tv ZDF Bauhaus Deutsche Welle December 7, 2020 1:00am-2:01am CET
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periods in a changing environment or the ice disappears earlier and it keeps retreating it's a huge the last years have been smelting. that are. our future depends on what happens here in one of the most fragile ecosystems on earth. northern lights within the arctic circle starts december 21st w. this is news and these are our top stories. voting has ended in venezuela's parliamentary election boycotted by opposition leaders polls is expected to tighten president nicolas maduro script on power by giving his party control of the national assembly that being the last major institution in venezuela outside his
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grasp the opposition claims the vote was rigged. the very it has announced tougher coronavirus lockdown rules aimed at slowing the rate of new infections there the new measures will see people having to provide good reason for leaving their homes and a maximum of 5 people from 2 households will be allowed to meet in public a very has the highest coronavirus death toll in germany. thousands of people have taken to the streets of the bella russian capital minsk and elsewhere to demand president alexander lukashenko resign from office the march was the latest in nearly 4 months of weekly demonstrations hundreds of people have been detained by police. this is the deadly news from berlin you can follow us on twitter and instagram the handle is at w news or visit our website to be found at d.w. dot com.
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faster than a speeding bullet find out why this untamed is burning rubber like a race car. more on that later in the show hello and welcome to another edition of your max with me your host meghan lee here's a look at what else we've got coming up. a baker in switzerland has opened a special hotel for sourdough cultures. and a city pays tribute to the bridges on euro bill. but 1st we want to take a plunge most regions of europe are too cold to go swimming outdoors but in poland
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diving enthusiastic can enjoy a special underwater experience despite the i see temperatures that's because a new pool has opened that takes things literally to new depths we went there to have a look. 45.4 meters that is the depth of the world's deepest pool opened in mission off south or was so in late november it's perfect for allegedly swim. and should diving practice whether you're a beginner intermediate or pro. just your up we covered court enter and the practice hours here's a good start for a complicated year we can stay active all year so when the summer season story we are prepared to guard other apartments. if you prefer to stay dry you can watch the
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divers from the tunnel 5 meters below the surface it's a bit like being in an aquarium. michelle kosinski came up with the idea for this unique construction. of the spectacular think about this tunnel is its 20 metre link flat surfaces give you an understood view of the pool. visitors can even practice diving in dark underwater caverns even though this requires considerable experience 'd the water is clear and has a pleasant temperature of 33 degrees celsius. with our former levers of their cupboards the couple this is proof for the person
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that there is not the but supportive of the caves as there is about. the main pool is only 20 meters deep anyone with just basic open water diver training cannot go any deeper. miracleman. we strongly advise against testing out your limits in this pool divers need to keep this in mind they may decenter greater depths only during training to prove what watch or from the adventure the. trinity is a free diving instructor he wants to reach the bottom of the pool with out an oxygen tank. you have to hold his breath for about a minute and a half. the deep spot is ideal for honing your free diving skills.
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they're limited to record the 5 meters but as a 3 day over 3 hour day the people are going to record the type of feeling up and down it's. a 130 meters and the difference is that the human were good 114 meters on a single breath. until recently the world's deepest pool at 42.3 meters was located in northern italy it opened in monte gras to tamar and 2014. there are plans to build an even deeper pool in britain by 2023 it will have a depth of 50 metres and mainly be used for research but for now the polish pool remains the world's deepest diving here has several advantages over the ocean.
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but is just good which is. unlike at sea you can practice here 24 hours a day you have stable temperatures and light plus we have the greatest possible safety measures in place with structures and lifeguards prez. the. ideal conditions for diving even though anyone looking for schools of fish and coral reefs will still have to head to the ocean. we continue now by hitting the road with our special series going into overdrive where we take a look at some of the fastest vehicles on the road and today brutus is in focus now this is a classic looking roadster powered by an airplane engine giving it the horse power of a race car brutus actually belongs to a museum but every now and then he gets the chance to spin his wheels outdoors.
