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tv   Made in Germany  Deutsche Welle  January 12, 2024 4:30am-5:01am CET

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additions could actually be another frontier that this american company confidently and strides into the c w. this award winning offer is available to them and it has never been since the germans out to be to q marketing can get people works up. that means that when some people see or ice cream, they throw it in the trash. others buy a whole truck load. more and more companies are scrapping l g, b, t, q, ad campaigns because of right wing trolling. so they stand firm instead that and more coming up this week on made why exactly is us real good kid rock shooting big hands
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a bud light. if it has a bush, have a terrific day. well, it's because the brand team don't put a well noun, transact, based in into, into the ad for the beer and instagram head and raged on conservatives. and the label ends at the partnership officer, the backlash. and it's not an isolated case. samsung caved in to protest against this ad and cancel that the impressive dry all companies having such a hard time getting behind l g b t q representation in the advertising. and does that all vs? i'm privileged damage. that image and sales service plan is one of germany's largest advertising agencies. it's run campaigns featuring people from the l g d c to community, including for gym and via brand vash,
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dyna. in some ways they might be the times that are brand could lease customers in order to win other customers. so to, to break into the queer community more or to, to, to align more of the career community and the, and therefore get a lot of a positive response from a large part of their target audience pretends it is for example. and in a way that kind of have to, in some cases, sacrifice, you know, the more conservative people to be to make more liberal advertising. that's unfortunately the trade off. one of the ad agencies, recent projects, is an a i tool that transforms childhood photographs of trans people to ads to be well received by minority groups. they need to be credible an outreach, sustained as a by i, by the national,
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already within gauge with, with the community to confide, always say you should never what tools? short term goal was nikolai. it's about long term commitment image which can lead to an image based and great to brand loyalty from communities in the media along 10, which i just have hired. so i can definitely help, goodness and trust in brands is very important. and many consumer groups are increasingly paying attention to this and i wouldn't recommend a short term approach because then you run the risk of disappointing these communities because nobody wants to be instrumental iced that. so not cues ation that's being leveled against mercedes benz. the brand has allied itself with the l g b t q, community on instagram, but only for a limited period of time. and also in its account targeting our markets. and he says, support for the community support for the community has to be genuine and sustained . and it's not enough to show up a christopher street day when the flight on all it's about when it's rising. supposing us to gain hatred,
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i know so politically and kind of that's what matters to us in the current climate . and many companies have a lot of catching up today if you feel no, not really big enough, but not well the same as ice cream brands and, and jerry's it has a long history of supporting the l g, b, t q, community. the us company has a dedicated team of 8 in europe, a loan that promotes diversity and equal rights desperate electric those months. and that means that when some people see or ice cream, they throw it in the trash. while others buy a whole truck load and amanda lock in the end is just what's important is that we feel the debate. one is and still survive divisive of play on can you to that's what matters and dealt with. most of the, however, the brand is owned by a global conglomerate. you need eva whose other brands are a lot less supportive or somebody else's team. i think brands today that do embrace friction. we've seen brands like nike to let's mastercard,
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they've been bold and they've gone up against criticism, but they've stood for something missing the end of actually won a great deal of brand loyalty from the next generation. so in fact, having the courage of conviction and braving any resulting backlash is ultimately good for business. also in this week, show life saving drones in africa. a unique source of phosphorus, india thrive in economy, and x x o, a greenhouse brakes limits. and many parts of rural africa, roads can be few and far between and where they exist, difficult past. so what happens in emergencies like delivering urgent medical supplies to hospitals? one us start up think 6 found the answer
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for cleaning one. during the day i started having pain in my abdomen, supplementing of was 1st, the 1st the sort i was just high and from what of a model number i'm from when the pain in my belly got was you? i went to the community health center, a good idea of what they brought me to bed right away and helps me do this. as you know, for the adult set. my baby had died and the reason for the weekend occupying a lives in a village and or wander southern province, she lost a lot of blood during her miscarriage and urgently needed a transfusion. but the hospital didn't have any, don't her blood fucked up close without hopeless. and i thought i would die
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too. i said don't to what you said blood will arrive soon. single. now i didn't know could come so quickly. did you ask someone to bring it to see? the doctor told me that a small, plain quoted drone would deliver it. oh, we're so happy when it finally arrives. the life saving donation came for level hunger drone airport. it's where zip line is based, a startup that varies vital blood products, baby, food and medication buy air, the hospitals up to 80 kilometers away. the team can load and launch a drone in as little as 3 minutes. so physically wants to package is prepared, use gun, the q r code,
