tv Eco India Deutsche Welle June 2, 2021 10:30am-11:01am CEST
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an expedition to the company, or we certainly came to the pacific to do the language starts to w twos in every pink around trees, plants, animals, even, not computers and kitchen appliances. it all comes from be we added on schuman dutch to process it to consume it. but after we're done, it doesn't easily go back into the. we're left with mountains of waves, harmful toxins and gases. it is possible to change this to be sure we introduce
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fuel for the people who are working towards fiscal hello, welcome to going the funds that i called 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 lot for tradition. ambien bothered to offer of sustainable felicia the me once a thriving of prosperous views today, this neighborhood as the story of a dying industrial high for these days, the glare, if we but are the watchman is better off,
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then 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 rivers who live in the beaver's colony and some of the lucky dead. it's one of the few rivers clusters and the capital that have existed since 1950 when the central government declared the traditional productive border. saudis, doughty and bet sheets to be made exclusively on hand. ah ah. but the lifting of both restrictions and increased production of imitation handle might by power lose weakened industrial. today, bob looms produce more than 60 percent of indian text guides. according to the textile ministry, ah. but some graphs people are holding up only
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a few kilometers away from some the luxury motto, shop is working on the soft furnishing company. it is fine as long 46 inches wide and made completely of silk. he's moving it into a chevron design button in mama nor sha belongs to a family of traditional dent, even volume and char in 2019 to be part of this a studio. a salary job means he doesn't have to struggle with the uncertainties of the trade in denison. if 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. you suppliers, how to utilize fabric meaningfulness. my focus here is on leaving
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and creating new design. if you go, that's all design it's going on in may 1, the studio gets his name from the phrase b, one blog. i mean to patch up a bit in india, it's aim is to breathe life back into the dining craft of handling beating, employ traditional beef and make the textile industry more sustain. founded by fashion design and social entrepreneur, she does in the studio of cycle topic raised into flexion, to be sold back to design houses for making new gardens the when it will be collaborated with design. how fashion guys sandra, so be, it isn't cain and assorted. i sort of colors inside, but it hasn't got into strips and then we'll run into
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a new fabric. louis pope with fabric isn't solar back to design or sell at a higher value so that they can create. this is seen, it was changed for the atlantic and so the process is a circular source. overall material is also was finely planned when customers got his student, an oil production 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 or 3000 meters of, of cycle summary, and save more than 3000000 letters of what it and we're done is around 50 lax bees or 56000 years for me, designers about solving problems and the biggest problem, today's of climate change and i thought of and fashion, they contribute to lot the woods, water pollution air pollution and consumption. the non phoenicians ah,
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a one what is only useful cleaning purposes. and since the company only uses waste materials, it can avoid dies and chemicals enticing. 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 test protect the environment can, ah, today we will have 6 hand looms and 5 be creating the sustainable business. much with customers being an active role gives whole and also provides a blueprint for either colonies likes and they're not me businesses like a part of what is known as a circular economy. but what does that really mean?
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conceptually, it's about making sure that what we have and create is least detrimental to the environment, to russell fighting and our businesses. let's begin a little deeper into this. me, what do you do with your entry bustle? me, 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 follow. it involves extracting new resources, making products, and disposing of them usually to the detriment, the environment as mountains of waste lots and finite resources. one else. this system is becoming increasingly unsustainable. a growing number of consumers and producers are turning instead to the circular economy. it's by nature's cyclical
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system plans. for example, health make soil moony 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, use plastics can be turned into wireless, and pulse of phones can be used to make new laptop or tablets. the most de code is getting both like design is produces and consumers. the easier it is to 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 from my generation. the ones that follow for the fashion have made by includes cheap books and accessible, but it's terrible for the environment in germany. businesses are looking for ways to move was the circular model in fashion, new t shirt new pants, another t shirt,
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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 places being 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 india resource every day worker sort up to 200 tons of items based on their condition style and type of material. it's one of the largest facilities of its in europe. garments come from
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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 quote's industry would shift to a circular economy, we 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 didn't have the demand of the customer and privately owned it anymore. nonetheless, so other people who are demanding these types of carmen, and that's how the value is created. the need for more recycling is growing due to fast fashion. now, power junction box is partnering with mario miles charter from a berlin based initiative called circular fashion. seeking to move the industry
