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tv   Global Us  Deutsche Welle  September 13, 2023 1:30am-2:01am CEST

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in 60 minutes on d, w. now understand can have a think, like the right to present data used on instagram and follow up the question is, there's probably no place on earth that won't be affected. what's not, what we already know for sure is that will see desertification stretching from argentina to the american midwest. the wells is losing its force and false. a result of wildfires looking it's climate change. under the trees go the animal species. we're seeing of a mode as a terrorist and oceans with foss did those without any marine life. we can still change things,
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but what would it cost the imagine a world where we saw nature for what it's worth. while we would recognize the life around us for more than just its beauty. because almost half of the world's economy, $44.00 trillion dollars depends on natural services like pollinating, capturing carbon and purifying water. these are all valuable to our economy, but they aren't valued in our economy. nature like this is being left out of the equation. it is easy to tell when the living thing is valuable. like with this tree, it's actually huge. it's old and gorgeous. and since the one of berlin's most beloved part, but it's hard to translate that into a price. how much do you think this tree should be worth? money?
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no idea, no price, it shouldn't cause anything. it's a federal case. several, definitely several. most people have no idea how valuable living trees and why should the nature usually doesn't have a price until it's dead. this is often a huge problem. let's say a logging company wants to come in and cut down these trees for timber. we know super well how much these trees cost once they're caught. so we have 200 oak trees worth of timber on one side and basically huge question mark on the other. we don't know the cost of chopping down a forest or how much value we've lost. that's because there's so much of plaque forrester, unbelievably complex eco systems. one way to estimated trees, value is to add up, what good it does for the environment is websites to the us does just that we need to put in the diameter of the trunk where it's located and what kind of tree it is . ready ready ready it's if i don't know what kind of tree it is, the value is calculated based on how much carbon dioxide the tree captures coming. ok, how much storm water runoff it stops or you condition?
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okay, it looks pretty excellent as well as how many pollutants like ozone and carbon monoxide here in this, in the air. now we gotta measure, i feel super weird doing this. it's estimating so estimating this tree, this here is where the $109.00 over the next 20 years. it's worth $2207.00. doesn't seem like that much for such a beautiful tree. the values are really conservative, though, because they're based on things like carbon pricing, wastewater treatment, pricing, and improved human health outcomes. so $200.00 log trees would mean $454000.00 in ecosystem services loss over the next 20 years. a lot of the cheese value isn't it included in that calculation? so it isn't perfect, but it does put nature into the equation and it applies far beyond logging. green economists like ralph shami, think pricing natures absolutely necessary in the fight against the climate change . it's not enough to sing songs about the way it's in the gold has
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a st come by. uh and right one more pull him about the way you lead a team of the international monetary fund to the 1st to put a price tag on a blue. well, with a guy, and if you spoke to a way to say, hey ralph, to stop crying about me, leave me alone. go in peace ma'am. and by the way, you owe me money, cuz i'd say to you, but i am a team valued a blue. well, a $2000000.00 visa and its activities in the ocean, the capture carpet. well, soup at the surface and well, who contains exactly what fido clinton need to grab a bite of clinton and turn produce at least half the world's oxygen? noel's no fido plankton. no oxygen, why do way to repay the wells and the other nature is using that price tied to know the benefit of conserving them. this is already happening in the form of carbon credits that individual their companies can buy to protect an area. here's how it often goes. let's say an island wants to profit from protecting it. see grass. someone's like ralph shami goes there and calculates a value for the c grass. similarly to how i calculated
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a value for that tree based on that value, a government or company sets up a carbon scheme through which those looking to offset their emissions can pay to conserve the sea. grass and valuations are starting to include more aspects and just carbon in the future. we could also see credits based on how much bio diversity to see grass supports putting a price tag on nature can also help underserved communities. it's estimated that indigenous communities manage nearly 1000000000, has tears of land globally in nearly 80 percent of the worlds about diversity. that living nature and intact about diversity are worth money that's ignored in the global economy. the people who conserve them are working for free. one way to change that is to payment for ecosystem services. we are leaving in some of the most probably these 3 can and we should then remind decisive that we should be left alone believe that way. because that's also not fair. many to go on is kochenda igor, people indigenous to the philippines. she's working on ways to make carbon markets more equitable. many community sites struggling and they need an update at the
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source of income instead of paying the carbon offset to a company or government payments are made to local communities, preserving their local eco systems. so hold on. this all sounds pretty good, but there's one huge thing we haven't talked about. the idea of putting a monetary value on a tree is just weird. do you think we should put a price tag on nature? no, no, no, absolutely not. it's habitable. have to. there's an ethical dilemma for communities to say that we will get money battery benefits from funding for us. so when we have always looked at the forest and some beeping equity stuff, how do you put the value, for instance, on the fact that these forest are the resting ground? so if i were upset stories that definitely wouldn't make it into a price tag. in fact, most of the price tag is based on the price of carbon. so all the benefits from valuing nature basically rely on global carbon markets. this website takes
