tv Global 3000 Deutsche Welle July 18, 2022 1:30pm-2:01pm CEST
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male body move forced into marriage, break to his escape will be the journey of his life. far from home, ali can finally become the person he's always wanted to be. i have only spur badly . owen lottery credit that we'll go through with it. i was born in berlin. he starts july 22nd on d, w. ah ah, ah ah, welcome to global 3000 as fishes, a fiddle. what flow melendez? secrets when it comes to long devotee power from the deep
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could our oceans satiate our future energy needs and droughts in kenya when it comes to fighting climate change into creativity. no rain for months, kenya is suffering from historic levels of drought. the soils, the too dry to cultivate grain or vegetables, cattle lie dead in the arid step plans. 2000000 people are at risk of starvation in kenya says germinate, organization very tongue. i heifer to blame global warming the over exploitation of natural resources and widespread deforestation. aid is urgently needed, but so our ideas, ideas for how to make it possible to survive in kenya's dry regions in the future. our reporter tubby imagine tyler went to kenya to find out more.
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the music and festive atmosphere soon attract the crowd. this safe pony theatre group is performing to day in vermani in southern kenya. the play is about every day hardship, environmental issues, and climate change. it's called me youngel, that means decades in swahili rosalyn to holla began, however, to do it sweeps through the last 40 years, starting in 1981 when nature here was still intact. but years of deforestation have followed to feed the charcoal industry. what will things look like in the future? my group manager, david kalu, me takes the audience on a journey. where did we go wrong? he asks, what can we do differently to ensure the next 10 years will be better? the story ends in the year 2031. it just billed people on the left mirror for them to see that this is exactly what i'm doing. so what can i do?
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so via the husband is just a reflection of your life. so from the reflection, you can understand noise like a mirror, if you have a something a done on your face, then it's time for you know, to try to clear that. so this is exactly what we're doing. safe plan is activists know people here are faced with existential problems. only 3 months ago, 40 year old shock, how much ali were settled in this village. a 2 hour drive from bossa with his 50 cattle. but now his herd is dying of starvation. he used to live in a village some 35 kilometers away until drought forced him to leave. but the situation is no better here. her grandma, my grandma, i have to buy the calves milk because their mothers have no milk to suckle them. once that while warn you, they don't even have the strength to stand up. they don't have the energy to graze
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on the field. sparse green. chuck, i'm on to lee were has to help them on today. his assisted by some of david kalu miss act is currently touring the area i amber syndrome. oh, we're here because we're working on a program on enrollment. mostly what we're doing is looking into community resilience towards climate change. as we can see that all the way that part of the changing. we can see that the claim id is not asi tall. some years book for one, the dry season is getting longer. sometimes it doesn't rain for months on end. now the theater group has invited locals to a workshop to talk about their troubles. the team hopes participants can pass on what they learn here to other villages working. yes, i know. one of them is 68 year old killough work. he told me. oh gordon. i
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jumbo lamita's every one planted trees. oh god, what will be good for the environment all night? she down. all your living conditions will be better. who did, we'll collect will people and that will keep people healthy, you know, joy yourself and according to your home, say, the retired civil servant has planted a range of trees from pasadena to blue gum and named trees. they provide shade and protect the ground from drawing out. he also keeps bees. he has 18 hives and earns the equivalent of $1600.00 a year. that allows him to pay for his daughter's schooling, and soon he hopes for her university education to $1.00 of his 2 wives and the mother of his 3 sons. kabibi. kalauia had no such luck . then if the were there will, they sooner were real and i didn't attend school here because my parents weren't able to pay for my education. i live live all over those who are one i gave. so i
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decided to get married the nigger, nigger more boy you a fate shared by most women around here. poverty is wide spread. locals fell trees to clear the land for agriculture, but that makes the ground even dryer. so harvests are poor. they end up resorting to selling charcoal, but that's made from trees. so they locked in a vicious circle in the workshops facilitated by parent n g o safe? kenya, the safe planning team helps locals, develop alternatives to we believe that is the people who for the world started the problem. and is that people who can solve your own problem? sure to ask is asked, not coming to just make them realize, this is where we went wrong. and then after there is them not to look at the solutions and haughton, with ours, is all new to facilitate these discussions,