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towards a more sustainable market. we are dealing with also very high, valuable product, 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 mature of recognition because this we can identify. however, when we're dealing with various mixes, we need more precise information. when the future is it will be relevant. is it like 80 percent 90 percent low because the recycling can create much different quality if you know exactly this is one of the percent was already can combine material protect all 80 percent. so that the, the output of the recycling it's really usable for the freshman is 3. again, many of the items that end up here are no longer wearable. around to 60 tons daily . right? now most of that goes to the automotive industry. it's impossible to utilize the
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full potential of these check styles while sorting everything by hand. this is where the technology developed by your mild and just colleagues comes into it. so this is x, the intelligence sorting station which is equip perfect scanner. and through to gather as soon as a garmin comes to the table with an idea insight, so clarity ideas. it's automatically read out and we get all the products verification with the products. if in case we can calculate, well, just the right we use case for this or 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 engine 93000000000 cubic meters of water every year. the difference in
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a circular model starts at the very beginning of the product. me, it's all about from the outset, from the design principles ensuring that you are eliminating waste and pollution that you are keeping products for materials in use. 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 meters of water just with 2 today. and it'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 die, textiles. and this is what you safe. we don't use that, ah, they work with reclaimed carbon dioxide instead. fabric is loaded into the dying vessel. c o 2 is added and brought to the right temperature and pressure only pure
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dyes are used with no additional chemicals needed. clean di is currently producing around $10000000.00 readers and died fabric a year. that's not much compared to global demand, but all of the lola hoops to skyrocket production as interest and this is standard method grows. this is also allowed to the rest of the barrel industry, but also to the consumer and, and the solutions on there and start to buy them. if you're a consumer retainer or brands it's, it's the same. there are solutions. it's not only ours are more, i think we are one of the important solutions because everybody helps to make this work. a cleaner place with resources becoming more scarce, many businesses are reconsidering waste. in a circular economy, clues are designed to be warned for a long time. after that intelligence solutions can ensure their recycled for maximum benefit. the transition to this mentality is slowly getting underway. now
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in the concept of circular economy, there's a very tiny amount of ways, if at all, one organization in the northeastern state of offend, is imbibing the values of this concept in a unique week by making paper from rhino down. let's find out how me 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 woman in the small workshop in some 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 entrepreneur myisha explains. some of people making point of view, these are the 2 and the most dung is the most fibrous. they eat long grasses,
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they have what these animals have a weak digestive process. so when different case for fiber is available to us to just boil and basically get the fiber, the bulk and go, unlike a lot of other animals, they would, they just said that would be not enough fiber available, which is why you work with the 5 of these animals, besides the fact that they're symbolically and functionally good from a paper point of view in valuable. and there's no shortage of dung in these parts. the woodlands of the state of a song are home to around 2400 dry nose. and at least twice that number of elephants for 10 territory, for an innovative concept reciting by less excrement to make paper was in fact an idea born out of necessity, animals and people live in close proximity here. the road villages and farms are increasing the interesting on the habitat of local life. not to mention the sprawling plantations growing to famous a song. many of the animals live in the protected natural park. and when
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seasonal rainfall causes the river from a bootstrap to flood twice a year, there is an additional problem. yeah, my cart, well that here is our village. more board. and just over there, less than one kilometer is the park. there are a lot of wild animals living there that i know so delivery and what about a lot of money when the even birds bang the animal know they are in danger and end up roaming to our religion. yes. invited seeking refute. they also look for food rice harvests here. i regularly devastated by nose and telephone. more in the home . i grew up nearly all the daughter i me we will always find the animals on the street. every when you go to get one buy new home with
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during the rainy season they would come and forage for food in our farm lands. and when we woke up, they would be out in the fields aliamanu. so by the one you have to meet daily, the whole the idea for implying local villagers to turn dung into paper came from the shop or us father. the retired coal mining engineer, one to give something back to nature. and that undertaking has been a boon for local communities, creating new livelihoods where most people had no regular jobs among them as model because up they were all of a 100. i now plan to save up and by attractive for our farm. we have to pay a lot of money to hire tractors, to tailor land. and if i want to buy one of our own on the sell, this done is combined with natural fibers source from farm waste,
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such as jude food, pure and cotton, the resulting product. therefore, also better for the environment than regular paper. people making use of lucy, one of the most water intensive industries in the world and is responsible for a lot of what we see. a lot of work goes on around this. we use a, we don't use that kind, the water would be also the walker that we use because it has no chemical. if we just use a basic filtration also gonna get back into the us. we also recycling on what a repeat of the past year was a tough one for the company, a demand committed to, to the corona, virus pandemic. over the next 2 years, they're planning to break down production into smaller units to enable their team to work from home. the enterprise has provided a welcome source of jobs plus he's turn off the company's product, save $27.00 trees from being failed to make conventional paper and with the rhinos