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scientific data from this tree and multiply that by the price of carbon to determine the value, the websites from the u. s, where the price of carbon is cheaper. if the website were from the u, this tree would actually be more expensive. this is what a massive hole in carbon pricing. it can be different everywhere and changes over time. carbon markets also make it easy for companies to continue business as usual . selling carbon can also reinforce inequalities in order to put a price on a protected area. remember that someone like ralph shami usually comes in to do the evaluation. this can be a problem that owners are incentivized to plan to not need a 5 species instead of indigenous species because it creates a new type of landscape that could back carbon faster. june robust research has major conservation from an indigenous perspective. critics that use terms like carbon colonialism to describe this new wave of capture enclosure, reach it uh by capital indigenous in local communities can end up being told how to manage their own land. and often benefits go to governments where the company's was
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just a small percentage reaching the actual communities themselves. one thing that's never going to go away is the discomfort and wrongness of putting a monetary value on. something is majestic, is this tree, or a blue whale? for now, many decision makers only speaking the language of money, not majestic nests, until that changes valuing nature could make it more visible to them. so should you put a price on nature in many places we already have, but just how it depends on the circumstance. when we know the value of living nature, it's easier to protect it. and if it's destroyed, finds a way easier to calculate when it comes to carbon credits or paying people for taking care of eco systems. we need to carefully examine who's doing the evaluation and where the money ends up. because in the end, we're still relying on market mechanisms which are exactly what got us into this mess in the 1st place. the
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. what do users on our social media platforms have to say? well, a lot of people feel closely connected to nature and for us, even if there's not much primeval forest left in europe at the latest. finland recently hosted the tree hugging world championships. participants got to show their love for trees with some public displays of affection. and the winter was a tree hugger from guess was germany our expedition gets off to a monday start the boat so being loaded with provisions for the next 5 days. the foot of during the flimsiest of foot west. the locals are still more sure footed the we are in our run updates. we're a company in christoph shank. hands of the frank foot. so a logical society to one of the most remote places in the world. the menu national
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park the german organization has been working to help protect the rain forest for decades. this year marks the 50th anniversary of the national park, a good time to see how it's firing the the river changes color. effectively sign, posting the way from the might to moderate the deals into the ground. a new trend which waters that the mind of to find time is we reach about quarter where we agree to buy these joint river alters as a young man. biologist christoph shank, spent 3 years living here and researching these red, endangered creatures once driven to near extinction. by poaching, we wouldn't want to see a stock or they used to be hunted for their, for around $1000.00 pounds. traded a year came from her room and then they were put under protection. but only
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a few populations were left in the most remote corners of the rain for us and had water such as here. the fact they survived here as an indicator that it's a completely intact habitat on us here in these river basin. the presence of the giant otter shows that all is still well with the world of additional $1030.00 both species voss arrived in 6. the money landscape is considered one of the most bio, don't those areas in the world. that's why the frankfurt, so the logical society supports it. the rain forest is home to few lodge mammals. even the monkeys are small. the soils in 2 months later, it isn't suitable for agriculture. how to the people who live here get by the beginning, 80 and visit agent is testing that groups are incredibly adapted to the system as their highly specialized diego and their hunter gatherers. so they fish and they
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also have a vast knowledge of where they can find fruits and roots. and what's they know what's out of all and what's not. there also semi nomadic type know model. after a day is gen the upstream. we meet the indigenous people of the match, the gang of tribe, literally to catch the fishes with the simplest of methods. she's $37.00 and the mother of 6. while her husband goes hunting, she catches fish. well, she's a family's clothes and cooks them meals. i'm glad that's mine. i wouldn't know how else to live in the city. no one gives you money to buy food. here, i can catch fish and cultivate yucca. this is all land cut off will come along with locals live in poverty, and the ability to tie a cool man is struggling. it's listed with plastic fall still holding onto many
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centuries old traditions. napoleon is fixing his palms. that truth. the people here haven't been sending the magic for a long time. in the 1950s of to the arrival of a mission reorganization, they became main, the southern trace and the population begun to grow. today some 270 people live here. that's too many kristof shank and his team ahead to find out how bad doing the young people have no work. they complain. he's just one of the problems with germany. provides financial support for ambulance transport, a garden for school, children and teaching materials to the peruvian state finances one meal a day for the children. many of them showed signs of mount nutrition. christopher st doesn't like the look at the packet soup. everything today than most money doesn't have enough calcium in an email.
