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tv   ZDF Bauhaus  Deutsche Welle  May 3, 2021 2:00am-3:01am CEST

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innovation and education. with this is one we can't afford to lose the world food program for its underworld words helping people help themselves my rule is 0 anger. this is news and these are our top stories indian scientists have accused the government of ignoring warnings about the new more contagious corona virus variants which have overwhelmed the national health system officials have reported a record number of just under 3700 deaths in the last day some indian states have had to delay plans to roll out vaccines to millions more adults because of supply shortages. u.s.
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secretary of state anthony blinken has arrived in london for the 1st in person meeting of the g 7 group of leading nations in 2 years top of the agenda is developing a rapid response mechanism to counter russian dissin from asian british foreign secretary dominic rob says the west needs like minded allies to work together. for astronauts have returned safely to earth after spending nearly 6 months on board the international space station their dragon capsule touched down off the coast of florida in the 1st nighttime splashdown in half a century it was also the 1st crew mission run by private company space x. on behalf of nasa. this is news from berlin you can find more on our website d.w. dot com. this
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might look like a sunken battleship but it's actually one of the most unusual buildings in berlin will find out more about this bizarre architecture later on in the show. everyone is welcome to another edition of euro max with me your host meghan lee here's a look at what else we've got in store for you today. a trip to the islands multiple which is fast becoming a destination for foodies. and how similar are dogs and their owners one german for charter 1st takes an up close and personal look. but we start off with a british artist who has made a name for herself not just by sculpting famous faces but also by the amount of time it takes her to complete the job frances siegelman recreates her subjects like
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this in just 2 hours it's her signature style while seeing is believing so we caught up with the artist in london to watch her in action. violin maverick nigel kennedy prime minister barres johnson and other members of british society when sculptor francis siegel money and his her studio in east london she always has silent observers here she's working on a private commission for 72 year old has always been at home in art. that she started as a hobby and all my life i was an artist because i come from a very very artistic background i took up a little class when my had my 2 little children and then from that minute always i was completely obsessed with sculpture i'd never want to stop working i never want to stop doing it and only in about 30 years ago 32 years ago i
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started doing which is a career. her special talent is working quickly she can sculpt a bust in about 2 hours siegelman often works in front of an audience for charity such as with these pieces british film diva joan collins russian ballet dancer sergei pollution and british actress joanna lumley. i love working in an audience. i'm not very keen on being my own studio which is quite strange but i have to have positive thinking all the way through the 2 hours otherwise the sculpture doesn't work. in the year 2000 francis siegelman was commissioned to sculpt prince philip the queen herself followed in 2007 since then officially a royal sculptor she has also immortalized prince charles and princess then in bronze. working with the queen was the absolute most
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amazing thing i've ever done it was incredible. she is such a lovely woman and obviously it was very nerve wracking because like i. i measure all the time with calipers and i have to get to her hair and her face to get the measurements it was very very. over the course of a year france a single mom had 3 sessions with the queen at buckingham palace the bust was unveiled personally by her majesty in 2008. there. but she not only betrays nobility and celebrities she is also working on a series that means a lot to her since 2017 she's been sculpting the heads of holocaust survivors thereby creating lasting memorials to them. oh i thought that i wouldn't be able to cope with the feelings you know when i was sculpting i were he said to me can i
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call you mother he said because i feel as if you give me a new life you know my life hasn't finished and it will go on and that was all i needed i was completely hooked and i just felt like these people are dying i'm going to do as many as i can. at this live event by the thames the audience is only virtually present francis siegelman will sculpt a portrait of mahler tribute born in 1030 commissioned by the holocaust memorial center yard vashem. something i would normally have so. i took well to it i have to say now probably find it interesting watching. this because it's very skillful and she's obviously got to be so quick within 2 hours she more to lies is the face of the holocaust survivor in clay.
