tv Global 3000 Deutsche Welle September 16, 2022 10:30am-11:01am CEST
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i to climate change, i mean, felt worldwide before a station in the rain forest continued, carbon dioxide emissions have risen again. young people all over the world are committed to climate protection. what impact will because change doesn't happen on its own. make up your own mind. d w for mines ah, ah, welcome to global 3000. up to purse as a delicacy. the highly intelligent creatures are threatened with extinction. what
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can be done or discarded? treasure could a human waste replace chemical fertilizer in the future and water stress. how people in california are adapting to long term drops dried up riverbeds vanishing lakes in many parts of the world, water is becoming scarce. almost half of europe's land surface is affected by drought. more than 750000 hectares of land there have been destroyed by wild fires . california has suffered drought for years, but this year it's effects a particularly visible lake made the areas most important reservoir has shrunk dramatically. it's water level has dropped by more than 40 meters. the situation impacts the lives of millions, many a looking for creative solutions. i san
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diego, the 8 largest city in the united states. 1.4000000 people live here with another 2000000 in the suburbs. they all need water, but it scares. that's why nancy and ken cavin are planted native plants. all of them, drought resistor it plenty low maintenance. no, you don't after we're not watering that much so. um and this makes it to school maybe once a month we have to come out and really trend things. it just depends on the season . 09 years ago they decided their front lawn had to go. it required too much water, an offer from the region of san diego came at the right time. of $43.00 bonus per square meter from the water authority. all this was long. this was all grass and it's about 1700 square feet. we took
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took it all out. this is all the bags. am all tied to buy. that's going to cover this whole area after the plants are for the cabin hours, the transformation has been worth it. they only had to put $50.00 of their own money into the project. they're trying to get others interested. but not everyone cares. some still have alarm that needs regular watering. war, they have artificial turf and rock garden. it's seal off the ground. it makes nancy angry. i always, i know it's to save the plan that you know his kitty, they even try to save water at home. something also supported by the city. i. at 1st glance, everything looks normal, but there are water saving toilets in the bathrooms, as well as special showerheads. more than 600000 residents have registered with the
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city to take part in the program. and any little bit i can do to out my daily life, whether it be in my bathroom or my kitchen outside in my yard it good tiny steps, its only baby steps you have to take to try to conserve on monitor. ah, the drought is here to stay. california has been suffering from a lack of water for 20 years. any land not being watered, turns to desert, saving on drinking or ground water is no longer enough to meet the needs of cities on the u. s. west coast, that's why the world's 2nd largest desalination plant was built here outside san diego. like engineer nathan faber shows us the plant see that he knows its energy intensive, a target for criticism from environmental activists. but he also knows there is no alternative can also, i could be surfing in the ocean, and 2 hours later,
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the water is converted to drinking water and going to the residence of san diego county. wow, it's 2 hours. the plant turns 190000000 leaders of sea water into drinking water for the region every day. it flows through 16000 filters in this pipe in a process called reverse osmosis. is one strategy of many for securing enough fresh water. so since the ninety's are per person, water use has dropped in half, even though our population increase. and we've had these suppressors like climate change in route. one of the main factors is pending cation teaching. people in san diego county resident audit use less water and be more efficient. so with irrigation, which showers really just changing their attitude towards the water. use the city overseas, 500 kilometers of pipes, using sensors that found an alarm. if there's a leak anywhere. nathan faber is convinced that the measures being taken by the
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city work well together. it's extremely critical. the stress test showed that until 2045, and maybe even beyond that, the region has adequate supply. we've invested in storage, we've invested in desalination. we looked at recycled water, collecting water and purifying it next to saving water. it's the issue in the san diego region, especially because it only gets around $25.00 centimeters of rain per year. emily and chris ear save every drop in 2 large tanks. that's enough to take care of their garden. they've created a green oasis with lots of fruit and vegetables. i fear for the day we're is the only way to go where we have to grow our own food because there's going to be such water shortages in the future, especially in the western states here. this is an ongoing crisis out here. so it's,
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it's, makes a ton of sense to, to use water intelligently garden, designer brooks, arson installed and irrigation system. under chris and emily's beds that transports water from the house, directly to the fruit trees. how much laundry water they would be using every week . and we decided that would water about 3 fruit trees. so there is a lot of nutrients in that grey water from the soaps and from whatever is coming off of our clothes. ah, it's basically like free fertilizer depending on whether emily uses bleach for washing or organic detergent, this lever controls whether the waste water is pumped into the sewer or her garden . so this is actually feeding the root systems below. and it's also helping feed the entire main area around here, and keep the, the ground more hydrated. like many san diego residents, they're combating the drought any way they can because they have no other choice.
