tv ZDF Bauhaus Deutsche Welle November 30, 2020 1:00am-2:01am CET
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i am telling you that it isn't going to go away, david and not a trace of oil money to be. so what happened to the mystery black gold oil dramas? it starts december 4th. this is news, and these are our top stories. the united nations says more than 100 people have been killed in a brutal massacre in northeast nigeria, motorcyclists are said to have gunned down civilian farm workers in villages and towns and borno state. no one has admitted carrying out the killings, but the militant group boko haram has attacked the area in recent years.
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thousands of anti-government protesters have marched on the headquarters of an army regiment controlled by the king of thailand. demonstrators wave the inflatable rubber ducks, which have become a symbol of their long standing demands for constitutional reforms. riot police blocked the gates to the barracks in the capital, bangkok. thousands of people have been evacuated from the slopes of an erupting volcano in indonesia. a column of ash has risen 4000 meters into the sky. officials have set up an exclusion zone on limbaugh the island and close the airport. a seismic hotspot, indonesia has more than $100.00 active volcanoes. this is news from berlin. you can follow us on twitter and instagram news or visit our website. dot com. the boys
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in our reports are henry growing. and dolphins find out which beautiful island he visited later in the show . but 1st, a very warm welcome to new edition of the euro box. today, we have a colorful bunch of topics for you. why out of all the cases are all the rage in russia and how designers on malta include their islands, traditions. but 1st, lots of people are crazy about cars and some of them collect or builds crazy cos in
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our new weekly series. going into overdrive, we will be presenting some of these petrolheads and they're met machines. we start off with at china, from britain who's managed something most inventors can only dream off he regularly at guinness world records, and he does it with roadsters that don't really look like cost and all, but believe it or not, all of them all street legal, racing along country roads at 111 kilometers an hour in the world's fastest dead china from britain set a new world record in 2008. doing this, he specializes in the can instruction of completely crazy cars. anything is possible. i do like exploring stuff. i'm very curious about how things
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work and i really, really do love sort of dragging things together that shouldn't be together. could i make a car that was nothing like a cop and still be street legal? or say the some of the controls on the serial will spot conventional when you've got your indicator of stuff you're lying on the whole one as well as all on here. so everything is nice and close. easy to get hold of. he's made it into the guinness world records 8 times. i guess nobody else is really doing that. so it's quite nice to be in a strange space. but it is also about pushing the limits and it just seeing how far you can take. and i think, you know, that's really where i get some of the record started to come in. and i would say that the safety record was just literally guinness world records. thanks to me and said, you know, we did, you know that i do 7 miles and i want to see if there is a world record with the sofas, steered by a pizza pan with a beer. can it's gas pedal is me. operated china earned his 1st world record when
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he drove the sofa around a track at a motor show and a spectator time. tim. i set the record boss's furniture about 20 years ago at 19 lines 8. and it was it with that was kind of was that the whole thing in motion? negligible one record a guinness world record isn't enough. you need to have lots of them or start building crazy cars and going crazy records like the world's fastest motorized bathroom. it's fixtures and fittings are attached to a motorcycle frame. when it comes to creating new forms of mobility and china likes to break the convention and simply let his imagination run wild creations like his mobile orange are the result. he's constantly updating it. so what i might tell you is we do the bomb will be in and i actually get it. so it looks like the inside of a little bit of same as well. maybe with
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a magic being given that really nice going to orange engineering product design. he became famous as a car expert on a british t.v. show, and for over 2 decades he's been constructing his mad machine near london. so this is my, this is me. but most of it's kind of a man ice cream van. this is the last call was printed on his latest record, pushing the all electric vehicle to a top speed of 100 in 1000 kilometers per hour wasn't a problem. but there were a few additional challenges. there are quite a few rules beginning with down actually. and then also because you're going through the sort of ice cream before and after the event. and that was really the nub of the problem. that's because he had to develop a new technology to allow his ice cream machine to run on battery power rather than
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diesel. he's patented his dream ice cream machine, and now it's being employed in conventional ice cream trucks. in the meantime, his record has now been broken, but his electric ice cream van project still gives him the drive to do more. to change the world and make it a better place. i mean, who wants to use all fields? are there i skate right now. i'm in the guinness world, record thing is fun, but there is now, there's always been an engineering purpose behind it. not part of the challenge is just nice to do stuff for fun, but at the same time has a 2nd or 3rd purpose as well. i think really that's really where this is going. i mean, you got to do stuff because amuses people. but it has to have a point and could provide valuable impetus for new kinds of mobility. the record breaking rebel is used to getting things moving even things that normally stay put . legend has it that the gods used to spring from one island to the next to cross the
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wools seas and oceans and to get from europe to america. they once set foot on the islands of the azores and they are really set to call them home to the states because the islands are so beautiful and i can totally understand why the azores autonomy's region of portugal. they are located some 1500 kilometers away from the mainland in the middle of the atlantic ocean. and that is where we sent our report to hendrick welling for. oh, and next report. he takes us on a voyage of discovery around these fascinating and very beautiful volcanic islands . i'm going to tell you, and today i'm going to show you how to spend the perfect day on the azores.