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hemant elia president of the technique museum since time in baton rouge is at the wheel of a roaring monster. the infernal machine is called brutus. an ant craft engine apply 750 horsepower to fulfill and wheels on wooden rims. that once the engines running it's a sensation and when it revs up it can hardly even a run for all the power it revs up and you just can't buy this engine and then all you can do is make sure you handle it but if you just let your feelings run free with it things start to happen. it took 8 years to get brutus up and running. and other museum association members started
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work on one of the exhibitions highlights in 1908 they mounted an historical 47 lead to aircraft engine on the shelf c. of a vintage american the false motor car from 1970. them with the engine was standing there and we thought what would happen if we were to run how would that be what all of our growth of the restoration process a couple of times because we were afraid of what the car will do with us because the engine is built to fly and we were using it to dry before heading out hammond lie a why is a horseshoe to the radiator grille for good luck. always turn the open side up so the lot can pour in today it's raining and without that horseshoe only i'm not getting into this car to. really step into the engine or sit inside the engine. all because
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a carcass has stood out to charlie of the engine your heart pass a little calling for concentration as if to say don't do anything crazy this car is always trying to kill you i don't know that's just how it is now pull the decompression lever and we can take off. nobody knows exactly how fast the car can go not even after 15 years of attempts to set new records at the airfield in and a nearby test track. the power goes faster than you drive it we had an englishman here who was over 70 he'd already lived his life he drove 200 kilometers an hour and box per on the grounds on those narrow tires kept pulling him back and forth and now we're just waiting for someone to say how to
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take it as fast as the car can really go it's just a little tricky if a tire blows or the chain breaks you'd have to know exactly how far to take things the car has no let's open it once a year bruce has fans come from all over europe to southwest germany for nick to vittie weekend at the technology museum. and brutus shows off his strength to the audience. the months to has attracted over half a 1000000000 fun it was well why don't social media. generally you can say this car is irrational it's wild it's untamed you know you go up people have such enormous lies that a car like this that's a little the norm was a fascination for them. sometimes hammon lying tries to cruise along with brutus through the countryside. specially
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blocked off roads because the vehicle is not street legal. but at the end of the day when he climbs out he's quite exhausted. always skip around and all the empty you feel a bit like your nerves are blown out because this role is rather dangerous it's very narrow and the cars always point one way or the other and the sparkplugs actually cut out when you travel slow and then when they fire the car leaps ahead. then it gets dangerous. gave everyone get scared in this car some sooner others later and then you stop then you know where you belong. and could it be that night feeling happy. and fortunately even a trip in what may well be the world's most dangerous car comes to an end at some
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point. it's not often that an 11 year old not only makes headlines for being gifted but also raising money for a good cause in our next report will meet daisy watt from the u.k. a young landscape painter who sells her works to help others in need daisy pains her memory and says she does it to make people happy while her works reflect a talent that is far beyond her age we caught up with the young artists is here what motivates her. tacey watts is only 11 years old but she is already a season artist she started painting when she was 6.
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as mushrooms. would never be as well well. known for daisy penny is more than a hobby her painting is a flowers sell for thousands of euros some of the proceeds go to cancer support charities. and i did a. daisy paste to bring joy to others. i liked because and a couple of years ago my mom's. and my dad's momo had cancer in one same time i did it to cheer them up because they were basically because i like to make people happy. karen watson noticed her daughter's talent and began auctioning off her work to raise money for cancer charities this way the young painter has helped
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raise over 55000 year old for different foundations daisy has received many prizes for her commitment including 82001000 yorkshireman young achiever. there you see when daisy wants to paint she sometimes puts a little sometimes she puts a lot of this goes quite embarrassed about people comments in given all the positive comments. daisy. his her very own artistic style her culture works are often compared with those by french impressionist claude monet. in my letter thank you because people call me me me mommy me.
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during lockdown she painted a rainbow of miniatures. as a tribute to frontline workers her motif is featured on greeting cards and magnets the proceeds go to the national health service. all current. ones. own. for tax purposes. and then glass. added more details tear gas and then and there follows all. these other pastimes include skateboarding horse riding meeting friends and playing football her local club she's got a pretty clear picture of her future. i want to go around the world. and then come back and put them into my painting i mean one day she realizes just how special she's got so many people she's ok.