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it's something we all have to do. often, moulton, once a day in germany, an average of 6 liters of drinking water washes the contents of our toilets down the drain, roughly a 3rd of the per capita drinking water consumption of 128 liters is simply flashed away. and it's not just water. this wasted human excreta contains many important nutrients, which could perhaps be put to better use. take phosphorus, it's essential for plant grice each year, 50000 tons of it, and up in sewage treatment plants. many countries are already starting to use human feces to produce bio gas and research is underway into its potential use in agriculture. that's not yet permitted in germany, but a revolution isn't away. time for the morning trip to the toilet at this music
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festival in northern germany, these toilets are collecting a valuable resource fecal matter. ready here it's not considered waste, rather a rule material. during the summer sanitation startup, venetia has been sending the toilets from festival to festival. that explains the anti hole at the company's office and even volunteer berlin. leaving c e o. florian augustine, with time to tinker. the, a washed alaska raw materials, we're talking about our urine and of course the feces that's collected here in all just enormous amounts of nutrients. it's good stuff that comes out of us is complaining. i mean, i wasn't up, but we just flush it away and don't want to have anything to do with it. but it's something we really have to start dealing with again. ah, continued answer, they are. that's exactly the goal of the state sponsored research project circle here bar, which benito is also
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a part of our the articles are coordinates the project for gather human waste from public toilets and turn it into a usable resource. instead of flushing the waste with water, it's covered with pulverized straw. i can view a demonstration as if someone were peering wounded. inside the toilet, the urine runs into a separate container. that means the feces stays dry. keeping them separate makes them easier to purify. one extra flip out of the project is to collect human waste and to bring the nutrients in it onto the fields as fertilizer. there's huge recycling potential in human waste aspect. sicily of ours research happens here on the edge of a, the solid. this is where nutrients such as potassium, phosphorus, nitrogen, and many others that people excrete every day are being recycled. turning the plants that feed us back into fertilizer. the collected fecal matter is combusted
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along with green waste and transformed into human fertilizer. i recall with foam by men after why did we want to recycle new transport? if we look at mineral, such as phosphorus or potassium, we typically get them from mines. and when it comes to phosphorus, resources are extremely scarce. nitrogen is another neutral that will really need to be recycling because it's an essential nutrients that every plant needs to grow . and that would normally be extracted in an energy intensive way. during composting bacteria create heat, so we're currently at $67.00 degrees is up, the goal is to reach $75.00 degrees because that's when you have the greatest an activation rate for pathogens thought of her con, guzzling up killing of the pathogens is key. that's just one of the things monitored by cloudy accosting of lab team at the bio mass research center in lexie . share my telephone, heavy metal should definitely not be present. we also check there is no mercury or lead, or traces of medication or resistant germs. it was that when all goes well,
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they're usually killed off during the purification process and the temperatures in the compost. if i opportunity regulations in germany currently forbid the use of human waste in agricultural fertilizers. that's due to hygiene concerns. and that's when your pipe, we want to show that it's safe and that it's possible to eliminate pollutants and comply with all the limit values in line with the regulations in effect. and to show that after the composting and purification processes, you can use this material as fertilizer on fields i'd o simply following her initial analysis, claudia testing is optimistic. so clear bar received special permission to use its fertilizer. now the corn on the trial field is ready for harvesting earlier than expected due to the drought. the soil mixed with the experimental fertilizer
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appears to have done a better job it supplying moist it to the corn than the untreated soil. syphilis bar plans to focus next on using urine as a resource, which right now still has to be disposed of in the sewage system. then i'm going to perfect the carmel would actually be the perfect combination. if we were able to bring all the nutrients we excrete together again in the form of agricultural fertilizer that's used to produce more food. adding this now has a good smell of soil. that means the composting has gone well. the material has turned back into soil added the team is working on improving an automating urine composting in order to start processing larger amounts. ionic houses and florian augustine, never lose sight of the big picture to make their products so good and so clean
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that they'll be put to use on feel on the festivals are providing more than enough raw material with ah, 2 children to countenance one giant problem. and melina, in on it this year, a bit chilly in the miami navy. it will be crazy, delayed food. exactly. how will climate change affect us? and our children learn more at d, w dot com slash water. it's time to head to thailand, to for it safety st. ah bangkok,
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over 8000000 people live here in the capital of thailand. but even more come to visit with over $20000000.00 tourists arriving every year. bangkok is the most visited city in the world. one of the things it's most famous for, is it st. food? it's always busy at amada market. sassy gone? some. ron opened her stall here one year ago. she sells a snack. many people love, but only a few still make. come home crock! business is good. quad and i chose to make this snack because it's hard to find and i like eating it. so i studied how to make etc. the dough is traditionally made from coconut milk, rice, flour, baking soda, and a little sugar. the recipe hasn't changed since it was 1st invented, while the halves of the dough balls are baked in the special con um, crop pan, sassy thorn. som, ron takes care of the toppings. in addition to fresh,
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coconut shavings. there's corn and spring onions on offer. after about 5 minutes, the con um crocks are golden. brown crispy on the outside, but still soft on the inside. the haves are cut out individually, then assembled into balls. they're sold in cardboard boxes of $7.00 to $10.00 pieces each for the equivalent of about one euro and $0.10. sassy born sam, ron doesn't just like making the snack she enjoys eating them too. oh wow. and people like eating it because the flavor is consistent and traditional thinking, you also get a nice smell of coconut milk. let them think they're in the texture of the colon. and coconut makes it mellow and delicious. i like sassy thought sam. ron sells about 50 pans a day, like the recipe. the spiritual shape of cannon crocks hasn't changed a bit translated. cannon crock means snack mortar. while a mortar is not used to prepare the dish,
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the round shape of the snacks is like that of a mortar bowl. and so the tradition still lives on today. over time, only the savory fillings have changed. oh, no, never. i see the snack. i buy it immediately. wow . when yeah, i used to eat and it's tasty. it's high snack that i often a growing up and i and even now i still eat eat, it's not messy and it's easy to eat. cannot crop taste best when the balls are still hot out of the pan enjoy an average of 19 point. 2 kilos of fish are consumed per person per year. that's about twice as much as 50 years ago. there are also twice as many people on the planet as bank then, which means that overall fish consumption has effectively could result. the u. n.