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the resemblance is impressive. when i sing it's a very good likeness and i'm usually quite fussy about it was pete. no that. thing. probably looks much more to the not. quite stressful. i love the fact that i'm doing this of this wonderful beautiful lady that's been through so much. but for me it was very difficult not having a crowd on the clay was drawing up. later you know be constant drawings so knowledge tributes and other holocaust survivors will live on through future generations through the work of francis see. she certainly is talented have you ever come across a massive concrete building and thought wow now that is a monstrosity the whole chances are if it was built here in europe in the 1950 s. then it belongs to an architectural style known as brutal ism such buildings were
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constructed after world war 2 as part of an effort to get cities back up and functioning quickly now many of them were considered eyesores and have since been torn down but there is a growing fan base for the ones which remain. the architecture style known as brutal listen can be described as monumental colorless and inhuman. these edifices tends to polarize to some their eyesores while others a growing number of architecture aficionados the world over are rediscovering brutalist. and. i find branches lism so fascinating because it's so antagonistic and controversial on the one hand the buildings are written off as ugly and many of them do take some getting used to. but once you look behind the scenes and begin to understand why these structures look the way they do it's
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a whole architectural cosmos opens up if. you take a course most. the so-called cousy a house in berlin resembles a towering cruise ship architecture historian and photographer felix torre car sees it as one of the city's principal examples of brutal ism designed by french swiss architect. 1957 it contains 530 apartments on 17 floors in what has been called a living machine then a brutal ism actually originated with. because he coined the term. unfinished concrete. and he coined it for this development. if you take a good look at the building you will see a giant mechanical monstrosity. but at the same time one that's remained quite roar . it was an able to carry out his plans for the
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interior except for a single apartment later remodeled to faithfully reproduce the original ideas based on his color theories. granted color the same importance as the floor plan and layout hendrix paddle and immediately understood the fascination and bought the apartment and most of its furnishings. we were not going to change the colors are poring over this like a house of cards sticking everything just fall down if you if searching too much also left unchanged since the late 1970 s. is the czech embassy building in downtown berlin it could be regarded as an art work in itself the architect even designed the lamps tables and armchairs the address also houses the czech culture institute the building often plays a role in its exhibitions interest in this architectural style appears to be growing even if it's not universally loved. words argues or i believe this clash
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persists even now that it's either loved or hated and of course brutal ism is far more in nowadays. i've been trying to bring architecture fans into the building to tell the more about the structure of the school and i was recently a british publisher put out a series of city guides focusing on brutal ism felix took car took the photos and curated the berlin edition among the buildings featured are this hygiene institute it was slated for demolition until recently now it's a listed site since they tend to stand out brutalist buildings have experienced a revival in social media triggered by campaigns aimed at preventing them from being torn down like this former animal testing laboratory in berlin. in the 960 s. when these buildings were planned a great number of structures from the mid to late 19th century were torn down buildings that we think are fabulous today and are horrified at how much beautiful old architecture has been lost at the time many of them were only around 60 years
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old exactly the same age as these buildings are today so we have to think about whether or not we want to repeat the same mistakes. but all the while new concrete buildings are going up in the neo brutalist style such as the lobe of block in berlin setting district here fair face concrete predominates both inside and out the multi award winning building combines apartments and studio is. its unfinished look is not only meant to be stylish but to reduce construction costs and keep the rents down. in recent years we've noticed a new kind of openness to craftsmanship. crafts movement goes hand in hand with the idea that architecture ought to be more hands on again. brutal is a style of architecture that appeared over 60 years ago and still polarizes and
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fascinates people today. from one extreme in architecture to other extremes across the continent follow our series in europe to the max on you tube for some exciting adventures. see your head from its extreme side in europe to the max your match reporter hendrick vending takes you to one of a kind places in your at. the highest volcano. the biggest stadium. the i.c.'s totality. breathtaking. stunning. record breaking. their. it's amazing it was like the weirdest thing i've ever done . what chicks dream quipping moments now. and we have
