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tv   Europe in Concert  Deutsche Welle  May 31, 2021 2:00pm-2:45pm CEST

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and i work out the ah was, ah, this is dw lie from berlin. beijing announces a major policy shift to try to boost the country's birth rate. china graph the existing limit on 2 children per family. it says married couples can have 3 if they want as a rapidly aging population threatens the economic growth. also coming up after the congo volcano or russian, we need the children lost in the chaos and the volunteers doing all they can take care of that. germany 6 answers after reports to jeff,
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a european neighbor helped the us by on chancellor medical back in 2013 and a huge question mark hang over the soccer tournament. copa america with just 2 weeks ago origin. tina is dropped his host because of a surgeon corona virus. cases can the tournaments still go ahead? the me i'm see me. so it's going to welcome to the show. china has announced a major shift in its family planning policy. it will now allow couples to have up to 3 children. the ruling communist party says it is scrapping a strict to child policy in response to the rapidly rising number of older people in the population. beijing as enforced birth limits for for decades. but it's now concerned that a demographic crisis could add to pressure on its economy from one to story. let's
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bring in correspondent, mathias billing or standing by in beijing. hi mathias. it's good to see you. so tell us more about why china is in acting. this policy now well, a few weeks ago, the results of the latest census came out. china is counting its population every 10 years. these results have to be delayed several times. nobody really knows why, but there has been a lot of speculation that china might have reached its peak population peak already the census data, the official said, no, that's not the case, but it is not far away. we'll have them in the next 2 or 3 years, and then the population would decline in china would be facing the same problems that many developed countries phase an aging population less workforce. but being on the development level and an income level that was much lower than these
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countries. and that could spell out the big problems for china. this is why it is a big concern to the government. this aging population last year was the year with the lowest birth rates in china history. and was 1.2 children women quite far from the 3 children. the aiming at not have a huge you set it. they, you know, there are many other countries facing this issue. so how serious is china as a demographic crisis? while the problem is that china has not reached the development level and the income levels that other countries had reached when they started facing these problems. so basically having to feed a retired population that is so big, but with these income levels will be much more difficult than if the income levels were higher. the pension system is not very well developed. so it is
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a very big problem for china. so china's now allowing couples to have up to 3 children. do you think we're going to see baby boom in the coming years? 4 years ago, china lifted the band on the 2nd child and allow people to have 2 children. there was a very small baby boom in the following year, but already the year after the birthrate started declining again, having reached the lowest point last year, the pandemic might have played into this very low number as well. but the trend is clear, the numbers are declining. not very likely that this is going to change because the government puts the number 3. it's much easier to prevent people from having to do and then to encourage them. chinese government is finding out now, there are many reasons for that. one reason is that the parents will have one now thinking about their family planning while maybe around 30 years old. they, many of them have never known families with 2 children. this is the one charge and
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ration. and the other thing is in the highly competitive education system, many prefer to put all the resources into one child in order to give him a better chances in life. correspondent, mature, spinning a recording from a patient. thank you very much. now the international aid organization, doctors without borders, is warning that hundreds of thousands of people displaced by the recent volcanic eruption in eastern congo are at risk of infection by colorado. the erection of they need a gun, go volcano, near the city of goma over a week ago, sent resident fleeing in a mass exodus that was chaotic and terrifying. many who fled ended up in nearby soccer. among them, hundreds of children separated from their parents as they left the w. maryan miller reports now from 2nd on some of the young people still waiting to be reunited with their families. when he had gone, go volcano, still fuming over
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a week after the devastating eruption and it's still impacting people in it's this entity like 6 years old as he lost his parents and the calles when he and his family flat and panic, both on this child has been found, he will take him to your home because the way to find his parents. he will stay with you. but perhaps you, but it's your works as a volunteer for the red cross. his job is to register children who have been separated from the parents. according to the you and nearly a 1000 children were reported missing after the option of them bahati and his colleagues have been able to reunite 700. with that parents perhaps found ezra among other children on the street. he says their child is taken in body already has 6 children of his own what he knew as to why they keep doing a sacrifice the little that i have that god has given me. that is what i feed the children. but still struggling at least they can still
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afford a simple meal. many others are fighting over essentially the people. but they're not clean and it becomes a to provide to people the next hour. many of the 400000 people who fled the eruption come here to the town of soccer. there are no shelters. people are sleeping and schools are inside the church. what when we want to? so, how can i keep to the living conditions? i've become very bad with markets have no, we would have enough personally. i'm not making a living. i'm now poor. was different. yeah, no one. no me was taken in 3 days ago. she never forget the moment when the sky turned red. yes. i told my mom, mom, look,