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facilitator them coming together? that is what we are doing much, but the solution is coming play, perform the people. after 2 months of consultations and conversations, the theater groups latest tour is drawing to a close. now. the safe kenya in g o aims to boost people's resilience amid the climate crisis. and inspire them to find solutions. it's safe pony theater group is based in mombasa, and financed by the international climate initiatives, small grants program. they'll continue to work with locals here for the next 2 years. wow. the audience have got the message, live in them a more meg is not live with little mother gave them. i have learned that when we manufacture charcoal, it has many negative effects on our land. it my bad amok will work. i because i know that by the league i'm not good. things will change because there will be no more cutting down of trees. and if people get tree seedlings,
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they will plant them and the current situation will improve. oh god, he hardly the only killough work. he to me is also among the audience. his tree planting has often been marked by his neighbors. now he's been vindicated. though, in fact, his desperate, since the activists were lost here, the drought has killed all of his bees. and the seedlings were his new plans have dried up still, his determined to keep planting new trees and hope small villages will follow his lead. it's the only way they can secure their future. blue water is life. it covers 71 percent of our planet surface and is in perpetual movement. ocean currents in particular, have huge potential as energy generators, as much as a 1000 nuclear power stations. tremendous powers brought forth every day due to the
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moon. it acts like a magnates pulling the water of our oceans towards it, creating a wave peak or high, tight. on the other side of the earth, a similar wave peak is created by centrifugal force. over the course of a day the earth rotates beneath these 2 high tide, peaks in between them is ab tight. these are the tides of the seas. could title power be the clean climate neutral answer to our energy needs? off the coast of scotland, you could witness this window by ins being put into the water. they're called tidal toby. they sit on the sea floor and harness the energy in the moving water that comes in and goes out with the tides fell. car just cannot sitting there and waiting to be used. the potential is huge. it's estimated
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that we could practically capture enough title, energy to power all home from the united states, twice over my research with climate change shows. we need this energy now. yes, at the moment, all the energy we get from existing title power plants worldwide can power less than 400000 homes. so how does title bow walk exactly? and why isn't it every way it would title power? there's one word that comes up a lot, predictable, predictable, predictability. tides are predictable. they come in, they go out and they've been doing this the same way since the moon was bond. so with the dial stick, adobe, and on the water, as it flows in or out. and viola, you can make electricity with the same, it's bullet window binds you moving water mix the turbine spin. this powers, the gearbox on a generator, which turn the mechanical energy into electricity. water incidentally is over $800.00 times down. so than air, which means that dial turbines need to be studio,
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but they can be smaller and slower and still individually produce more power than wind turbine. so far so good. then back the titles from card predictability. wind starts and stops blowing somewhat randomly. and the sun isn't always out. so these renewables can be difficult to integrate into the grid tides as we know, i really, really predictable and consistent. so if batteries are charged, when tides are flowing, we could use those batteries each time there's no movement and repeat at regular intervals. with tides to mean waste extract, power exist, once called title stream, and the other title range. let's talk about titled range power. that takes advantage of the difference between the high and the low tide, which can go up to 12 meters. this work by building a dam across the region where the sea water meets the land. the shape of these bays or estuaries magnifies the difference between the high and low tide. how it
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actually works is the gates of the down offers shut until the difference in the water level builds up to the highest point. and then the water is allowed to flow and as it does so, a turbine below collects and converts all the delicious energy into electricity. many title plant can actually work when the water flow the other way too. which means they could work for between 18 and 22 hours every day. and this kind of title power has been along for decades. the oldest title reign generator lawrence was built in northern france in 1966. it costs around $1000000000.00 in today's money, which is cheaper than a comparable nuclear power plant, but higher than the cost of installing other renewables. but it's still going strong, producing enough power for a town of around $250000.00 inhabitants. and the electricity from lawrence is actually cheaper than solar and nuclear. there are 4 other titles range plants
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running in south korea, russia, canada, and china. you can filter the range part not anywhere, but it wouldn't be economical to put it somewhere where there's minimal title, rent top rates in the space funding in canada, the northwest australian shelf, the northwest european shelves are probably going to in shell, but they're not all suitable to for example, that may not be much grid connectivity or the populations may be quite low. so apart from geography, the infrastructure to support title drains, plants just doesn't exist everywhere. and people have opposed the massive strand people have of both the massive structures because they can be who left for the local environment, disturbing migratory fish, the composition of the soil and even taking space away from local communities. but things are changing for title range. bower, a project commission in october 2021 in wales dixie idea out of the $960.00 s and applies it to to be when environmental damage is much less acceptable. the design