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a brand new book to accompany our europe to the max reports if you would like a copy of this then enter our viewers draw all the details are on our website. next up we head to the mediterranean island state of malta for a colon area tour now maltese cuisine is rich in history with influences from europe to the middle east typical dishes tend to be quite hearty but a new generation of master chefs is adding a fine touch to the traditional cuisine. has long been known for its common delights a total of 5 restaurants at iranian island state of being awarded. 3 more have. to serve an excellent moderately priced meals one of the michelin stars went to noni in the center of mountains capital for latter which serves traditional cuisine with a modern twist. it was named after the founder jonathan brink 2 is also the chef
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state think you have a little bit is done for 1st of all because of their subtle flavors secondly because it's very likely seamus it's not very fatty you have a very lean meat. mostly i think because the population not a good hold up the finger both. rabbit is one of the many teachers that can be ordered out of comfort but there's also a 6 course menu for the very hungry the rabbit is served with a traditional street called pass t.t. . there's also not a fan to touch sheen a dish that combines punster with octopus roku which goes back 500 years and has a combined dessert of lemon mousse. black tea and green. bay doing good mood today and cuisine is one of the best was in a special because of being greedy and you got to play a lot with this mess especially if you're car and saw that if you smell that on
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what the one that goes the other view you don't just buy those arabs it's over the . world of flavor. this is the philosophy to add command in the town of milly's some 20 kilometers away in northern monterey. the restaurant serves mostly french and regional projects and it was awarded. for offering high quality dishes at affordable prices. edge chance dave in japan runs the family business we are influenced by a lot of cuisines and our culture that transferred out of people from arabic it early in english french and that's when these creations for the final dishes contre . the typical starter might be a tomato and a new jam served with a local sheep cheese and a whole not been a great. the main cause could be paul bellies stuffed with cauliflower mushrooms as
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well as small turns take on sausage filled kind alone in. this role desserts made with dates i need sleep and rose water is called and added when it comes to mauritius busines using various cities like for example the basic in our it which is a very classic maltese space 3 we've found ways how to do new pastry how to do refine the filling and how to do it as a restaurant dish no food he should leave multiverse capital lanter without visiting the food market. will find a variety of dishes here from over the world as well as traditional mall teens cuisine. that's one jonathan can't say in his be strong to teeth now that the thief. is a combination of. their a.t.m. flavors were started by an army and garlic and.
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carrots. then. the octopus. that is all the capers. they spoke to purse to insert in scientists found a branch of life. before tierra is filled with some dried tomatoes onions capers you know fresh. and cheese. the food that was served at the thief it's like my mom. my own grandmother as well so whatever we do from the heart. has launched to be found here for lovers of italian food like these maltese recall to ravioli in a tomato and possible songs morton's cuisine has many facets but whatever you try
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it's bound to be delicious. it's often been said that dogs in their own or share an uncanny resemblance well i don't have a dog so i cannot speak from personal experience but there are plenty of examples on the street as a matter of fact i just saw a short man with a somewhat flat face walking a pug or one photographer here in berlin is fascinated by the relationship between man and his dog so he set out to get some answers. as the saying goes dark are man's best friend and these dog owners regardless of gender love their canines and the feeling seems to be mutual. but photographer thomas doesn't have a dog and never has for nearly 40 years his exclusive passion has been people. yet for his latest project he's focusing on dogs too and sometimes it's challenging.
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but honestly i've got to admit i have quite a bit of respect for dogs the bigger and more boisterous they are the more respect i have so it's a challenge for me but it's always good to learn something new in life. timing is an art that thomas really has to master for this project. not all dogs love to be photographed. bribery is the main ploy to get the perfect picture. in comparison beings are the easier subject. of this type of photography meeting dog owner at eye level it's really exciting sometimes the similarity between dogs and their owners is quite amazing when you see them next to each other . of course you look for similarities because that's the cliché that owners resemble their dogs or vice versa or both but i haven't really seen that.