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the volcano is now on fire. we got out and many were fleeing. there was when we lost each other. i was very afraid i was shaking. i was not even able to run to the house. she thinks she knows where her parents might be, but it's far away and transportation is expensive. after i find mom and dad would like to move here because i like it here. playing on the love of a pastor option as right now me hope to be reunited with their parents soon. the that story from dw somalia miller and she joins us now from goma with more. maria, we saw there, a lot of people have had to flee. they've lost their homes. tell us more about how they're coping. yeah,
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so 4500 homes have been destroyed by the 20000 people have an effect that according to the un. and as you could see in the report, people really lack everything. they don't have enough food, they don't have access of very limited access to drink of water and sanitation, medical treatment. so it's a huge problem also shelter. i mean, you could see they had some sleep in the church or they look for mosques and schools where they can, they can sleep. so, but the most pressing is just probably the drink of water. and now people turn to the keyboard, which is actually right behind me when you follow that road, it's not clean the water. if you drink it, i mean that will report that children get the area doctors without borders. as you mentioned, they really weren't of a color. all right, so it's actually quite dangerous. this water and it phillip 10 situation. what can you tell us about the current volcanic activity? yeah, so there was an expert and vote on ologist here. they carried out
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a risk assessment and they found indicator indicators that mark my here below this area of gama and also extending into like under like people. and this is actually particularly interesting because there's the worst case, horror scenario of all the just here. and the experts because if lava flows and interruption below than they come together, then the dissolved shoot amount of carbon dioxide inside the lakes that are now in the depth of the lake could rise to the surface and form a invisible cloud. this cloud could move and onto the ground as well, and kills every living being actually, and it's the suffocates everyone. this is something like a horace scenario that actually happened in the past in 1986 in cameroon. 1700 people died in many animals and nobody really knew why that happens after some research was done. and then they know this is called eliminate interruption for
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everybody's years. afraid of them. given that danger is the government doing enough to monitor the volcano and protect people living there? it so there's a volcano observatory here, and they are in charge of monitoring or can activities, but they were limited in their work because last year the world bank actually cut funding. so the bank said that this was because of embezzlement allegations. so they couldn't handle the money anymore, but there was over time, you know, had the problem. they couldn't pay their bills, they couldn't get internet to actually make the most basic checks on the kind of activity. so that was the problem and what kind of just had told me that the government should have stepped in. they should have paid so that the regular checks can be ongoing. and that's also why this reaction was not foreseeable. dw, malia miller reporting there from goma. thank you so much.
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let's check in now and some other headlines from around the world, west african leaders has suspended molly from the eco, was trading block after a 2nd military crew with 9 months. but the meeting and gonna stop short of re imposing sanctions on molly. instead, the block insisted that it should be led by a civilian government as it prepares for election. police and nigeria, se gunman have kidnapped around 200 children from a school in niger state. it is the latest and a series of such raids with $700.00 students, abducted and held for ransom since december israel. the far right party leader and tele bennett, says he is willing to join forces with the opposition to oust prime minister benjamin netanyahu. that could pave the way for abroad alliance headed by liberal, former finance minister jerry luckett. it comes after a 4th inconclusive election in 2 years. germany,
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a seeking clarification over a report that denmark helped at the u. s. by on senior european politicians, including uncle michael revelations that emerge in 2013, show that the u. s. national security intelligence agency. tap the phones of several leaders, including the german chancellor. now, a new multinational media investigation says a danish military intelligence unit supported the us wire tapping operation. this is done mar, secret communication station near copenhagen. danish intelligence reportedly worked with the us national security agency from here to eavesdrop on european politicians . that's according to danish sources. a joint investigation by several european media outlets shows former german chancellor candidate pastime brook was among the espionage targets destined todd before the grotesque that allied intelligence
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services spy and leading politicians of other countries in the test. evidence that they have a life of their own. i think this is a political scandal. a major problem. the danish government didn't inform their german neighbors. so they apparently knew about the eavesdropping as early as 2015 . the german government said it only found out about the spying after press inquiries. spying on chancellor uncle mac on former foreign minister, frank walter stein mire, was revealed by an essay laker, edward snowden, and a parliamentary inquiry. indeed, it did not reveal that a close european ally was involved most esteem for now, you have to understand the system of intelligence services. it's not about friendships or morals, and it's about asserting interests and gathering information to do that for you personally, i would take the approach with them and we can't trust anybody or me mandel, the say the danish intelligence service and the danish government refused to comment on the latest revelation and i'm joined now by patrick's sense book from