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one thing's for certain days it's future looks bright and picture perfect. when we take a vacation there is usually a checklist to consider before we go on the water and electricity turned off are the plans watered and so on but what about your sourdough culture well if you bake your own bread then you know that leaving your sourdough culture on it tended for long periods of time code lead to dire consequences meaning it could die but now is a hotel in switzerland is offering a solution to keep the culture alive. thank you it's all the rage these days especially with sourdough but what can you do with your sourdough culture when you go on holiday a swiss bakery has come up with a clever solution just hand it over to martin my in zurich parting can be
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sweet sorrow even from dough culture it was every time if eels a bit like a sad goodbye to be honest this sourdough culture has been part of our family for very long time we got it from pizza tionna in italy this sourdough culture is 150 years old and even it behind us whenever we go traveling abroad was always told this minute a hotel opened in oktober and can accommodate up to 30 sourdough cultures where $45.00 euros per week well looked after. originally we had planned an all exclusive package leave your sourdough culture with us when you go on vacation we'll take care of everything and look after it but now we've also got customers coming to us if they have problems. all you need for
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sourdough culture is flour and water. but there's a whole philosophy that goes with it. after all it's like a microcosm in a jar. once prepared it needs to be fed almost daily. it's a living thing. sourdough contains yeast and lactic acid bacteria they multiply creating gas which leads to natural fermentation we might even hear this when we lift the lid. if. i had discovered his passion for sourdough bread during his years of training and travelling in new zealand. shortly after returning home he started his very 1st sourdough culture it's almost 5 years old now now has foreign. culture come from south africa we were there on vacation about 3 years ago and took
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a culture there along with us and they had a culture in south africa that was 20 years old so we got an exchange for. every sourdough culture is unique. stores and cultivates 120 from 25 countries the aim is to preserve that variety and knowledge of their preparation and use. multi-talented its virtues lie not only in the flavor but in its long shelf life and digestibility according to. the baking bread series the correspondent. whipped up a good 300 loaves of bread in one. version has it that a slave in egypt was forgot to put the tofu the pita bread into the oven in the intense heat of the egyptian sun. and then the sleigh one ahead and places
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fermented dough in the oven what happened then. what makes our show is a raising agent and that gives it the flavor sourdough and that revolutionized baking in europe and the world. today amateurs are rediscovering the merits of hand crafted bread not only as food but is a canvas as well. takes a somewhat simpler approach because he has to produce a lot more than one loaf a day his bakery carries one of the largest selections of sourdough bread in all of switzerland over the past 4 years. spending because we realize there's a lot of interest in it. people like the spirit so we kept creating these things in the meantime we have come up with about 15 or marty's awards. as the day draws to a close martin my inspectors sourdough culture as they appear safe and sound so he
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turns the lights out and wishes them a good night. well if you're interested in preparing some traditional german food then check out our new d.w. food series on you tube where chef tain shows international guess how to cook it like a german. interested in german cuisine this is the show for you. hello and had come to cook it like a german. distain presents some of germany's finest dishes to foodies from around the world. a lot of meat have you done this before this will be my 1st time. traditional german fare prepared and easy to follow steps from the savory to the sweet we've got it all. cook it like a german. food.
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if you take a close look at a euro bill like this one then you will notice that on each one there is a bridge but where they were okayed it when these bills were 1st introduced the bridges didn't exist but thanks to one designer from the netherlands these structures are no longer fiction he built replicas of them in the dutch city of spyker nyssa. a total of 6 bridges in the canals of the de element in district in spike knesset possibly a hooded hemp in the netherlands. the designs they based on can be found in almost any one of. the initiator of the 0 bridges his artist and graphic designer robin stamp this is the 100 euro bridge. favorites what are we like about it is.
