tv Europe Revealed Deutsche Welle July 6, 2023 2:15pm-3:01pm CEST
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he's living killed and was, and says he injured in a russian missile attack on the ukrainian see the, the rest, the rescue as a now searching through the rubble for potential that up to date don't film is i'm not asking what the sustainable agriculture is possible across here in my mind, you can and thank you, watching the imagine how many portion of loads of turn out in the world climate change. the storage space is much less the way from just one week. how much was going to really get we still have time to work on going
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like this today, and what's kind of getting into stuff? what do we believe the future lies in the growth? then we have 9 or 10000 pix today in my father's day. so that it was just 15 on the i love to tell you that we're going to need to work on. we can keep doing things the way we do now. we have to be sustainable as possible. and many of the, in other words, the green revolution is desperately need is who will actually notification where on the costs of a fundamental disruption to how we produce paid. we really do expect the cow will be up sleep by 2035. it's hard to see kind of people really embedded in traditional agricultural being, the loses it doesn't matter where in your you are the only people that can manage the land properly. at this time.
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the units farmers produce our food day in and day out and they've done so for many centuries, the every country region and climate has its own calling every tradition, the farmers shape our landscapes. they reflect our history as well as our identity, the budget, a farming using crisis. industrial, agriculture, striving for higher yields at a lower cost has become an environmental disaster. it's time for a radical re things. but what would that look like? the some 700000000 people living in europe.
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how can they all be fed sustainably? today most european funds are still run by families. the come on. come in. the happy here in the meadow, then not interested, right? the gosh, i don't want to change. i don't want to because i mean, i don't mind, i love raising my animals, i left my watch and i love being surrounded by animals, and i love my freedom and i'm a farmer, someone local who, cuz the land knows it. well. i think that i do my job. well,
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it's feeding people is important landing, but when we run into problems, we deal with them. want us to time $24.00. i'm proud to be in this field most i'm proud to be helping feed mankind the issues you're in my res dairy cows use. i have about $65.00 dairy cows per year, which produce about 600000 meters of mill valley. even from what i have all these my father used to sell milk directly to customers who would come with pounds. but hardly anyone does that to. yes, it's a shame to the less to see if you choose my grew up here and i watch my father build up the song that history connect me to this place. these are my groups and it's something i want to present. okay. similar to like his reading during the meal crisis and some people really struggled cycle for the price of milk
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was so low that they couldn't a profit on a farm or on their own. if they had family issues or health struggles or anything, it went quickly down hill on ocean. when we initially let me feed people, we do our best always done. we give it, oh, and yet for some in the phone, the way out seems to be suicide. so that's wonderful because the number of farmers taking their own lives isn't astronomical. it's tragic and they're not a psychiatric type. somebody that farms aren't being abandoned, farmers are giving up in france, a farmer committed suicide every 2 days, more than anywhere else in europe. abandoned funds are everywhere, but why the
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global competition is at least partly to blame. consumers demand low prices in every kind of fruit and vegetables. what ever the season? agriculture has become a ruthless global business. not all that long ago, most of our food was produced locally. but today in europe, half of all food is imported according to data collected by euro stat. over the past 20 years, the this map display smoke exports among european countries. the sticker, the line, the larger the export, fresh, tomatoes, travel, even further. european consumers want fresh vegetables and the global market reactions the to europe has become a world champion and exports of pork primarily to china and asia,
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but also to the rest of the world. the performers, the choices, symbols, expand and increase productivity or get squeezed out the, the impact is clear. in 10 years, europe is lost nearly form 1000000000 farms the and yet, every year with a european union goes out 60000000000 euros in agricultural subsidies. weird is all that money go. the answer lies in history, and the origins of europeans subsidy policy, the at the end of world war 2, much of europe, lee and ruins. hunger was rampant agricultural production, had to be revived as quickly as possible. the,
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the solution was financial aid and rapid modernization. the strategy worked soon, the shops were failed and the bread, butter and meat were plentiful. again. the strategy is still alive today. agricultural productivity is risen steadily. since the 1950s, the average weight yield per hector has doubled the dairy cows supplied $2.00 times as much milk. many experts say that your lips, massive subsidy system is outdated. you could easily feed itself without it, but it didn't yours. many have grown to depend on it a part of the blame lies in the criteria that govern you accurate cultural policies