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as it is a hunter, he imitates the cry of a spider monkey monkey meat is a vital source of protein for the much he ganga. but because they're in a national park, the 2 men can on the hunt with a bow and arrow. now that the indigenous people here a 2nd tree, there were hardly any monkeys left in the area around the village. they've all been hunted by the way, we have to inform the frankfurt to a logical society project when and where we kill anything. when we get home, we'll pass on that information. the conservation is keep a close volume the much he can goes hunting, then the more the population grows, the more animals are hunted and the more rain forest is cleared for agriculture.
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it's an environmental dilemma of the this is nicole, is the household. it's a major challenge, the magnet effect, the move if living conditions improve, which is obviously a good idea. and there's also an obligation to make this happen and then the location becomes more attractive on this bill. and that means more people stay here and somebody even move here from outside when done it. but that exacerbates the problem of your intent when the heart of one of the most important biodiversity areas in the world. and more people always means a reduction in bio diversity. soon to be able to facilitate the inevitable outcome is all to a parent just outside the national park. walker, colorado is a gold mining town. signs that we buy. gold lined the streets, gold, prospecting, as a lucrative industry. the gold fines', the divine ring,
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the rain forest, 18 percent of the amazon rain forest has been played once 20 to 25 percent has lost its ecosystem will be in jeopardy. the rain for his will to cycle will no longer function. then it gets no 5th, just a normal deforestation underway in the amazon continues, then we'll reach this tipping point of ice and of the amazon rain forest will disappear on a large scale and there will be a global impact. and unfortunately, there's probably no place on earth that won't be affected. what's not, what we already know for sure is that we'll see desertification stretching from argentina to the american midwest. the frankfurt zoo illogical society invest some 700000 euros and yet, but its own funds and gym and government funds in the my new national park that it is help subsidize, a boarding school for the much younger children in bulk on my new, on the south eastern edge of the park, the children look cheerful and well fed. education will improve the prospect
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improved and the horizons including raising their away and as of the environment. you say see noble, medium a. so if we didn't get the help from frank foot or whatever have to eat, would be called the hydrates, that we wouldn't have workshops, the buildings wouldn't being properly maintained to look at monthly. the peruvian government doesn't give us a sense for them for, i mean the say don't know l sorted by them and didn't even mean today tends to being pitched in the classroom. mosquito protection, i'm some people got to take a shower of a spaghetti made by the expedition shift. the group discusses further ways to help the national park. and the people who live in is it's early in the morning on the last day. the every stick with humidity which will turn into rain
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later. the frankfurt to a logical society would like to see funding for the my new national park secured for good. with the help of the german government, the world simply cannot afford to lose this unique ecosystem. the runny nose is still a popular target for coaches in the 1st 6 months of this year, 231 were killed in south africa and. and it's not just really knows. allison buffalo, hippos and ethan drops the russo hunted, because of the huge demand for rhino hol, ivory as well as other bodies thoughts used. for example, in jewelry and metric, tracking down the killers is challenging. this is an old to common site on south africa's reserves. a rhino killed by peaches is cause open to find the object that
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killed it. that's often the 1st clue to help catch the culprits. but this work requires a little of no house and the experts are in short supply. great. simpson is taking on the coaches who have but during the local wildlife, since most of these crimes and never prosecuted. simpson has founded an academy that helps train ranges and all the 1st responders to wildlife crime scenes in criminal forensics. we felt that was a great need and that training ranges and people that are 1st responders or even professionals that come across to nora is way when an animal is punched in and out of a legal activity. and if they have some of the forensic skills, then it means that them, that, that investigation is more likely to end up in a prosecution at court. at this facility, the wild life threatens academy stimulates different wildlife crime scenes based on real world examples. including a snag, jerome, off
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a killed lion and rhino poached. his whole students are trained in forensic techniques in order to preserve and collect vital evidence which can be used by the authorities to move forward with court cases. and that's what we've tried to create in this academy multiple scenarios, really drum and what that meant. and then um, and so when they go back into the real world and much better at tech in wildlife. com, one major challenge when it comes to wildlife crimes is that they generally a cut in remote places, which makes some very difficult to prove south african spa. scrathland offers plentiful, coveted zip coaches who ambush that prey. the issue is, while that comes up from the on to any witnesses, there's no one else around. uh, maybe someone had a gunshot, but that's, that's what do you have. but if you actually can link someone to