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the note you see statues. skill them now you see abstract objects. the designer get the idea while the center restaurant waiting for the check on the stand began whether the bridge is depicted on the euro notes actually stood he found they don't exist in reality in 1906 the european monetary institute how to design competition for the euro banknotes rubber cleaner from austria one with his designs based on a european architectural stopped. fissionable were chosen for the bank notes so no country will be either favored or left out. the bridges in the last cooperation of communication between european nations. so i thought it would be funny if. 2 bridges that were fictional suddenly exist. in 2010 provincetown proposed at the city council after bridges constructed by knesset. the
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bridges were actually needed a new neighborhood is surrounded by canals the city council strike and it's really like the idea they said ok give give some person to asians and i did it and everybody loves it they said ok but now we need permission from the european bank of the european central bank headquartered in frankfurt gave his blessings to the art project. i wrote a letter and i called. though it really surprised me what they wrote me back and they say that they also realize they are here and as long as you can play with it then that's fine by them but 2013 obvious difference in the park takes any engineers hank lead to real life copies faithful to every detail but on a far smaller scale. now petitions can pick the bridges from the 5 euro note or call the 100 year old. this is the 10 year note this is the 1st one we've built and
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one of the difficulties was on the note it's a super big one but now it's progressive or brits of the 2nd fictional bridges only 6 real life once were built one is definitely worth a 2nd book. this is the largest richest of all. it's this one is the 20 year old and the 5 year note this one is based on a roman architect. truth value but the big note is pictured on. this british would be the priciest this is the $500.00 euro bridge it's supposed to be a suspended brits and of course the. isn't. the last thing on earth that defies all the general is going out of circulation so everything that is left is this bridge.
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no matter how much longer the banknotes remain in circulation i'll always be part of european history now to bridge the spike in essence cartoon. hour that we were on the show now don't forget to check us out on facebook or go to our website for this week's draw and chance of receiving this the backpack with a bunch of goodies inside well as always thanks for watching and was feel again safe.
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some surprising results. 3000. next on t w. how do loners see comes right wing extremists how do you outsiders come to class and that's. one thing is for certain they are not alone there are thousands of other right wing extremists just like the around the world how the insidious is done a radicalization works. alone was terrorism. why did this person. there are many survivors.
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is there such a thing. but 1st our planet is drowning in plastic waste how can we clean up our world. the plastic revolution began around 1955 a nearly 70 years an estimated $9000000000.00 tons have been produced every year more than $350000000.00 tons of plastic are added to the mix and just a fraction is recycled around half of plastic products they used only once and then thrown away the majority of plastic waste goes in a landfill is incinerated or ends up in the natural environment every year around 25000000 tonnes of plastic ends up in our oceans that's a truckload of it every minute if our plastic consumption continues to rise we'll be discarding 2 truckloads a minute within 10 years and 4 minutes by 2050 then there will be more plastic than fish in our oceans. plastic need centuries to decompose so the plastic we
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discard today will be a problem for many generations to come. and i delete location on the who are in western germany but take a closer look and it's not as beautiful. as. kevin though where and their classmates have come to do some fishing but not the usual kind it's trash their fishing for. and here it doesn't take long there's lister everywhere they look. and lots of different types of it and kevin and they where show us some discarded newspapers and cigarette lighters they worry they could cause wildfires. and there's plenty of plastic. and quite a few glass bottles to. the students attend a local high school and are taking part in an initiative called plastic pirates
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it's a research project where young students get to do the work of real scientists. they take water samples and measure count and record the pieces of trash they recovered from the rivers and river that. scientists in kew use the data to generate a garbage map of german rivers and calculate how much trash ends up in the sea. since 2016 more than 15000 plastic pirates from 700 schools have collected samples from all over germany. the project is now being launched in other european countries to the state also for the great advantage for science here vast amount of data can be collected by within a very short period of time that's also what plaster pirates. of the initiative for a period of 2 months and within that we normally receive hundreds of data sets we could never achieve that with our small team so that great benefit of submissions
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science is the amount of data that comes together. for the past 2 years the school has included the topic of recycling on the curriculum. and the teachers are happy to do their part to inspire the budding scientists. now it's just. it's something i care about myself it always bothers me when i see people leaving rubbish behind especially when they have small children with them and are supposed to be setting an example. and it's part of my jam to to the students to care for their environment. a hands on project is much more effective than sitting in a classroom with a piece of paper in front of them especially now in the pandemic. the work of the plastic pirates shows that on average one piece of trash can be found for every 2 square metres of riverbank in germany. france also has
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a project aimed at tracking down the trash it's called plastic origins and goes a step further using artificial intelligence and an app we want to move. as much as brought us and citizens as we can to. redress. once and using those data using the video footage that they are going to take over the river banks we will be able to analyze as we do detect early 2 items and uses data to my previous plastic pollution the aim of plastic origins is to get straight to legislation introduced on plastic waste and regulatory limits for the amount of plastic in european revis pick up it is intended to identify especially polluted areas and it's important because it's going to help us.