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is 55 and a berliner by choice always has plenty of new project ideas. but it was the corona pandemic above all that gave his latest person dog project a big creative push. at the time i wasn't getting many photography jobs and was spending lots of time just going for walks that's when i had a closer look at the dogs and on as i ran into and made some funny observations powerfully built man with a little dog for example so i thought i could explore that more closely. he's already photographed 40 pairs his images are meant to express the intense relationship between a dog and its owner he always spoke to graft them separately and then links the photos. in identical composition the visual imagery is straightforward and direct. has already applied this is that x. to his most successful projects so far. 100 here he focused on the change in
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a person during the course of their life from an infant to a centenarian in another project called one he did portraits of people wearing. his works have above all. of the deeply looking into the eyes of another person. creates a connection. and this connection leads to one being one and that's what i want my images to convey. that we all have with each other from person to person but also from person to animal. whether thomas himself will at some point establish a deep connection with the dog is uncertain more likely his human how and photos will appear in a volume of his latest photographic work to the delight of not just these dog lovers. may be whole ducats next. when once asked what she wore to bed american actress marilyn monroe famously said only
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a few drops of chanel number 5 and with that statement she cemented the perfect his reputation as a classic must have now chanel number 5 is celebrating its 100th anniversary we take a look at some of the elements that have kept it going for so long. the formula for one of the world's best known perfumes is known only to a few people one of them is olivier mouche house perfumer for. over a century has passed since coco chanel set out to develop a perfume unlike any other chanel number 5 among the more than 80 high quality compounds are tuberose jasmine and this was new synthetic aldehyde so. she wanted an artificial purview she compared a fragrance with a dress because the dress is also created from different elements that's why should
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know number 5 is so different in its style and composition based around the floral aroma boosters and all the other chanel per use that followed were like that. here in southern france jasmine stretches to the distant hills these blossoms are reserved exclusively for the production of chanel number 5 several times a year olivia push comes from paris to cross. the blossoms are harvested in the early mornings from august to october and taken to a nearby factory for immediate processing. $350.00 kilos of blossoms yield only about one kilo of pure jasmine extract. just mint may well be the most important element in the identity of should know number 5 when coco chanel meant to push him. in the early 1920 s. she asked him to create
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a scent from the finest of compounds these are most often extracted from blossoms and of those the jasmine from grass is the finest. coco chanel and her new fragrance revolutionized the perfume world just as she had the fashion world before. in the 1950 s. the simple but was made part of the permanent collection of new york city's museum of modern art. guarded 5 as her lucky number. she presented her collections on the 5th of may the 5th month of the you. the number 5 great significance for her. and so she felt immediately drawn to the curfew sample number 5. from the iconic american starlet marilyn monroe to french academy award winner and now. many
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of the most beautiful women in show business have done advertising for the legendary sent. his most daunting challenge is to preserve number 5 legacy while advancing its development. laboratory in paris has turned out a few variations on the classics and over the years. the way the purview muse applied has changed over time in 1921 this gesture was in style people would put drops of her few behind there is. a highly concentrated and rich sent today. to apply. the original formula for the fragrance had to be adopted once again. the pandemic has put a damper on plans for a big celebration for chanel number 5. but nothing can change the fact that 100 years ago. created a fragrance that has since become one of the most successful and popular on earth.
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and i'm out for a great notion we've come to the end of the show don't forget to follow us on social media for more on the program for me and the rest of the crew here in berlin as always thanks for tuning in and we'll see.
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probably a vast indian our field is on the fred was more mostly 5 seminars. monocultures keep spreading to the detriment of our health a massive our ecosystem. how can we preserve our understand nature traditional seems like your resume in ecuador is leading the way global 3000. next on d w. we have an important new nurse.
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smoking is helping. posters signs are good for the beast. global warming doesn't exist. well not yet for the industry. it is controlling your thoughts manufacturing ignorance. 55 minutes on d w. r journalists were current every day to bring this story. to tell the truth to put in. i mean journalism from journalists.
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looking good still and you public service media are supporting world press freedom day to keep media an initiative of the european broadcasting union. welcome to. access to clean water is a basic human right but what if it's not readily available we hear about one solution from uganda. the winds of change the traditional oil loving texans a sea of green and renewable energy sources. but 1st we reap what we.
