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tv   Eco India  Deutsche Welle  August 29, 2022 4:02am-4:31am CEST

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ah, since the beginning of human history dies, hubbell, concoctions and natural remedies have been used by men and women to enhance health and identity. today, this is an industrial with a market size of hundreds of millions of dollars. it will be crypted, the production process, packaging, and drama teeter, huge, heavy burden on the environment. the demand from consumers for sustainability is only increasing when the going got to be, let's talk about of to be in which this can be achieved. hello, welcome. i'm sorry that i'm in india. many young and open consumers are consciously choosing to buy non toxic biodegradable and sustainable beauty and was though kept products. even though these products remained inaccessible and unaffordable to the masses to be a few entrepreneurs are setting the foundation to build an industry that is
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scalable, yet sustainable. ah, money, she welcome. our son displayed an intolerance to supermarket soaps and creams in early childhood in search of alternatives. she began to experiment herself. they started making simple fraud exec home, lazy thorpe's live bombs, shambles. and just, you know, using it on my own, you know, sell fuse and my son's use. that's how it started for me. i think the journey went a little, the i, c, d as in 2016. and the bug got me a book to see this and i wanted to studies can get on munitions again. governor dreamed in banking, she now began to grapple with the science of surfactants fats and oil. it marked the beginning of her company. oh, through them today it produces sustainable body care
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products such as soaps and shampoos, but honey sure, welcome on. doesn't call her products organic. we don't classify chemical and non chemical. we don't classify natural organic, but we classify ingredients only based on that box would be living that are multi fires, that can biodiesel easily into the soil, right, so they might be slightly expensive, but there are such ingredients available. so we choose to consciously target ingredients that are more sustainable and bio to think of what exactly is in the products we use every day or in the clots. we where these are the kind of questions that also interest 25 year old or did the my of the indian american influenza uses social media to spotlight are through of a society and called for changes in consumer culture. i think there is this undercurrent of folks wanting to know the stories behind their products,
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who made them, how was it made and ingredients. and i think this coincides with living in the age of the climate crisis. so whether that's the question about the labor behind who major clothes or the ingredients that populate or beauty products, people want to have a more critical dialogue about that mercury in face screens. heavy metals such as chromium and nickel and lip sticks. experts see long term exposure to substances like these poses a health hazard. se sinner is a scientist who publishes facts that the cost medic industry keeps under wraps. all these chemicals are likely to impact and barbara big will impacted vironment. what will you use on your body? it'll impact you, but a lot of it get washed up. it going to the waste water system, a lot of the tubes that you discard that can warranty or where stream, where does it fine if you go to the restroom anywhere to landfills that starts to
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leach into the sub swine adding to surface water. ne hutch audrey is a makeup artist in delhi. she's is that for a long time now, her customers have valued the sustainable ingredients in the cosmetic products she uses. as a result, she has also changed her tools earlier. there were only plastic youtube that used to get, but now we can bam was to execute tips across brands and across 30 dealers and everything. that's not the thing. and for makeup remover instead of gardens because accordance is also very huge waste. i use an academic of razor flooding and divorce, and he used any number of things. the cosmetics and personal care products industry is a $1000000000.00 business. last year alone, sales totaled around $425000000000.00 us dollars worldwide. in the us, the 4th largest market after the usa, china and japan. sustainable products are still a niche market. accounting for less than 7 percent of the total,
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but their market share is growing every year. oh, through them is one of the few players in the indian market that produces packages and also organizes distribution here. the company is breaking new ground not only in terms of ingredients, but also in terms of product packaging. glasses not sustainable. it may look sustainable, but producing glasses not sustainable any more. so then we started looking for alternators. today we use a wide range of materials like they should look in blaze based plastic on base plastic b, c, r, post consumer, reasonably plastic, which are more, you know, a part of it as biodegradable. so we try to ensure that at least 60 percent of the pubes composition is, is, is biodegradable. but rhythm sells its product to its online store. donors, sunscreens conditioners,