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. 3 quarters of the funds are distributed according to the size of the farm. the larger the farm, the larger the subsidy with often outlined this results. this was done. romania is great by you. island is europe's largest fine. 55000 textures of land, and 10000000 euros in agricultural subsidies every year. the money goes to out to hire a company based in the united arab emirates, 7 most part the most of the loan. uh uh, got a frontier part of the dean that didn't really wanna have frontier to display the fields behind me belong to one company. so it's a thorn and assigned to rooming and family farm is because the company practices, very intensive agriculture for assist. i just looked into,
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excelled and out of the 50 offensive products. you did the $2.00 a month. i'm 55. the sad time slowly here is use mainly to grow grains. and the grain doesn't stay here and it's exposed to directly off to the office, probably to the united arab emirates. and it made up a little bit when he did. she did the next test with the last what the completed and it just started and the company meet all the criteria needed to receive subsidies. while the small pharmacy you are not eligible for those sorts of things . they give you been to the doctors that funded the romanian government just interpreted the european rules to mean that farm smaller than 3 hector's are not eligible for each subsidies. that effectively excludes the most agricultural operations in romania, where a small family farms are the norm. square for cv suspicion and my puts in the last within the so you got to protect you guys because didn't seem to tell us that it. how can you offer support to less than one percent of farmers while the remaining
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99 percent or less down getting some to visit it in terms of the social impact e u. agriculture policies with the financial subsidies and other measures have been additional failure. all the regulations are harmful to all society follow on the so charlie ramona to many junior is determined to fight back together with other small farmers. she's fighting for their rights today. her organization has some 14000 members. sorry. you, did you say this was the wrong thing? our political leaders have never lived in a rural area. she and that's why they don't know what could help us on the printer if they would at least visit our community. maybe they'd have some sense of how small farmers layouts out as soon as she able to a doctor who's sitting in their offices on it. they don't see any of the 3 point in
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the la syria and practice crease or 2 different thing might of who are up to go. small farms are often less productive, but the cobit pandemic is served as a reminder of their importance. during locked down, local funds rose to meet the demand and without them many local crops which helped maintain biodiversity would be long gone. she made a jump, the show will fight until we get our rights back. farmers deserve that, don't sit on the e u agricultural subsidies system has proved problematic in practice. how can that be remedied? industrial agriculture has given rise to a host of problems and not just for small farmers, but for us all in europe is responsible for some 11 percent of carbon emissions.
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the, our appetite for meat is part of the problem the to satisfy that craving, the number of livestock has sort according to the un statistics, especially in italy, been deluxe western france and ireland. that's especially true when it comes to port in some regions. there are more pigs than people. spain is now the world's top work exported the
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analyst with the most on your success of books. you know, that's funny. uh, in the last few years of the pig farming sector in spain has grown exponentially. it's become a major player world wide and about 40 or 50 percent of spans. production is explored as financially for dental munoz run. several family owned farms with 10000 live stock is pick farming business is one of the largest in spain. the lice, the, as i see the simply collecting ends of the i think one thing about this good bar history academy i asked has always been about growth. we have 9 or 10000 pigs for that. and my father's time, it was 50 and that's all you have. and so there's a, we're proud of that. uh, our family is proud of our business. is that, or would you say about seo and those with our passion. we've dedicated our lives to it now and we don't intend to give it outside of the book. and i think i'm
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the only part is when i started out, we raised cattle. my father always had cattle. the slaughterhouse used to be right here. this is where we were slaughter the famous i'll be la calves. obviously cans are famous around the world. really. the and facing us with the c gets done with the get will to see on that he was able to stand or less of the agriculture and livestock farming have to keep up with population growth that you have meant the population density is much higher than it used to be offensive and so advert. cultural production and livestock farming also needs to become more concentrated. the more the, the world population keeps growing is every time there's millions of people when they might or might not like meaningful. maybe they lead whatever they have for me . i don't know, but we have to keep producing food, lucy, and that he meant nothing in boston and we're planning to new project
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to livestock operations use for them. we hope these aren't the last new projects we can take on growth as our future interest. you can't just stand still with us by the endless growth. is that really the solution? or will we have to set the limits for our own good and for the animals we depend on . industrial farming practices are not the only problem. live stock requires more approaching feet, such as corn grains and sly, half of europe's farm land is devoted to animal feed. the war and ukraine has made the bread, we eat more expensive, and the same is true for animal feed. much of it is exported like solely from south america. the states and our plates come at the cost of clear cutting, vast tracts of ring forest.
