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tv   Tourismus extrem  Deutsche Welle  May 13, 2021 4:00am-4:46am CEST

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just. for. the little stores on the big stage. kids start listening to. w. . this is news and these are our top stories israeli air strikes in gaza intensified today amid hints the military is preparing for a possible ground offensive there health officials in gaza say the death toll from israeli airstrikes has risen to more than 50 including 14 children a mosque rockets fired into israel have killed at least 6 people washington says it's sending a special envoy to the region in a bid to deescalate tensions. ugandan president yoweri museveni has
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been sworn in for his 6th term after winning a controversial election this january during the inauguration ceremony police surrounded the home of opposition leader. was called was of a needs victory quote a sham police describe the measure as a normal security deployment. u.s. house republicans have voted to remove fellow party member list cheney from her leadership position in congress the wyoming conservative has been under pressure for criticizing former president donald trump and his refusal to accept the results of the 2020 election cheney says she intends to continue to fight for integrity within the republican party. this is the news from berlin you can find out from more from our web site. if you lost someone to cope with 19 chances are it was
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a nerve sue held their hand as they passed away if the coronavirus pandemic has changed anything for the better it has to be a more sincere appreciation a greater awareness of nurses on this international nurses day we examine the sacrifices made in the past year often overworked and underpaid the frontline workers who many times became patients themselves sometimes losing their lives trying to save ours i'm bord gulf in berlin this is the day. to day is a special and much today the people are grateful and happy this fills us with pride . that the nurses have clearly shown that covert 19th that they are the soul of this excites the truth is this recognition fills all of us nurses with
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pride. my thanks for that tireless work we are all very great. and. not tired we will rest when it's as if nothing now the whole world realizes we can't live without. also coming up republicans in the us house of representatives today had a choice wyoming congresswoman lives cheney or former us president donald trump guess who they are we are a party that can fight for conservative principles that can fight for substance we cannot be dragged backward by the very dangerous lies of a former president they fear not. to our viewers on p.b.s. in the united states and to all of you around the world welcome we begin the day with the women and men who dedicate themselves every day to keeping you would be alive and healthy today as international nurses day this year more than any other
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all of us have reasons to be grateful for the never ending work of nurses in the 1st months of the coronavirus pandemic we were witnesses to the cruel contagion of coded 19 in many cases blunted by the nurses who were often the only ones in the room to hold the hand of a dying patient nurses have been without a doubt life savers in this pandemic but their heroic efforts as frontline workers have taken a toll many nurses contract of the coronavirus themselves and many died from coded 19 last year in spain roughly half of all coded 1000 deaths were medical staff but even those who avoided the virus could face future mental health problems the international council of nurses calls it the covert effect and warns the stress of the profession could result in nursing shortages all the across the globe. but you have more even you saw a lot of people die in one shift in
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a sea and at that time we had up to $1012.00 deaths per night it was terrible it up there even me it was terrible so we almost on every shift the bell that rang to move the bodies that the patients to the cold room was ringing almost every 2 hours every hour. it was very severe psychological stress i mean. mexican nasa lena salgado lost a lot to cohabit even her father who contract the virus working as a doctor. in what we do here was so heartily for you that it was the most painful experience of aside seeing so many people die and back in again i saw a lot of people die and going to be. like many of the almost 28000000 nasa's around the world a working under huge pressure at the forefront of the pandemic. there are for many
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people as well but the reality. is we really. are. the international council of nasa's says mass trauma among us says as a global phenomenon. the organization once the pandemic to mark a turning point for health care. now 12 plus months into the pandemic we should be seeing those approvals turn into action we need to see the hot investment in the protection the support the development of all nursing and our health care workforce not just for the psyche of our health systems but full on the national safety and security of the i c
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n says at least $3000.00 nurses around the world have died from covered 19 the real number is thought to be in the 10s of thousands. that was the most difficulty being have you ever quit eeks may have no cortex made of the dying on its own will not speak because of you it took and it will be just the defining day that prison is not. in some countries the heavy tell of the pandemic has prompted a growing number of nurses to leave the profession. but for many it's reinforced that dedication to the job. base the number of fish you know it's a profession where you are there from the moment life comes into the world until the moment it leaves again to let me sleep. well for more now we want to talk to one of the people featured in that report howard catton is president of the international council of nurses he joins us tonight from geneva switzerland howard