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divested is so important for both people and. the earth produces a rich variety of plants adapted to a wide range of habitats around the globe. there are 400000 species known to science less than 10 percent are edible. rice and wheat accounts for more than half the global food supply. ever since humans began adopting a sedentary lifestyle they have collected seems to plant. the 1st crops were cultivated over 10000 years ago by farmers in mesopotamia now modern day iraq and turkey some 200000 varieties of wheat alone have developed from that early stock. having a wide range of crops and genetic diversity within each variety helps to secure our
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food supply. the greater the diversity the smaller the risk of wheat or some other state being wiped out worldwide by a single pest or disease. that's why seed banks are so important the oldest is in st petersburg and dates back to 894 today the seed bank and gardens laban germany boasts one of the world's most diverse collections. many of the seed stored here are found nowhere else a large seed archives have now been established all over the world. each collect various scenes and plants from different regions. many are then stored at the global seed vault on the norwegian island of spitsbergen. but out in the fields the trend is towards less diversity during the 20th century alone an estimated 75
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percent of crop diversity was lost according to the un's food and agriculture organization the reasons are many and varied. the industrialization of agriculture meant crops suddenly had to fulfil different requirements they have to produce a high yield all right then at the same time and not suffer damage being harvested by heavy machinery. are modern globalized trade network means fruit and vegetables no need to stay fresh while being transported over long distances very few varieties can live up to those demands that range of produce in our supermarkets is deceiving the tomatoes and cucumbers may look different but genetically they're very similar. this genetic poverty is not without risk in the 1970 s. for example a virus destroyed one quarter of the rice harvest across the whole of asia it was
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only through cross breeding the rice with the wild variety that the crop became resistant to the virus thus rescuing the world single most important food staple. for thousands of years farmers have collected their own scenes and swapped them amongst themselves to improve their harvest and develop new varieties. but in recent decades a steadily declining number of seed companies has. in selling an increasingly limited range of sorts. 95 percent of cabbage varieties for example have already disappeared the companies designed their own crops and secure them with a patent they supply 2 thirds of the global market often farmers are unable to collect scenes and are required to buy certain fertilizers and pesticides but a growing number of people worldwide are seeking to reverse this trend by increasing crop diversity and distributing scenes without patents
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a nonprofit organization in austria called nora or noah's ark collects seeds of old endangered varieties. it propagates the scenes and then passes them on to a supermarket chain which sells both the seeds and their produce. here the genetic diversity is genuine. now from the gardens of noah's ark in austria to the sea of south america ecuador protecting traditional seed varieties also indigenous traditions. is a farmer entered her and her village. corn seeds are stable and vital for life in their community she conducts
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a ceremony to thank. her for her bounty. for indigenous communities here in rural ecuador understanding seeds and different varieties is essential for survival but the old varieties are fast disappearing pushed aside by modern industrial alternatives 75 percent of traditional seed varieties and native plant species have already been lost. in the ecuadorian capital quito a collective is working to preserve native plants and crops they've already saved 3000 seed varieties which they now make available to farmers all over the country javier career a set up the network 18 years ago when he realised that industrial sea varieties were taking over. the
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problem with industrial seeds is that they've been bred intensively to ensure they can withstand the use of agro chemicals. they're not designed for natural farming methods and have no genetic diversity in themselves. so the seeds can't adapt to different places and conditions yet up. all the seed varieties here in the store are free of disease and plant debris they're stored without use of chemicals with every seed they pass on javier career and his team are also helping to preserve a traditional way of life ensuring valuable expertise is not lost. yes i mean just. a part of our culture. if someone gives me a cd but i don't know what it is or what i can do with it it's worthless to me. so passing on information about the seeds is equally important i mean. one of the
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goals of the network is to put these old varieties back on the menu. one sebastiaan pears is preparing a chocolate drink made of cocoa beans in a local fruit known as tax so for 4 years now his restaurant key to has served dishes made exclusively with natural ingredients including traditional fruits and crop for righties. working with the writings also means that you're promoting fair trade which approves people's lives and you're helping the environment too. and above all it gives you lots of freedom to conjure up a different menu every day based on what is currently available and what's in season. the seed guardians network wants to persuade the farmers to adopt ecological methods and work with old seed varieties. they also
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give workshops this one here is all about perma culture how their career explains how best to maintain the soil so that it remains fertile and retains its natural balance of nutrients. the tomato is native to ecuador. potatoes come from the andes lintels come from asia right over here somewhere. every sort of seed has its own story which is very important to the seed guardians of the hungry began growing kirk out 12 years ago 1st he visited the farmers in the local area he discovered more than 30 different varieties of cocoa. every cocoa bean can be planted to grow a new tree but this one will be turned into chocolate so you know.
