Skip to main content

tv   The 77 Percent  Deutsche Welle  April 24, 2023 8:30am-9:01am CEST

8:30 am
issue with politics. we are here to empower people on monday. you'd celebrate africa sort of by ab with 77 percent. 60 minutes on d, w. these places in europe are smashing all the wreckers stepped into a bold adventure. it's the treasure map for modern globetrotters. discover some of you up to record breaking sites on your back. you too. and now also in book form ah welcome to these new edition of eco africa brought to you by germany's d, w. nigeria, channels, television. and you again this and to be represented on the show by my wonderful co
8:31 am
presenter sondra. oh thank is so my screen is as a very wonderful day to you too. well, nice to see you all. and today we've got a wonderful schultz and less thought with the peep. look at what we have coming up . how am i in uganda has found a way to put used diapers to good use. the poor steve impulse. shellfish have on climate change. and why some consumers and promise in germany and giving farming our rethink. but 1st, the bush, me trade has come under fire in recent years. one reason is the rise in disease transmission between animals and humans. but there are also very serious concerns about endangered species. several countries of now banned the huntin, selling and consumption of bush meets that his wife trees,
8:32 am
and indeed it is good for the animals. but the big question is, what happened to those people whose livelihoods once depended on the white life trick? how have they been impacted by french bonds? and our foss report picks us to a barrier to find out this young dwarf crocodile had a lucky escape. it was rescued a 3 and a half months ago. now be on board board is raising it back into the wild ease the conservation manager at liberia's 1st general widely century. before he started this job, he told of sin crocodile as a source of food. now he's returned hundreds of animals to their natural habitat. when i was growing up, i had the coma view of all the barriers. well it, it will need is like of course them, or tradition. ah,
8:33 am
what growing up in going to school, lenny i, what was the vision in getting that if you working with wildlife have teeth everything mclawrence did is to what the bid be brought to bring about change in community to schools and in the, in the villages where most of these animals come from the forest among ruth and rivers of lay barrier global biodiversity hotspot with hundreds of different species of buds, mammals, reptiles and plants. a few years ago the barrier passed law binding, the cell and consumption of bush meet. the aim is to preserve biodiversity and prevent the spread of disease. and we make it more really bustle wildlife century outside the capital monroe veal was founded in 2017. the stuffy care for
8:34 am
a huge variety of wide life. most of the animals were config, ticketed by 42 development authority from people involved in the now illegal bush. me to fred factories, absolutely imperative to live area. the wildlife law came and got changed from 2016 and the, when the law is in force, they have to have somewhere to bring these animals linguists most in the animals here actually often. and this little boost mark is a prime example, came in at 350 grams, which is the white they would be while it was when it was born. so there is a 99 percent chance that it's month. the mother had actually been killed. and for the mate, and the little one was left with nearly 70 percent of the barriers population
8:35 am
living in close proximity to the countries dense forests bush, me was incredibly popular. the most common animals targeted were tongue hollins. along with several species of monkeys comfort, debbie sold, bush made in monrovia market for over 20 years. but today she has become a national advocate for the country's wide lives and biodiversity. and we are talking with a we me and with talking with other people to stop trading and wish me because it will be fine for willoughby. read it with wanton under a tree, a push me how far i would be empty. it will not be a good for us, according to the worldwide font, for nature liberians used to get more than 75 percent of the protein from bush meat . much of it was sold at local markets where most people here get their food. at muma also sold bush me to for many years. but after walking with comfort,
8:36 am
she switched to selling fish, which benefits her and her family. oh, i sent a bully her with this so far this. this is another kiss i'm silly. no such is that i'm sad, the book fair, this is travis with ample following. if i don't want to go by, i think so much of it. i'm, i think you're the way. i'm at this comfort derossi's advocacy looks to be paying off. a study was conducted on the prevalence of bush me being traded on the markets across the country. it found that in a single year, there was a 50 percent reduction in bush meat. but despite this positive results, there are still challenges this mike, as long as southern was me while we have so many my guessing, like the rug bosses or mike, a bows is on mike as an idea. and then the ladder as i saw, that it didn't abuse me. so it takes time. all change takes time,
8:37 am