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it's a paradise that's been shaped by volcanoes. the azores are a part of peace archipelago in the middle of the atlantic, some 1500 kilometers from the mainland. on the main island of sami again, and shows me the best way to experience the island's natural beauty on food says. first we make our way through what looks like an enchanted forest. a few steps further on. we are on the edge of a volcanic crater on the head of us. plus the cult there are set to see dodge, which means 7 cities. and rock and roll. engineer is
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this huge cult there are posts to different colors, shimmering lakes. you get a great view of them on many of the islands, dozens of hiking trails. i really like the hikes one are challenging. and here, since there's a lot of mountains on in one single hike, you can do a bit of everything up the hill flats down the hill slippery you can you can i across the forests and a few minutes later you're, you're already outside on a field like this so i guess our very, i would say my opinion, they're very complete. there's a bit of everything. yes, ours also whale and dolphin watches paradise. the various ocean currents around the island make these waters a playground for them. i'm joined marine biologist, inish tabo on route. she tells me more about the way it's scouts on land that the
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boats know when away it's been sight as they are starting their migration norse just feeding grounds where it's a lot a lot off with available. and here it is. almost. we are one of the 1st stops, are the 1st places where they can find a bit selfish because they spend our winter having their babies and almost not feeding at all. so here we are a nice coffee break. that's what it is. but before we actually get to see any whales, we spot dolphins, first one, and then the whole school. but
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then the moment arrives. if it's a huge sperm whale, about 16 metres long, the whale disappears in search of food. and i continue my journey around, saw me get the code in a village, or park stretches along the volcano. it's hot springs give off the smell of sulfur . and that's fun. the island's volcanic origin can be seen everywhere on some again. but it's especially evident in the village of footage, located inside of a kind of crater. it's famous for its $22.00 hot springs. fire test,
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the waters at poynton fair idea. where hot spring water makes sense with a cool currents of the atlantic it's really a lot like the bay is the perfect spot to wind down and then the truth i'm about it was just a fantastic. thank you to those that live, but thanks so much to make sure you know, if you go to the right, you know, the baker was just part of top 2 lives and decided off began painting at the age of 7 and quickly became the child prodigy of the german ot's see now 22, he has become one of the most popular visual artists in germany. his style has even
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been compared to that off the cuff. so for example, live in tell its latest work is now on show in a very and usual place. let's find out more if creators call it the biggest mobile work of art in the world. this is the global gate on display at frankfurt international airport, and crafted by one of germany's most renowned artists the death and the 22 year old. you did his latest work as part of the un campaign, art for global goals, an art project whose name is to grant everyone a fair future. and in a world worth living in the central it's, i mean, sustainability which is never before such a crucial theme. since we have to have a clear idea about how we plan to out to and how we will. and the bigger the overall project and the bigger, more visible the scope,
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the more attention the project, which i feel is a good thing. the global gate was built in just a few days out of $37.00 c. containers. decorated on the outside with brightly colored works by lay on live and out. the piece was inspired by the world famous brandenburg gate in berlin . the idea to construct this 21 metre high gate in frankfurt was the fruit of a child's imagination. 9 year old song 1000000 has a little toy shipping container he started stocking with and used to build the brandenburg gate. and it's an interesting coincidence that each pillar of the brandenburg gate is 13 meters long. just like a $24.00 foot shipping container, which is also 13 meters, meaning the resemblance is very, very clear. the artist les i live in taught was commissioned by the united nations
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3 years ago to depict its global goals for sustainable development in a creative piece of art for each of the 17 goals he painted a picture meant to illustrate gender equality and climate action. for example, these paintings have already been on display in paris and new york, and the proceeds from their previous sales were used to build a school in senegal. and here's the end result in frankfurt with the artist 17 motifs presented in large scale on the global gate. the walls are adorned with tags on the un objectives in 12 languages. but how does the topic of sustainability fit with an airport? you can use to draw attention to the topic of sustainability and hopefully promote great sustainability when it comes to flying. but salt is my passion. and as an artist, i've done everything in my power to at least build awareness regarding sustainability