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a con through something like a footprint or a cell phone or a weapon or dna, even that is really popular in court ranges also. and the ones who 1st discovered the caucuses of poached animals, their initial response is critical to reduce the risk of evidence being contaminated or destroyed by window rain. those details can make or break a case of chances in court. so i think it should be full hands on the ground, feel changes as well because they often the ones who do come across the scenes before we do see i do think of something valuable for oranges to attend and to ask the applicant and submit as well students at the academy also take pause in mock trials where they have to defend the evidence they collected. the participants in this simulated court proceeding include former prosecutions judges,
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and lower enforcement officials. collecting evidence is only the 1st step, but not alone legal process. in real world cases, ensuring what they've gather can hold up in court is vital missing training which to to 1st responders and those. and did you understand the role will definitely have an impact in fighting while of crime, in the sense that it will lend lead to credible evidence which the prosecution can use in proving the elements of the offense against the public practice. poaching is a $1000000000.00 business in asia, one kito of rhino one sofa, tens of thousands of us dollars. the financial incentives huge. ryan is ellison's red reptiles and even such implants, old pay the price, the consumer trends. the loss of life has profound impacts on the environment. the
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large mega format, like elephants and hippos, they have a really important role to play in an ecosystem. as prompt spaces as large animals, they have an important role in shaping the environments and the habitats around them. they have a role in the disposal, nutrient cycling, and by removing these animals it's can lead to by diversity loss and changes and transformations of whole landscapes. last year, south africa, the last 448 rhinos approaching. but that will also as a $130.00 arrests and a number of convictions including one that resulted in the purchase being sentenced to 60 years in prison. despite in the stringent penalties, wildlife crimes continue training in dealing with them will become increasingly important to ensure that the countries bio diversity is protected. the
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to me this week's label team, we had to venezuela, the hi, i'm a ts, i'm pronto. i live in caracas, venezuela. the me right, my mother is working in a school administration and my father is a lawyer. the c 4 came yes. a i put in because i learned a lot of take go and hang out with my friends. i mean, in my free time, i play trumpet. 2 2
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2 mean, i love classical music music, and my favorite piece is francesca remaining by check of scale that i mean they take all the data. so i would like to be a symphony orchestra conductor, the, when anything well, and this generation, we have more opportunities, a fatal right. in the old days, there was a better quality of life mass going to be, i mean, the, the biggest problems in the world, in my opinion,
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are drugs and violence. the, the, the
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using the ocean as a giant battery. and the deepest rocks on earth as a heat source, exploring new frontiers of clean energy, finding out what works and what doesn't. yet, testing new technologies in germany, looking for breakthroughs, made in germany. in the same it is d,
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w. $300000.00 children disappearing without a traits. a dark chapter for the catholic church. child abduction is a policy initiated by dictator franco and carried out by nuns and doctors until the 1996. the victim's face a wall of silence. even today, the 75 minutes on d. w. the x ray seconds a zeta soon to is very sick. so soon as she could time is she must wait months in uncertainty to to
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300 things that will change her mind. find my angry close to this weekend on w. what do you see? it really is possible to reverse age researchers and scientists all over the world or in a race against time. they are peers and rivals with one daring goals to help smart nature. the more likes watching it on youtube. dw documentary, how often flying rivers created? is it by a voice a full crying voice of power as it goes into the b trees spacing goes up to $1000.00 leases a blow. so in
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a day or forest fires evaporating large amounts of moisture to name to get the onset and learn more about the heavy and visible river flows through the sky. start september 20th on dw, the . this is dave dudley news and these are our top stores. more than 2000 people have died and 10000 missing in libya, after catastrophic flash floods swept away in time neighborhoods and wrecked times multiple coastal towns. the city of dana was one of the west affected with a course of the city thought to be one of the 2 dams collapsed. the difficult is expected to rise sharply conjunction that has arrived in russia.

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