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you tell it where it's going to go into associated this package to a john. now the drum tax on that. and then from the moment to launch for the moment just comes back. so you don't have to do anything. there is any one of the things that to notice is one definitively one west. it's because blood is a product. any unit that's listed is a lot to is on time. if you to take it means for 45 minutes to get to the product, the time to go and come back. that's usually 19 minutes on the road to get that product. we can at least tough and that quote, time zip line manufacturers, the easy to assemble autonomous aircraft in the united states. the rest of the operation from assembly to launching and recovering the drones is handled by a 140 employees in lawanda. an average of 72 blood deliveries are launched every day. the 1st drone took the disguise here 7 years ago. today,
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the company which works closely with one does ministry of health supplies more than 400 hospitals. zip line doesn't divulge, but it charges per flight. but still worth while, not least because during blood products is expensive, the order based service means that little goes to waste hospitals in rural regions benefit the most. like here in romero coma. in the past, blood and medical supplies had to be delivered by road. which meant the time could run out in an emergency before it was really hard to quote you quote, comment that i knew wait for, i was white and my dice bleeding. so this reply, the things that has really improved our system on test help to fish out seeing if there was a couple ways marketed to keep on. i was able to leave the hospital and go home just a few days after her blood transfusion. the things i read it
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contains, i'm feeling better. i go to the health than to regulate for wound treatment on taking the wound and change the bandage is slowly healing. her friends now call her the one who has risen. because without the drone delivery, america to the ocoee, mama would probably not have survived her miscarriage. the is, this is this line company is also working on other transportation concepts. packages could soon literally be landing on your doorstep . this drone can transport packages weighing up to 3.5 kilos within a radius of 16 kilometers. the drone is currently being tested and is due to be deployed in early 2024. for more information, check out our facebook page, the, the docs business.
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when it comes to keeping food on our plate, phosphorus is essential. it's a key ingredient and agricultural fertilizers, but they are also limited supplies of it, and prices have tripled in 10 years. here's one unique way to produce that using every day waste. what's on our bones, dna and steve, the phosphorus. it's an essential element that sustains all life on earth. it's also in your p more on that later. but the vast majority of it goes into making fertilizer. why? because without it, we wouldn't be able to grow no food. the problem is that there's a finite amount and roughly 70 percent of it comes from just one place. the bigger problem is that we're wasting most of what's already there. every individual is just throwing away it left for bread every day. for countries like india, which is 90 percent, depending on imports, dwindling access could be alarming. plus fos versus also causing some massive
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allergy issues. but of the world's food security depends on it. what can we do about the potential shortage? put alternatives to we have and cut our own p. save us. thanks to a german scientist boiling hundreds of gallons of urine in 1669. we saw on files for us, the 15th element and the periodic table. fantastic, he was trying to find out how to make anyway. what is phosphorus? all organisms need fast, persistent, essential nutrients by the central composite of life. this is barbara came on. she's a renowned soil scientist based in saskatchewan, canada. it's had if i dna, it's hard, as i saw, was considered us let betts it's part of our, our and i today roughly 80 percent of the world's phosphorus is used for agriculture because it's a structural component of cells. it's a central for cell division implant development. without enough of it,
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plants are stunted and don't yield as much between increasingly using these chemical fertilizers on farms since the post world war 2 period. together with crop engineering, it's bread, the green revolution. this massive increases in crop yields, especially in the global south, and places like india and nice in 16 or less than the production was like the animal. they give me the intense nice the are lovely and they production which the food 315. in the sedation, i thought the atari a as a scientist at the indian institute of swale science a definitely they give this credit to fuck laser application because before it was there was no knowledge about the world. but fertilizer use increased 6 times from 1950 to 2000. so where do we get all of it from? like 950 of costs for this? to apply this, it was do get don't they didn't get some but people to get us to work on body. but maybe 80 percent of that would be best if you didn't inside. that's why the
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industry solution is to just chuck more on the soil, faster suppressed, relatively cheap, adding a bit as good as that marble guarantee profits. this accumulative phosphorus is comm legacy phosphate. how much phosphorus as lost in the soil also depends on the so to acetic, like in white climates, and it will bind to iron and aluminum to alkaline. it will react in calcium. this has consequences. the use of chemical fertilizers increases to run off with nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus into bodies water, at least future if occasion, which kills of oxygen in the water. it also causes massive algo blooms, which can be toxic and producers wondering nothing when they die. contaminated water is lagging through southwest providers. shores san francisco bay area is experiencing a toxic eligible. and it's not just a place from agriculture that's ramping cost versus everywhere in our food or tap water. so if we consume a lot of phosphorus,