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the top cello solid chapel. unlike it's liquid counterpart, it doesn't require plastic bottle. plus it's supposed to last for many more uses than liquid shampoo. our statistics was if we are able to can miss even 5 percent of in the us population to move into forget 52 percent of indian population. the movement to using sample bars. imagine the impact that we will create in using those many sample bottles. going to lengthen by just replacing one product at around $252.00 piece or just over 3 euros. the solid chapel is not cheap and is probably only affordable for the open middle class. as long as this remains the case, sustainable cosmetics will have a hard time establishing themselves everywhere on the indian market. in recent years, the mineral, micah, which gives the shim unaffected makeup, has caused a funeral for how it's sourced. we visited
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a german cosmetics company trying to follow ethical standards when importing and using micah and also explore micah mines in northern india. coma davie and her 5 year old son, roger scoured the soil in search of micah. the glittering mineral plays a vital role in this region. the economy, even though many minds have been officially closed mining the raw material is the only way to survive. for many people here, children work for hours in the blistering sun. in the indian state of jar calmed, this is nothing out of the ordinary thought that at bella tele glerison, my children are so young, but there's no other way of making a living here. but there's no farming and nothing to do with that. i can't afford to send them to school. i was, they have to help me had that though, but they managed to to 2 and a half kilos a day and then that we work until 5 in the evening class. was it today, some 50000 adults and children work here illegally. local authorities don't
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intervene. almost all the workers are dilates, who occupy the lowest rung and the indian cast system. a kilogram of micah can bring the equivalent of up to 20 euro cents. but often they only receive half of that middleman clean the mineral enlarge filtered rumps, the platelets have been cut into varying sizes. this is how it enters the market. the word micah describes a group of naturally occurring silicon materials that are rigid, yet elastic. at the same time, micah is used for electronics and paints and lacquers and for construction. it's also used a lot in the cosmetics industry. a few years ago, anna maria jaeger and her husband kai founded their company lethal cosmetics. the
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acres emphasized that all the ingredients, the farm uses, are vegan and ethically sourced. in other words, they guarantee that no animal testing or child labor was involved in production. one of the key raw materials they use is mike, up and some of it comes from india. the acres handpicked their supplier in india. one who assured them that their micah only comes from minds that don't use child labor. but in that industry, it's often difficult to determine where the material originated with our suppliers . it's one supplier, that's often the manufacturer that also works directly with the mines that also does the audits of the mines and has them independently audited as well. and that is where we gained that confidence with meanwhile, coma,
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davy is glad if she receives a $150.00 rupees a day, a little under 2 euros. that's enough to buy some vegetables and rice. but for that, everyone has to pitch in including her 7 and 8 year old daughter's work. oh, it's called finance on one, i'd really like to go to school. all. it's gone that we need money that they will have. we don't even have our own house full, so i have to collect micah. according to indian law, no child under the age of 14 is allowed to work. but millions of children are doing just that. in the states of john dundee, hot around 22000 children are working in illegal mines. since kids are small, they're often made to crawl into freshly dug pits and crafts that aren't safe or less. i mean, i'm always afraid when i'm looking for mica. not long ago, over there, 2 or 3 children of my age were buried in one of the shafts. and they died like jack,
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i want to go to school. i don't want this region. the cosmetics industry is very secretive when it comes to micah in 2017, the responsible mike initiative was launched. it's an alliance of companies obtaining micah from india who aimed to in child labor in mines, but no one from the initiative. wanted to talk on camera in germany, a supply chain act is set to come into force in 2023. it would require businesses to uphold basic human rights. but on an e, you level an equivalent law is still being negotiated. i think it's absolutely within our responsibility of course it's also within the responsibility of everybody in the chain to make sure that it's producing ethically as well. mm hm. if you ask the miners and
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jock on how to solve the problem, they say genuine change can only com if mining is once again officially allowed. because then workers would be provided with clear safety standards and a fair wage. then their children wouldn't have to work any more. one important ingredient, of course medic products is farm oil. it's all material that's also found in many other products. for example, it's often used in the food industry. however, the production of family is often problematic for the environment. we tried to find out what are the ecological disadvantages of families, and how could it be produced most sustainably? oh, if you want to know why palm oil is in everything, you have to look back to the 990 s. the food industry was in turmoil. as research revealed the horrors of trans fats. eating more of these trans fats meant more bad collateral and less goods which lead to increased risk of heart attack. most