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it's good to have you on the program the world owes you and your fellow nurses a huge debt of gratitude when you consider the dangers of the job especially in this pandemic is saying thinking was that enough. no it's not but firstly let me wish you and everybody a happy international nurses day but it fails so much more poignant a moment for a more somber reflection as your pieces showed the fight against this pandemic that nurses have been the forefront of has taken a really significant toll and cost on a single work force physical exhaustion the mental health pressures nurses with infections necessarily dying nurses now leaving the profession as well and it's it's good to hear the recognition the applause and the accolades
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but it's not enough we need those applause to turn into firm actions we need to protect to support to develop on nursing work force our nurses have shown how they are holding our health systems together when our health systems out together our economies thrive we're able to meet people who are we have economic freedoms we have personal liberties as well we can help granny i think hope this marks a change in how we think about health care as being an essential investment in the sorts of lives and societies that we all want to live in and lead let me ask you belt vaccinations and nurses when the vaccination campaigns began rolling out here in europe in north america we know that nurses and frontline medical staff they were prioritized in some countries is that the case everywhere around the world. no
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it's not and your gripes that people around the world committee to prioritizing nurses health care workers the most fun rable in recent days i've been talking to nursing colleagues in india we all know the trade food situation in that country and what nurses are going through we think only about 50 or 60 percent of the health care workforce there have been vaccinated out of all of the vaccines that have been put into people's arms around the world only about 2.3 percent have gone into the arms of people in africa the inequity in vaccine ministration to people in need around the world if this is grotesque inequity countries need to do much much more to share vaccines we know that countries have massively over all did the patent law you've heard that the us have announced recently is very welcome but we need to share the manufacturing know how
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as well nurses have often been the only one in the room with a dying 1000 patient we we've all heard these stories many of held the hand of a dying person i mean this has to take an incredible emotional toll on even the most seasoned nurses. you're absolutely right that nurses have stepped into the shoes of families and relatives they've been the last handle that been lost face that many patients have seen nurses are use to caring for people in their last moments but they are doing this on a regular basis and nurses you know who i talk to if you say to them do you get used to it they say no we mourn every single death every single passing if you say what you mean you must go home and talk to your family and relatives and that's where you are burden and they say no we don't because we don't
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want to put that off families are worried about is already so we keep it ourselves this is an enormous we call it must traumatize ty's they should and nurses have had to buy life and death decisions we see in the game the pictures from india the lack of equipment oxygen beds ventilators that the people who made decisions to didn't prepare our health systems then all the people who are facing the consequences is nurses is a health care workers and we know that there are warnings that there could be shortages of nurses around the world here in berlin there are reports of medical staff wanted to go on strike to protest working conditions working hours we what should be done to ensure that people stay in the profession i think we've got about a minute left here what would you say. so we need to 1st see protect the nurses that we've got decent work safe working conditions nurses nurses right saw human
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rights they have a right to be protected at work but we also might make sure that we invest in educating new nurses so that we've got enough nurses who are well need to feel respected and valued we've not got anough nurses in senior leadership positions nurses office often aren't at the table and influencing the bake policy decisions we won't get the learning from this pandemic right we won't strengthen and rebuild our health systems if we haven't got nurses at the heart of those decisions howard cancer president of the international council of nurses howard it's been good talking with you thank you to you and all of your fellow nurses around the world we appreciate everything they do thank you very much. for a living you have signed a deal with a company to manufacture millions of doses of the johnson and johnson coated 1900
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vaccine but there is a catch the deal is dependent on patent protections being waived bolivia which is that it's needed about 10 percent of its population says it desperately needs more doses and has found a canadian company to manufacture them it has now applied to the world trade organization for a temporary patent suspension johnson and johnson would be paid royalties under that proposal. well many developing countries in the united states support waiving patent protections for covert night back scenes but european countries they are resisting some nonprofit groups say e.u. leaders are only listening to the pharmaceutical lobbyist why is that going on how is that going on the talk about that right now my colleague joel door joins us so why is there so why is the european union resistant to this idea well we know that this is a global debate going on in the european commission's current position is awaiting patents not what necessarily speed up production that moment tiriel the know how are also needed and it was stifle innovation while the other side n.g.o.s are