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. and this issue impacts the entire world, which is why an airport, a symbolic they all live in talks, photo campaign or my future can be seen throughout the corridor. to complete it, he asked over 200 children how they imagine the future and photograph them. but how does the artist himself imagine the future i think digitalisation will certainly play a very, very key role in our lives and daily routine with a different image and understanding of how true is he, especially in light of the difficult period we're going through now. is global gate the gateway to a new world. the sculpture will be on display at frankfurt airport until the end of february, before embarking on
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a journey around the world. but without the containers because they can be found anywhere. and besides, that wouldn't be very sustainable. this is the nicest bouquet i have ever been given, and it is perfect because i was planning to make vegetable soup for dinner. but what would you say of summer? offered you a bunch of vegetables like this, instead of flowers in russia, food bookcase are the latest trend. the capital of moscow is home to several through laura studios which make beautiful bookcase from strawberries, nuts, gummy bears, cheese and even sausage. and if you want, probably all of them at the same time, i'm sure their creations are guaranteed to leave you hungry for more. without any flowers, they can be made into a smoothie or snack or even be set up for supper. in russia,
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it's the latest craze. for street store brands, instead of roses. the florist cuts arena cosmina paying a visit to the food markets in moscow is just a normal halter has told. she's been creating for 5 years now. that the stick at that is a bustling new board. it's a new trend that's grown more popular in recent years. above all, we do this to see how customers react. we witness a broad range of emotions among people who give or receive these bookcase, which she should or they are always surprised how they work at all. and they're amazed when their notion of what a bouquet is. suddenly goes out the window. but i didn't watch the book more than a book together with a friend cuts, and when a cousin mina founded of the culture studio in 2015.
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not 10 women look at creating arrangements to suit every taste in the commission for a get well bouquets and ones to surprise those with a sweet tooth. the studio now receives up to 30 orders of perfect ingredients, creativity and patience. a key to creating the arrangements which take around 2 mouths to my look. tonight, we start at the bottom of this homemade form and work our way to the top of my getting q. i'm inspired by restaurants, an unusual taste combinations. i also keep an eye on fashion and what the latest trends are, and i collect ideas from projects that use fresh flowers as decorations. the
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goodness of a few of the cuts arena also creates themed bouquets by adding a few specialty tiles. these tools might from chocolate turn the bouquet into a suitable house warming gift. but the studio's number one best seller is it's made from one and a half kilos of food. see a companion all of the ingredients. you see the bread. it's all edible. so you don't conceal anything or use any chemicals. he me present the freshness of natural it's made from various parrots, like cheese and coconut is now finished taking the photos to freeze the studios. roughly $60000.00 fans on instagram is part of the livery. caterina custom means
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food because it's become something of people that she now lives online courses to make them to participate. so located around the clock making have believe the trend will spread, but the bouquets themselves are filled with the 3 hours to the latest, they need to be stored in the fridge. if people still plan on eating, if you're looking for ideas on how to create surprising and tasty things with food and pay a visit our you tube channel g w. malta is made up of 3 islands in the middle of the mediterranean, over the centuries small also was conquered by the romans arabs, the french, and the british. given this colorful influence, many residents have struggled with their own cultural identity. but now look of the
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zionist, an architect, a rediscovering their traditions. their work is attracting international attention the european highlands different something to take, design, rediscovering their identity. charles from courtship his husband wrote form the fashion charles and draw their creations are inspired by multiple traditions. they present me twice a year of your common collection showcases a famous maltese 17th century being smaller than the middle of the military. it's not really associated with fashion. but
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when we go abroad and we show our collections, especially in new york fashion week, when they see our vibrant colors, the fact that we can tell a story with every gallon that we make, it makes it more interesting. colorful balconies. the typical couple to make an appearance from charles norms gone wrong could be moved from the netherlands to malta or in the 1990 s. using the r. than traditional as an inspiration for fashion. we started for sometimes it was difficult for us to, to sort of explain why we're using these maltese traditions in new clothing. but i think over the years, people have come to appreciate much more much more crowds as well to show their culture and their flow. of details of
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this abandoned 16th century fortress in the port of the maltese peninsula was transformed into a luxury hotel, opened its doors, and 28 teams from architects had been mentally carried out the project together with the aim of restoring and reviving this part of the heritage more to has a very unique history and it's extremely interesting that the history of the structure and why it was hard with the reconstruction project, 17 years he was awarded the renowned pre-birth size for market sector in recognition of the house standing exterior design, anticipating the restoration would take so much parts that you are not quite sure where they were from historic buildings to traditional