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do we know exactly where we should start 1st you know the pollution is coming from everywhere but we know that most of the crucial thing we found the ocean is transported by regrets that right now we don't know which way it goes most probably for the pretty ones. but the app contract micro plastics in germany and down fall kilos of micro plastics per person per year end up in the environment the main sources particles from vehicle to industrial waste and household garbage it's difficult for waste water treatment plants to filter out the tiny particles but a munich startup called showing how it can be done using a simple but effective method. as we'd be the last stage in the purification process that we take to clean water that would normally be pumped into the rivers lakes or sea. but it still contains
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a remnant of micro plastics. and might only be a few particles per liter or it might be quite a lot when you whatever's left we're able to remove a large amount of it and. they pressure is currently being tested this is how it works the waste water is pumped into the filter a powerful voice x. is generated in the pipe pushing the water containing. most of the micro plastics to the top the company says 95 percent of micro plastics from municipalities and industry could be filtered out in this way but that's not enough cut he's calling for a plastic revolution. i need given you just having a few people doing things differently won't be enough to turn society on its head so that will only work with really rigorous legislation concerning areas like single use plastics micro plastics wastewater treatment regulatory limits and so forth legislation that specifies exactly what technology must be used and where
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whether it's ours or someone else's doesn't matter. if the young plastic pirates agree that more needs to be done to combat plastic pollution after just 2 hours in this idyllic location they found more trash than they can even carry. shifting our world economy toward sustainability will require both a lot of cash and a good deal of support from wealthy investors there's no shortage of capital in 2019 global wealth totaled nearly $400.00 trillion dollars and global stocks alone are worth around $95.00 trillion dollars. but the overwhelming aim of investment is to make money the impact on our planet and its people often takes a backseat but there are other ways of doing things. 20
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years 2010 a drilling rig exploded in the gulf of mexico the largest oil spill in history. ports revealed that the attempts by oil company b.p. to cut costs and maximize profits could lead to the disaster. has risen. by a mental disaster which is still taking its toll. the incident illustrates the frequent conflict between the planners and shareholder profits. but what if it didn't have to be this way where a very expressed concern around its outsourced maintenance offshore wells before this scandal some investors had sold their b.p. shares concerned about the company's record on environmental social and governance issues so they avoided the stock crash the fall of the oil spill. these 3 metrics
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are now called e s g and they're defining a new way of investing that promises to reconcile planet and profit. but can they deliver. as cynical as the financial world might seem ethical considerations of almost played a role in investment decisions. the origins of responsible investing trace back to 1758 when some religious groups prohibited members from profiting from the slave trade ringback but the modern era of responsible investing really evolved in the 1960 s. together with the boycott movement it started with the boycotts of companies that did business with apartheid south africa that's really the genesis i think of. many kind of grew up along the green movement through seventy's and eighty's and kind of going through the great move of tobacco stocks removal of firearms manufacturers removed through our nuclear weapons manufacturing is all about excluding companies
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this exclusion strategy is called divesting and despite the initial excitement it led to mixed results. however according to a modern political theory hurting your bottom line a little bit and you have to sacrifice some financial returns. vestments remove entire sectors like energy and tobacco from investors portfolios on a portfolio is less diversified this risk goes up. 5 the 1st of such funds for example has historically underperformed the market but the big money is now betting that this will change in his 2020 letter to c.e.o.'s larry fink the chairman of blackrock the world's largest fund manager came right out and said climate risk is investment risk. but i don't think there is a choice between plan and profit. to somebody actually metrics that
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you're scoring companies on you look at anything or is this really any s.g. thing or is this just good business are you producing are you wasting resources or wasting resources back to the bottom line or that. bring it straight back into big business. screening companies for e.s.d. criteria has proven an effective way to anticipate and avoid scandals capable of wiping out share prices through for example in the mean mutual fund. folks who are going for a long time because there were questions around the governance structure of the company. this allowed those e s g phones to avoid the stock crash that followed hughes emissions cheating scandal. of their cars with cheating software to make their. green companies are also better prepared to face the growing threat of climate change. these factors are reviving the appeal of green investment. sustainable funds or attracting new assets at