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providing the paper manufacturers with the raw material relations between the villagers and the animal neighbors have also improved, ah, now one place you can find a lot of in a weird idea about circular economy, is the dutch capital i'm to them, scientists, an entrepreneur, have been looking for ways to deal with the fifty's plastic and waste water problems. let's take a look. the dutch capital amsterdam is aiming to create a stock killer economy by 2050. that involves curtailing the use of new rule materials avoiding waste and were using as much as possible that by slashing emissions. the city sanitation, department fishes, $42.00 tons of floating plastic trash out of the canals every year. a lot more probably gets through we know that around 2 thirds of all,
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the plastic in the ocean actually traveled via your 1st towards the ocean. quite some trust that you see on the street or that is, is there ends of, in this reverse. and then of course the rivers flow towards the sea. so it's one of going to transport magnets the mechanisms of the pollution. and that's why we would really like to stop there. and maria abilene's is behind a start up the great bubble barrier and innovative technology. here's how it works . a tube is laid across the bed of a waterway pumped down to poles along it. the bubbles dr. trash and the water to the surface towards the bank and into a receptacle. tests have shown this tone out french, 86 percent of trash and water can be collected in this way. the garbage, the ends up in the container is removed 3 times a week. so now
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only one bubble barrier has been installed in amsterdam. it's a pilot project, but the potential both in the city and worldwide is enormous. i have multiple factors that have interest. and if, for example, you can imagine that companies that have a benefit of tourists coming by, they want beaches that are came that one's riverside that are clean and one half terraces or you can fit on nicely. and on the moment you install such a system, you can, you can make it, make sure that it looks nice to visit again. the phone has received financial support from the government. it's also working on ways to recycle all the collector trash cities also generate lots of waste water as unlikely as it might seem. the water flushed down our toilets contained valuable resources that could be retrieved . scientists in the netherlands have developed a new waste water purification system to do just that. one of the end product is
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a gum may call comb error, which has many applications as a clue or binding agent in the manufacturing and construction industries. it was a circular society, i'm sure it's cycle all our waste streams and waste water is very important re streams. and now what happens in the end for june, bio guess with it with bio guests, relatively low fail you application and producing this got me is do we can use as new for high value applications? so what we want to do in the end, the buzz and produce i fail, you're building a serial for safety. using waste water from a certain standard industrial please, a may through wheel which is not good for the environment. in the new process, bacteria purify the waste water cameras are site benefit, a single plant can produce up to 800 tons of s a. yeah.
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in this lab, research is working on new biodegradable materials. they mixed marrow with recycle toilet paper and various combinations of peach pitts and almond and pistachio shells. i saw they've made great signs and developed architectural clothing material made out of 80 percent organic materials. more r and d is needed before this new compet based on comb, error and toilet paper can come to market. the prospects look good for interest, tropical hardwoods, that's beatable by this material. and also elimination and elimination is a huge markets. but the aluminum has a very, very high c o 2 footprint, and a good thing of this material is you can beat it on mechanical properties. and c o 2 properties, you'll beat it anyway. so then the price will be the challenge. and i think the upcoming 7 years, we will try to replace aluminum by discount me or accomplish that material,
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recycling and up slightly organic waste and construction waste could be a money spent and would certainly be good for the environment. stems but known as a great place for emissions for cycling, for decades. it's still a long from achieving a sock killer economy. the plan is to make that happen by 2050 and i'm vicious goal for us to teach the time and to be a pioneer. we have only one and we need to do all that. we can to protect it from becoming a jain spirit of waves. i hope you had many takeaways from our show on circular economy to be an important solution to and saving our planet. i'll see we'll get next week with many more start solutions until then from all of us in india and germany. goodbye. and thanks for watching the news.
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the power point i come from, i never weigh heavy enough in brazil is always the man since the board for sun masculine. when i moved to germany, it's 10 year old. i was the curriculum on tv. that was a how i'd be the world because now with the side of a girl, you know, i was a funny instead of a deep voice, extra guy seemed absolutely incredible. i realized how language shape, thinking, how far i'm not only mental images are whole types of the world insights my life and was one of the reasons i became a journalist. i'm storyteller, and i use to my words to help with infant coastal understandings. my name is elena
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quinn and i work at the ongoing quest for a bit of the the arab spring began in 2011 people stood up against corrupt, rulers and dictatorship. all these moments have left the box in my memory. the me they had hoped for more security, more freedom, more dignity, have their hopes in for 10 years after the arab spring. rebellion starts june 7th on d, w. the
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news . this is the news live from berlin, china's all seeing surveillance system in shanghai video cameras and artificial intelligence team up to keep a close eye on 24000000 citizens. is it smart governing or a violation of human rights? the w get special access to the monitoring center called city brain. also coming up much too long. the history of what took place here was told in silence, cloaked and dark.
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