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arguing that there is spare manufacturing capacity the materials can be ramped up knowledge can be shared and that innovation is already being rewarded for billions in public funding but who are european leaders listening to in this debate well to find out a brussels based lobbying watchdog cold corporate europe observatory crunched the numbers on the meetings being held by european commission is we can have a look at what they found will firstly commissioners who are the decision makers who are leading europe's response met with the pharmaceutical lobbyists $140.00 times in the about the cost for team months now generic drug manufacturers are the ones who would actually be able to make patent free vaccines $18.00 meetings but n.g.o.s who arguing in favor of patent waivers they got just one high level meeting in the past 14 months one ngo that wants to meet with european commission is and conde is medicine sans frontiers or doctors without borders and they told me about
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their struggle to get their foot in the door in brussels let's have a listen. but when we tried to meet with the commissioners themselves who are we both from its decision makers and the political leadership of the european union among the political leadership of the european union. are meeting with the health commissioner was the client and with the trade commissioner vice president's budget office was not to respond that it is in the interest of the commission to hear all sides and to hear many points of view to be informed about what are the options available to them to improve better access to these tools and not just here a number of forces particularly the voices of the pharmaceutical sector themselves who vested interest yeah joe what's so bad about the obvious from the pharmaceutical industry meeting with european union commissioners i mean after all these are the companies that have developed the back scenes that are saving people's lives well i put that question to the brussels law watchdog which is a corporate europe observatory and they said there's nothing wrong with the
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commission is meeting with big pharma but they also need to hear the other side of the story too we can have a listen to what they had to say it's not it's not that they should meet with industry i mean there are there are a number of practical reasons why they would need to meet with the companies that but when you when you get to the present where the discussion inside the commission is completely one sided that it's about the views of industry and nothing more and nobody else gets to present the case for how. next acces could be. produced on a larger scale international then then i think then i think the commission is making a serious mistake. well ask the european commission for a response and they said that in the case of doctors without borders one of those requested meetings was turned down due to show joining conflicts and that the ngo would be able to take part in talks later this month what's important to note is that the european position on this is not yet set in stone there are more negotiations planned for later this month and what n.g.o.s one is the european
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commission is an other national leaders to open the door to hear their points of view as well yeah at the end of the day we just want to get everybody back to native the fastest way possible joe as always thank you. the nation needs a strong republican party the nation needs a party that that is based upon fundamental principles of conservatism and i am committed and dedicated to ensuring that that's how this party goes forward and i plan to lead the fight to do that a defiant wyoming congresswoman lives cheney speaking there just moments after her fellow republicans in the u.s. house of representatives voted to remove her from the party leadership today was the most significant purge the republican party has conducted since losing control of the u.s. senate and the white house in last november's election liz cheney one of the most conservative members of congress so album favor with g.o.p. leaders rather quickly because she refused to accept donald trump's election lies
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and strewth today former president trump praised the move cheney's takedown shows in glaring clarity the g.o.p. is total subservience to donald trump cheney said today's vote will not change her conviction. i will do everything i can to ensure that the former president never again gets anywhere near the oval office we have seen the danger that he continues to provoke with his language we have seen his lack of commitment and dedication to the constitution and i think it's very important that we make sure whomever we elect is somebody who will be faithful to the constitution and what will this change responsibility is to lead our conference in the house of representatives and so she has a particular responsibility as a result of that and it that frankly it doesn't serve us well if he's creating fomenting division in our ranks and look i'm all for unity i'm all for unity and
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truth you know truth cannot co-exist with lies truth cannot co-exist with false and you cannot unify with that. all right so where are the republicans heading now let's go to los angeles and bring in republican strategist for chris faulkner chris it's good to have you back on the day let me ask you would you have voted to demote lives cheney today but well as you can tell i had no intent of running public office so i'm in no danger of having to take that. i think what you saw today was a great example of. individual members of the republican party having their own opinions of expressing those and kudos from cheney she has her convictions you stand by those she certainly no need to fight them all to consumer stands. her position house leadership is not only connected to the representation of people wyoming but also has a lot to do with the entire caucus of the public and represent
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a lot of different viewpoints as you know full well you know in countries like germany you may have 6 or 7 major parties but the united states we jam everybody into 2 so we have our fair share of disagreements well after today's vote chris who would you say that who is really running the g.o.p. . well that's the beauty of our system it's not a top down type of thing we have no one person is running g.o.p. you can only have white house just as joe biden is not in charge of every aspect of democratic party you know whether it's mitch mcconnell or kevin mccarthy you are in leadership in the house and senate there is no one person in charge of the g.o.p. and i know for a lot of people who aren't involved in politics every day they can you're frustrating answer but it's the reality of what it is you have a democratic system which is by no means perfect but it's better than most the rest that are out there but i noticed you did not mention donald trump's name as a possible leader for the party. well he's now terms were present united states
