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tv   Thirst  Deutsche Welle  August 24, 2022 6:15am-7:01am CEST

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all assaults and prime minister justin true does say it'll help fight climate change and help in japanese dependence on russian gas that is over now at documentary series don't film is up next. for the look at the growing shortage of a precious resource. i think water, stay tuned for that. you're watching day w news live from berlin. we'll have more headlines for you in 45 minutes from now. thanks for your company. and we're interested in the global economy. our portfolio d w business beyond. here's a closer look at the project. our mission. to analyze the fight for market
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dominance. get a step ahead with d, w. business beyond the economy has been growing steadily for over a century, creating prosperity and security. but everything has its limits. we need ship, we need energy, we need food, but we're gonna need it for centuries and centuries, pen millennia and hers longest humans around. and all of these things need water plaza in unit one. for the days when we had abundant water supplies are gone to fall by it's is on and many regions of the world water has run out new and metal, no water at all, not to drill through that. the economy versus humanity versus nature. when did a joke it then it was this, we have a right to clean also debate,
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globally 70 percent of the water goes to irrigation, deeper visible, look in need water to make agriculture and uses a hell of a lot of water. water will be the new gold they are not matching the reality of the disappearing water with their desire for economic growth. m. we've always known water to be plentiful. hm. but that's changing because of the climate prices ah. with water becoming scarce, this series asks, what happens if we have no more water?
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for years, the potsdam institute for climate impact research has been warning about the effect of the climate crisis on the water supply. that's handy, that won't find any st. louis, my phone falls when i let it go, a lot of i don't need to do an experiment on that as i already know, what will happen? my video is simple because we understand physics icon. so if we increase c o 2 in the atmosphere, then we will warm the planet and, and a woman planet means more water vapor, more drought, more periods of intense precipitation a business. we don't have to do an experiment to know what availability is decreasing, map of it. as it gets even warmer, we will need even more water for agriculture to drink and for industry. was in us quite a we can see this very clearly with tesla test which needs a relatively large amount of water locally, but also not. and of course, this has to be balanced with nature because what we do now, i will have
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a lasting effect. its height for its giga factory and brandon book, outside of berlin, tesla wants access to especially valuable ground water reserves. critics say the testing water from the region. yeah. that's your internet. it's so much. what's it a look around you? but the local, what does appliances of know what of a further developments they, none of us are completely wrong. it's like water everywhere here. this seemed like a desert to you. thank you, sir. as ridiculous a bang. tesla's application hasn't yet been approved. but it's just one example of many german industry now seems to be waking up to the increasing scarcity of water, to nativity, shandy, toyota, and spells out. since i told the dry years and 201820192020. we also showed
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companies how important water is of the needle, and now there is a big rush to permit the seat of that. and we must really be aware of the tree water supply now from them, so that we don't sell at office for cough as fast as cold water is a sought after a commodity, and the chairman of the federal working group on water. professor martine campbell wants authorities to use restraint when allocating water rights. hum, felix also unplug fits, and so we have a lot of big offers or with the global water shortage. the biggest water companies in the world are knocking on our door holes, not big names that everyone knows if they will want to get water from us because the quality is simply excellent for ford soup leash. coca cola is planning a controversial project to extract water and luna berg. germany's largest beverage company has been bottling its vio, brand water, and the northern germantown for years. i say it american named awesome god, was allowed to run a 5th to 20,
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already have approval to draw 350000 cubic meters from the aquifer, which is the same amount we put in the application for a 3rd well on to double the amount of water we're taking for dobrinka. ready coca colas quest for water leads to happen. step just outside lunar burke, the company is drilling a well 190 meters deep into the earth. here, putting the mayor in a dilemma to progress was the for colton. the all 4 of us ultimately submitted us in berlin on the question is simply how do we sell it? or rather, how do we communicate to citizen? is that the ground water that is actually there to ensure the supply of public drinking water is partially being given to the beverage industry. so and then we have to tell citizens when they get in return or who about an or 100 a sounded awful resistance is stirring in the region of luna book more and more