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cancer. michael city, you party. he led the parliamentary investigations into an essay. spying on the chancellor. mister pennsburg. good to have you on d w. i want to ask you, you had said in interviews that you are not surprised by these revelations, why is that? of course not. so i think europe and intelligence agencies work together with the u . s. side, so they work together with other partners and they have the interests. for example, if you're taking concerned the period of breakfast, i think our european partner has got the interest to inquire, what are the positions and that's what so intelligence agency of a for, to get information to gain information. and that's what they are doing really. so they work together, but they also spy on each other. how is that not a serious breach of trust? of course it's, it's a breach of trust on one side. but just if you have the trust that part not,
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i'm not spying on yourself. but this is a mistake, so also partner agencies did look what the other side is doing. so it's very important to know this. don't trust anybody. so you're saying this is par for the course in the intelligence world that germany cannot even trust its closest allies when it comes to intelligence. that's why i always pointed out, we have interest, we have common interests, but there is no field of friendship concerning states or agencies. friendship you have from between person but not between agencies. and so of course we have something that we call $360.00 degree around view. so we also take care that our partners didn't buy on it or not, with germany then work together with the us to spy on france, at least some of its closest european partners. we have in our
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framework, a decision that we don't spy on our partners. we don't buy on european partners and not on the american partners, but we have coming interest. we work together, for example, in bringing light in the fields, what russia is doing, what china is doing that we work together, but we are aware that our partners maybe once you have a look inside and our information, so we keep them secret. mr. i just want to make clear what you're saying or you're saying that other partners can spy in germany, but germany not on its partner. so, so we don't invite them of course, and under german law. of course it's a crime that somebody is spying here in germany. but on the other side, we don't trust anybody that they don't do. we try to prevent that others also our european partner. we prevent that. they can spy in germany. okay,
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so do you think that berlin should take any action of these allegations, at least demand that this report be released? of course we have to find out what happened there. what kind of last, while the cable cables have been fired on and used for trying to, to get into the communication of our leading politicians. of course we have to investigate this. but on the other side of something that we can band or something that we can avoid forever, we have to be aware that anybody tries to get information and these what's intelligence agencies for so never trust anybody. all right, patrick sandburg, from chester michaels cd you party. thank you very much for joining us. your look. new zealand, the military has been called in to help evacuate hundreds of people caught in flooding in the country. south island, a state of emergency has been declared in the canterbury region that surrounds the
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city of christ church. as many as much as 40 centimeters of rain is fallen and the area over the last 2 days meteorologist say that in some areas that is more than the entire rainfall so far this year. the extent of the flooding houses marooned by water roads impossible. this one left with a gaping hole and rivers have turned into lakes. went to bed about 10 o'clock last night and i was not assigned to the river. get up to 6 o'clock this morning and gone to order the can to pre region on you zealand. south island is a foaming hub, but the deluge of rain is making work hard. even if some a pushing on
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a brave face carried on terry. oh, don't worry about it while you discovered water, all conditions which conditions have left some extreme danger. on sunday, this man was lifted to safety after becoming trapped in flood water with a really, really, really good risk. very lucky. with whatever the hell they told us they couldn't get through because the we have so it's just been a really good for everybody. up to the top here rescue work is a trying to reach a car that's fallen down the cliff just above the raging river. hundreds of people have been evacuated from their homes. authorities have now declared
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a state of emergency with more rain expected more world headlines now. police in southwestern france have detained an armed fugitive after a shoot out in the door don't region. a major man hunt was launched to find a former soldier who had opened fire on officers responding to a domestic violence. cold residence in the area were warned to stay indoors. vietnam has started testing all 9000000 residents of human city as part of efforts to contain a new corona virus. now for a strict lockdown has taken effect for city resident and vietnam is also stopped international arrivals that main airport in handling the south african, the presidency around the pose says his country is reem posing stricter lockdown measures in the face of a sharp rise of covert 1900 cases. the surgeon infections was putting a spotlight on south africa, slow vaccine roll out. fewer than 2 percent of the country. 60000000 people have received a 1st dose. let's get some more developments now. in the pandemic,
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the brazilian city of serrano has seen covered 19 deaths drop by 95 percent after was able to vaccinate almost all adults. it's being seen as a test for brazil, which is the world's 3rd worst hit country australia, 2nd most populous state. victoria has reported 11 new cases of community transmission and rising numbers could prompt authorities to extend a 7 day lockdown. and the european commission is calling on e u. countries to gradually loose and travel restrictions over the summer. as the pandemic eases across the block football, now the future of this year is copa. america has been thrown into doubt just 2 weeks before supposed to start. south america. football confederation says it cannot be held in argentina as planned because of a karone of our search. the event had been due to kick off and went sideways on june, 13th, earlier argentina's cohost columbia was also stripped of the tournament because of