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vegetable oils are made up of unsaturated fat, but these are relatively unstable and liquid d, making them rubbish. ingredients for food like marine to make these fats more versatile, they can be made more saturated. but this results in those harmful trans fats. your body has a tough time of breaking down into the magic fat palm oil. one of the real monsters of pomo is that it's highly saturated. what that means is that it's very stable, so it doesn't go runts. it's very easily pump. oil comes from the feet of this tree, which is imagined to be named the oil palm. both the fruit flesh and the kernel can produce oil and palm oil provides a healthy alternative to trans fat. it's relative be thick and solid, and so can be used in
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a wide range of foods with long shelf lives. without the homes caused by trans fats . and that can't really be replicated with any ever oil over 68 percent upon oil is used for food. 27 percent is used for cosmetics, detergents, and other industrial products, and 5 percent to biofuel. this possibility has seen demand for palm oil increase almost sampling sold since 1990 of rich and e from west africa. 85 percent of the world's palm oil now originates in indonesia and malaysia. despite the plants incredible properties, there's a catch. it only grows in the tropics, the location of the world's tropical rain forests. ready her growing appetite, the palm oil has meant deforestation in a single decade. forest totaling the size of israel being lost, destroying rain, promised to displace indigenous peoples and labour pieces have been documented on
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palm oil plantation. deforestation destroys habitat tooth, threatening pungent from march and tigers. to be around the turn, one of human closest relatives. but the rain for problems don't end in the rain progress. caitlin's, economic b, which wetland, when that dried out to grow oil palm, they can catch by creating evolution and foaming surrounding region. deforestation is also a leading cause of climate change since the c o. 2 absorbing powers of trees and soils are last good amount of the deforestation for palm has it could be called pete land areas. and pete lens are very a very unique ecosystem. and very important, it's a very common rich ecosystem. so given the impact of palm oil production, it's hardly surprising that many want to avoid it entirely. but not so fast
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because the oil palm is an incredible over achiever. every square meter of pomona plantation typically produces this much oil from the same line diarrhea. you'd only get this much rate seed oil, and this much so we've been so replacing palm oil would mean using more land oil palms. productivity is one reason it's often the cheapest vegetable oil that money can buy. the truth is oil palm is the most efficient oil crop we have, and palm oil demand will potentially double by 2050. 1 way of meeting tomorrow's 1st palm oil would be to improve productivity. research suggests that better agricultural practices can boost indonesia as palm oil production by 60 percent on existing land. meaning we could increase production without destroying additional
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rain promised. yields could be boosted by tools. we already have from mechanization to better fertilizers, as well as know how like lang down palm front to slower back ration and protect soils from heavy rain, new and improved oil. palm trees could also help created to selective breeding or genetic engineering. for example, the dwarf palm which stays shorter for longer, making it easier to harvest while more trees can be packed into less land. increased intensification could also have environmental drawbacks, but seems like a better option than chopping down more vein forest. but even with moves to halt deforestation, and increase productivity, future palm oil demand might increase beyond what today's land can provide. so which if we can make palm oil without the oil, palm tree that the east which can make the oil drop inside the cell. now the real
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advantage of this is that we can replace possible exactly. we can produce an oil, which is exactly the same. now chris says this oil won't ever compete with palm oil on price, but hopes it could still play a substantial role in the future. even if the future is still years past decades away, there are plenty of ways to improve upon oil production, whether it's more capital monitoring, producing more oil on the plantations, we already have or producing extra oil using completely new techniques. but all of these approaches could end up increasing how much we pay for our products, given the cost to app and it and people, surely the price would be worth it. another problem related to the production of course metrics is the amount of packaging waste that is generated in indonesia. for
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example, like in india, that's products are often offered in singling sashes so that it's affordable and accessible. but this ends up in landfills and makes a garbage problem. was the mom to now he does his rounds. in this indonesian suburb, he's a trash collector. a lot of says she's land in his cart. the small plastic packages are you bic, witness in se, asia with color that he assigned more kitchen waste in housing estate in the villages more sasha is throwing away wiggle. the single use packages are part and parcel of you mom can of his own lifestyle. he lives in a small house in tongue, around silla chung, together with his older sister and his niece laundry. so shampoo toothpaste, all supplied in single portion, plastic backs,