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tunnels. they were used to decorate multis houses for generations before going out of fashion. but not for the designer. stephanie porsche returned to malta in 2000 to rediscover cultural roots after spending 10 years or brought since i was little and i had this fascination for the monte sets, i used to draw them and i left there that color and i thought it's was a shame that we were throwing away part of our heritage. so for me, it was a way of preserving part of our heritage and making people aware of the people the old hand crafted was a multi one of us and an exhibit. it's several times. stephanie borscht is glad she's not the only one drawing attention to the country's culture of life. and i just hope it's not just
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a phase. i want that the trends, the loss on the basis that it is because it's is ingrained in our culture something . but that's we should preserve, cherish, celebrates, and sholto of the word malta. the hockey peleg on the mediterranean, is steeped in history and culture, and tradition just continue to inspire at this and that's all we often time for today. but if you would like to receive this d.w. back hag, then our current draw. as always, you can find all the information on our website. thanks for watching and to you again. next time we're talking about
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the idea 3000 next. w. love more hated the future. hold for mortal danger. yes please. there are no thanks to the outcome. the toss. the way the enter dog story of nuclear energy that is splitting humanity in 45 minutes on d w. we know that this is a scary time for the coronavirus is changing the world changing.
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so please take care of yourself. good systems wash your hands. if you can stay at how we do w. for here for you. we are working hard listening to keep you informed on all of our platforms. we're all in this together and together. make it fair to say to everybody is very safe, stay safe, release and stay safe. welcome to global 3000 underwater bangladesh. his farmers are having to adapt to climate change, sustainable lifestyle farming can new methods save mexico's cloud forests. but
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1st, we find out how faith can conquer violence, the former gangsters, finding gods in brazil the average number of people to be murdered worldwide every year is 6 per $100000.00 citizens. that figure is 5 times higher in brazil. last year, an average of $114.00 people were murdered there every day. that's $41635.00 over the year of all countries, not at war. brazil is one of the most dangerous the countries favelas a particular hot spots when it comes to violent crime. much of it gang led the military and police regularly move in on the areas and shootings a commonplace. yet many young men see joining a gang as their only chance of a future and leaving is notoriously difficult. this evangelical preacher was once boss of
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a drugs gang who seeks to make amends for his sins and wants to give others hope. when he speaks gangsters listen i can't forget the sound of the kalashnikovs. he lives in rio de janeiro but nowhere near the beach. his wife always prays for his safe return. whenever dimitri, on march eans sets off to preach in a dangerous neighborhood hum along, he himself grew up in the slums and ended up making lots of money through crime. all this yr. unfortunately, i did bad things. kill people. that's why today my mission is to convert drug
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addicts and criminals will be going to profit he's on his way to a prayer meeting. it will be the 1st time he attends one since the pandemic hits while gangsters patrol the streets with automatic weapons. dimitri, on march eans prepares to deliver a sermon, evangelical christianity is booming among the poor in rio. this is one of the many churches in the favelas. uganda believe that if you go astray, you usually have 3 options, get killed, go to jail, or end up in a wheelchair. that's my message to you and your employer. the churches, pastors, get the service going. extatic practices are typical of this brand of christianity . there are a lot of young people in the congregation that dimitry
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0 asks anyone to come forward. who has a friend or relative in a drugs gang? i don't feel soon, half the gathering is standing in front of him. that's when he starts talking about his time as a gangster. he can do there hear what kind of life that i lead. i have money and power, but i have to hide every night because i couldn't trust anybody. not even my friends. he later back at his home, he told us he never got a good night's sleep as a gangster. but he had had high expectations when he joined up as a poor boy from the slums. he saw it as a chance to be somebody. let me see why i was that you should i started to take drugs and got in with a bunch of criminals and we would attack other guys. as i rose up through the ranks
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to become boss in the complex favela, he reached his criminal zenith in the late 1980 s. and early ninety's, a wild time with lots of partying and lots of drugs. dimitri omar, chines oversaw 25 drug dealing benyus as the right hand man. other major drug fights with rivals were bad enough, but attacks by the military police were even worse. a hit team caught him by surprise. one morning i was walking down a steep when i noticed i'd walked into a trap. they started to shoot but i don't know. i fell. i was in shock. he stopped bodyguards ran off.
