tv Made in Germany Deutsche Welle March 11, 2021 7:30am-8:01am CET
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they want to know what makes the generals who have their. own banning away from the. unlighted of the world. and everyone was made a holes in everything. getting you ready to meet the germans then join a break just do it under. the world's most important resource a given for many regions but experts warn 2 thirds of the global population could face 4 shortages in the next 5 years like so often in life you only notice something when it starts becoming scarce and by that time it's often too late it's
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no longer as easy as turning on a tap for more and more people water our most precious resource welcome to made. there's a reason earth is known as the blue planet the majority of the globe is covered by water of course around 97 percent of it is so water i mean it to a hospice said is freshwater but much of that is locked away in ice soil and the atmosphere but he bore of it is highly polluted or too deep underground to be extracted at an affordable cost just how 5 percent of all water is readily accessible from lakes rivers and of course has water scarcity it's one of the most serious risks we face and the problem is growing. new deserts are emerging forests are drying up and we're still wasting water. the regions marked here in dark red are places where water is extremely scarce and sources are drying up pale
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red and orange indicate areas where water scarcity is only slightly less critical. delhi in india the southern part of the city. water tankers supply poor neighborhoods but only come once a week. if. they can get out of the let back in line or like water is so scarce some mornings there are so many people you would think there's a fair on everyone is struggling to fill cans there are arguments fights even accidents water is our biggest problem of the well and we wish they would fix taps on all of our houses just like they've installed electricity on. delhi's main water supply is the moon a river but there hasn't been enough rainfall so its water level is low. the least . problem in delhi today is the availability of clean water.
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a lot of work has gone into cleaning efforts. or program but there is an urgent need to address the issue of making more water available. and is taking place rapidly and with this the demand for water is rising just as fast. in germany water is also becoming an issue. u.s. based electric car manufacturer tesla is planning to build its european factory in brandenburg outside berlin once it's operational it will consume millions of leaders of water every day. water levels in this nearby lake have already sunk due to a series of hot dry summers the water at this point in the lake used to reach us moderns waste he grew up here on lake strauss say. the prospect of the new test the factory worries him. we have to assume that climate
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change will continue and that there will be less rainfall and increased about peroration there's a vast amount of water consumption on top of about the water level will continue to fall as it has done in recent years it's likely to drop another few metres the theory will no longer run down no one will be able to swim in the leg and bird breeding grounds will be destroyed. in the state of north rhine-westphalia there is concern about the drinking water supply at the gills in vasser waterworks to thoughts on this that we understand the situation is fraught called for seeing some of the lowest water levels since records began as a result of the past 3 dry summers gets placed. or. there's a slight improvement on the way but the rain from the past 2 months isn't enough and that's why there needs to be a lot more rain in the humidity in the fire. water is all part of the fun for tourists on the island of bali and as tourism grows so too does water consumption.
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bali residents are getting worried about their drinking water supplies. it's all because there's a shortage of sweet water we need to keep that within our system we need to keep it on the island we need to retain it push it into the ground and use it here where we need it the most obvious villagers have to travel long distances to get fresh water the next clean water is an hour walk from where this woman lives around the world to 2000000000 people face huge problems when it comes to access to clean water that leaves a lot of funky every morning i go out to fetch water. for drinking water at home i fill up a large container. i always bring the does he clothes in the water and wash them every day at flight that. if you have enough time to go to the was a slow several times
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a day to fetch water back home. what would global solutions look like one key aspect is utilizing waste water it's rarely treated in india but recycling it could ease demands. absolute water start up came up with an organic innovation filtering sewage water through plant matter and sand in their system break down any toxins in the water digesting them into harmless components and converting sewage into drinking water. the what's important thing is the operational cost which. we are not subject very heavy so therefore the cost is the lowest so all in all it's a flu sustainable. system and it is. a big
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rethink is already underway in germany as well where farmers are turning to crops which need little water researchers say climate change could make the long hot and very dry summers of recent years a permanent fixture that could lead to conflicting demands on water distribution the farmers association is already highlighting potential flashpoints. competition for water will increase for those relatively minor parts of the agricultural industry which use sprinklers meaning fruit and vegetable farms we need water for irrigation and obviously we'll have to weigh up the benefits of say watering gardens washing machine usage showering cooling water and washing up water and ask if we couldn't use that. better to produce food or else the world needs investment in water pipes on bali aid organizations have stepped in to help the
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villagers are also footing a share of the costs in projects like this where water will now be pumped up hill from the source to the village. when i went to new zeland in 969 everything was just so like heaven if. you got home not at that cold water the futebol and. everything was kind of all right so good so i thought well why couldn't i improve the situation over here so i do it in this state doesn't do much for infrastructure here it's the same as in many countries around the world. hot and cold running water a beautiful thing i never really thought about it though industrialized countries like germany nobody really does things are very different in many other parts of