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what i love most is the risk for rioting that we have here. but i thought you can harvest throughout the entire year. if you have a monoculture you only have one harvest. but here there's a cow that you harvest when it's in flower one ripens only in summer the other is better in the wet season. many of us cook our varieties were on the edge of extinction until his team began growing them again. by preserving old varieties they've also helped to preserve and remove the rain forest. female a.m.r. from the indigenous keech war community this type of farming is nothing new 22 different she varieties have been sown in this field alone. she
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loves the many different types of corn. she has at the question we have all the colors here white black red yellow purple all these corn varieties are there for us to nourish. 2020 was a record year for the global wind industry newly erected wind turbines alone generated $93.00 gigawatts of power 30 more than the year before total wind energy production rose to $743.00 gigawatts that's about as much as 70 nuclear power stations harnessing the wind to help to cut c o 2 emissions by more than a 1000000000 tons worldwide the equivalent of c o 2 emissions generated by all of south america. china is home to the lion's share
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of turbines just under 56 percent of the us follows with around 20 percent. one place relishing the breeze is the u.s. oil state of texas. currently 10 times more people still work in the oil industry compared to renewables but change is on the horizon. some things never change in west texas and brooks ranch cattlemen round up the herd as they always have on horseback. only the landscape looks a little different today the cattle graze at the foot of wind turbines it took some time for lewis brooks still in the saddle at $71.00 to warm to the idea. initially i didn't really long you know. and then. one hour
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found out you know. well and like a general i mean they're beautiful while the cattle like to lie down on the board for some reason. the ranch lewis brooks runs with his son boyd covers almost 80 square kilometers better 3rd bigger than manhattan the land is dry and it's hard to thrive on ranching alone. the brits thank god for giving them boil as well as another and even more lucrative resource when but different energies are have been a great. to maintain this release rich is the way we we want to be maintained in the way my granddad and great grand. all the way that they are it doesn't well pump starting their land and 78 wind turbines the other brics doesn't want to talk about the income they produce passed on average each wind turbine in the region brings in $10000.00 a year. when he hears the hum of the blades turning saving the planet is not what
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1st comes to mind. so what monny there may. well it's just mind. or well it's you know it's produced you know nothings wise to. so welcomes visitors with a huge turbine blade the town of $11000.00 is a 3 hours drive west of dallas and has traditionally stood for oil cashel and rattlesnakes. it may have weathered droughts storms and the ups and downs of the oil price but many young people moved away. sweetwater was becoming a ghost town then came the boom in wind energy. brought wetzel is the 4th generation of his family to live in sweet water he's a proud texan as a mineral rights lawyer he negotiated leases with the oil industry until the late
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ninety's when the new wild west of one. we had so many people wanting to talk to us about their wembley says that they lined up all the way down the block trying to get into the door that's always good for orders but it transformed everything so the property tax base here was only $435000000.00 after the advent of all this wind it is now 3 b. . texas is now also a leader in renewable energies more than a quarter of us wind energy comes from the republican run state is plenty of wind and sunshine here and they took of transmission lines and little to no regulation. wind farms are popping up all over. but they're not an option for buddy napier. he too has a ranch near sweetwater but it's more fun he makes his money with the small oil
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business he's run for 30 years. he's skeptical of president biden's plans for speech to renewables. it is. a good thing for renewables i don't have a problem with i don't think they are to be created the. condemning your own gas industry which also seems to be obvious. for navy here the heart of texas pumps oil 2 hours from sweet water is the permian basin the largest shale basin in the u.s. countless oil pumps work around the clock vast amounts of natural gas are flared rather than piped to markets it's terrible for the climate it's a practice president biden aims to regulate more tightly. navia says the market is being skewed against oil and in favor of renewables even though green energy is in
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his estimation unreliable there is definitely. i think it's not good for us to be reasonable about the way that you go about it and condemning $11.00 energy industry in order to supplement another energy industry that is intermittent energy bash i think is shortsighted. but others see the future in wind texas state technical college and sweet water trains turbine technicians there's no shortage of students the industry of his good pay travel and opportunities for advancement and jobs not far from home. a lot of these students that come through here are from oil families so they know what it's like to the way of having money and everybody working and then when it will drop those people are laid off and then you know they lose the money whereas and when it's steady. predicted the
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tuna has already secured their job with the wind power company what makes the job so appealing. and. the students here acknowledge the need for clean energy but they certainly don't see themselves as doing aren't all romantic about preserving nature. i don't down before you're going to need natural gas those kind of i don't doubt that we didn't have all. the college has a wind turbine for students to train on. oil industry champions complain that wind energy gets subsidies that the oil industry does not get one response to that charge is that everybody has to pay down the line for the damage the oil industry does to the environment. whatever comes of joe biden's plan for a clean energy revolution texas is pressing ahead installing wind turbines across