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like any former president should be you know given the courtesy you could use these dates and here's an email personally i think you should have access to social media twitter and facebook but those are private companies that made their decision and you know you can choose name and some politics and can speak to. boise the future the party candidates here supports or doesn't support and it's fully focused entirely by every other u.s. president done that's not. what you as a strategist do you see this devotion to donald trump as the best way to win back the senate or the house in the 2822 midterms. i would disagree somewhat with the description of it being. from yes there are a lot of. republicans who will show up to republican primaries who have more say so than people who don't show up to those elections were still fans of the president i think what you would find is you have
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a lot of republicans who are still confused quite frankly why we're talking about this you know we have so many other issues facing our nation in the world well why are the former president's opinion chris why are you still 2 why are you still talking about this why is the party still talking about donald trump. well let's put it this way that wasn't for donald trump there is no way that you and i would be having this conversation about let's change this was a procedural vote or a minor leadership position in one of our political parties that took place today and it's worldwide news why is that is because armstrong and unfortunately since he's left office since he has left office he you know and i'm not one to ascribe myself to conspiracy theories but this trumped arrangements in rome where people are just obsessed with hating and they want to bring him into every discussion about everything and it's just he's not the president he more i don't why there's a lot of us it's not i'm prepared to move on as you know and pretending like he didn't happen as president but he's not the president for years and out of the
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running for office we have a whole slew of other people that are and so we're looking at those and particularly the 2022 midterm elections and yes i do think talking about some of the trumps accomplishments economically and otherwise during his presidency is a pathway but the real answer is we don't even routine joe biden is doing such a bad job in the 1st 4 months of his presidency that alone is going to give us the land line coming into the 22 election cycle which will hand control the gavel the house of representatives back to the republican party but well let me let me ask you about that more than 100 republicans are expected this week to call for the creation of a new 3rd political party if the g.o.p. does not take action and i assume that means if the party doesn't distance itself from donald trump is this is that wishful thinking. it's it's it's how you say a straw man it's not actually news and i wrote the actual story on this this 100 republicans none of those people are actually elected officials we have. millions
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upon millions of people that are registered republicans and active every day in politics we have hundreds of thousands of elected officials that 100 people who their former administration people or staff people they think that they're important because of their former jobs quite frankly i don't care and the vast majority of american to particular very graphic nature less of those people think about forming a 3rd party. me asking about the people in california and what they think of caitlin jenner i mean that's also been a big story around the world california is where republicans go to be reborn redesigned is that what you've got in caitlin jenner. i think i would i would just screw with that description of california so the california definitely was a place where girls of your political party affiliation it was a land of dreams is the kind of place that people came to all the time to achieve their dreams whether they be in entertainment or technology business agriculture
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all the incredible things that california has to offer unfortunately you know very short period of time incompetency at the state levels driven the state really into the gutter for the 1st time in the history of california they lost a congressional district as more people are moving out of the state and moving into the state. so do you think that she has a good chance of becoming the next governor. you know the thing about a recall election is you can really it's very hard to handicap who has a good chance or who doesn't have a chance i think it's very secure and generous not i was fortunate i you know our source in your course referring to $2000.00 and $3.00 recall election was a very unique individual with wide popularity across political and demographic boundaries kaitlin jenner's audiences is smaller and so she doesn't have that wide name i.d. . but she has just as good a chance as anyone else the specifics of the california recall and again nobody wants to get into the kind of nitty gritty of this but really the most important
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what question of her one which is is gavin newsome going to recall in the 1st place otherwise it really doesn't matter if the most votes and well i think that arnold schwarzenegger with agree with you he is definitely not skateland jeb the republican strategist chris faulkner it's always good talking with you we appreciate your time and your insights chris thank you my pleasure talking to you as well. well the day is almost done the conversation continues online you'll find us on twitter either d.w. news or you can follow me of t.v. and remember whatever happens between now and then tomorrow is another day we'll see the numbers but. boy. oh boy.
