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tv   Eco India  Deutsche Welle  April 4, 2022 4:02am-4:31am CEST

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ah, modern life has given us many conveniences and comforts to make sure this is not disrupted, need given ourselves or mission to be extracted or wilkens you and disrespect the ecosystem. we live in the results of this and not hidden, crop failure, unseasonal floods and droughts. rising sea levels to name just a few, thinking back with nature is how we can solve this. we'll talk about that and more on to this short hello and welcome to eco india. i'm son of that i call. now i begin my bill with a piping hot cup of tea for many d, drinkers like me this, steve comes from the plantations of a sam, the world's largest t growing region, situated in the northeast of the country. a sam has more than 1000000
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t workers working in deplorable conditions for as little spool your rules or did a local plantation is trying to show that this needed to be the default that sustainability is indeed possible. the me, for many years lucky, the waller has worked as a t picker at the west. jollin got to your state in a sam, it's one of india's brian exporters of organic t. the company doesn't use any chemicals in its di production and in 2013, it was certified as the was 1st carbon neutral di estate. ah, i know that chilling tea is going is that all happened since fair trade got
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involved appear to be near luck. hinder is referring to the fair trade certification that jarling guy has also received. it's designed to ensure certain standards are met and make the workers aware of their rights. being part of the federal system has helped to the estate group beyond d. today. it produces organic chem, mom lived lemon grass, rice, toma rick and ginger on it $650.00 days of land for estate owner. keep in patel, bringing such a large enterprise into cabin negative territory was noisy dusk. so we do almost $250.00 tons of drilling ideas into the german market. we do about 15200 tons into the u. k. market. probably $250.00 tons into the us north american market. doing organic, chilling. i was not an easy journey. it is a very liberal job because the reads manually. so lot of manual labor work is there,
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which we had to convince of workers to do additional for which we were being them very well. we got federal certification, which allowed us to bring a lot of premium money, which came direct, do a walk, us bank account, no luck hinder. and his wife on among, on around $13000.00 repeats for a month about $150.00 euros. that's 3 times more than water t war goes on elsewhere. this extra income is also made possible by jollin goes back to the ship with atmosphere, a german non profit organization. they have provided 0 emission cook stoves that are powered by billets made of grub residue. walkers gather the material in return for extra b, all bought of the carbon neutral the t program. it was a split, especially important to us that i'm hurt and i was, are serious and genuinely interested in protecting the climate that they're not afraid to question their own processes and to constantly improve themselves and the
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content for us. a successful climate protection project is one that has of balance between climate protection, environmental compatibility, and deposit of social impact on to important to even go down. the fact when on emma and the other workers are done cooking with the pellets, she can sell the burnt ones back to the estate. ah, martine hulu, for their good. oh, i think that they that also the, the fire we used to use turned everything black from the smoke going ladder. now with these pellet ale we take the burnt ones to the office and they give us 4 rupees per kilo. and for every 10 kilos we sometimes get $100.00 rupees in there like otherwise we'd have to buy wood a dead and cut it to pieces for the stove. cutting down trees for him, but it doesn't work. so we don't get any wood. the laboratory jarling has agreed
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with a code global so do fire rain forest alliance to predict the 125 picked as a forest within the estate. that means it can use the green frog seal on jarling our team. we are really aware that there are more and more consumers all over the world who are increasing the content about the social and environmental impacts of the, of the products that they're buying. and so when they see the green frog rain 1st of ion seal on a pack, what that tells them is that this product has been produced using miss upset. so court environmental, social and economic sustainability. and therefore gives them confidence that both farms and those companies are taking the right steps to protect people and planning . ah, the estate is located in a remote area with poor infrastructure badge, roads, and power outages make production and transport difficult for challenger and other
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di farms in a sam and to workers health remains the cause of concern. we've done looked at deficiencies in their body. so we've given them of the nutritional food which is lacks in their diet. so we've done that as one of the projects through the federal premium o money which come in addition to paying for health care. the fair trade premium also helps to empower the tea pickers. a walk us committee now decides how the estate spends additional money from the federal initiative. the parents of these children are keen to invest in an education program so that the next generation has the chance of a better life. like the young while i want to good job for my daughter. something that makes her a leader going on. i will encourage her to do something else if possible. i thought maybe she could be a doctor or an engineer and i think any other armed with it,