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people are protesting against coca cola. more than 1000 people recently took part in a demonstration, organized by our water luna, book the initiative fears their water is being sold off. yeah. then luna bogus. my name is mariana thomas spelled and i am also a member of our waterloo board. as mr. didn't want to stop this. wow, i want to prevent coca cola from taking any more and they will say, okay, and we can't produce any movie in dr. marianna. tim, as fed has been involved in the citizens initiative since the beginning of 2020 local politician yann's buttah issues, water extraction permits even coca colas. his decision will last for decades that and b and child threw up the annette knob, the ground water authorities and luna book 1st determine whether extraction is possible and then we make a decision with that can also mean that we have to make
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a decision that the town doesn't like that if you go by the next to name is water rights are up to local administrators. but the state of lower saxony, where luna blog is located is also dealing with this issue needed jackson's confused camera. saxony is quite diverse. of we have regions where there is a lot of water. you attended a big area like lower saxony. there are also regions like the north east of our state that have less ground water vinegar since there is so little right if there is more demand, for example, because farmers have to irrigate the laugh, they should bricklin mr. the effects of the warm dry years can no longer be downplayed. the consequences can be seen everywhere and it's especially severe in the region around luna board. these are tie, it says on seems follow this. poland is usually much below turner. sadly, the water level is very, less eager once get us going said c. o does. alba basically we're worried about the legacy we're leaving to the next generation. the generation was that follow water is the foundation for all relying of her for alice leave in the future,
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germany will have to learn to get by with less water for other parts of our planet that day has already come or worse. since i need at least always actually really sad because in many parts of the world, coca cola does succeed. and then people can only by watering the supermarket at high prices in mexico for example, by ashby sun calistoga, in southern mexico has a large coca cola plant well protected behind high fences and barbed wire. mexican health authorities say more of the beverage is consumed here than anywhere else in mexico to leaders per person per day on average. as long as coca cola has enough water, business is good for the people of san could he still ball however, life is very different. they are left high and dry. this i haven't looked at here is the force it on. there is no water tool, not
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a drawing. absolutely no holter. no one. yes, the breath, it's like this every day. the whole city that everywhere in the city, people are complaining in every neighborhood because they have in a water. yeah. oh stossel one at amanda is boss gaze also has no water. vasquez is a gardener. without water. he has no work. he whose orita young like the name was ellen. we have no water and won't have any until monday. then we will have water from the tab again until then we have to make due with the water for food and then it's unbelievable even. and on top of that, our, the dry season is just beginning at the input basic, take care of water today because it is important for to morrow. this sine tells us that it was at glassy. is it any 2nd now what hold hold let takes water out 24 hours a day. i said for soft drinks and water that they bet is selma bottle soon,
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but every wrap were to other cities, the country and state. this is that they half water you said why allowed were because place in europe it all up for the and the people of san cristobelle don't have access to that. only war telephone does not. carrington see they have to buy water in plastic bottles. it c l, the name of the brand translates as sky, but it's a product of coca cola, bottled from the ground ikea, you know, they're on his mac, said emma corner, we're gay. silica water authority here is called con hogwash or let in the tissues permits. and coca cola has a license for many years or better because we had a president who used to work for coca cola helix. he sent a fuck. so he made sure they got all the licences okay, called exclusive rights to the high quality water of a once water rich region, no doubt, and extremely lucrative business that corporate fuller. explain the i don't, matthew, me, john doesn't those me literacy. i, we're coca cola pumps,