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the po value in northern italy is one of europe's most fro tile regions. ideal for livestock farming and large scale feed cultivation, the damage caused by intensive farming is very apparent here. and not just in the air we breathe. the most good, the civic was nothing, don't know what the data going with. so if you look around, you can see that to most of the quantities growing and dispute. this is industrial, agriculture, very intensive, mainly devoted to cooling funds that need the fountain. isn't that grow them? it's incredible system. it's early in the morning. professor manuela that's on your end or students are studying the impact of the chemicals used on crops and a lot of them. but that's not enough. all right, so i'll take the 1st measurement, then we'll take sample storage of the luckless if there's any questions on the to the community, we've been monitoring the ground water in this area for about 15 years. the manager,
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like we found there's some areas where the nitrate concentration is always above the legal limit. yeah. and it was that's due to the use of synthetic and we've got, except eliza is containing nitrogen compounds in agriculture pump. use these nitrogen compounds to grow when the ponds don't use tools because too much such as long as it was applied or it was applied incorrectly to set up the nitrogen containing substitute for these are washed into the soil when it rains all of it. luckily, but it should be that sunday printing kind of book with us and from the soil. it ends up in our ground water. so that's can increase the nitrous concentration in our ground just kind of do you need to also get enough stuck with that in because to i feel it to the brim. see yes. we'll measure the nitrate levels now and resound like tom to hamilton. and is that the way that it goes on the 9th right residue in ground? water is dangerous because ground water is used so many things above all for drinking water. drinking water with high nitrate levels can make you sick,
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dotted that amount of light blue baby syndrome. gemma, which is a hot defect, found maybe in children is beautiful. it causes problems with the oxygen supply agent and recent studies have also shown how consuming high levels of nitrous might cause many more serious diseases. boston approval got him. i left him in to go the you had succeeded in significantly reducing nitrate levels on farmland. but recently these levels have once again begun to increase man researchers at stockholm university. i've discovered an interesting correlation. the more agricultural subsidies origin receives from the you. the graduates nitrate contamination. like here in northern italy to move in will take weight, a product will still come through and i mean don't but why did we come here to take
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all samples? because much of the ground water from the po valley flows into this river. we need the ground floor to convert as yet and mixes with a water in the po ridley off with this too much on the nitrate. some terminated waters of the po, flow into the adriatic sea water nose, no borders. nitrates can be found in nearly all lakes and oceans the least nitrates lead to a harmful accumulation of nutrients that causes algae overgrowth. the green carpets that are even visible from outer space. like here in the baltic sea, the algae blooms bucks, the sun's rays,
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suffocating organisms that live deep under water. when the algae decomposes, it reduces the level of oxygen in the water. the large areas of the baltic sea have become dead zones. the, the country is bordering, and i've already reduced the influx of nitrate, but it will take many years before the baltic recovers the problems like this. have helped organic food rise in popularity. consumers that become more environmentally aware and more health conscious. but organic farming is nothing new. it was established in germany a century ago. more and more consumers today are looking to avoid pesticide and
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chemical fertilizers and promote biodiversity. organic food has become big business . over the last 20 years, organic farm land has grown from 3.5 to 8 percent of europe's cultivated land. the e u is now hoping that it's green new deal will increase this to 25 percent by 2030 . organic farmers are fighting to preserve bio diversity and the fertility of our soil in the western balkans. industrial agriculture has not yet taken over most farms. our small bio diversity is flourishing and the soil is still rich and bro, dial without the over use of chemicals. conditions here are ideal for organic farming and for producing products that are especially valuable on the european market. in a village in costs of the ship and young goes organic business is barry bruce
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and that s can because we need to spread it all over this table. no business see know that they don't do that. our business is called 99 lula board 99 flowers. we collect them additional and aromatic plants that grow wild in nature. we also cultivate some varieties. an open field is seen that we also process plans to make to use oils, creams, vinegar and spices. freshman for genic products have not yet caught on locally 99, lou, the main, the supplies that you market, your crew sorta or to to be in your shop. the quick one. honestly, what matters to us is a high demand for our plants and the international market. we know that exports can help you grow a business, and that helps assure greater sustainability and safety and you tend to wish moody you might meet or the moxie