but awareness is half the battle and any reduction could give critical, endangered animals like these white belt tree pavilion, and countless other species a fighting chance. the progress made in liberia shows the f. what is what? while to ensure the long term survival of many de bus and beautiful species. it's great to see nature preserved. another huge challenge in today's world is all the west with create and how to dispose it or, or recycle it in a way that doesn't put a button on the environment. and a human west is no exception here. but before we, you poor poor. that idea, we want you to take a look at an interesting project right here at home in uganda that he is making the most of these and a valued natural resource here. ease this week's doing a bit. ah,
8:38 am
you can a business be built on baby poop. well, entrepreneur patrick medusa think so babies go through 5 to 7 diapers a day on average. but in compulsive camacho, settlement most dirty diapers, end up on massive garbage heaps around town. now patrick medusa, his team goes out and collects the diapers after separating the organic material from the plastic parts. the plaque, the becomes a component in the construction of urgently needed community toilets. missing the fust, if a while it is a compost napa toilet. so, to me though, the $200.00 women are vulnerable, women income, which i slum. ah, we have, we have picked all we picked on the sorted on the puck. ah,
8:39 am
they said they pause and fix them into the boat. was to from town, from bricks on the upper part of it to the other. i whispered of it over there they, but they put on and they put bull is put into the compost. ah, to make the best fertilizer which is organic. the baby poop is mixed with clay and local trees seeds and then rolled into balls and dried patrick ma josie then sells the seed balls to tours keen to do their bit for the local environment. and with a bit of luck, the seats will help trees grow far and wide. and how about you? if you are also doing your business, tell us about it. visit our website, or send us a tweet. hash tag doing your been we share your stories. that's certainly
8:40 am
another way of getting seeds into the ground and a pretty clever business model, considering it is best, own free and endless supply of roll materials. well, that's true, sandra. too bad. i didn't think of it myself when my kids were younger. now speaking of sowing seeds in many parts of the world, industrial farming has taken a serious, tall on biodiversity, many crops and now also struggling in the face of climate change. in germany, some consumers are calling for our general think of agriculture and the number of farmers actually agree with that. an early morning wash at chi farm in the zone holland region of western germany today vill him a guy doesn't have to look after his animals alone. alexandra moose stumpage. and
8:41 am
even as cooney are here to help for a weekend, they've only just arrived but are already hard at work. they want to learn more about the practical challenges faced by farmers are within a label with abortion. i work in the food industry and would like to continue down this path in the future weekend or. and i wanted to get to know the whole food industry from its ruth's industry and yeah, what's the canon lana? and there's been been this and move cuz i am self employed in the catering industry . and i what with products from the food industry or our survey was sort of console and was i had this, i want to know where they're made, where they come from and how much while catch to guys. and then how about the voice of the farm has been in the family for 150 years. it covers 70, hector is of land and has pigs, cows, and chickens. while not an organic farm vill him a guy is big on sustainable methods and animal welfare. unlike on many farms,
8:42 am
the pigs can move freely and they're stall and an outdoor area. but of course, the animals will still be slaughtered as it is been that the i'm not the kind of person who says that i can't eat them now that i see them them good. it's actually just the old to sit. once you see they have a good life to no, there's always lots to do. raising livestock is an important part of the farms income. in addition to around $300.00 pigs, there are also 40 cows. but the farmer has no plans to increase his livestock. with van, so feler finer on sco, frugal garden in germany, we keep germany, pigs and poultry does. he had sierra did we produce more mate than we can consume? and that's not good for any one. i'm good. so he decided to take a different path in 1989 vill him a guy farm was the 1st in germany to adopt stricter animal welfare rules. these
8:43 am
include free roaming for livestock all year round the use of strong and plenty of space in the stalls. unlike industrial agriculture, them with an all clear stud fin to the store, we have to move towards more regional farming and regional marketing, where we produce for the needs of our population and under conditions that are approved to ecological and sustainable india coalition in our how they send the were continuous for the 2 women. next they have to collect eggs from the chicken coop. the farm has more than 1200 hands upon me. i've never collected eggs like this. this is oh, it's warm. it's really fresh. is it farming that needs to change or something else? the name is mine is the act. i think the problem is over consumption, the constant unnecessary demand from consumers. i mean, if we could just reduce bad,
8:44 am
then there'd be no problem there. then people would just be satisfied with what's available in between us as heat. so both consumers and farmers need to change, but how much change is realistic? the 2 women raised the issue during the coffee break. as a new counselor, not to completely turn that o'clock that only that people joining forces to work together again when i was a sharing system exactly mankind, the olive moor heading home. you can think of all sorts of things, including new farms or small farms that are managed sensibly by several generations or a farm with a baker, a butcher or handicraft business. in these, unlike in our market economy, the decisive factor is always whether something's profitable, whether the prospects for making money are so good that there are courageous people who do it, will help