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playing. this ideology may apply to soccer but it doesn't always apply to the manufacture of soccer balls there's a lot of money. most of the world soccer balls are made in steel cut costs to. be missing a company that is here to fair trade standards. for. me just. next to. enter the
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conflict zone with tim sebastian america's secretary of state i was in the loop and was in ukraine last week seizing the power of these awful lives of comfort and support for the country of the russian troops of the mass the huge numbers close to florida my guest this week is ukraine's foreign minister good to be true coolly about get out of the visits so what was he asked him. conflict zone. in 60 minutes tito. it's in. the arab spring began in 2011. people stood up against corrupt troopers and dictatorship.
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the true for security more freedom and more dignity have their hopes been fulfilled . 10 years after the arab spring. rebellion starts june 7th on d w. m d a. if you can for dr cycle a wall crowned parts of germany any time lately he may have come across huge advertising billboards asking the question if we can stop global warming or create a fairer walt and how many of us think about the products we buy where they came from and it made them is it our job the consumer all the responsibility of multi
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1000000000 euro corporations shareholder pressure is starting to make boardrooms more accountable and t.v. commercials tugging shoppers a clear the trend here in europe at least is towards green and fair. i'm not here to pull at your heartstrings but any football mom or dad would sleep better at night if they knew their kid was kicking around a soccer ball that hadn't been stitched together by the tiny hands of a boy or girl around the same age on the other side of the world in pakistan where officials have failed after decades of if it's to fully eradicate child labor. soccer is a global sport whether it's children or adults playing for fun all the pros like in the german bundesliga it's a global business with billions but what if the soccer ball went to come from. most of them come from c.l. could in pakistan put decades the city has been the world's largest producer of
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soccer balls thousands of local people work in the industry. in the past all the balls was sewn by hand but times have changed at least at this company game if you do says 160000 cycles a year maybe in automated production. the industry used to be in the tourists many workers took the balls home with them with family members including children stitched them by hand. in how to produce everything in-house and we only allow people who were 18 or over to work in our factory. our focus is on producing high quality balls. to achieve that we have to provide more benefits and good wages to our workers a benefit. to speak of new birth being in 2015 game i was certified as a fair trade company indicating that it meets international standards for working
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conditions. and between different rates of sirius radio company has to have fixed labor contract with all its employees with agreed working hours better working conditions rights to representation within the company all workers are entitled to sit maternity leave. and these are all conditions that the whole company has to adhere to. at dell based on the supplier for the german bundesliga all the soccer balls are made in pakistan. peak times they had courses in germany sends out nearly $100000.00 bulls a month the management here is satisfied that its partner company of pakistan does not use child labor. check on that by ensuring that no soccer balls are produced in private homes nearly 20 years ago opened our own sewing centers and we were able to monitor the process. but has
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the industry really changed even now only a fraction of. the certified fair trade conditions. the mayor of seattle assures us that working conditions have improved he says there was a lot of international pressure. level of compliance with worker standards and action of workers rights can't be found anywhere else in pakistan. our customers pay for social security and you were mentioned benefits for our employer . these things didn't exist before. and as we have complied with employer protection standards the pricing is becoming more competitive. but the head of germany's with fair trade certification still the exception and 5 to 10 percent more expensive. isn't
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a fair trade product. fair trade balls is negligible. only make up about 45 percent of overall sales. it's grantley because the fair trade c.e.o. is high profile in the industry or amongst the clubs as we would all like you to be . back to pakistan and. the company says it wants to become a role model for the entire industry. manages hearsay custom is ont always willing to play ball and shell out more for their products. other than european union are in the work from the european union and the scandinavian countries buyers from other regions don't value the fair trade sealable more because they don't like the higher price but if you want you can be a role model for fair trade not only to provide additional benefits for our workers
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but also so that our workers put more effort into the fair trade products because they know these provide them with extra benefits and premium sub. extra benefits. despite the lack of industry wide standards it's clear that working conditions insufferable production have improved here over the last decade but look at that if it's cost money and there's now a very real risk that parts of the production could be transferred to delegates countries like china only on mom where working conditions may not be fair even money to it. and just because it's fair trade isn't 100 percent guarantee there inspectors can't be everywhere all the time now to something that is free it shines from time to time here in germany and the nations being ranked among the world's top installers of solar panels for several years now the stats aren't all that impressive when you take
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a look at solar power as chunk of the overall energy makes the same goes for most other countries time to crunch the numbers with the use. it's astonishing but lean energy from the some solar energy has become the cheapest way to generate electricity it's even cheaper than coal and yet it produces only 3 percent of the world's electricity. wound be using way way more of how to get some cheap. and what does all this have to do with ducks. let's find out. first let's take a look at how much the price for solar has fallen. i started this job as. 2005 and then i thought it was ridiculous to expect from jimmy chase's the head solar analyst that research from bloomberg pay about. for the reservoir for some.
