, juta the trout without massive artificial eric ation, there would be no harvest. are these fields facing an imminent collapse under the bridge as the conditions are currently i would have to recommend my children look for or a different profession. devastating drought here. heavy flooding elsewhere. food production is in danger, and catastrophic famines wreak havoc throughout the world. researchers are searching for solutions a typical harvest in japan. the workers more protective suits that are hygenic,
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they prepare the environment is clinical. these lettuce heads are cultivated without source and free of pesticides. in this room, the temperature always remains the same. it is because i find it pretty good that i can always work indoors regardless of the weather in tranter than in the rice fields. vertical farming is the name of this method from japan as seen here at the company spread and cure to the roots thrive in a liquid new chancellor ocean without topsoil. but with the same natural ingredients, such as sodium and potassium lamps with a similar color temperature to sunlight are used. solar collectors and the buildings green facade indicate that progress is that home here. the university of chiba in japan. and this futuristic looking greenhouse experiments with vertical
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vegetable cultivation are being conducted professor to your key cause i invented this method in the 1970 s. back then he initially had problems finding the right light and had high electricity costs. the breakthrough came with the technology originally, i wanted to help the small farmers who own a small land parcels strike vertical farming enables one to achieve 100 times more and you will harvest on a single area then with conventional farming he must stop. so it's worth investing in such vegetable factories. these facilities can be set up anywhere. it's an important step towards sustainable agriculture. there are no losses during the harvest, and we use less energy for transport. productivity and profitability can be increased even further. with the latest technology of this method is mainly used for fetched to post in salads. as far as staple foods go,
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such as cereals or potatoes, more research is still needed to know who should go to school in japan after the same a catastrophe. there was a lot of interest in these new greenhouses because it is possible to produce all year round, regardless of external influences are going to follow. which one has to our methods of the farmers have a stable production without damage from insects or warms the fish. and of course, the system is sustainable when you can run these vegetable factories in the middle of the city and produce local food as needed from the uk and the contrast agriculture and the fields. once again, the farmers like watch are a lot of watcher and the weather is much too hot. temperatures of up to 40 degrees celsius can dry up the soil to 2 metres deep.
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large parts of germany are affected by trapped in the summer. the result can be, the total loss of the harvest was high financial losses. and brandenburg is one of the farmers who suffer. he grows potatoes and corn. his farm is located in an area with light, dry soil. without the help of expensive irrigation systems, nothing would grow on his farm. the water already needs to be pumped from deep underground. and climate experts predict that even more extreme dry periods are expected from the well here in bordeaux called that if you look at the ground here, there is no moisture that's no longer can survive the fall through the that's why there's not much angles. if it's a 2 miserable potatoes, there are
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a few more which might have been ok if they had enough water over my last year. we are having a very dry year. again, it's only rained half the amount that we normally would have had at this time of year or so on or so dry from last year that even the little rain we've had over the last few days is not enough for the plans. because i know the functions within me are but how can the farmers problems be solved? how can we ensure that food supply in the future is safe? fastening in university in the netherlands is looking into these questions. at the renowned agricultural university, scientists are working on using new ideas and methods to finally defeat hunger in the 21st century. they are working on the assumption that in just 30 years, twice as much food will have to be produced as today. but the conditions for this have become worse, in order not to exacerbate the climate crisis. the area available for food
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cultivation should not increase. new methods are therefore needed to produce food in the future. and funding and as head of the planned science department. he understands how grave the situation is. so if we change nothing, and we keep all consuming the way we are doing it, we don't optimize the way we produce our food. then for the next 40 years, we will need to produce as much food as we did over the last 8000 years. and i think that gives a really good impression how big the challenge is to feed the world in 2050. with its huge greenhouses, the netherlands is the 2nd largest food exporter in the world and they take care of their resources and vegetable growers here, much less water to grow tomatoes than elsewhere. thanks to new eric ation