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since then, dimitri a has been paralyzed from the waist down. nowadays he spends his days going around the favelas, preaching and trying to get gangsters to reform. his own story is well known, a bad man who found god in the path of virtue. many people here find it moving. was one minute that he often talks to the dealers hanging out on street corners. here they seem to accept him and they pray together. even those who carry a hand grenade with them just in case they are shot. maybe the government needs to create opportunities for the kids here, so they don't just make the obvious choice to become dealers. my father lose their freedom or even their lives. quite a bit of a brilliant idea that i got, but they don't let me be a god. those who choose to go clean and renounce crime are relatively few
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in number. wagner, jody vega is one of them. he got his 1st revolver when he was just 15. so i came up by page, it's following the mold of my rear went well. i was soon one of the bosses and had loads of cash. and in the shoot out, i was grazed by a bullish couple as if it's going to get out the way they should. nowadays, he's deputy head of the local residents' association. he helps people fill out forms and deal with the authorities. think of all the new beneath the ceiling madness. so all i have left from my former life are bad memories and scars. i sleep much more peacefully than i did back then. you're just going to support them inside little me by. he's devoted himself to improving conditions in the neighborhood, digging drainage ditches and clearing roads,
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they plan to tarmac this one when dimitriy omar, chines, the preacher does manage to sway a gangster. it's usually during a prayer meeting. it's quite standard around here for dealers to attend and engage with the pastors. towards the end of the meeting, a young man is moved to get up and tell his story of redemption. and the lot of it, of course, the only part was sentenced to 14 years in prison. then i found god and then i was released. now i shall always walk with god other congregants, find such declarations inspiring. it gives them hope. then another dealer comes forward to receive the blessings that he got this year to outsiders. it might seem very odd that drug dealers can be god fearing. here it is, everybody must know in his heart what he is doing as
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a rookie to clare's his intention to live a cleaner life. if he doesn't, i want to give up drugs. dimitri amar chines good example. see to be a healing influence. helping others like himself to escape a life of drugs and crime. in may 20 twentieth's tropical cyclone hit, the coast of bangladesh. millions of people had to flee for their lives. storms in the bay of bengal, often drive seawater far inland, damming 2 of the country's main rivers, the ganges and the brahmaputra. this can cause them to burst their banks flooding large areas of land. experts believe that climate change will inevitably make extreme weather more common. the country's annual monsoon rains are already becoming increasingly heavy. they also fear that by the end of the century,
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sea levels around bangladesh could rise by $1.00 to $1.00 and a half meters. large areas of the low lying country would then be submerged under water. in southern bangladesh, the monsoon rains are getting heavier year by year, and that means ever more extensive flooding nowadays overdone models, fields are not just under water during monsoon season, but for a full 8 months of the year. so he's turned to growing vegetables on floating beds . the water here is fresh, not salty. mana has become a farming pioneer by reviving a technique that dates back many centuries. but i got, i learnt from my father a few plants on the water, but he didn't do it systematically. i have one. we've developed the technique further. we don't really have any other option if we don't want to starve. my
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mother has got used to spending much of his life in and on water. the venture is proving very successful. the goods are growing fast. they're almost ready to harvest, grown on water, taste better and contain more visible. well, we don't need any chemical fertilisers or pesticides, so these vegetables are better than the ones grown on the much better seedlings have already been planted on the adjacent bed. the roots store new trains out of the water, and the beds are made up of water hyacinths, decayed organic material compost that fertilizers the plants. they're held together by nets and hardly move. there's almost no current here of it. all mother has become something of a star in his village. his income is now 3 times the local average. the whole
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family works on the farm. his daughter is in bedding gourd seeds in bowls of come past. they will then be planted on a floating bed. families in bangladesh are innovating their methods in response to climate change. have those teams of the high. what's a bit scary is that my father's out on the water all the time. it's getting hotter and hotter here, and mosquitoes, breed on the water and cause diseases. my father's often ill, that's terrible because he is the only one in the family who earns any money. so we get very worried whenever he's sick. in the neighboring village of bread, fruit tree has just been felled. the timber is form of an under some a day has given up farming and not only builds but it's