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see glue. and then do you saw women face many obstacles to found in your business by policy? now 1st of all, you need funding easy, but it's hard for women and cost to vote to obtain a bank loan with no property as collateral, and i don't care if you're unemployed. if we have no collateral issues, the banks won't give you a loan. this, you know, but every set back and just increases your determination of any me 40 to the end. but all 5 of them getting i have boucher building, jacobi maint, undeterred chief thought to launch a business and help the women and reveal that you know, the city the success today. she has 60 employees from various ethnic backgrounds, coastal i dedicated myself to the business and to my children, my, maybe i neglected my children from time to time, but i had to work before the war. i worked in education, but after the war i was unemployed and i needed an income these me. so i worked
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very hard. my businesses, my baby to the economy to the actual packing. the fox knew the other radical changes in europe could shape the farming of tomorrow. the netherlands may be small, but it's at the forefront of an agricultural revolution. it's now one of the world's leading vegetable producers. until recently, little attention was paid to the it's a logical impact of high intensity farming. but that's changing the campbell on an accent is that's what o'con kesha well needs in both my supplies. and you can say shouldn't be too dogmatic. it always sounds like it's easy to say we should all make the switch to organic farming. go back to traditional methods as
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long as it was, that's boxing ourselves into a corner. 5 by 2050 will have to provide food for 10000000000 people. that isn't. that's a tremendous challenge. at the same time, we have to save the planet, which means being sustainable as possible is do is out of many of them. and we desperately need a green revolution ups, and that's where smart funding comes in august. my pharmacy. let's take a look and spending and isn't agricultural implants scientist at voss ending in university his life is one of the leading research groups of its kind in your smart farming has a very the physics is out. you may still have minutes on over sort precision agriculture. smart farming is smart. farming is quite multifaceted. from much of it is about precision agriculture hang. what smart farming also means that we're using all the innovations we see around us, whether they come from organic one main stream, farming open. hey, that's smart. we want to bring an altogether in
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a smart way to create sustainable systems to stay my uncle taking them in. and it was really seen about smart farming. that is asking cool me nancy smart funding is a combination of high tech innovation and intelligent ideas that come from organic farming local safety issue statement. the visuals has to be located along about picking smart technologies form the basis for smart farming, like energy saving leads. sensors, robots, and a variety of digital tools. the, the goal is a fully automated greenhouse soon of pepper plants like this will be monitor 247 from seed to harvest, the development of those appreciate you can theoretically control everything from here. i'm just like these 2 compartments and of the unit back there for, you know, smart farmingdale or sales agents, a venue hope i say this is
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a smart farming and you are the superior. you see it in the netherlands. tomatoes are going in high tech greenhouse and discuss if you compare that to open field farming in spain and spine, you in spain, you end up with 4 keywords per square meter at harvest, and then other lands, 80 keywords per square meter, right? so 20 times as much in age as long as it's of the people come to see you come to my to the screen to scan yes. openings in our greenhouse as we use 75 percent less modern. hardly any pesticides office with the bang if we use pesticides there. most of the organic name contains environments. it is assigned caution. there's other that's one aspect of smart funding. so you can find plenty of examples of smart farming on open fields to my pharmacy. smart funding also means integrating organic techniques into industrial production in permit culture. for example, several different plans. species are grown side by side that can nearly eliminate the use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides. good thing guys and
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job related. not one of yeah, because i have resign mulash dealt mostly many young 1000 years ago. we were still hunter gatherers from us. that was the way we felt ourselves. so they couldn't solve a lumber. at some point, people started to domesticate crops, and that was the birth of agriculture. and the 2nd queen revolution about the mission, a chemical fertilizers which increased you with the data. and then came the 3rd green revolution which created new varieties and also increase the old site. but it did have downsides, high water use and lots of pesticides times me as a new style mind. now, what is the beginning of a 4th green revolution in which we need to make production as efficient as possible by limiting our consumption of resources of inputs? the technology is already in use and costs are dropping quickly. as smart farming expands, it promises to reduce our impact on the soil. but what about energy consumption and
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the quality of the food it produces? the this new green revolution promises to we shape our world landscape. and not only that food can be produced anywhere, even in the city, the new service you see, or the pseudo is they have. well nope, with that being defined, we're on top of the process water reservoir as belonging to the city of power metal associates, the, the city came up with the idea of using this site for urban farming or juvenile bin . and it was the to t bone plastic, but we mainly grow micro green's and greenhouse at the, on the stereo. the flow from outdoors we grow animal flowers, herbs,