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certifications, jarling girl has managed to bought improved conditions for its workers, and me get steeper production more sustainable. and those efforts are being rewarded with growing international demand for its products. ah, like we saw sustainability doesn't come about an isolation. it needs all stakeholders to begin. let's head to move my mouth. unlike many cities in world which encounter wild animals in open areas, my is home to an apex, predator, leopards, live cheek by jowl with human beings, in one of the most densely populated regions on the planet. conflict is but natural . but how is it being managed by all the stakeholders whose life it impact? let's take a look. the not commodity either truly enjoys watching
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the children playing outside. things have not been safe around here for months. not since his nephew was attacked by a wild leopard. just beyond his housing community is sunday gone. he national park where $48.00 indian leopards room there teletubbies and i are both eager to bump of middle came up from behind and grabbed the boy's neck and took off and will be the oven. a double is it? it was holding the top part of his head with its jaw. but why does it as it turned away? i'll look, i rushed out the door and ran after it. ordinarily gilder. but the moment i came out but took a turn and ran across the road, you threw it out on the child's feet, dragged down the grass, is a girl boy, our dog, arthur gaz. and then it went a little further where the grass was higher. idols were past in the boy's foot got caught in the grass, was the dog its grip on the child had loosened and he fell from its jaws very odd. it was around 8 pm when i rushed the boy to the emergency clinic. drama,
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m a. liquor. the child recovered by the incident left, the community shaken. the forest authorities compensated yard of family with 820000 rupees or 1500 euros as part of a scheme to support people here. they also set up camera shops near his home and install lights to increase visibility by reason, leopards come out of the box to prey on dogs and cats that scavenger unguarded. so i told you now have cleaned up the area and set up trash cans for regular waist collection the up arrow gigantically, but here's where it snatched the child already hoping to get all the other bo dogs . there was so much more grass here. gotcha. but the authorities have cleared the area a bit know why one is cassandra paula garza's come over here. what is but we know that ease is at a month after the attack, the leopard that attacked his nephew named c. 32 was caught and taken to a rescue center. she had reportedly attacked 7 other people, including children. in india, a leper is only caught as
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a last resort measure when it is labeled a problem animal. which means that is documented evidence that it has attacked humans. all livestock, leopards have lived in this area from time immemorial. and there conserved under the wildlife protection act of 1972. the apex predators had maintained the biodiversity of the central indian plato. because they keep a check on herbivores. this is an essential part of protecting india's green cover . a key step in fighting climate change. but these leopards, i only unique and precarious situation, living beside in the as most populated metropolis. wondering how my laundries are for us for people. i'm not young. we know that there's a national park on that side of the wall or in a residential complex on this side of year. but leopard don't know boundaries. so when they roam in search of food or anything else, may they come into contact with human i that they held on with are 25000000 people
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in them by but with communities living around the park that but so there's bound to be contact and then conflict with up a howdy stuff because if you click on print without that back in 2002, there were around 25 instances of human leopard conflict. in a 6 month period, the forest department then decided they needed to bring in drastic measures. one key area is fast response. john mccall at la gun when we get a call from the control room that there is a leopard stuck somewhere and we have our team launch a rescue operation. a b lipper. muskegon is on a hipaa sub look back. said that they're ready in 5 to 10 minutes. they any good id and we tell the people, dig it up, that if you see a leopard or say the hutch, then you should allow to stay in hiding was a blue heap clear from the animal and things on. don't try to go near. it was easy because if you approach it, i could attack an injury. you was wiggling. i love about gilbert ugly, and you to go through. so keep an eye on it from afar. it was good to day or so it
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was gilbert nazareth, along with the local citizens groups. the authorities also working on bringing awareness about go existence into the community, the deep children about the leopard. it's importance and how to see safe with fin screenings and illustrated books. they are taught about cleanliness vigilance and acceptance of the predator that they have shared space with for generations. as long as balances maintain yard of believes, but he earned the leopard gang, call his place home. mamma is measures good to be a model for co existing with predators. every species on the planet has a role to play, and as iep expressed it to us ourselves. it falls upon us in this and not hindered is. let's dig the example of the octopus. the demand for its meet worldwide is high, but rising water temperatures have meant that the number of octopuses in our oceans