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it takes him 6 hours to build a boat by hand. business is great. he could sell a lot more than he can build. i don't know if you guys, i'm going now you were very busy right now. it's the time of year. you know, the farmers have to take to the water or puerto rico. now you got that for us. it's doubly good because we have to use up the wood. otherwise it will rot in the rainy season of cardboard. cut out, but we still offer the farmers a good price. on the friday, the if the mine, under some a dad goes to the bank market every friday, he may be 70, but he paddles the 5 kilometers there comfortably. hundreds of rivers flow through bangladesh. and they have tens of thousands of tribute trace and low lying coastal regions like here in battery. cell division is a growing threat. the sea level,
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this rising in the bay of bengal. so rivers flow more sluggishly towards the sea and spread out across the land. salty sea water is intruding deeper into the interior for boat building. it means more work on the boat market stretches for more than 2 kilometers along the xantia river. these boats sell for the equivalent of 40 euros. they are a bust and can carry loads of up to 450 kilograms. mohandas some of debt has a number of loyal customers. it all depends on the skill of the boat builder experience. i have a boat, so people like me. but i've had to work very hard to get to where i am now back at don roy has come to visit. he's an agricultural engineer with a district of thora to use and stops by regularly. the government is keen to promote floating phones, all kinds of crops can be grown on them. spinach,
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tomatoes, cauliflowers, as well as gawd's climate change could mean that a 3rd of the country will end up under water. the question is if floating farms like here in barrie soul could be developed across the country right now bangladesh produces enough food to be self-sufficient, but we don't have enough of a safe food food, free of toxins, and contaminants. the floating gardens make a valuable contribution because the farmers use a lot less pesticides because there are fewer pests on the water. at the local wholesale market sells his produce and also seedlings to other farm this. earlier he says they used to grow just rice and that involves much less work. but switching to farming on water has proved to be much more profitable. so i
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don't know what might be the sun are going to seedlings grown on longer, weaker. ours are more robust and look fresher. i'm going to sell more than lamb. farmer's mother got a little water seedlings are greater, demand come on, tire prices, you know, and more and more farmers in bars sell up planning to switch to flushing, cultivation and certainly no shortage of water. ok. we cheat on their travels. all reporters often meet interesting young people like this week, still able to see from time
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hi, my name is playing. i'm 16 years old and i go to the international school of bangkok . i'm currently a junior and i live here in bangkok, thailand. i like to go diving because there's no other experience like being in the water. it's just you and the water and you feel a sense of connection that nothing you can ever experience on land when you're connected to nature on that level, everything just sort of disappears. and you just realize how amazing and connected nature is futile. i like to learn, but i don't necessarily like how schools are organized. so i feel like it puts too much pressure on getting good grades, sigs that are a instead of just the aspect of wanting to learn
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my mom own a parenting seminar company called me into 60 degrees and my dad, he just makes business still hasn't i currently hope so work in the you and i think you'd be really cool to just be in the role of it all and try to make the world little bit more fair afraid of world leaders. because i have no control over the decisions that they make is what it feels like. and when those in power have their own political agendas, that's when things get really scary. and i think you rather than the future people become more sympathetic towards others
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and realize how similar we are instead of focusing on our own self interests because of that. and nothing can work without each other. and i hope that in the future we can all just come to terms of how everyone is different. yet we all strive for the same. even if we hold different beliefs, we all want the same thing this week in global ideas, we look at the told farming takes on millions of hectares of woodland have already been destroyed worldwide to make way for agriculture in a nature reserve in southern mexico, more sustainable methods are protecting by its farm as livelihoods into the forests . it's daybreak and head to cut, he is on his way to milk his cows. he follows a path up the number you grew up