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and varies with small food products with big value. and the same as the flowers should be cut at an angle so that it heals better, offending and try to approve the new season. this one's nice to save on your domain. yeah. then you put them here, 3, take you. everything is sold locally to us. so there is a little transport and we sell to restaurants and the general public overall diesel . don't city dwellers today or searching for meaningless on purpose for towards us through some are going back to the country side or returning to nature may on urban farming is also a way for a city dwellers to find a meeting without leaving the city. which would like to do song songs i run i, i believe the cities of the future will be very grandma june. i hope it will happen in my life time because we are on the herb and smart farming could help supply
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us with fruit and vegetables. but there's another urgent problem to day europe consume 60 percent more meet than 60 years ago. men, especially experts agree that's far too much, but not many are willing to give up their stakes. that's where protein alternatives could come in. incense, sebastian, spain state is be a waters is researching alternative sources of meat. she's hoping to find a replacement for live stock in a laboratory flask and let us know the work never stops. so coaches don't rest night or on weekends. we have to be organized, take tons, keep it to go. any, we're about to ramp up so that we can keep raising our production capacity. but
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we're all giving 300 percent so as i know in the account of this, looking for a solution, it is very exciting. it's wonderful. and the this is, this are going to be the see us for me. um. and besides the professional and most popular and i'm most proud of it, this is where it will stops where the process begins. either the product, we've taken a sample of muscle from an animal and we'll select the sounds we're interested in. then i will keep the muscle cells which produce protein and cultivate them. and this will end up with millions of cells that were proliferate. and that will turn into billions and even more billions in. ultimately they'll fuse together to form slash cultivate. to meet to those guys, like i mean, it all starts with
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a cell cluster, which divides and multiplies. the goal is to grow an entire stake in the laboratory . so you've got the problem. now we have to figure out what prototypes we have and what time budget is. then we can figure out how many fans we can exhibiting because maybe we can add another one for one. want to start the stop stop was mass collateral trying to see the main obstacle was coming up with the proof of concept or showing that what works almost as a new scale. i guess it can also walk on a very large scale there's, there's some, there's, i feel like a lot of that's the key, technological kind of thing for them to have grown meat is on the cusp of becoming a reality. the entire industry is competing to become the 1st to marketed on a large scale. so yeah, is not even due to a maxima. this is the biggest adventure i've ever inbox on the one of those with the challenges. very motivating, especially when it could have such a positive impact, a global impact, right? yeah. but the methane is be a white,
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a startup is still in the development phase. other companies are a bit closer to the goal, like solar foods, not far from helsinki, which is building its 1st test plants dedicated to what it calls precision fermentation. it uses microbes, electricity, and air to generate all kinds of proteins too soon there even hoping to produce milk proteins and at a much lower cost. then cow's milk, the standups like fees receive little or no e, you subsidies, they raise funds on the financial markets. but that work could end up revolutionizing farming the
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were on the costs of a fundamental disruption to how we produce paid, you know, by 25. see, the cost of production of protein is going to come down by $5.00 times by 2035 by 10 times. and that's, that's compared to animal protein. so that's going to have huge ramifications for how we produce protein in 2019 catherine tub center, shockwave through the meat industry when her london based the think tank made and astonishing prediction. all right. how can i help? i was looking for a piece of steak for special occasions. i don't know if you can recommend the i've got some t boned to revise, but if i was to go for anything today, i'll probably have a nice bit of this. so in the option of delicious, the nice logical changes because the cost of protein is going to come down by $510.00 times. that's going to be a huge impact and the number of animals. so we actually full cost 50 percent for your accounts by 201375 percent. few accounts for 25 people. if we're ready to
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expect the cow will be obsolete by 20 x 5. it's like i need this option that's gonna be lots of windows and lots of lasers. it's hard not to see kind of people really embedded in traditional agricultural being, the loses and not more industrial states. a for predictions come true that vegetables and meat will soon be produced in factories will that spelled the final blow for farmers. the one solution to help save farmers might be underway here in power. in the north west of ireland, brendan dunford has come up with a plan to support traditional agriculture with preserving nature
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to work here become around, i guess, 20 years ago. and we did some research all about the relationship between farmers in the barn under landscape. and we found that that's okay, the wrong type of farming, very intensive, modern methods can be very damaging to this environment. but in contrast, a traditional farm practices, old grazing, raising them to the legendary scenes are really critical to maintaining to buy diversity in the natural environment. in the bar and so when we finish the research, there was a recognition not just within the front of the community, but within the conservation authority assess, we need farmers on the land farming in a way to have them for 6000 years. if we want to protect the parent into the future, so the child was then became, how do we support these farmers? brendan, done for its program, provides grants to farmers who limit their environmental impact. the funds come