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civil unrest there. and we have max merrill from d w sports with us. hi max, this tournaments just 2 weeks away. and now both host essentially been stripped of being able to, to hold a tournament. so how could this happen? well, the tournament has had its fair share of struggles, like many events that were postponed from 2020. it was moved the year on and is due to kick off on june 13th, in a long time, to go to have no host. and back in april, they already made a decision not to have fans in attendance. then columbia. as you mentioned, one of the co hosts was dropped, was removed 2 weeks ago due to the civil unrest. and on the same day, argentina, the other host went into a strict lockdown. they're currently insuring one of the worst cove it outbreaks on the planets, and the government decided on sunday would not be safe, comparable the south american football federation then rescinded the hosting rights just hours ago. and the situation in south america as a whole is quite dia, of the 12 worst hit countries at the moment in the world. 7 us in south america,
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6 of those are participating in this tournament. and among those are also argentina and colombia who have both lost the hosting. right. so what does that mean for this tournament? how could it still go ahead? what are the options there? well, carnival have said they're going to analyze what other countries have expressed interest in the past and make a decision hopefully very soon they're going to meet today. but the list is incredibly short. i mean, she lays being put forward as a country that has had comparatively good vaccination roll out in south america. however, they're currently struggling with an outbreak, brazil in paraguay. i'm very, very vague. maybe's and usa, a being touted as a potential host having hosted in 2016 as a guest nation where they participated, but they're not in this torment. so there's no real incentive for them to take this on. the incentive you could argue might exist for countries like katara, saudi arabia, who would maybe like the p all. and the cloud that comes with hosting this sort of tournament. but i think it could and probably should be cancelled because this
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would be this the 4th cope. and 60 is because there was a special tournament in 2016 health. we've had a lot of copa americas. maybe it's just better. louise swat is a brutal guy. says prioritize the health of the people rather than money. i'm sure a lot of people are watching this closely, especially here in europe. do to hold a continental tournaments here in june. how is that looking? well yeah, it's a 60th anniversary year has moved from last year to this year and it's held across the toner, the continent rather in 12 cities across europe. now that's gone down to 11 off to dublin, pulled out and there will be fans up to 20 percent and most stadiums. but for instance, munich has still not confirmed that they will actually allow these 20 percent of the capacity to enter band there. and it was probably going to be a logistical nightmare. teams are going to be playing in england and scotland. they might then not be able to fly into germany without a quarantine that could happen in the quarter finals. indeed. so it's going to be a bit of
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a struggle even though it will go ahead. max merrill from the w 4. thank you very much. in the women's german cup, final heavily favored volts. virg lived up to their reputation, although just barely, they narrowly defeated frankfurt, one nil hollis international striker pie, or scored the match winner and the dying minutes of extra time. for the hard part. when, if the 7th, a straight german cup title for votes for the team wanted to even though they were short a player in the last 20 minutes of the game because of a red card or reminder, no of our 2 stories on d, w. china has announced a major shift in the family planning policy and says, couples are now allowed to have up to 3 children. the ruling communist party is scrapping a strict to child policy. after recent data showed a dramatic decline in birth. the international aid organization, doctors without borders,
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warns that thousands of people displaced by the recent volcanic eruption in eastern congo are at risk of infection. my call around with coming up next our show eco, india looks at circular economies and sustainable fashion in delhi. that's coming up in a moment. they use the news, the news
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the the the. ready ready eco india. ready turning orange of clouds are transformed into new fashion and an ancient craft creates new jobs, inspires fresh ideas for me, designers about solving problems. sustainable fashion in new delhi,
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in the next on ah, the little guys, this is a 77 percent of the platform. is used share i did you know on this channel we are not afraid to have young people clearly have the solution, the future. 77 percent. now everything on the w. the news, it's been ongoing quest for the spring began in
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2011 stood up against correct rulers and dictatorship. the hope for more security, more freedom, more dignity, have their hopes than full failed. 10 years after the error of spring, rebellion starts june 7th on d, w. twos . in every pink, around green plants, animals, even computers and kitchen appliances. it all comes from the. we add on schuman dutch process it to consume it. but after we're done, it doesn't all easily go back into the we're left with mountains of waste,
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harmful toxins and guesses. it is possible to change this to be sure when introduce you for the people who are working towards the school. hello, welcome to going the 1st let's head to delhi. what is becoming increasingly difficult for workers and traditional industries to make a living? weavers are finding themselves forced out of jobs that have sustained their families for generations. but one on the printer is combining a love for tradition and the environment to offer a sustainable solution. ah, once a thriving ha of prosperous weavers today, this neighborhood as the story of a dying industrial i.