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a mountain in unless it grew to the biosphere. reserve in southern mexico. legend has it that anyone who tries to take something away from the mountain will never return home. the slopes are shrouded in an almost primal mist. there's been widespread deforestation on many of the other mountain slopes in the region. farmers keep their cattle in the forests that remain cows grazing on land that's fenced off to protect the woodland. yeah, there went back and there was good with it and i want to copy wreak havoc in the forest. they destroy everything, contaminate the streams and cause ground erosion. so if they run around the forest and it rains there, be landslides, with god fair hector keeps 20 cows used to have many more, but he got rid of half of them because he knows that traditional livestock farming
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is bad for the environment. decades ago, his grandfather switched from growing corn and beans to livestock farming because it was more profitable. 3 years ago, hector joined the project to be opossums, which promotes cattle, farming that's sustainable and doesn't destroy diversity. his income is starting to increase and the environment is gradually recovering. but it's been a difficult few years. only little ball leave the article i argued with my father. that was the 1st obstacle i had to overcome. hasn't been easy. but i asked him to give me a chance moment of wait, if you think that when i took the risk by small farm, i went through some hard times. very hard times. i milked my cows constantly, but the yields were low. which i let
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indigenous farmers traditionally let their livestock graze in forest pastures and also grew vegetables. their methods were sustainable, their expertise had largely been lost. now their descendants are looking to revive it and save the cloud forest. jose antonio jimenez coordinates the bee opossums project in the state of chiapas. right? all 4 of you know, meticulous planning facilitates the farmers switch to the climate. smart livestock concept knows the region well and can provide practical support when necessary. the biggest challenge he faces is convincing the farmers to change the way they've always done things the upper limb, but not the most. we need to work with the farmers to identify problems together. we also need to work with them to find solutions when this process taking into
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account the expertise and experience of the farmers and their families. it helps them to learn new things. and then we must always factor in what the farmers know protection through production, that's the motto of the opossums farming practices don't have to entail force degradation. some 1200 farmers in the region have joined the initiative. most of them are cattle farmers. 1 pm in town still has a herd of cows, but he's also cultivating bananas and soursop trees on a section of his land. even though it'll be 5 years before the fruit provides him with a solid income. he signed up with b, o, pass us that, but a lot of people think we're crazy. they don't know why we're planting small trees when we won't even live to see them grow. but my wife and i hope that even if we
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never get to harvest the fruit one day, our children, our grandchildren will benefit and they'll also benefit from improved air quality. we'll feed them a little naive. and oh yeah, yeah, yeah. a year ago, 1 pm and tells wife was one of several local women in the village and has to found their own cheese dairy, which they run as a co-operative. they all used to make cheese at home by themselves. now they've joined forces. the equipment is all brand new and was provided by bill passes. the women produce 5 the riot, the cheese. and then we'll head if we went out talk a lot, we say what we think it's good that we're making different kinds of cheese.
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everyone knows different varieties so work sperm, anting, that if we women support one another, or yam the farming families used to sell their milk via a middleman at a very low price. now they're earning better the focus of going to money. that was one of the main incentives for joining the project. and switching to sustainable production center with all the nico they pull, it allows them to diversify. it means they can sell their produce at higher prices . is our aim was not only to teach them new technical skills, but to support them in the whole production chain, from the farm to the consumer. in the hectare and rosa county, you have also invested in a cheese press. it's helped speed up the production process and they hope that in
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radiant dog story of nuclear energy that is splitting humanity in 15 minutes on d. w. green lungs that let nature and humans brief uneasily in the mega city of mumbai, nope. only 13 percent of the city is covered by green space. a japanese method of reforestation aims to change that. it can create a way season, biodiversity in just 3 years, eco, candia. in 60 minutes on d. w i think is everything challenging 1st on how to make a muslim so much different culture between here and there. challenging for
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law. i hate tobin's 9th symphony for the world starts to simmer down on g.w. . this is good news, live from berlin, parts of australia in the grip of record temperatures as scorching heat fuels ever more wildfires. city records taught us november night since records began terminus latest a hotspot. we don't have a small town with an alarming infection rate over 4 times the national average. and
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