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techniques, our research is focusing on to produce more food, but at the same time to do it with less imports. so we need to produce more nutritious food, more safe food. and this challenge, more with less and better, is really the overarching theme of our research programs. this is how daily life knocks in the spanish region. i'm mary under this sea of plastic tarp and then lies europe's largest special car, artificially irrigated grown for exports. millions of tons of tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, and other varieties are shipped from here mostly to germany. but intensive cultivation has its price. pesticides and fertilizers contribute to the fact that hardly anything grows here outside the greenhouses and spanish vet school farmers are running out of watching. the whole area is drying out
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the situation in africa is even more extreme, especially south of the sahara. there isn't an increase and whether catastrophes it's almost impossible for the poor and hungry to lift themselves out of their misery without external help says the secretary general of german agro action zeidan yards wide. since 2014, the number of hungry people has continued to rise. and currently 821000000 people suffer, but we can see quite clearly that about 30000000 people have been affected as a direct result of the climate change this claim of hundreds personally and very acutely affected by this. because the storms currently hitting these countries were previously completely unknown. and this is just such
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a sign of the destructive force that a change in climate country give us and how the people in the countries where we are quite defenseless and at the mercy of the elements. also give us and catastrophes, drought, and floods destroy. not only the living spaces of inhabitants, but also valuable agricultural land other brandenburg for america in heart and consult his trap. problems with technical help supported by the e.u. . he nevertheless has pessimistic about his future. with legal is of irrigation is the only way we can still grow things here. grain cultivation is actually not feasible anymore before and we are no longer competitive world. why it will be here with potatoes that we barricade are sold here in the region where we still have a market that we can sell to redeem recalled will be included back in japan at the
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company's spread and kyoto headquarters for the new world of agriculture spread as currently the world's largest farm for vertical production and employee of the company on her way to work. her clothes are more similar to what people wear in an operating theatre than on an outdoor farm. here hygiene regulations are very strict . all precautions are used to prevent germs from the outside, entering the production as the food should be clean and unspoiled. and this closed sterile environment, the plants grow without the use of pesticides and fertilizers. a good $50000.00 heads of lettuce, leaves the factory every day. this hall is only used for packaging. others are used for growing very special post, including mushrooms and exotic herbs. the selection is large. none of the producers watched as there are germs in the watch and that may cause the vegetables to spoil
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. another advantage of this type of indoor farming is that the chance thrive on several floors above each other and each very little valuable floor space. the cultivation and some of the house is already fully automatic. she found at the factory 15 years ago, you could of the most older than me. fact that climate change or the explosion of the world's population was not a big issue in so doing or was there a market for factory grown vegetables? well, you may be more on the right now. we make a good profit will. i don't think that factories will replace conventional farming completely and good. but i think that our way of farming will play a central role in 20 or 30 years to go through this. we want to share the technology with poor countries, so that they can produce their own food or goods. we'll stop the stuff. i, thanks to the short distances to supermarkets and restaurants, no goods are spoiled, train transports,
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unlike in conventional supply chains. on the other hand, conventional agriculture in japan is also in a deep crisis. farmers use pesticides as a necessary tool and rice cultivation. price which is sacred to many japanese is heavily subsidized in japan. the market is largely protected by high customs duties . prized imports are considered an attack on cultural heritage. but the areas under cultivation are dwindling. the average size of a japanese farm is just $1.00 hectares, which makes it difficult for farmers to make ends meet. that is why there are hardly any young people farming was the average age of a farmer being 66 years old. cooperatives are formed in many places in order to be able to far more effectively. but the increase in natural disasters is also causing them problems in the world.