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hi corey these days. i'm glad if we, but already watchman is better off than the probably $130000.00 will be the month. we don't learn more than $500.00 will be like this, like now. got yards arm is one of them. 100 beavers who live in the beaver's colony in sunday lugged dead. it's one of the few me, there's clubs of the capital that had existed since $950.00. when the central government declared the trend, this new production border, saudis doughty and bet cheapest to be made exclusively on hand. ah, but the lifting of bulk restrictions and increased production of imitation hand to mike by power loos weekend. and just today, bob looms produce more than 60 percent of indian textile and according to the
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textile ministry, ah, but some graphs people are holding up only a few kilometers away from the look. how much shar is working on the soft finishing up. it is 5 meters long, $46.00 inches wide and made completely of silk. he's moving it into a chevron design button in the mama chart belongs to a family of traditional vivas in present even volume in china in 2019. to be part of this is a salary job means he doesn't have to struggle with the uncertainties of the crate. then suddenly i have job security. all i need to do is come here and prepare the fabric i came back in my hometown. i had to worry about every little thing and suppliers,
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how to utilize fabric. got a delivery meeting. my focus here is on leaving and creating new design. if you go, that's all design. it's kevin way . one, the studio gets his name from the phrase. we haven't gotten mean to patch up or repair in india. it's aim is to breathe life back into the dining craft of handling employ traditional and make the textile industry more sustain. founded by fashion design and social entrepreneur. she was the studio of cycles topic raised into flat young to be sold back to design houses for making new government the when it will be collaborating with the design. how did a fashion done this?
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and it isn't came to massage for different colors inside, but it has been cut into strips and then we'll run into a new fabric. the pope with fabric is then solar back to design or sell at a higher value. so then we can create a sustainable range for the atlanta and so the process is a so a close ally source overall material is also was finally flamed when customers in god stood it an old product in a sort of discarding so they can be rebuilt. this in the last 2 years, the studio says it has a cycle. 1500 kilograms of cra reviews over 3000 meters of upside, could fabric, and save more than 3000000 liters of water. it and we're done, is around 50 lax bees on 56000 years for me, designers about solving problems and the biggest problem, today's of climate change and i thought and fashion lay contribution lot the woods,
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water pollution air pollution and transactions and conditions. ah, bay one water is only useful cleaning purposes. and since the company only uses risk materials, it can avoid dies and chemicals entirely. the bigger challenge is converting waste into well designed for up level. i enjoy creating fabric samples the most. it's challenging, which is what i like about it. it's not easy to design with scraps, but above all, this work is useful before the tests protect the environment. ah, today we will have 6 hand looms and 5 be creating the sustainable business. much with customers being inactive rule gives hope and also provides a blueprint for either colonies likes and they're not me
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businesses like pay one part of what is known as a circular economy. but what does that really mean? conceptually, it's about making sure that what we have and create is least detrimental to the environment, to russell fighting and businesses. let's begin a little deeper into this. me, what do you do with your empty bottle or your cell phone when it dies? and what did these 2 things along with many other every day i have in common part of what's called the linear economy. this is the approach that modern day economics systems mostly followed. it involves extracting new resources, making products, and disposing of them usually to the detriment of the environment. as mountains of waste, pi, love, and finite resources, one else. this system is becoming increasingly unsustainable. a growing number of
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consumers and producers are turning instead to the circular economy. it's inspired by nature's cyclical systems. plans for example, health makes soil morning attrition. it's a system that means nothing is wasted. economists are cooling for everything. so that things we see as ways today can be recycled to become the raw materials of tomorrows. for example, used plastics can be turned into wallet and pulse of phones can be used to make new laptop or tablets. the most stakeholders get involved like design is produces and consumers. the easier it is close by grandmother often told me stories about how she and her siblings will get new rules only once or twice a year. but it's been very different for my generation. the once that follow foss, fashion have made by includes cheap book and accessible,
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but it's terrible for the involvement in germany. businesses are looking for ways to move was the circular model in fashion, new t shirt new pants, another t shirt, a new hoodie. and maybe another pair of sneakers on special offer. most likely, all these new garments will end up in the trash sooner rather than later. just like $92000000.00 tons of textiles, every year, only one percent of that gets recycled. the true price, so fast fashion. between 200-2015, the clothing production. meanwhile, the amount of time place has been used for individual items have been used for actually decreased by over this sorting facility and eastern germany takes in a lot of unwanted clothing. but here it's treated as a new resource every day workers sort of to 200 tons of items based on their