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the state stemming less from idealism and the desire to save the planet then there's a way to make some money. at the un declared access to safe clean drinking water a human right in 20 to 10 yet millions of people simply don't have it for global ideas our report said julius mcgee traveled to lake nucky valley in uganda there he took a swig of the lake water which thanks to a simple but brilliant idea is safe enough to drink. this is the nucky valley refugee settlement in western uganda 130000 people live here. 6 years ago dina not been to fled the democratic republic of congo after rebels killed her husband. inaki the lake is the source of water also for drinking for livestock as well. but the water is full of
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germs. every year 20000 children under the age of 5 die in uganda of diarrheal disease one major reason is that they have no choice but to drink dirty water. heat kills germs so dina not been to boil the water she fetches from the lake she has 5 children. and i think we were drinking water using charcoal and if we don't have it we use firewood otherwise we would be drinking 3 days he water. that comes at a cost to the environment to make charcoal trees are cut down forests also had to be cleared to make space for the settlement. but there's another way to provide safe clean drinking water south of the room g. and henry if you know run to sufficient a social enterprise that makes automated low cost filters this set up cost $1200.00 the money was donated by somebody in the united states. it supplies enough water for about 900 people out of 130000 in the settlement but it's still
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a start and it worked and that through our food that you brought up from the lake you can see this is the original order from the lake and then outbreak prices through the future this is there is out that we get. south of the ruins you have lost a brother to cholera he drank contaminated water access to clean water is a human right to sufficient aims to deliver what the state fails to provide it also developed a small water filter for home use. and uses grenades to . purify the water we have 2 buckets that bucket contains the grenade and then below but there is a reason for this safe water so they pour water on the bucket and then the whole food creation happens in the ground.
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only water and can get through the ground and only see if what i was to be reserved for that out. of you know shows people how to put together their own water filter the grain it needs to be cleaned every few months then it can be reused. do you not have been to is intrigued if you filter water this way you no longer have to boil it or buy charcoal which means lower emissions and costs and there's another advantage every time we stall a new station filter we train that women around a community to make sure that they have access to safe drinking water in their homes and they can also go and train other people or also make this wonderful to us then so them an extra income for themselves. out of the room going henry if you know installed the 1st large filtering system using granite in central uganda in
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a school near the capital kampala. several 100 pupils now have access to clean water and fall sick less often. doesn't have anything so told me a lot because i'm no longer suffering we tell you for stuff every day for you and those like i don't even go to school. to sufficient has installed the institutional scale filter systems and more than 30 schools so far. here at st bruno's an impi district near kampala the system is the school's pride and joy it cost $600.00 the parents each contributed about a dollar. the school still uses wood but only for cooking not for boiling water to make it safe this is good for health the environment and the budget. we used to. follow riis. by rights we've tried to save us. from. now we.
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see to sufficient has quantify the impact that use of its filters has on the environment and terms of trees protect it and c o 2 emissions for every fruit that we install the industry every day which is she once was and plays on the edge here of the old somebody up there to make a deal that he will see if. we. have these 200 imported. say. trees that will run. whenever 2 sufficient installs a large filter system in a school the team plans marine the trees with the pupils about a 1000 in all over the past 2 years. the. ring has absorb carbon dioxide and an amazingly high rate of 20 times the rate of general vegetation according to one japanese study
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few but to sufficient aims to do more than just replace trees that have been felled. we need to begin right in. protecting the environment into the mine so that people why they are. in uganda and many african countries is that you've got to treat computing right what i would want to. do you know not been to had since acquired and started using a water filter she put it together herself. from the filter is clean and usable i'm very surprised that this is the same level as what was originally did to cows and people have contaminated it my. thanks to the 2 sufficient filter she and her family stand a better chance of staying healthy with less effort and at lower cost however dirty
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the water in the lake continues to be. 0000500. that's all from us a global 3000 this time don't forget to write to us at global 3000 dot com and check out our facebook page to label ideas see using take cap.
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is news live from berlin and scientists in india accuse the government of ignoring warnings of a deadly new coronavirus variance advisers blame politicians failures for the devastating 2nd wave of covert 19 is now overwhelming of the health service also on the program australia gets tough on travelers wanting to return from india even its own citizens face fines or prison for breaking the rules we'll get the full story from our reporter. plus back home on planet earth.