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food and agriculture organization reports that 31 percent of the world's vicious dogs arose. fish. could aquaculture be today? half of all the fish we consume comes from controlled breeding found that doesn't always mean it sustainable. the construction of fish farms often means the destruction of natural fish, habitats, chemicals, antibiotics, and excrement, create pollution. conventional aquaculture also contributes to over fishing. the farmed fish are often fed wild fish and not oh, marine creatures can easily be bred in captivity. we had to mexico, where scientists are trying to do just that with one particular local species. octopus, a type of several. a pod is a fascinating creature. it has 3 hearts and 8 arms. those arms also contain most of
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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. ah, when they can turn into rocks, looking like they're covered in algae or make themselves huge and turn completely red more you extend me. those are all horse at an anom university satellite campus in the mexican coastal town of cecil 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 in the us of him. we know today that the
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caribbean see 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 the room in order can 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 fished for octopus catcher. antonio cock in cecil business is better than ever this season. it always depends on how long they want to work. and i'm usually full by 1 pm, and i earned around 50600 pesos. the people who stay out all afternoon make 2000 or 3000 pesos either or to the with of grapple barbara
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and then a very, very 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 universities. scientists to sell octopus raised in a breeding station instead of capturing them out at sea. is this is this who isn't kitchen ambitious project isn't, 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 facing the global seafood industry. unlike salmon and shrimp, their. ready sensitive to captivity and die quickly. but the mexican researchers have one advantage the local species. the maya is particularly robust. some will be those misses. this one is already 2 months. so if this per seal copel's mother, as the maya octopus is a very pleasant specie, little love for me,
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they don't one fancy of no problem being in these tanks together. frank, no song, we'd better cody as they get along very well. and god bless. and besides, they don't emerge from the eggs of females anxious larvae, but as are fully developed. tiny octopuses on will. fetal dallas out or yellow, 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 skipped the larval stage they breed surprisingly well. the heart of the university station soon 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. little $32.00 tanks here, and each one they're so pregnant female. and we're now we're waiting for them to
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lay their eggs of food on worker. yeah, this whole 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, 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 phone wasn't equal. so unless he and that's a problem. yes. or is that the good? ok, this is a problem in southern mexico, the octopus is regarded as a resource. it is source of income and food for many people in the village.
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i would it in a moment, you'll see how delicious this is sad. the cock family is having it for lunch today . it was for a place like hearing a in here in yucatan. you'll be offered. oh i do, is i every way you go. this also in restaurants and a little the thought on they've, sylvia cock serves fried octopus with her eskimiya che sauce. in other mexican regions. octopus is served in sushi, 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. when okay,
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hold on 1.6 grams of 1.8 grams. rick, at the very small ones, get stressed out very quickly. and last while the scientists focus on their research and collect data, antonio cock and his wife have now founded the maletchko. so my up co operative 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, but just a waste of time. yes, lilian, as i've been there, they didn't believe in the project. 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 you wanted to expand our project so that we can increase our market. i've been selling nationally and internationally. that's my dream,
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the money 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 and that so from global 3000 this week it was great to have you with us, drop us a line and tell us what you thought of the show. you can reach us at global 3000 d, w dot com and we are on facebook to dw global ideas. see you next time. take care. ah ah. ah ah ah ah
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in architecture. this has to be really, really good. start september 30th on d, w. ah. ah, this is the w news line from berlin, ukrainian, or thursday side. i found mass graves outside the city in which was liberated from russian forces 6 days ago. president salons, he says russia must be held responsible for the behind a trial of death. also on the program, germany takes control of russian refineries to.
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