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the world where people can line up for hours just to get a few leaders of the precious stuff industrialized nations play a role in that scarcity as well that's because we eat large amounts of products like beef which require a huge amount of water to produce even if it isn't a media apparent here's a breakdown of what some things cost in terms of h 2 o. . what is virtual water. let's take jeans as an example it takes around 8000 liters of water to make one path that's $53.00 bathtubs full how come growing the cotton uses most of the water it's a very 1st the plant if the rains failed cotton fields have to be irrigated. and if the cotton is to be spun into jeans it also needs coloring rinsing and bleaching that pollutes a lot of water. virtual water is the unseen water that goes into the manufacturing of our product. nearly 900000 liters for one kilo of coffee 184
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liters for a kilo of tomatoes and about 15000 liters for one kilo of beef. in a country with adequate natural water resources high consumption isn't a problem unless of course a lot of it gets polluted but in many regions water is scarce or supplies have been depleted by producing certain goods the water level in the aral sea has dropped 18 meters because of irrigation in cotton fields it's turned parts of was back you start into a salty toxic waste land. tomatoes are cultivated in the parched reaches of southern spain using water piped into enormous greenhouses. and in brazil where there's a shortage of drinking water the country's huge coffee plantations are never short of a drop coffee is a major export for brazil. europeans import the as water guzzling goods and by extension all the virtual water needed to produce them seen from this
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perspective someone living in germany uses 3900 liters of water a day slightly over the global average but cooking showering and laundry make up only a small part of that most water used here is a virtual water hidden in the products around us. so it takes 8000 liters of water to make a pair of jeans and they use so much more washing them over the years staggering numbers pose some serious questions like what should water cost who should provide it is it morally acceptable for companies to profit from selling it to those who need it most of schmidt went to talk with a woman involved in a project that discusses issues like that she things to fix the problem you have to hit people where it really hurts their pocketbooks.
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sophia maria schmidt is a professional musician and a student of economics who thinks a lot about war. deprives most sean the price should go up until it hurts a bit sounds to december scimitar. schmidt researches water related issues for united nations resolution says that it is a human right to safe accessible and affordable water i'm not conquer the problem is that there is competition for the use of water if we want to introduce a basic right to water we have to consider which sectors which people are to enjoy that right we can identify 3 major players industry farming and private households which has priority who has more of a right to and who are less private individuals also depend on farming it's a very complex problem and we can't simply demand free water is a basic right. on the desk if you think that overall the worldwide water is too
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cheap. to. compare the united states and in the us water consumption per person per day is almost 300 liters that's a huge amount in germany by contrast it's $122.00. and then compare the prices here water is twice as expensive to i'm here because so if the price is too low we waste water and that's exactly what's happening in the u.s. . meat is involved in a project to take a new versity in frankfurt that focuses on water and it's sustainable management worldwide they held events and have invited representatives of nestle to attend the swiss multinational faces a lot of criticism for bottling and selling groundwater and for generating vast amounts of plastic waste. standard and you for some teaching proceed. sponsored by nurses is that a conflict of interest this is
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a feeling that there are many things to criticize but it's very important to engage with corporations it's all very well for academics to develop ideas but you can only achieve something if you work together with industry we should certainly view nestlé very critically but we also need to talk to it and find out what it can contribute. to most of us and that's kind of this little fountain has dried up schmidt says sources of water around the world are going dry so they need to be maintained in a responsible fashion by the public and the private sector. if a company slaps on a 10 percent profit margin water gets more expensive but given that it's our most important source of sustenance is it right for it to be provided by a private company from wendy marshall. as long as the profit margin is not too high relative to per capita income so as long as people can afford it as
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long as it's dignified add a low enough price so that they can buy as much as they need there's no problem it's the same with everything food clothes so there's always a profit margin and that's ok as long as we can afford it that is our business like the country as a not. the only way to prevent a supply crisis is to raise the price of water so we come to value the resource for what it's really worth. yes. water is used in different ways in different parts of the world in europe for example agriculture industry and household suck up and spit out pretty much equal amounts but in north and south america farming makes up a much more sizeable fraction of total use and agriculture in asia and africa swallow around 80 percent of it just 15 percent is used by industry and amiga 5 percent by private households in many mega-cities water is growing increasingly
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scarce in the philippine capital things have reached a critical stage now the government plans to build a dam to supply manila with 600000000 liters of water a day but it will uproot entire villages my colleague milan went to talk to some of them. the cali war river has always run through the share of modern mountain range in northeastern philippines but a controversial down project is set to change its course forever so this might be one of my last boat rides here. up ahead is the plan construction site for the collie walk down and all along this forest wall here at a big tunnel will be built for the convenience of water. the water behind the down could be up to 162 meters deep. that's more than enough to inundate communities like this one i visited the village of secret keeper rosoff which is closest to the
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dam site here are the indigenous to moderate people have lived alongside peasant farmers and fishers for generations many of them have put up signs opposing the down as they face displacement and the loss of their livelihoods. i'm just wondering when the flood comes how are we going to find. i mean we can't swim or dive for fish. we wouldn't be able to do any of that. so what's going to become of us. for. the dam is designed to boost the water supply in manila the philippine capital and the country's economic and political center. we're actually just 40 kilometers south of the dam site but this urban jungle feels uproots away from their remote mountain communities. the authorities here say dwindling supply primary water