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$0.20 for that. and that is just the last 15 years if you look further back to the price drop is even more impressive how did this happen that's been a long story but it's unbelievable up gregory nemat has written a book about this. no one country did it it was a strange of one country building on another one the us created the technology the modern day solar cell made from silicon was invented in the us a 954 back then and many got used in the space industry in the steel super expensive but as the technology progressed prices started to fall to germany created a market in 2000 germany passed a law to boost renewable energy development because it was me because it put a fixed price on energy generated from sources like wind or solar back if people and companies a reason to set up solar panels and for them to do that someone needed to build the
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solar panels 3 china made it. once the german laws come into force china really started to pump hell their souls. so basically it held the whole industry for this on a scale that the rest really didn't keep up. the non existant player 20 years ago and today they're the biggest producer of solar panels about 70 percent of the world for action so this is how we ended up where we are now clean energy that also makes business sense but solar is so great why don't we rely on it much much more than just switch off all these 30 power plants well sold us always had this one big problem. it only really works when the sun is shining. when it's cloudy or even worse dark even the best solar cells are pretty useless and that's a real shame because that's when we need them the most. let's take
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a look at how we use energy in the morning when most people get up and get ready we need energy. the so-called daca of charts our demand for power from nonrenewable sources like coal and gas throughout the day 1st in places without much so after the morning spike it stays pretty level. when people come home in the evening it goes up again and then drops at night. at this point you might get an idea why they call it that curve because it kind of looks like a duck. anyway in places with lots of solar like california this curve changes the mornings are pretty much the same vendor sun rises and solar energy production kicks in this lets demand from nonrenewable energy drop. until the sun sets that is. that is when conventional demand shoots up again way steeper than in the 1st curve to problems with those one traditional power plants suck and ramping up this quickly that means you have to keep them running at
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a certain output all day even though there's lots of solar and that means that you could end up with actually more power produced in a day that he. and that leads to the 2nd problem there are limits to how much energy you can put into the grid too much solar could overpower roots so it needs to be thrown away this is always made it super difficult to add lots of solar power systems but guess what there is now a solution to this chances are you have part of it in front of you right now a lithium ion battery. or just taking the same construction stringing together many many of those cells and making battery packs that we can use for cars and then we can also scale that up to use for stationary power to go next to wind. solar farms what's been quite. well. with. shift.
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in the u.s. for example the state of new mexico just decided to shut down a coal plant that's build new solar farms that store large amounts of the energy they produce and batteries. lithium ion batteries have become a lot better and a lot cheaper than expected in the last few years they're now a viable option for storing and shifting at least a few hours worth of solar energy as needed so the storage problem that's always sad is actually not that much of a problem anymore. sometimes though we might want a longer term storage places without much sunshine for example and that's why companies are offering other solutions let's just run through. another type of battery called a flow battery separates the charger outside. that has 2 advantages it can store more energy and. the problem is still relatively expensive.
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hydro storage which is already used quite a bit you need. one of them needs to be on a hill during the day use solar energy to pump water from the lower leg up to the higher you need. to find legs. the hill. gravity comes from. working on it. building blocks with solar energy and then releases the energy. space also the option of using solar to produce hydrogen hydrogen number of things like fuel costs or even make steel but the whole process is still pretty costly i think that. there are. batteries are becoming. expensive it will be hard to compete but they
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do have other attributes like the charge longer which. has become cheap and has pretty much fixed its biggest problem so what's next. i would not be surprised if by 2030 we're talking about. a large part of the world's electricity supply sold as common. but now that the technologies in place it really looks like it's time to shine. just like if you like this piece similar topics and make sure you visit our planet a you tube channel. but when it comes to investing your money how much of it supports green initiatives especially if you leave it up to
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a hedge fund or exchange traded fund reporter at the frankfurt stock exchange chelsea delaney took a look at how easy or hard it is being green. and list stretches of green. the frozen tundra of the our tech. lush south american jungles this is what climate activists want to say from destruction but can fighting against climate change also make you rich. my friend lizzy's started investing last year through a trading at mostly buying popular tech stocks but she also cares about the environment and she once turned vestments to reflect that. and it's not just her. millions of people have taken to the streets in recent years to protest climate change and that movement has also found its way into financial markets many no longer just want investments to.

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