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then that means essentially what's coming out is the same. this is john or son, a call. she's a researcher at the swedish university of agricultural sciences and also started a company that turns urine and seizes into fertilizer. one out of 10 people are like that of the amount of nutrients that are in your end as enough to grow as 500 grams of weight. so basically means you're, you're and you can be grow, you can be producing a loaf of bread every day. she and her colleagues designed a system that essentially boils down our excreta and routines as nutrients. how to the urine diverting toilet these toilets can get expensive and it leaves the problem up to the individual. consumer genesis has been approached by building companies interested in installing them. in new houses, a and her company already has a partnership with the sweetest public toilet frontal firms. if the british breed circulate of our year end and we could actually replaced 8 percent of the global
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demand of foster as the solution is starting to gain traction in the west. but the upside is that it's particularly adoptable for places that don't have plumbing since it doesn't need water. unfortunately, household p is just a small fraction of all the nutritious waste on earth. there's also phosphorus and sludge and industrial waste water, not to mention the newer from livestock and dairy farming. one of the most scalable solutions is to figure out how to get all of it out and reuse it right now. so it's cheaper plan to get the water cleaner, get it. we're not looking at it as a extracting way as our sewer and i think here is mine and these are 6. but why not? the industry is still figuring out how to improve existing technology is to make large scale removal economically viable. there's also been advancements in the methods of extracting fos for us from animal maneuver. there's no shortage of technologies. it's just right now, it's still more cost effective to ship box and then it is to try to get it from all
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these other sources. we can also start earlier in the process and how plants absorb more of the phosphorus. recent research has shown that certain types of fund guy induct syria could be used in the future to improve crossfield and so we will help him find j. the. these are actually a group of funds, a bit of like very good, the fox, but a scavenger. you've been sick and it's been that high cm's cabbage plus what else from it? the best time to come out to the scientists are still researching how these microbes could be used for large scale farming. however, transitioning to such organic agriculture takes time and could result in your losses or risk. farmers are hesitant to take with the legislation could help move the market along. the you recently legalize the sale, fos for us recovered from sledges, fertilizer, and is working on laws that will require more fos for us to be removed from waste water, a bulk check at the p revolution. the,
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an economic connection between germany and india that's existed for more than 500 years. in 15 o 5 by tells us king of oaks book travels that go us in the not trip kicked off, be a no german trade relationship. such thing as leads was partially financed by germany's forgot plan, which then exported copper to india. but the trip took several months. telegraphs eventually made a faster connection possible between the 2 continents. the gigantic projects was completed by the beginning in 1870. the new technology could transmit the message in just 28 minutes. and today, the volume of trade between germany and india has grown to 28000000000 euro. more
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than 1700 german companies have a presence in india is nearly every 2nd person in india is under 25. the population is growing rapidly and so is the indian economy. all those people need infrastructure, homes, food and more. german come, baker veto is investing big in india, building its largest pumps ever this country in the next, at least 10 to 20 years. really a major consumption of at the same time, there will be no daughter of preen manpower. so men bought a supply conjunction was pending. the pumps produced here are sent all over the world, including to africa, where they're used for hydro electric power plants. products are also developed here in india, and not just back at the headquarters in germany, the re manufactured in this specific d v. what because of buying pounds,
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we'd have to keep people spinning olympic sized swimming pool in 10 seconds. this plant near the city of pulling out was only opened just recently. it's in a manufacturing hub that is attracted investors from all over the world, including more than $200.00 companies from germany, a stone's throw from here. we brought just not. he's from the german engineering federation that has been supporting german manufacturers in india for more than 20 years. he says when the corona virus pandemic started, and logistics change world wide collapse, the indian government, so an opportunity to get the edge over china. i think the human companies are looking to deal with. i'm looking at the alternatives. i mean, they offered a good opportunity for the german companies looking at sourcing from india, enhancing the manufacturing and india gun, or the days when big international firms looked only to china when expanding
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manufacturing kids village is in asia. the new hub on the continent is india. or b corporations likely to invest less in china after the pandemic? and if so, why this week? i mean, well, there are several reasons. firstly, there is indeed a massive level of one sided reliance that's crept in simply because of the sheer size or the chinese markets. and just come up here and meet a guy who have 1400000000 consumers and mark that is on swapped of it. that's a market that you otherwise only find in india, india, and plus, if you know china works according to different rules and what you're sometimes difficult to navigate free. absolutely. so and then it's just, it's a communism system with a government that works hard to ensure its own company is you are adding advantage of the item of the name and then the full touch that of the suit thing. and that definitely makes life harder for foreign companies. actually it,