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more than 1200000 liters of water every day. those they have 3 wells from which they produce all their products, then they lightly distribute them. so the water from san cristobal ask is that all the surrounding neighborhoods don't have enough water. alice india. how quickly is the water supply changing in the region? how long will the reserves last? nasa's grace mission can provide information about developments in san cristobal, how the region has been losing water since 2011, 60 per cent, faster than the rest of central america. on average. the data cannot determine coca cola role in the disappearance, or if it has one we asked to coca cola for a comment and the company said it's aware of the water problem which is why it helps local residents install water tanks as well as rain water and
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other collection devices the people who have hardly any water left want change. and also that us get him was, is vicki the, can we won the coca cola company out here that can you tell me the last you that people are rebelling against the powerful industries? huge thirst for water. it's david versus goliath. what they say yes, that is what we want. but you know what? it's like to fight a monster. the monster is huge, not yet. it's a war for water in because there will be no more water. southern mexico was once the country's most water rich region and will eventually lose its water reserves. just a few hours flight to the north lies phoenix. this city of over a 1000000 people in the south west u. s. is as dry as dust a rapidly growing metropolis in the middle of the desert. the economy is booming
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and micro chip manufacturer intel is building a gigantic plant. here it is the largest private sector investment in arizona's history. $20000000000.00. really unbelievable. everywhere we drive around here, we just say the scope of this place and just stretches and stretches and stretches . and it's hard to see where one plant ends on the other plant begins. and this water facility is about the size of a facility that it see for a small city who micro chip production requires a huge amount of ultra pure water. but intel has been expanding in phoenix for more than 25 years. anyway. why invest in the middle of the desert? we are here in the middle of the desert. it is warm there's. there's no question about it. so why building the desert? we take many factors into consideration when we decide where to build a favourable business environment is certainly one of those. a strong workforce
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educated workforce is another. but thinking ahead about an infrastructure, including utilities, water is very critical to us as well. and when we evaluated arizona 25 plus years ago, we saw that the state had done that and was looking ahead and preparing for that drought in the future. every drop counts. that's why intel is investing in this state of the art water treatment plant. to further purify the water, the city supplies 25 plus years ago. what we decided to do was to fund the building of a facility that i believe you'll see later called the o b r f. fact it's, it's here over my shoulder. you can see it in the background. and what that facility does that partnership with the city is it allows us to send some of our water from intel to the city where that water is cleaned, to reuse standards, and then it can be reused for irrigation. other applications, parks, golf courses,
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et cetera. in the city, and it can also be cleaned and put back into the aquifer, which the city has done for many years over the past couple of decades as well. this water treatment plant is located next to the company's waterworks, intel financed it together with the city to recycle some of the waste water from production b and that we are in arizona. we are in the middle of a drought. we have been for many years. there's just not a whole abundance of water to get water conservation is really important for the state of arizona. for intel, it's plants like this are going to be needed in the future to basically squeeze every last drop out of that water. herculean task. but will it be enough now looking good, we just need to get more rain. need to fill the reservoirs up. right. the fan sure that we have water in the future. why is the industry investing in one of the
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driest places in the world? scientist and journalist a brom loosed garden is also curious. why are corporations moving to regions that have hardly any water in the united states, especially there still these weird, perverse incentives that do keep the flow of population going in the wrong direction in a way, you know, the city of phoenix, the fastest growing city in the united states we, we've made water cheap in the south west. if you own a house in the city of phoenix, you don't pay very much for your water. even pay less than somebody in philadelphia . pennsylvania pays for their water despite the fact that your water in arizona is incredibly scarce, but those price signals, that's the market at work. and so the market in that situation is telling people an incredibly water, scarce region that they can afford all the water they want. and that it's really not that valuable does in tell, know about the lack of water. how are it's people dealing with the climate crisis? we are in the middle of the the worst route that we've seen here in the south west and in any of our lifetimes. how do i see it? personally?