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to avoid being held hostage by these changes, the farmer was inventive. will go up on this is my aquaponics system. he proudly flames and his small greenhouse. he is trying out a new form of agriculture. aquaponics here, fisher, bread and large tanks ikea easy has 250 starches and his facility deficient excrement is pumped out and used to spread to lies or her various vegetables. the water purified by the plants is then returned to the fish tanks from rice farmer to modern aquaponics farmers. almost all vegetables thrive here all year round and are independent of climate changes. the greenhouses even withstood an earthquake. the neighboring farmers have already suffered this year. it rained too much and their plants did not get enough sun.
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i kid out over can still carry his harvest to the market. and dreams of an even bigger plant, such as this one in the show, never back to strict in berlin. in the grounds of an old industrial complex greenhouses professional growing in the middle as the city groups of visitors from all over the world come here to learn about the goings on. inside. this is also an aquaponics farm, but on a grand scale, the current product, capital city, grown with the excrement to fish president these tanks. the fish that is marketed in berlin is of course, called capital city perch. the one we want to produce where people consume,
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so we don't have long supply chains or long cold storage time zone and we have a much better c o 2 ballots. so it's why i think our fish, the capital city curch is the freshest best. you can buy here in berlin. the principle is as old as the hills. the water that is polluted by the fish is extracted and used his manure for the plants. and has been used this way for centuries in china and by the mayans of central america. the plants grow faster on shelves, are in raised beds in these rooms than in a natural environment. the young entrepreneurs produce $1500.00 basil pods per week for a supermarket chain. so won't take long before the costs for the 1400000 euro construction are recovered. from the 7800000000, people currently live on our planet and a mere 30 years it will be 11000000 more and more people are leaving the rule areas
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. and according to united nations study 2 thirds of the world's population will be living in cities and 2050. so more of these fires will have to people, especially in asia they're the mega-cities already extend over huge areas without any agriculture. more plants and more greenery is needed in the cities. urban planners face a new challenge. the inhabitants of mega-cities not only have to be supplied with living space watcher and energy. they also need room for growing food. the descent of architects just talking and move on and his staff are planning huge presidential and office complexes and almost all the world's megacities. and they need to make them attractive to live in the islands and are hits. we have to deal
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with overheated cities. cities are significantly warmer and hotter and the surrounding areas rips through dealing with cities that are not only dan, so to speak, but also sealed. so no offices there is little contact between the environment and the ass with correspondingly negative consequences due to the influx of people and of a grounding by the physical about a foot. it is no longer possible to ignore this problem with me. so the idea of revegetation and of green architecture equal to a major role in the wheelchair to war for though the ending of the awful. i know this residential and office complex in singapore, as high as the berlin television tower is an example of the descent of architects work. 20000 people live and work here. a small town in a single building complex. in the middle of it is of green heart, 350 different species help to provide better air and a better climate. this is certainly not the solution for normal rural
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central european areas or it is the solution for high density locations. of course, if you plan to create a green area, you can also use it to produce food. so you have to have facts of life that you have to shading a factor and the fact that the food is produced here. and so you have the benefit of oxygen production. and an additional advantage is that if the project is grown here, you also save c o 2, june, additional to transport roads. what we are going to green areas and not just for recreation, agricultural producers, growing food at high rise buildings, or on roofs next to huge office towers. that's really, i wouldn't dismiss it, although it does, of course aim bizarre. because i think that from a central european perspective, it's difficult to imagine the density and intensity is one of the difficulties. many of these cities will face in the next 50 years. what comes next is to achieve
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this with a quality that enables the people to live healthy lives there on a permanent basis for us. what sounds like a futuristic dream is already a reality in asia. but also in europe, more and more people are moving to the cities and the transport supply chains for food are getting longer. in the center of tokyo, they can sell the main shopping street of the metropolis home to the large japanese corporations and law established institutions. a rice field in the middle of it on the roof of a high rise building a secular brewery grows the raw material for its rice. while here in japan such is not just an alcoholic beverage. it is an indispensable part of the country's culture just like rice, which is why sackey and rice belong right in the heart of tokyo for this program.