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is reducing steady, meet biologist in mexico, are working to sustainably breed octopuses. let's find out how the octopus, a type of several. a pod is a fascinating creature. it has 3 hearts and 8 arms. those arms also contain most of its brain with 500000000 nerve cells and real super powers. octopuses are highly intelligent, depending on their environment. they can change their shape, color pattern, and even the texture of their skin when they can turn into rocks, looking like they're covered in algebra, or make themselves huge and turn completely red warriors and eagles. the roar hello . at an anom university satellite campus in the mexican coastal town of seesaw,
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biologist carlos rosas, is researching the octopuses, ideal living conditions. miami results so far. the sensitive animal reacts dramatically to rising water temperatures by laying fewer eggs. this could become a problem if climate change progresses or you in the us of him. we know today that the caribbean sea in the gulf of mexico are warming because of climate change. the way we want to create models that can predict whether the number of octopuses will decrease in the future gave environment rather than i'm in oregon. feel if there are still plenty of them here along the coast of the yucatan. but that could change demand for the low fat delicacy is rising worldwide. and in some asian regions, they've already been over fish for octopus catcher. antonio cock in cecil business is better than ever this season. intellectual and has been insane. and especially
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august and september and into october, when i look, it always depends on how long they want to work. and so i'm usually full by 1 pm, and i aren't around $5600.00 pesos. the people who stay out all afternoon make 2000 or 3000 pesos landing or develop a gravel. a barbara does anybody? is dr. lisa? but antonio coffee is also worried about whether extensive fishing can go on forever. that's why he's working with the university's scientists to sell octopus raised in a breeding station instead of capturing them out at sea. is this is, this is who isn't kitchen ambitious project, but it will work. move when we, when we, when rub off was or not. i will say good recall, fortunate farming octopus is one of the biggest challenges
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facing the global seafood industry. unlike salmon and shrimp, their sensitive to captivity and die quickly. but the mexican researchers have one advantage the local species. the maya is particularly robust, who will be the liberals miss as this one is already 2 months old. is the special copel's mother? if the, my octopus is a very pleasant specie, little out of, for me, they don't one thing. they have no problem being in these tanks together. thank not song we'd better cody as they get along very well and god bless. and besides, they don't emerge from the anxious females. anxious larvae, but as are fully developed, it's tiny octopuses on when people gather sarielle, other octopus species are born as para larvae at that stage of development. massive numbers of them tend to die here and see. so where the hatchlings skip the larval stage, they break surprisingly well. the heart of the university station soon
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knew little maya octopuses will emerge from these eggs. if you look closely, you can see small black dots, the tiny eyes of the baby creatures and new eggs are already on the way. again. the name of the little 30. 2 chang's here. and each one, there's a pregnant female, and we're now we're waiting for them to lay their eggs with some of the food on what via the soul. the scientists capture the pregnant females in the open sea. they're just one year old and die after laying their eggs. they starved themselves to death, here in the breeding station, as in the wild, but keeping octopuses in captivity, even if only at the end of their lives is always a source of controversy. the animals are so intelligent that critics consider it morally wrong to confine them. carlos rose,
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us sees things differently. is good. i'll put both hello money saddle. we've anthropomorphized the ought to push through movies and other stories that are spread, the full mother he for. so unless he and that's a problem, yes, all is done. the good. okay, this is a problem in southern mexico, the octopus is regarded as a resource. it's a source of income and food for many people in the village. i would it in a moment, you'll see how delicious this is odd. the cock family is having it for lunch today . it is more for voice like hearing a in here in yucatan. you'll be offered ok because i every way you go is also in restaurants in the, in the thought on face. sylvia cock serves fried octopus with her eskimiya che sauce. in other mexican regions. octopus is served in sushi,
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a popular dish in mexico. the world's appetite is huge. some 420000 tons of octopus are eaten annually. antonio and sylvia caulk come to the anom university research facility every day, and volunteer to help raise the octopuses. they're learning how to successfully breed and raise them in this artificial environment. wing of oil for 1.6 grams. oil 1.8 grams. the very small ones get stressed out very quickly as well. the scientists focus on their research and collect data. antonio cock and his wife have now founded the maletchko, so my up cooperative to expand octopus farming. commercially, the other catchers in the village were not very enthusiastic about the project. at 1st, a youth, lithium, they said it was crazy. just