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i recently did some landscaping in my backyard, the grass came out, the artificial turf came in. so i think we're all learning how to adapt to this new world and, and say, okay, if there is going to be less water available. you know, not only what can, what can we do as a company, what can i do personally to make that a little better. this region is running out of water and it's running out of water very fast. and so there is that information is not making its way through to the city planners. i to the elected officials, to the, you know, to the governor, they are not matching the reality of the disappearing water with their desire for economic growth. those things are, they are there at odds right now, and that is the definition of unsustainable rural areas in the western us
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provide more insight on the water crisis. we've seen all the struggles that people face in the cities to conserve water are going through some real herculean efforts to, to use water efficiently. and then we come out here, we see this greeting of the desert, a strange sight, a kind of mirage in the desert. once completely parched ground turned into vibrant green fields. as far as the i can see, kilometer after kilometer desert artificially irrigated. welcome to the imperial irrigation district. one of the largest agricultural regions in north america. and coca cola is here to
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the imperial irrigation district, known as i, i d holds the largest and oldest water rights on the west coast. a good morning. how you doin? good rubber. welcome. the i d robert schnettler of the i. d wants to show jeff i'm an yeti, his agricultural associations fields. many of the water writes from the colorado river belong to the id agricultural association. the idea knows the value of its water without water, so everything here would disappear. i these main concern is the protection of its water rights, and these have been argued for the years, but we, we still have these water right. that for, for this water, for air, mainly for agriculture purposes. yes, sir, in this appellate industry,
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but it's really important that we keep that because we are providing food and fiber for the nation. without water, there is no agriculture, but how effectively is agriculture using the precious resource and what is it being used for? to grow feed crops, for example, this here is alpha alpha hay which is used for cattle. and what we're coming up on is couple fields of alfalfa. and what we see here is the sprinkler irrigation system for the imperial irrigation district is right at the end of the colorado river. but it is 1st in line for the water, right? it has the senior water, right? so it has access to a tremendous amount of water to grow alfalfa in the middle of the desert. this is to me a growth misuse of this, of this great, right?
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that they have this great, unfettered access to a tremendous amount of water. and about 75 percent of the alpha that is grown in the imperial irrigation district is exported to china. so that is like taking colorado river water and shipping at to china is the agriculture industry even aware of the situation? the enormous agricultural sector is keenly aware of how scarce it is because they fight to the death for it, and they lobby for it, you know, in state houses and in washington. and, um, you know, and they, they argue, you know, vociferously for what they need. so they're keenly aware um, but perhaps less willing to sacrifice their share of, of that water distribution. battles over water are inevitable,
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but 3 quarters of the allocation of california is colorado river water comes to the eye. right? so when, when other arid regions like san diego and coachella valley and a leg are booming with people and need more water, the trim with their laura, they're looking at if this is of been an ongoing battle for, for a long time and probably will continue. but we're in a whole lot of room because we believe in that we do the imperial irrigation district. fields use about 3.7 trillion gallons to water crops each year and unimaginably large amount that is now lacking elsewhere on the countries west coast . san francisco is the gateway to silicon valley, which is home to the world's largest tech companies and a center for innovation and progress. the water is even running out here in the countries richest city anderson reservoir is the regions most important and
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is nearly empty at only 3 per cent of its capacity. a serious threat to say managers from valley water. we've always had to import water. okay. the price of water on the exchange or it's kind of traded, is $5.00, is what it was 2 years ago. there's a limit to what people can pay number one, but we also can't get it here even if we could buy it. the problem we're having is there is no water to import any more. the water crisis has unleashed a modern gold rush. business men like real estate magnet john veto, which are investing in water. and american water loss suits them just fine. whoever owns the land also owns the water rights. how much land do you own is to take a number to it. and it's somewhere between 80200000 acres of agricultural and grazing land somewhere. so do you have an idea of how much more