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sources is leading to shortages in a city that won't stop expanding. the greater than metro by then but he's very serious. growing the about through those. the government argues that displacing thousands and destroying hundreds of hector's of forest land is justified as it will secure water for more than 12000000 people and that it's worth the taxpayer burden in the form of a contentious loan from china of more than $200000000.00 residents whose properties are set to be washed away by the dams construction are going to be taken care of according to official promises. but many here tell me that they're skeptical. why down on one of our. own we've heard a lot of offers but we're not accepting them because we don't want to give away
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what's intended for the generations that come after us. we want them to live if really in our communities. what are they offering you a long career they say they'll give us money or they'll provide us with housing but we don't know where they will take us what if they relocate us to manila for example how would we survive when we're not used to life there. and indeed communities here live in accordance with the rhythms of the river and protect the environment it's a way of life that could be lost if the government has its way. these are our ancestral lands if they build the dam we'll lose our identity. that's death for us not just of our physical bodies but our culture politics and
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economics. even if they do find somewhere for us to resettle we won't be able to live in our traditional way dependent on nature. so projects critics say they have history on their side the current initiative is a reincarnation of sorts of the even a few kilometers away which was never completed that project was shut down by community opposition more than a decade ago only ruin stand in the water. now if the event project had been continued there be water all around us as high as the walls which you see behind me the fact that the project was halted is a memory for many of the resistance that was successful but the outcome of their present day struggle is far from certain. the desire to preserve the river as it is clashes with the urge to change and control in
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a standoff that pits local people against the powerful government in the capital if you expect to give way. the poll often lose out the most when it comes to water rights at the other end of the spectrum by the wealthy who have turned water into a luxury good bottle burra that can cost hundreds of times what it costs out of the tap it's a sect of west billions and of course there are experts who say that like fine wine . has many nuances that had to take to the discerning palates our reporter went to talk with people trying to be what he's. so what it isn't just water. you know region and source good water is a distinctive character and. we're not talking about regular tap water but the kind that comes in bottles in germany that can up the price $100.00
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times. these people are taking a course to become water sawmill yes they're doing a taste test identify the water without seeing the label on the bottle. you know i've you know as you know sodium taste salty calcium makes the mouth feel dry magnesium makes the water taste sweet and bitter and then there are bubbles carbon dioxide. that's often a giveaway you know. the 9 day course costs over 2000 euros sommeliers have to register subtle differences and talk about them key if you want to sell lots of bottles. did some of the students work for mineral water companies usually in the marketing or sales department they have to be able to explain to customers what makes their water special. last year the global bottled
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water market was worth $270000000000.00 euros average consumption 62 liters per person. colum lynch for my it is one of the students. he works for a mineral water company entire austria. it has its own spring and has invested millions in a new bottling plant. we're standing right on top of our source the aquifer that's been here beneath him for 25000 years waiting for us. you. damn water contains a certain mix of minerals which is quantified it and the austrian law as a medicinal water in both austria and germany medicinal waters are actually considered drugs are regulated by the relevant authorities. you know we have what's
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known as a sodium potassium sulfate asadullah spring with its positive feature is that it contains a lot of lithium which lifts the mood significantly and. that higher ground was recently acquired by the billionaire mater shit family which made its money with the energy drink red bull and knows all about marketing beverages. back at the taste test some of the students are fluxed. distinguishing waters is no easy matter. but what is difficult. yes very such tiny differences. here are the answers the 1st was number 21 and singer surely not much sodium
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a little magnesium and a lot of calcium. and mastery of barely perceptible difference is makes the. posh water is big business worldwide. 100 international trade is growing all the time the country was the 2nd largest number of somalia is this taiwan with more than 21. we need water to survive water can be very refreshing and for some it's a delicacy to be savored. i have to admit the only time i really save water is after a long workout or work but then i'm a straight no one expects us to be garza's of anything that's all for made today thanks for joining us and to drop us a line on twitter or facebook as you know we're always keen to get your thoughts of you again.
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blacks know the band southern side of the bargain for environmental activist the further proof of the consequences of an air pollution increase along. their commanding the relocation of endangered. but from any tree that's responsible is also a major source of reliable income focused on europe. in 30 minutes. on d. w.
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. ow. what secrets lie behind us was. discover new adventures in 360 degree. and explore fascinating world heritage sites the b.w. world heritage $316.00 get kidnapped now. more than 1000 years ago europe witnesses a huge construction boom. with christianity firmly established there is a greater demand for houses of worship. and both religious and secular leaders are eager to display their flour so churches can become palaces. the race begins who can create the tallest biggest most beautiful structure.
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is e w news live from berlin japan marks the 10th anniversary of the country's worst disaster in living memory led by the emperor and the emperor is the nation mourns the more than 18000 people killed and the massive earthquake and tsunami that struck the north east coast on this day and 2011 and led to the meltdown of the fukushima nuclear power plant. also coming not surgeon coronavirus cases in brazil pushes the daily death toll to its highest since the start of.
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