8:45 am
a guy has that courage and has invested in new mobile outbuildings for his chickens returning on for them that i phone and we're actually getting 3 of these in total. they cost a lot of money. so of course it's not something you do when you're 60, but our son said he's more interested in poultry for van. so in the future of the farm is looking secure and the sustainability concept of the past 30 years is said to continue eggs and meets are 2 sources of protein. another excellent source is c food. but once again, it seems endorsed. proficient has cost more ham than goods. not only is specie loss, a huge problem. stalks are also dwindling at an alarming rate. the good news is that fishes are increasingly discovering ways of farming, seafood. more south terribly. here is one example of that from
8:46 am
italy. ah, it's an icy 7 o'clock in the morning and goro, and the harbor here on the po, daughter is draped in a thick fog providers. pies, auntie, that doesn't make setting out any easier. roddy, i know he got it. you tried to navigate by orienting yourself to certain landmarks, but on mornings like this. when the fog, which we call calico is so thick that it makes navigating difficult super feature very difficult. his father fished the adriatic before him but a day, but his harvest clams, bungler. where and how much they can that changes every day. less hero at ativa mandel mas in the evening. we get a message from the co operative don't mind telling us what zone we can fish when we can set out. and when we have to return to laura,
8:47 am
and how much we can bring ashore in the piece of that little thing, but they glide for a half an hour through the silent lagoon. then suddenly the quiet ends. the cramp fishers appear from the fog like ghosts. 1500 men and women work to go to lagoon. that is finally reaches his assigned zone is not deep, but it is cold. luna, tomorrow pascal that suzy. bonnie: it's the only way to warm up your hands when they're cold. ammonia ammonium all, come all the clam. fishing is more like farming the sea bed than traditional fishing. the girdle fishers harvest, almost $14000.00 tons of mollusks. each year. luck today, we can all harvest 30 kilos. they suck the mollusks out of the sand with
8:48 am
a special device. the water is 6 degrees celsius just right for winter. but in recent years, the temperature has stayed around 11 degrees celsius. climate change is also affecting the po, delta noise we. they don't come into the night, we observe the effects of climate change here when the sea level changes aqua, when the shock a wind blows or during the phases of the moon, the fuzzy lunar video one that i see come yeah, man, totally. but we also see the effect of climate change when we find fish demolish and crap species that we've never seen here before. it showed that the b value, jonetta king prima known of it. that's why clam farming is important. he says to help protect the climate liquid key, the shelves are made of calcium carbonate onto the car, which is just captured carbon dioxide. lenny that he did go to bonnie at the university of ferrara, professor elena thom bodine has authored
8:49 am
a study on the impact of muscles on the climate. it confirms what goro fisher's argument could be. more or less can be mileage as they grow. mollusks for michelle in that capture c o 2 o 2, and i'm gonna if i harvest akilah cram so that the c o 2 emitted for their commercial use is much less than the c o. 2 captured by the clamshell as they grow said he already spec last you had what that's the surprising thing will show that even good evening. don't look at this. when i was back was i sort of put him in in the lagoon. the girdle fishers now form a dozen mullah species over 10 square kilometers. 7 years ago bought us and the other fishers launched another climate from the project. farming oysters from the mediterranean, using the tides. i pulled assuming dalia. we're the only oyster producers in it allow the other shook. now it's low tide idea . and these baskets with a young oysters are hanging in the air and the sun or yeah, yeah,
8:50 am
solar gondola when the tide comes in with this entire zone will be flooded via lega . hooked up to slightly like waste. and okay, i'm off by live with very nice, lucian and festival i fully funded me, lead me there from 2020 shod to me that in the mid of in the fissures called their oysters golden goro. and sell them to chopped shafts all over italy. but above all, bodice loves one thing about his work. li built on his c. so the, it's that sense of freedom lemma. a you follow the ebb and flow of the tides and the phases of the moon is elisha, your part of this beautiful world? our world, the po, delta, preserving this world and ensuring its future provide us and the fishers of goro, it's their life's work. back to africa now they on dylan
8:51 am