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a record pace. the real question then is not whether green investments can make profits the question is whether they can be called green in the 1st place. this only is a definition problem with got yesterday the lack of a central standard is an issue so company could in theory score very well on these . rankings but on the other hand have a large negative effects on the environment. and even if a company is genuinely green buying its shares may not translate into creating an impact. the theory of change behind sustainable investing is pretty straightforward . screen companies receive the more they can pursue their sustainable. vestments are unlikely to financially starve the fossil fuel industry for this strategy to be effective it must permanently reduce a company's ability to access capital when capital is divested there's also creates
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an opportunity for other investors to buy shares at a lower price when this happens the stock price can quickly bounce back to its previous level without impacting the. valuation ringback ready. it's not enough it simply isn't because the effect is so tiny. and investments are not a magic formula. very often what is advertised as sustainable is just greenwashing . of the cases impacts can be achieved only by sacrificing some profit. in investing in our early profitable non-green companies and then diverting the profit to environmental causes would be more effective. but similar calculations miss a more important point. it is tough to actually measure an impact on your conscience is clean you don't profit from that activity. many people simply no
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longer want to invest money at the expense of the environment and that alone is an important step forward in. investing in our future leading us self-determined life this should be a given for everyone including women on our facebook channel d.w. women you'll find stories about those taking a stand and inspiring others to do the same. d.w. women gives a voice to the women of ah well. this weekend global ideas we also turn our attention to waste much of what is discarded in landfills is still perfectly usable including filmed. around 1300000000 tons of food just thrown away every year at the same time according to the u.n. 690000000 people worldwide suffer from hunger even though there would be enough to feed everyone. most people will only see
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a carpet of trash here. sees a scandal in thailand landfills nearly 2 thirds of the waste is organic mostly food waste there you if you go on the surface this all looks like plastic waste. of it but when you look inside as well as a soft gooey stuff down there it's offload organic it's biomass. these still are quite ok they're well packed you could probably wash them and make something with them like my old model. the originally from germany done your book is head chef and in bangkok hotel food and reducing food waste is important to him . it doesn't mean i personally hate throwing food away not only because when i cook something i've put a lot of care and attention into it but also because it just seems utterly idiotic
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to throw something away that's clearly edible. kind of it's always bothered me. and it drives me nuts. when we. can normally be found in the hotel with over a 1000 rooms it's one of the biggest in thailand has planted a vegetable garden on the roof of the hotel for his $200.00 staff. its yield is negligible compared to the hotel's needs but the project has raised his staff's awareness of the life of food. the way we carelessly throw things away as a result of our seeing food merely as a product. we're not aware of how difficult it is to actually plant something and how long the path is from the seed in the soil to the edible produce. to her says storing food correctly is key something he always thought was up these but he's
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found many people ignore even some of the most basic principles. things like drawing washed vegetables to help them keep longer. every day hygiene thomas check the food in the hotel's pantry and to make sure it's fresh. it's on i kissed him if you have a bell pepper which is going soft in a box like this whole part of the box can turn very quickly and then it has to be thrown away my booth says hotels waste food in part because the chefs have to work at a fast pace. so he set up a central kitchen in his hotel where many of the leftovers can be put to good use. he is the man we collect all the leftovers from preparation the on used and the vegetables or meat. at the various carvery is in the hotel there are always the bones left over we collect them to make stock with normally you wouldn't bother if
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you only used one onion but when you've sliced hundreds of onions there's enough for a stock. but. this hotel boasts 6 different specialty restaurants . there's also a buffet area with a variety of different stations for preparing various dishes. with a bit of supervision and planning he's able to keep waste to a minimum. until. the boiled eggs leftover from breakfast all end in their death of it's a midday paper it people really like eating it ok and we don't have to boil the eggs in it and i darted into their car one dies the problem is that breakfast eggs are cooked in the western kitchen with them but this is chinese cuisine it's. ideas like this have helped to her and his team cut the hotel's food waste in half over just 2 years it wasn't easy there was a learning curve and a lot of work flows had to be changed. hands up i'm up once you've got things