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from the you and the irish government. so in the current program, we have a we are rewarding farmers who deliver great outcomes for our environment. so we have a very simple score cards where we walk each field like this field every summer, and using 10 different categories that grazing levels, the condition of the electric water sources, the feeding system, the presence of invasive species. is there any damage being done? and we tell you that all of the crease of scored 10 bits, assuming we simple idea and an appealing one that's already one over $300.00 farmers who take them together. farm some $23000.00 textures of land come michael devereaux, and he's also participate in this kind of be that fee and scores as a recommendation about how you improve the score in the area of the field. the score to 10. if it's come up or down and the amount of money that they each field
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in the farm in tennessee environments set up an inquiry my own in a $9.00. and that picks for like concepts and not the same, you know. and so you have for your, so that's a development that you're going up there. you're going up there. so you know, i need to know if there was a firm under all good. there's nothing to make society where every unit is like money. that's what makes the world go around and like managing the from doing this environment to farming is this cost errands us good money, maybe turned of our income comes in from there. and the bigger of the score, the more money i and so yes, but it isn't really competition with my neighbor. i'm wondering what's the doing that i'm not doing? and i want to do that because we get in to be more money. so this, the reason that i'm doing, i'm a business man and i have to earn a living 1st and foremost what the farmer has done here over the last number of years is 1st of all he's repaired the walls and that's allowed them
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to target increasing more effectively here by targeting, grazing in winter time, increasing more flowers and summer time. secondly, the water source which is previously produced by cut the stand against, he's built a wall around this, i'm pumped the water to storage trough. we spend feeds, trusts for the capital, and so that's allows the items to drink clean, fresh water, but also keeps the water source fresh and clean for us who are drinking also the water on this area, the searching is going to change. the feeding system is move towards the more b spoke feeding system, which actually does less damage to environment. i'm cards is gradient grades, increasing levels and over the years by virtue of those management interventions and better grazing. so putting more capital on here, the right time, the score is gone from a 6 to 7 to an a to a 9, and now it's a 10 of the 10 because my god, when you look around here, you can see that this is pretty much perfect lambs being meant as beautifully so the farmer is getting a premium payment. brendan, done for its program is a success. it's a win win situation for local farmers and for the environment. grasslands are
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beginning to recover along with bio diversity. i think there's, there's 2 to kansas and we need we need to change this and we need to really quick and that's why i'm excited about the potential of the farmers and the phishers and the far choose the door of the county unsung heroes. if we can get those on boards, i'm working towards instruction outcome if we can get those, those communities to bargain and to be the leaders to be that the customer searching to be the 1st responders, these crises i, i think i'm optimistic that can help them in europe spends billions of bureaus to subsidize farmers to produce more and more food at every lower prices. all the while our sales are dying. the climate is in crisis and our health is at risk. good laboratory farming help make industrial agriculture more affordable and
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sustainable. if that happens, farmers might also stand to benefit by producing less at higher quality and smaller scale farmers might once again become the guardians of nature and biodiversity. the enters the conflicts. how rome did you ask any precaution, really go in his ladder uprising? my guess is to be done accomplished on his russian investigative journalist and security services expert. andre full data hello is adding to our website tracks the russian intelligence center. how long hold on to power,
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the w. o t gen policy. do you know what that is? no, no, no, it eats up a 3rd of the entire you budget we explained the what, why and half the focus on you a few minutes on d w. maybe the things are going and getting comfortable. yes. listen, not fears, comedy from pakistani women pretty to shake up the image of their generations. some topics are still tapped, but these comedians are pushing the boundaries of free speech humor. again,
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sexism focused on women. rise up in reporter this weekend on dw the . this is dw news live from the lyn. what is yes, get any progression. while the leader of battle roost settings on the look of shan coast as laval nipple is in russia about despite previously claiming progression had gone into belarus, he hasn't made a public affair. and since he led an arm to revolt against moscow in june, also coming up on the program, russian rock, it's making.
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