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india has plenty to offer, including a lot of tech savvy young people with an above average education in the i t industry 4 point oh, the math digitalization of manufacturing is well underway. this factory belonging to german automation supplier vice is among those offering customized solutions. the 1st breakthrough for our solution factory was securing our 1st engineer to all the projects which was completely customized. i spoke to somebody climbing the best part of this project was the entire solution was designed and developed locally here. and why is india solution factory? of course, in collaboration with a real big product lending. but it's not as if global corporations are suddenly having to choose between china or india back at pump manufacturer. vito executives believe it's important to invest in both countries. you buy one of the and so we're
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building a factory in china to right now. since i use and that tells you a lot, and we're opening a new factory in india in august. it's a decision for that factory was made 3 years ago before many of the current issues cropped up and before a coverage on define the size to montgomery haven't regretted the decision for one second, because we can see that both markets will experience strong growth. but that's gonna stop by the, by the mac to see does. the stock box in india is definitely on its way to becoming the new leader in economic growth in asia. but china is still ahead in many sectors, excuse 50, live blogs and not people from any industry knows that it's still true that china is the largest market worldwide devices on the shouldn't take the chemical industry . for example. you know, the names of the chemical companies are very clear, then they're going to continue investing in china. because for the next 2 to 3 decades in china will account for half the global market for chemical is not something other markets can compete with the ends of america. it's impossible for
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a globally position company to bypass the chinese market home users in black and the foot by german pump manufacture. v no certainly agrees, but still believes that every cent invested in india is worth while many other western companies are following suit and now for something else that's really big in business. from our series x x l and the biggest greenhouse in europe is as large as 80 soccer fields. the company is called m slower and is run by tim cooper's and his family. it's in germany unemployed. it's about 450 people. there are several reasons why it has grown so fast. number one, ecology, employees travel through the building on bikes. thousands of these help pollinate
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the plants. work or insects like lady box effects, reducing the need for pesticides. number 2, automation robots can plant more than 15000 cuttings in our plants are cronin trays that can be delivered directly to supermarkets. automated trains transport the products the 3rd reason resources, roof solar panels provide electricity, 100 megawatts enough for a small city would waste is used for heat in the winter, cheaper than gas and better for the environment. the plain water is collected here and mixed with the fertilizer. watering is controlled by it. saving money and resources contributes to
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the company's growth. the thoughtful for this addition i've made in germany. thanks for joining us. i'm see your next time the, the, the,
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it shouldn't be this warm here. it's like summer conditions in the middle of april . hard not to feel that something really is happening here. what is happening is degrees and size. a team of china research has a store and on task for put in place the into the ice in 15 minutes on the w 9. but you will tell here we are happy that we are boxing the story.
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we have a getting a visa is more difficult than finding gold hosted to use the sales force and for the future in the stories and issues that are being discussed across the country. news africa. in 90 minutes on the w, the, the trash fashion as an environmental nightmare. a closing graveyard image of land desert. this is where things wealthy industrial nations no longer need, and the lightest textile waste gets stranded here.
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all about the final stuff in a global fashion industry. fast fashion. watch now on youtube. a fateful encounter in the late 19 seventy's former concentration comes in my general, most meisner meant the man who had to maintain him to stop bogged, known as the beast of sylvie, bore shame on you. tell the truth to use nature. wagner was dead, and investigation concluded that it was suicide. of the fire. give rise to down really how to go. the dogs january 27th on the
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you're watching ended up giving you a platform bed in the us and britain launch strikes on the targets in yemen. with the tv show of explosions of the capitalist. so now president biden says he or so far as the strikes and response of what he attacks on ships into the sea. also coming up israel and the set to defend itself and quote, against accusations of genocide, south africa brought the kids the folder you installed on it says in status compared to genocide against cause us about us to new incentive, florida against her mom. also coming up pulling info, electrical prices, tens of thousands trotty to denounce the new governments reform agenda. as the
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president says, he followed into ex cabinet.

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