climate crisis is forcing us to be more for gold. with our most important results, if you guess it's water in lake else, less than 40 percent of people have access to clean drinking water. this equation is similar. kanyes, capital nairobi where the poorest residents leaving terrible conditions now of private sector initiative is introducing enough they take, take nicole solutions to help them. oh, just one touch of the sensor and clean water flows from the machine is changed merrily. can gee's life my did not, but any therapy, the water we get is clean, affordable, and easily accessible them. berella congee has looked all her life in monterey, one of the biggest slums in nairobi. those 22 years have been governed by a daily struggle for clean water. she had to walk long distances to walk or to
8:52 am
point in constant fear of being attacked or getting sick from the water. to go mad, what by matter, the dirty water gives people diarrhea, they drink it, it will because they have no other option. i like to do what are your major half a 1000000 people living metering in very close quarters settlements like this one, keep growing. and so does the need for water. the cities are exploding, we are and planned that you have more and more people coming from the countryside and settling down in the cities in slams that are not on the map of her work, her provider. so we are not getting water and boost gay from un habitat sees another problem. there is a backlog of infrastructure development over the years because we're what our company is, the government, i've not invested enough to maintain with pipes, so we have very old. so what cell networks that are leaking and on top of that,
8:53 am
coll towels often control the taps they may charge extortionate prices or sexually exploit young women for water barrel akin g. feel safe now that she can get her water from the machine is charged at a fixed rate and she doesn't need to carry cash yet. then if i have 10 canyon shillings on my chip, back with that last me up to 3 days. but before i could only get 3 jerry kinds of water for that money that the users receive about $10.00 times as much water for their money. now, kenneth window from the supplier much malawi, had his work, cut out, trying to convince water companies and authorities to back the idea. when we got to them, mister waller, you are not very popular. i think one of the biggest impact is to get organization . and to do is to think about technology, do you think technologists is being 2nd,
8:54 am
are very good. one of the things we see now is that no fill of the p paid. what am i we have is anybody is becoming more efficient, low operating costs. so one of windows main arguments staff, the only required for maintenance. and this is actually helped to diffuse conflicts in some places. areas where they will probably 50 help you more. but if you are, let's say, from your parents, bridgewater from to me, because the attendance events for fixing that water. now, this doesn't happen. people out of indiscriminate the, the technology comes from ends, her day in the netherlands and tom lay palo was working in africa for an 8 project when he came up with an idea to better regulate the water supply. on sir joseph consensus token, the fell so open and the flow material measured the amount of water is al serra g s . m modem is size and as the car to store older transactions the machines sunday to
8:55 am
run consumption to the cloud. this allows supply and demand to be regulated. they see all the systems in martha down here, crunchy revenue for one. what's important there are already around 800 of these pay as you go water dispenses in kenya and some neighboring countries. fortunately that's been very little vandalism so far there really can g comes her several times a day. she says that with this new clean water supply, stomach upsets or thing of the past. we've come to the end of this edition of eco africa. thanks for joining us. do come back again next week until then. i am chris alone say good bye from logan states nigeria . well, before i sign off, i do want to remind you to please check in with us any time on our social media
8:56 am
platforms. let us know your thoughts on these weeks. sure. until we meet again. it is a good buy from me, sandra, to nobody else here in kampala, uganda take care. ah, ah ah. ah. ah, ah, ah ah, ah . with
8:57 am
who you're watching the 77 percent. oh d, w and the red list. well, this week's episode is all about the power of music. we're going to go around and see what the 4th of august when it comes to a pop and it's affiliation with politics. we're here to empower people on monday.
8:58 am
you told about africa with 30 minutes on d. w. o. goal. in sometimes a seed is all you need to allow the big ideas to grow. we're bringing environmental conservation to life with learning packs like global ideas. we will show you how climate change and environmental conservation is taking shape around the world and how we can all make a difference. knowledge grows through sharing, download it now for, for ah. oh time, once again. for a brief update. it's magic,
8:59 am
it's the kind of magic a because this orchestra called the brain continuously adapts itself. and so we ask a few astute questions. are we smarter swarms or use? i wouldn't causes monster waves. hope you're full or your thoughts. however, we can control our thoughts, which makes us very power games we have to learn a lot. and we do that through play questions about the life of the universe and the kind of like a superpower. that we're serious. 40 to the answers almost every thing this week on d w ah ah
9:00 am
ah, ah ah, this is dw news live from berlin. germany's 1st evacuation of flight from sudan arrives in berlin. foreign military plains have a back. you made it several 1000 people from cartoon where rival forces are fighting street battles. millions of residents remain trapped in the capital.

21 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on