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it is also an experimental field for new varieties, the roof of a high rise building as an agricultural alternative. but it was in the beginning, they didn't take us seriously. no rice would grow here. it's much too right here at night with a cut on the roof. it's much too hot. but our experiments have been good and we're harvesting more and more. the rice grows well here. i think it's right that in japan they are looking for different ways to grow rice and vegetables. it's a challenge. and after all the rice is part of our tradition. let's start there, get another one. each season, the group produces 50 bottles of sackey from a small rice field on the roof of the historic building in the center of berlin. right next to the museum's
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entrance hall is a restaurant illuminated glass cabinets are not just part of the decor. i inside grow harps and salads, and it's really start up based in berlin has placed these plant cabinets in various restaurants in the city, as well as in the stores of a supermarket chain. they function similarly to the plant factories in japan and ensure that the project is fresh on the table. there are 50 sets many greenhouses, and berlin alone and about $200.00 already distributed throughout europe. 2 square meters of space in the plant cabinet corresponds to 250 square meters of regular farmland and less food is waste in the kitchen because you only harvest what is necessary for the dishes that guests have ordered this thing from our farms
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. 2 or 3 times a week. we don't have to wash it because it doesn't have any dirt. it has just water. so it's perfect for, for the cook and also for the guests. this is, for example, is this 1st of all, it's this, this is very hard to get in the market. so you can see that it's super tasty. and the fact that you just, you are harvesting it and putting it straight into the plate. it makes a huge difference. but the other thing, and i think this is the most important one, is that you have access to the flavors and to plants that you cannot get anywhere. for example, this one is small stuff. and it's something that you cannot get in the market. things to really like must start, like, sharp and spicy. admittedly, this kind of special preparation is more for the enjoyment of a metropolitan minority. presently these greenhouses are not your plan for mass
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production in germany. at least the lettuce here doesn't travel far to be put on the table. the factory plans grown under artificial sunlight without earth and with little watch or an important step for the nutrition of the future. and a challenge for conventional agriculture will work with nature. if you look around here, marx are singing, the insects are flying around me, but that isn't the case in these facilities. i believe that this is not what you want in the future. it's not nature. it's just an artificial product. i just can't imagine it would, but it has nothing to do with my eat. those as a farmer or me would be farming is having an area of land here where something is growing that i can take care of. i'm one of a bunch of artificial farming goes against the philosophy of what i want to represent with my soul as a farmer. but do we have another choice?
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classical agriculture alone will not be able to supply the growing wild population without the help from the oratory for much longer with plants that develop in a controlled way without the use of fertilizers and pesticides, and with less water. soon there will be a world population of 10 or 11000000000 people. we can't yet imagine how big the cities will become. and at the moment it's almost considered progress if you can successfully cope with overcrowding at all. it is an essential part of the 21st century technology that we achieve this because if we don't, all survive on the planet may not happen. what do you want? do you want to produce in such a way that you have some optimal yields? and you use, you need to use a bigger surface, and that means that you have to destroy nature, or you want to have your optimal yields per square meter. so my opinion is that we use our agriculture fields in such
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a way that we optimize the growth in order to save the environment. our research is still just starting. however, in the coming decades, cities throughout the world will need to host critical agricultural was safe, clean, and sustainable projects. if we are to prevent food from becoming scarce in the
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his money. figuring the onus on the star 10 or even in coronavirus times is not easy. to reach the artist known as tough luck. armstrong, last w. . the fight against the coronavirus pandemic. how has the rate of infection been developing? measures are being taken. what does the latest research so information and context. the coronavirus of data. the codes of special
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this is a d.v.d. of you news live from berlin. protests erupt across france over a new security bill violence flares in paris, protesters say plans to restrict the publication of images showing police officers on duty for the love brutality by authorities to go unpunished. we'll hear from our correspondent in the french capital, also coming up the opposition in belarus. accuse hard line leader alexander lukashenko of jailing doctors who could be treating coronavirus patients. this come
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