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doesn't block of an entire b, but only uses a part of a lagoon. the local ecology is protected and it's expected to generate even more power than the french plant. the proposal also includes space for agriculture and sports for the area can remain a shared resource. 98 percent of title energy today comes from title range projects that together have a capacity of $520.00 megawatts, which is still a tiny, tiny fraction of our consumption. but the other kind of total power generation could ship things up. the younger and sexier kind of the market title stream power . it's showing more promise at the moment with its simpler devices that depend on underwater currency caused by the tides. they vary in shape and design. the most common ob breeze turbines like wind turbines, that can be set up in clusters in wind farms under water. a couple of research and
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development zones in the not of scotland supplied record breaking levels of teen energy to the u. k. grid this year. powering over $12000.00 homes for a year then there's an underwater kite that flies and a figure of 8. like the wind lifts the kite current and the water speed it up into and producing more energy. and then that are floating stream turbines. the most powerful of which was recently launched in scotland with an individual tobin capacity of 2 megawatts dead dead though to the sea floor. but the turbines remain close to the surface, which means the undersea works cheaper and they can be moved around. compared to wind of solar energy though. title has been slower for the reason you might have guessed. sadly, a lot of the solutions are really expensive because the industry,
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so young with very small industry, it doesn't have an established supply chain for manufacturing chain any time you were gonna operate. something under water has its own unique sets of engineering challenges. your standard was like, corrosion is going to be big problems. you're going to choose your materials, really carefully, bio falling as a really big issue where, you know, you put something, the water is things are going to want to grow on it. and that's going to make it into a little mini regal habitat. the performance of the turbine deteriorates. you need to find some way of renting that that's a huge operational costs. which is why most titled stream generation project cluster in the global, not with financial support to death. the technology at this stage exists china and south korea joining in but low income countries. like in the, i have been slow, a drop plans to try out id power, but they could benefit when the cost of deployment begin to fall. charles, now as to bring down the price tag to, to make sure that it is something that's commercially viable. and this is where
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things like sort of investments and govern government support. and so these can be extremely impactful. there is a number of proven concepts and there's a number of companies that have a technology ready. wiley, u. k and canadian governments have been the biggest invest doesn't tied to power. overall grants and government investments have been filled with less than 0.0. 2 percent of annual investment engineers both meeting tied to and so it's been behind the cove in other ways to electricity from underwater. title turbines can cost up to 9 times that produced by turbines above the surface of the water. but the industry targets that life cycle costs good for the $0.10 per kilowatt hour by the end of the decade, which would be pretty cheap. but apart from cost, what actually happens when you put this turbines under water oceans are abundant with marine life. the structure of the laurels project from earlier decimated the populations of to 1st species and like wind turbines that have been known to cause
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the lungs of baths flying past, implored the pressure difference caused by title barrages could have a similar effect on the internal organs of fish, but title stream projects are already more eco friendly. titled turbines turned quite slowly. so the idea things getting chopped is, is, is going to be, you know, probably not going to have things getting hit yes. back and happens, especially at tip speeds. the big problem is not probably going to be collision. the problem is going to be displacement, that animals will avoid these areas and therefore not use these dairies to feed in with compared it to climate change. and even by 2050. what you see is climate change is 10 times worse than taking the maximum amount out of tides. title has other benefits too. while it's financial cost is still higher than other renewables
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. if net benefit could actually be higher when you consider things like it's predictable supply of clean energy to the grid. all the fact that stream projects don't visually affect beautiful sea view. so especially in cost to long island nations title does have the power to play a significant role in getting the net 0 in a relatively less destructive way. the need of the hour is to make title power competitive. we need to understand such natural forces and live in harmony with nature. that's one key way to solve the huge global problems facing us and for us to live halsey contented lives. despite worsening global crises, more and more people are living ever longer lives. according to the un, there have never been so many 100 year olds. there are now more than half a 1000000 centenarians world wide, 5 so called blue zones. aki noah in japan. a korea in greece.