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to you actually own? nobody, i don't, the anyone owns the water. you have a right to use. nobody owns it. you own. and when you put it in a glass, then you own it. you drink it, you pay it out. ok. speculating with water has made video which unpopular anybody that is of size. you know, sometimes it, it causes people to, to not like that. most of his land holdings are here in the central valley. long established farmers like can, and michael don't like to have financial investors like vinegar, which in the region our farm is not something to me. that's just a number on a spreadsheet, you know, in 50 different investments that we have. it's something that we care passionately about that we care about. michael's family has been here for 3 generations,
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and they own the bold farm. michael's great great grandfather, a penniless immigrant from battenberg in germany, built an empire here. my 3rd great grandfather was a man named while heinrich chrysler. he was born and brought home germany, but he came to the united states and ended up changing his name to henry miller. but he got to the san francisco area, 18 fifties and partnered with another young german immigrant and they established but your business versus competitors. and then they work together and they got here in the time when california was growing very rapidly and it needed food and reliable sources of meat. they ended up being able to purchase over a 1000000 acres of land in california. and then all the way up into oregon and into washington. and so for a period of time, henry miller was the largest land owner in the united states. henry miller realized early on that water would be the key to the success of his business. he took his
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water rights all the way to federal court and one to this day, the laws he fought for apply to everyone in california. we still have access in our area to, to a good amount of water really based on the decisions and foresight of that of henry miller. my ancestor only those who have land have a right to water, which is what is louis the financial speculators. their betting water will become more expensive as it becomes scarcer wood. canon michael cell, if the price was right. we're not ready to sell our land or sell our water and, and do something else. we think we're doing a valuable service for, you know, humanity, investor, john, feed of it says the criticism of him and his business model or a double standard. you need water to make food. agriculture uses a hell of a lot of water. everybody in the u. s. i think except for vegetarians, the, the hamburger me takes more water than amens do. and aman
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takes a gallon to make one, went on and meet, makes more 70 per cent of water around the world goes to agriculture. we feed more than half of our grain to animals. no food requires as much water as meat. what is this agriculture and cattle region runs out of water? that's what happened in saskatoon, canada, just how quickly the water would disappear here was also underestimated. we need as human beings, water, a good water supply. cattle are no different and they have a, they need a large volume of water because they have a very big stomach on them. people lack water, animals lack water. farmers have so little water. they can't even grow enough feed . the water shortage has brought farmers to the edge of existence and
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a place that was once one of the most water rich regions in the world has been very devastating. and the tough decision is they don't have the feed to overwinter their catalyst, so they're going to have to put them through the sales system. and so we're seeing anywhere from $1020.00, maybe 30 percent in some areas in reduction of heard. and that's devastating. why? because it's taking generations to build that number of cattle up on that farm or their ranch. and so they're going from it could be $400.00 cataloging that on that farm. and they're having to sell it down to 200 head or maybe 100 cows. and so it takes years to build those herds up. psychological pressure is affecting the cattle farmers as much as economic hardships me. ah, as suicide, an issue here?
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oh, it is. we have our government stepping in with support programs. ok. and so those are only one year programs. they're going to hopefully help you stick candle through this drug situation in 212022 ad hoc programs. and we're always, we're always very hopeful in the egg industries, so we're always looking at next year at the global institute for water security at the state run university of saskatchewan, j. familiarity analyzes satellite data. india is one of the 1st places where we did in depth analysis. why? because we could see this tremendous hot spot from space. we did some research and we figured out that it was the depletion of ground water that was driving this tremendous water last, northern india lives from the water that comes from the rivers of the himalayas. but the climate crisis is changing the water supply at an unimaginable speed,
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even if it doesn't look like it at 1st glance, water last here is almost the highest in the world. because the soil in the region is particularly fertile poon jobs, agriculture can still feed up to 1000000000 people, but the decline in water availability is now threatening the entire subcontinent model that, that part about that or possibly get the got the idea. our ancestors all farmed farther south. it had that for our grandparents underground wood, it was right under ground that when we started, it had already fallen 3 meters at port beta. the ground water has now dropped it to 20 or 25 made as ga. gov. yes, the port. okay, be it. can i get the more the ground water sinks, the more people's existences are threatened. people here have nothing but agriculture that bonnie did by lab in that i thought that the yeah, that's where that body we used to have natural. so seems like live isn't canal is think of it now. we have to get grand water from underground, isn't godaddy?