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even the spices for their food coming, sanchez dead. or if there's no sashay products, i don't know what to do. the sash is very cheap when i hear the amount is just enough for one meal. alice, i said that if i could buy a big pack, i would buy laundry. so both so dish soap, sugar and coffee. but unfortunately i only have a little money. and if i buy a big package, oh, i'm afraid i can't buy other necessities. the important thing for me, the price of the sessions cheap and i can cook every day. who lack of pay and pay the rent as household help, she make some $50.00 euros a month. her brother earns between 60 and 120 euros, though their income does very. even together, it doesn't stretch to a middle class income. that's why they prefer to buy single sashes. it gives them
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flexibility, but over the long term it's an expensive way of managing their household. a large bottle of shampoo or laundry soap would be 20 percent cheaper than the same amount in st chaise. in back to what he wouldn't matter, but says shays are the main range and local stores. not that that, that can. yeah. many people need these sessions, so we got lots of customers. you got what i mean. they more in demand because they're easier to use. profit that we buy customers spend $1000.00 or 2000 repairs on our but then got it. hello. it's very cheap for them to do audi will and be then there be a gump on my guy there. so cheap that even down at the riverside sashes are used for doing the laundry. the way it always was appalling. i sometimes i only buy one sashay, sometimes to ally,
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cuz sometimes i have a lot of laundry. sometimes i used to such as a day, i thought that this online, it's a huge environmental problem. empty plastic sashes are all over and they're non recyclable. environmental as teaser. my fear thinks it's monstrous that these packages are still being manufactured. she's fighting for a plastic free world. every single region in indonesia will have a tradition online and they used to sell daily items in bulk. they sell it in bulk. we would go there with our own container. we'd get a keela rice, maybe a few eggs bringing our own baskets. none of them were package and that went on fine. the same goes for so we could buy so far as back then. there was no problem at all. we didn't have to buy liquid soap in fashion about 50 percent of global
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sasha production is based in se asia. and the region is where most of them are sold, a lucrative business. a lot of the gran, that whose names are on this actually packages our brand of multinational fast moving consumer goods, who companies are all around the world. and they've originated in developed countries. they originated in europe in the united states, were very familiar with the brands. the irony is that in europe and in the united states and in the u. k, you won't see sasha. you'll see these brand sell their product in bottles that are recyclable, but not fashion. the only place where they market pressure is in the developing country. ironically, in a place where they're so little capacity to recycle those fashion. you know, lever is one of the top brands here,
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especially when it comes to shampoo and laundry soap. the company declined in interview, but it did right to say that is working on producing sashes, made of only one material and future rather than several materials, which makes them impossible to recycle. but the company won't comment on profits and any quality unsaturated sales. nothing's likely to change in the short term for a mom and darcy a canopy. they have to decide on a day to day basis. exactly what the family needs. i am and will not been for beth beth again. i use sanchez because the cheapest got me day. the amount is just rightly but under easy to use along with and once again, he takes off on his rounds. the companies produce the sashes. no, they can count on their indonesian customer base.
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in recent years, my choices, when it comes to beauty, enforce them, kids have become more and been mentally friendly. thanks largely to being a part eco india. i be such deeply about the products i buy and buy a new product. only when i'm nearly done with an old one. if you've made a change to tell us about it on eco india and d, w dot com until next time from all of us in india and germany. good bye and thanks for watching. ah ah ah ah,
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with ah, in good shape, keep your feet fit. after all, you use them along the equivalent of about 4 trips around the world by the end of your life. how can we keep our feet healthy? so we say pain free. what should we know about them? how can we give them a break, and what can our hands do for our feet in good shape? or next on d, w. o o d is only oh,
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ready at the top of this deluge. care seat is his talent and the piano has put in at the top of a list of the world's 100 brightest child prodigies. the tiny great pianist fills concert halls most still managing to be just a kid, 0 max in 60 minutes. d, w. ah. the amount of cost is increasing every year in many im gonna working on lunch with fairly holiday destinations and drowning in plastic white. we rewind and happy to look at the causes every year. europe exports over 1000000 tons of plastic with there.
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another way, after all, the environment isn't to recyclable. make up your own mind. d. w. made for mines. ah, how far does one person walk in a lifetime? research is estimate that over the course of 80 years, the average person covers between 82860000 kilometers. that's like walking around the earth equator $3.00 to $4.00 times. but it's only possible if our feet are in good condition. so how can we ensure our feet stay healthy, all that and more on this edition of in good shape.

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