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condition style and type of material. it's one of the largest. so these of its kind in europe, garments come from all over the world in store collection and recycling containers . there either sent a 2nd hand shops or sold to recycling firms to create new fabrics and some $500000000000.00 us dollars could be earned every year worldwide. if the clothes industry would shift to a circular economy with the valuable resource the found in our clothing. and it is, it is, it would be a shame to not re utilize these resources. we are creating value again because we are identifying items that new didn't have the demand of the customer privately owned it anymore. nonetheless, so other people who are demanding these types of garments and that's how the value is created. the need for more recycling is growing due to fast fashion. now power
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jerked and boss is partnering with mild suffer from a berlin based initiative called circular fashion. seeking to move the industry towards a more sustainable model, we are dealing with also very high, valuable product like kashmir, for example, which we are able to identify by simply touching it. and this isn't a way is a showcase for what's about to come with regard to material recognition because this we can identify however, when we're dealing with various mixes, we need more precise information. when the future is a bill, be relevant. if it like 80 percent who it is 90 percent will because the recycling hank rate, what's different quantity? if you know exactly this is one on the percent will or you can combine material to have all 80 percent. so that the, the output of the recycling, it's really usable for the fascinated reagan. many of the items that end up here are no longer wearable, around 60 tons daily. right?
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now most of that goes to the automotive industry. but it's impossible to utilize the full potential of these textiles, while sorting everything by hand. this is where the technology developed by mal your mild and his colleagues, comes into its own interest acts in house, things, equip scanner and fruit as gather. as soon as a garmin comes to the table with an idea inside a circularity idea, it's automatically red out and we get all the product classification with the products. if in case we can calculate what is the right we use case? what is the best recycling case? workers still have to decide whether the item is wearable or not, and the rest is shown on the screen. truly circular products will one day contain information from the whole value chain. the conventional textile industry is resource intensive. it relies on oil chemicals and 93000000000 cubic meters of
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water every year. the difference in a circular model starts at the very beginning of the product. it's all about from the outset, from the design principles, ensuring that you are eliminating waste and pollution that you are keeping products from material been used and you're generating actual systems dying. the conventional approach uses water and chemicals. one reason why fashion is responsible for 20 percent of the world's wastewater. this dutch company is different. it's facility and vietnam dies polyester without process chemicals or water leaders of water just flew through today, and that's only one t shirt. so if you look at a t shirt, it will be 150 meters of water for kilogram of fabric you need to dye textiles. this is what you save. we don't use that. ah, they work with reclaimed carbon dioxide instead. fabric is loaded into the dying
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vessel. c o 2 is added and brought to the right temperature and pressure only pure dyes are used with no additional chemicals needed. clean guy is currently producing around 10000000 liters and died fabric a year. that's not much compared to global demand, but all of lola hooks to skyrocket production as interest. and this sustainable method grows. and this is also allowed to the rest of the barrel industry and also to the consumer and, and the solutions on their end and start to buy them. if you're a consumer retailer or brands, it's a, it's the same. there are solutions. it's not already ours. there are more, i think we're one of the important solutions. so let's, as everybody helps to make his world a cleaner place, with resources becoming more scarce, many businesses are reconsidering, waged in a circular economy. clues are designed to be one for a long time. after that,
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intelligence solutions can ensure that recycled for maximum benefit. the transition to this mentality is slowly getting underway. now, in the concept of circular economy as a very tiny amount of ways, if at all, one organization in the northeastern state of sam is imbibing the values of this concept in a unique week by making paper from ryan or down. let's find out how i this material has a very special structure and each sheet its own unique composition. it's used to make lampshades, notepads, and even clocks for a global clientele. the paper manufactured by the women in the small workshop in san is chiefly comprised of rhino and elephant droppings. a notion that may have some turning their nose up. but this done is actually ideal for making paper as.

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