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i the farmers here are in despair over the water shortage and the loss to their livelihood. when? no, no, no, no better arc. i'm about another guy on one, on a what he has on thanks to my father's upbringing. i'm a respectable person. i'm with med box bad. okay. but he used pesticides to commit suicide tale. god needed it. or what about it? that's bad. ok. on january 25th, 2022 swan ron sing took his own life. this came as a complete surprise to his wife and their younger son. no warning. he never mentioned his problems to his family, but on, bundled up under good in buddha, down and willa will come without a political kind of civil. a large part of the harvest failed, and we had even higher costs. now my father had to take out
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a loan because we had an earned any money with our coming up one of them because they were gonna go to the other rising temperatures and the falling water supply are leading to smaller harvests, more and more farmers and ripped now gar, in the state of punjab, are falling into debt with loans they can't pay back, swore on sing, suicide is not an isolated case. they not know what delegate and sort of embassy and, and he was really stressed about the loan or get on board the bank kept calling them as he was getting more and more depressed answered with you always got to pay. the pressure became too great. he knew no other way out if we were going to get the money for him, but we had no idea he was going to take his own life near. i didn't know how to live. the city is grieving with the family, but not the bank. note if it didn't go through the phone as it went through the very day after our father died,
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one of the bank called out quickest ago. they've called us every day since, and demanded that we pay back the debt as soon as possible or otherwise they're threatening to seize the farm. and i didn't know about his debt until his suicide with the family will need many years to pay off the loan. if they manage to at all, the climate crisis will continue to dry up the fields. and the next generation will have an even harder time or order decided him or when he got me. if, if it i thought i will do my body medicine, i would have got a middle a name, but as i knew all the responsibilities on me now he met my whole family has huge problems. now it's taking a toll on me. i'm on the i can't even find peace in my house. so 40 that i'm not like go to my field alone crying. i don't know what to do. i know. lot answer randy
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or got it. we might be got on nowhere in the world do more farmers kill themselves than in the indian state of punjab. their survival depends on water get open. yeah, that can't be bought and sold by can't think of but he put our net about it. punjab is an agricultural region he got it, agi, if there is no agriculture, there is no economy that we will have no industry. i'd. we use very little water to fund the flourishing green fields here. but the future scares us, especially in the region near the border. i cast our phase about radio kidney on the border with pakistan and the water shortage could also become a political threat. the concern is that old conflicts will flare up again. punjab boarders directly on hostile pakistan until 1960 bloody wars were fought here over water from the emily and rivers. since then, the indus want or treaty has brought relative peace. it divides the water among the
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neighbors. will the climate crisis reignite the war over water? it could be a water between india bugs than the former general of the indian air force confirms the concerns of the people in punjab. he thinks such a war is quite likely. ah, yes, 16 person, the principal commission didn't go to lead people sort of, it worked wonderful. so currently the governments of both countries accused each other of diverting the rivers water for their benefit. tensions are increasing one percent of the thing that because it again once was but use war does. when people switch over to that location of the district of, of, and is stopping complete flow of water from these under was the thing that it is interfering with the globe. wilton bug with them. and it's causing a huge amount of joblessness viable for the pendulum. because the, because of india and did a sex selection, the increase in the political sabre rattling is in turn,
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fueling farmers anger on the border. they no longer want to share water with their hated neighbors. i mean, money gets almost have out of the upon and what i gather that every day. the problem with water is getting worsening and most of it flows to pakistan anyway. even if the situation gets worse, we are ready to fight for our water. this gets hot letting of morning and i sing is also ready to go to war for water. i wonder what's going to happen to this region. there's one and a half, 2000000000 people that live in this region. what is going to happen to these people when the snow pack on the himalayas disappears, when the glaciers melt and the big rivers are no longer being fuel and the aquifers are no longer being replenished? i wonder about conflict. i wonder about climate refugees? right. i wonder about livelihoods, i wonder about political stability. these are all on the table. nasa data has