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a waste of time. it's alarming in us up to them. they didn't believe in the project . i am now almost 10. octopus catchers are organized within the cooperative with the help of support funding. they were recently able to finance their own site. the tanks are already in place, but they still need money to get things up and running. i was telling was banned our project so that we can increase our market, i think, selling nationally and internationally. that's my dream, and preferably starting tomorrow for this project could secure the future for many fishing families and perhaps become a model for other regions affected by over fishing and climate change from mexico's octopuses to know. we see we'd belt these underwater plans have many uses. they're being used to make alternative to plastic. for example, let's see. read is also the mission and nutritious to women, living on the north coast of the country of farming the super full sustainably,
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to cater to its rising demand in europe and the world. mm. seaweed is known as the super food from the c angenie to erickson and tamara singer. harvest seaweed in water that is just 4 degrees celsius in temperature, about 300 kilometers water, the optic circle. and see we did not just healthy this little low. it's purple, see read. and even though it looks a little brown and bushy taste like truffle, it is amazing. kara bill's office is really young. age roughly taste super good. ah, there are thousands of varieties of animal seaweed. untruthful sea, wheat, or brush tuft alkie. grows especially well along the norwegian coast,
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like here in the lofton islands. angie nature and to morrow run a small business, love it and see weed. they want to make c wheat widely popular again. while it has been largely forgotten in europe, it's quite common in the asia pacific region. my mom to say japanese, i'm so i've grown updating to say, wait all my life. sorry. it was really exciting when we, when i moved to norway to say the petite show there was here, there was just sorry, much say wait, growing along the course line, it being completely forgotten about and then a wage and tradition. many people here never what the c provides. the region is famous for it stock facial when dried caught, which even the vikings 8 as well as seaweed. on the moon, this rough and clean sea moves the better the seaweed kind of developed healthy
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nutrients. they processed the harvest in the small fishing village of nap angelie to ericsson often helped her father fish. so she knows this coastal region very well. what is the perfect place for say, read through grow. we have this cold arctic waters that are really nutritious. ah, the water is moving past the current is the 4th strongest in the world. off to the sea, we just harvested it 1st has to dry. they processed 9 different types here. 24 hours later, the seaweed is ready for consumption. costing up to 500. your is per kilogram. it can be served, disappear, double dish or solid or dried and used as the salt seasoning in the kitchen lap. they create new seaweed, recipes along with local shafts. french f joanne pock. my deck uses travel. see we out a special touched to noodles with stock fish. all ganesha,
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cauliflower cream with sealy champs. everything you can do basically with the k was at this you up, it says to gum, much crit so you can cook fish. can cook meat in says she, we do when o'clock the from 1st, who is large food new world opened to us chefs and delicatessen across the globe, or, or to see we'd from angelie to erickson and tamara, singer. it, they practice castle unsustainable harvesting, allowing the see we to grow back again. and they see it as the food of the future, potentially as it is so healthy i. well, it really is the super food are full of vitamins and minerals. it's an anti virus, its anti bacterial. it's got more nutrients. who graham than any other plant on this planet. and it's just grown. and so angelie to ericsson and tamara
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singer enter the water almost every day to supply the world with this healthy super food, from missy. each of audrey bolts to me and introduced to her to people and projects while walking in sync with mutual bellas about how you fine tune your relationship with metro after eco india a d w dot com. i'll see you again next week with many more such thought provoking ideas until then from all of us in india and germany. good bye. and thanks for watching. ah, [000:00:00;00]
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a ah, with to be your own health advocate by turning into your own expert, we are your coach without any fiction and lots of facts. reactive in
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and award winning documentary searches for answers for 2 years. the author accompanies a sour fist family in northern syria insights into the isolated world of radical islamists, a film about family, faith, masculinity of fathers and sons starts april 16th on d, w. or where is the live m either on the right or left side, but it's here at the bottom. what's for sure, yet one dog i. 2 here, man put up a bit of
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a lot of your good some of this before with. 6

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