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working it's easy and runs out of magically. once a month bu her and his team take stock. they take a look at what food has gone and use that day and how it could be transformed into cool make cuisine. everyone let's go let's go. here to measure the sequin and if you can take this salmon for instance we take the head it was baked in a salt crust and make soups out of it it goes into the japanese breakfast soup this you can break up. and in the evening we're doing pasta so we can do that with salmon and spinach. food that is still good to eat that the hotel can't use is donated to an end. it's stuff collect the leftovers each day and distribute them to people in need across the city. only perishables containing things like fish or cream end up in the bin though even then not till they've been weighed and
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registered. just have to end up with us this helps us to better understand what we're throwing away and how much we always compile our monthly report. then we can see exactly how much it is and maybe manage to reduce it a little and if i want to know where we're focusing on next or what's next to be tackled then we use that data to say ok these are the areas where we have to save and where we have a problem over and over the. data collection can be a good way to discover new solutions to old problems like the problem of food waste . the german agency for international cooperation g i's said is funding a study to examine the waste produced by 400 representative households across thailand this kind of information hasn't been collected before in part because the costs were garbage disposal here are livid at a flat rate and not according to volume or weight you're going to visit and we want
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to know how much garbage gets sorted in separated where it goes to and what happens to it. it's hoped that this data will help discover ways to reduce food waste food that ends up in landfills isn't just wasteful it's also terrible for the climate when organic matter rots it releases me thing gas a powerful greenhouse gas that's estimated to be $25.00 times more potent than c o 2. so cannick waste is a real climate killer especially in developing economies which rarely have modern recycling or composting technology for dunny the solution is clear. believe and off we often talk about what to do with all the waste and there are important debates but we should really be talking about how we can prevent these trash piles from building up in the 1st place. wants to lead by example pay knows that every step forward will make a difference. in
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the. red square in the heart of moscow and home to the renowned department store and. amidst its regal arcanes a soviet style can take offering a huge helping of nostalgia canteen style of buying a $57.00 sells traditional russian dishes including shuba or herring under a fur coat alaina melnyk over shows us how it's prepared. it's a must have on every new year's eve table. and a very popular lunch and dinner dish. that. was interesting to see what you look at the facial you're still at it today making herring under a coat
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a traditional russian salad for most of us a favorite dish that we prepare for every holiday meal. carson kressley. let's get started. we make it in a ring full on the bottom layer it will put herrings so it. no searching to smash and to make it more. each layer with mayonnaise which. the next layer is boiled potatoes. legend has it that during the 1917 revolution a merchant wanted to create a dish that people could identify with herring cooked vegetables and beetroot are symbols of the proletariat. the french mayo that dresses the salad is a reminder of the enemies of the soviets.
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that they fall serving we remove the ring so. we decorate it with some fresh costly and it's ready. just we always had it when i was a kid especially on new year's eve. it's our family's petri dish. really tasty it was our childhood dish on new year's eve my mother was a very good cook she knew how to remove the bones and prepare the hair and she taught me to do it because. number one it's nice here they put in the right amount of heroin some places put into little herring and too much potato here it's good. but. this is my 1st time in moscow and i've chosen a dish i know well and it tastes really really good here on the hottest. style of by
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a $57.00 cells between $3.00 and $9.00 large trays every day of portion costs $120.00 roubles or about one euro and $0.29 shubha can be found in many cafes bistros and supermarkets. but. that's all from us that labels for a 1000 this week don't forget to send us your feedback we're at global 3000 at d w dot com and visit our facebook pages t w. label ideas and d.-w. women seizing take cat.
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starts to similar feelings on g.w. . this is the news lot from berlin in the middle of a crippling political and economic crisis finished while and spoke for a new parliament opposition leaders a boycott of the election claiming it was not the free no fail it hopes the change in venezuela dwindling president nicolas maduro is set to type in his career on palace. we must put it.
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