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ali astra inside dina. costa rica nicola peninsula and loma linda in california. all have very high numbers of people living far longer than average. what's their secret? meat jane peel 103. james ho 82. and christine ho, 85, they're old and they're in great shape in loma linda, southern california, that's not unusual. ooh, oh, jean peel swears mine a healthy diet. she's never smoked, and she's been te total. all her life. people are killing themselves where they're eating pep. there their lifestyle is killing them. she's a member of the 7th day adventist church, a protestant denomination, if members believe in clean living and advocate vegetarianism
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this hell message is not our religion. it's that they call it a right hand help because lot of people won't listen to religion, but they'll listen to health. jane peals lane. husband was a doctor. every one in her community make sure they drink a lot of water and exercise every day. they also believe in a day of rest. this community began and the early 20th century, when adventist pioneers opened a sanatorium, here it became the loma linda university medical center. the church is healthy, lifestyle seems to add years to its members, lives. the loma linda community is the core of america's blue zone, where people live much longer than the rest of the world. there's a city wide smoking ban.
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cardiologist, gary fraser has investigated the 7th day adventists longevity and a long term study. we felt that it's pushed a head as compared to other californians, a man about 7 years and woman about 4 and a half, which is a big deal. i mean that's the kind of gain slit a whole population. mike, mike m a generational 2 generations. christine ho hits the pool to swim lamps every morning. a former nurse, she believes that exercise keeps her young and healthy. she likes to crawl a few length and then switch to back stroke with i like the backstroke because you can, you know, a brief vendor. and when, when i do best, i see the sky. sometimes the sky clouds, you know, have different. uh,
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any more of formation. you know, i enjoy looking like that. her husband, j. so please badminton regularly, always against a younger opponent. not all of the residents of law melinda are elderly. it's a multi generational place. james ho used to coach the son of his badminton partner, who's 30 years younger than him. in recruit, active in michel. oh, golf home mall quoted me said those relaxing. okay. the young people are the more saw that it makes me also wants to move with them at home. the walls are decorated with james hos many metals. now $82.00, he still takes part in competitions in the senior category and usually wins. but the couple also feel that a long and fulfilling life is about learning to savor the moment. both of us, we'd retiree early enough. if i take it easy, we do,
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i just and now my me to leave on and and see the wool and enjoy. i keep the sabbath. i go to church and sing. ok, volunteer. right. they don't pay me, but i volunteer to help that makes me happy. because i can share my talents, re, people oh, balance. terry work appears to be another secret to a long and happy life. oh, as is the sabbath, the day of rest and worship? every one here follows the church as rules and adheres to its wholesome doctrine. most americans have a notably shorter life expectancy than many europeans and are more likely to suffer from high blood pressure and diabetes.
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also cardiologist, gary freezer thinks loma linda could serve as a role model for the rest of the country. religion aside, this lower magic elixir rules, pull it by, swallow something like this. um, it's raw, they've taken many things that we know and the virtually put them into practice as a whole group. jane peel takes an hour long walk each day, even in the blazing sun. she's convinced a few of her neighbors to join her picture. walk. good job. well, i've changed my diet. i've lost some way. i walk more. yeah. yeah, she's a bad person. jane feels advice is simple, just do what nature, what god intended us to do, hidden tend to us do just follow pills and sit around and watch tv. get out. nature get out and enjoy life. good grief. she doesn't understand why some people find
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that so hard. surely everyone wants to lead a long, happy, and healthy life. that's all from us this week and label 3000. don't forget to send us your feedback, right to global 3000 at d, w dot com. and we'd love to have you visit us on facebook to d w global ideas? see you next time. take care. ah, ah ah
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a meaningful way with eco india in 30 minutes on d, w. o, a wide wing extremist, i suggested again world lobby and coping weight and burned in south africa. people with disabilities more likely to lose their jobs. in the append demik black lives matter, shine a spotlight on racially motivated police violence, same sex marriage is being legalized in more and more countries, discrimination, inequality or part of everyday life. for many, we ask why? because life is diversity. to make up your own mind.
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d, w. made for mines go mike speaking, how can this passionate hatred of a people be explained? a gold top? where does it come from? come all wrap up the history of antisemitism. he's a history of stigmatization and exclusion of religious and political power struggles and interesting christianity wants to convince that is why christianity you like the figure of the jew as any parent, some hope to fly. it's a history of slender, of hatred and violence is the focus from then on the jews were considered servants of evil. they simply told you about the most atrocious chapter and that within 6 years, a 3rd of our people were exterminating 6000000 jews, like microbes to be annihilated. even 77 years after the
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holocaust hatred towards jews is still pervasive. a history of anti semitism this week on d w ah ah, [000:00:00;00] ah, this is dw is coming to live from berlin. the climate crisis hitting europe. huge wildfires burned across the mediterranean, fueled by record drought and high temperatures. hundreds of people have died as a result of the extreme heat wave, which is now moving north,
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