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provided early warnings about water availability and hot spots around the world. what about the situation in germany? and so we're seeing a fair amount of water loss, and one of the regions that's really impacted quite significantly is the lunar burke region. the trend for the luna burg region is clear. the water supply has deteriorated significantly over the last 20 years. and now coca cola, germany's largest beverage producer wants to drill a 3rd well and double its capacity. the citizens initiative is protesting and politician yen buttah is weighing the company's application. he doesn't yet know the results of the nasa mission, which you have to step in if this situation gets, was sheila 2 little the longest edison was alt yes, of course. that's the way it is. if we reach that conclusion, this, our mandate is to protect the groundwater. and if we find that the long term supply
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is at risk, then we would have to do something, for example, using water sparingly and sustainably, or were using water for irrigation of head good o, find a technological solution about that or i could limit the use of any one using the water commercially, for instance, an o with a with that i can and most the see in the world. so god, she will new nasa data influence his future decisions about water rights permits. we provided him a copy of the analysis thinker models and us one. yes, i think that when we talk about time frames about perspectives, then we have to take advantage of the latest technological possibilities. if something like that's available, then it has to be included will just come and it could lead to a re interpretation or reorientation. and my also still call dr. mother unattached has failed, is frustrated that global warming is progressing faster than politicians.
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legislators and society are responding as of being in this in north finished tied to it was vital to push them my feet went to the fire design. your father and i have been on the demonstrators have been taking to the streets again and again for the past 2 years. oh boy, well, coca cola application was still pending. the company made a surprising announcement. it would put the project for a 3rd well on hold for the time being the demand for vo water had disappointed the well remains protected with a casing, but has not been dismantled. dr. time has failed. doesn't trust the company. and as far as the door to door vasa, no. that means we now will have to be vigilant, said mr. we can only celebrate when the well no longer exist is done when it cannot
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be reactivated only then will we be rid of this 3rd? well, in new new blank, or we on tea ets breaking out the champagne and lock natasha the 3rd well doesn't appear to be completely off the table that and when will the well be demolished? the entitled to those who yags and gluten boons, the decision to drill a 3rd well was a general decision that we considered very carefully truly, if over the next is the trend in the mineral water market reverses. it may be an option. again, it's not well, but for now it's definitely unlikely. actor is t as low as the hellish ellen version. it is unknown whether the company is planning to extract water elsewhere or whether any applications are being prepared nor whether coca cola is taking global warming into account. tesla's application and bun book is still being
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considered here to the data from nasa satellites show how bad things are for our water. but what did e long mosque say when he visited the site, southeast of berlin? it's like water everywhere. here. it does seem like a desert to you. thank you. yeah, that's ridiculous. mm hm. mosque should be more acutely aware of the dangers of water scarcity than any one. millions of people in his home state on the west coast of the us where his company is headquartered, are already feeling the threat. what we consider to be all right, that doesn't exist anymore. that's, that's gone. is life going to go on as usual? no way. right, so no, everything is not going to be all right. and the only way our only choice is to adapt to the water that we have available to the amount of water that we have
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available. and that's gonna take a lot of work. and so that's the, not all right part. and if we don't adapt, you know, then it's like the apocalypse ah, [000:00:00;00] ah ah, to own or not to own. what about a sharing economy instead?
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a change in thinking is changing the economy to create something new. the economics magazine made in germany in 30 minutes on d. w. ah, a 100 german lost reeds on d. w. i thought it's a journey across the entire continent with a variety of cod. so what on this, so the focus, the movers shake is visionaries and made it when bonnie,
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the meaning of modern africa this is an egg on d, w. m. on this day it's been 6 months since russia started on precedent to talk on the summer and maybe on you crate. we are here. we talk to people on the ground. to politicians, we said light events and their consequences. ah, 6 months that ab's tease ukraine and the world on all platforms brought to you by g w ah, this is d w. news, and these are our top stories. world leaders have joined ukraine's president for la miss lensky, to discuss the future of crimea. so lensky promised to do everything possible to

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