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tv   Made in Germany  Deutsche Welle  March 27, 2024 11:30pm-12:01am CET

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so much trouble to fix the wheels. culture identity meant, let's say together talks about community life on the service. the research is now on the top. the industrial nations have always had an abundance of food and the waste with thousands of tons thrown away every day. hardly a sustainable system. climate change buttons harvests worldwide, but especially in countries already suffering acute shortages and with solutions desperately needed. can high tech help out? the purpose of this addition of made the, the use business magazine, the also coming up in the show or city source mushrooms, the future of farming an app that can help to diagnose plants,
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diseases and increase harvest. plus, could we soon be facing a world without coffee? a room stacked with erie looking objects shrouded and fog. but what looks like some alien clothing facility in a science fiction movie is actually a mushroom farm in berlin. the varieties being grown here are from asia. they range from the same, is she talking to king oysters or the less well known e? i'm up who she talking or lions main mushroom. we try and keep the, the distance from harvesting from growing and harvesting to consumer in and around 20 kilometers. so at our farm berlin, our sour pilot farm, we are producing more than 3 tons of mushrooms, fresh mushrooms, harvested every month. we are selling those to gastronomy to wholesalers,
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to some larger supermarket chains. delivery time to downtown berlin is under one hour, which means the mushrooms are super fresh on arrival at restaurants there. the quality of these mushrooms is, is very good and is also a constant, which is something very, very difficult to actually find especially um, in jimmy that i found these mushrooms would normally be sourced from thousands of kilometers away, apprise delicacy for gore amazed. but poor performers on the environmental front growing food where it's consumed is a concept with a growing appeal for producers eager to save on both space and resources. and for many cities, the nearest farm will be some distance away. to have the quality effectively on our doorstep is something which is rare,
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especially nowadays the food industry is responsible for around a 3rd of global carbon emissions with production and land use change accounting for 24 percent and transportation for a further 6 percent. and then norm is burden on the environment, the you have a lot of extra c o 2 emissions as well as all the materials needed to get them there to store them here and there, the refrigeration, needed, etc. and when you're growing something locally, as we are, you cut out all of those c o 2 emissions. fruits and vegetables have a particularly high carbon footprint. a major factor here is the large number of varieties being transported across long distances. what's more in refrigerated trucks. to us, china, india and russia rank worst in terms of transportation related emissions in the food production industry. the looking at germany, for example,
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in 2021. it imported 63 percent of its vegetable supplies and some 80 percent of its fruit. the vast majority comes from southern europe or overseas meaning length, each journeys by sea or even air. while the wealthiest nations constitute only a small proportion of the global population, they are responsible for almost half of the world's food miles. and therefore for the related emissions to their lot of restaurants in billing now, which do actually try and fix receive fixing the products on something very, very low regard to having delivery times. and also the distance of delivery is it just helps, once again we talking about reducing carbon footprint, tried to be as brief as possible, but it's something that we're working towards here. effectively just trying to get as much as we can from gemini and from the local area. the next step for the
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mushroom farm in the suburbs of berlin is to recruit artificial intelligence. to save energy and minimize product loss. we're developing some a i tools which use imagery in our grow rooms. we can monitor the monitor them on a 24 hour basis and they help us understand the prime time for picking so that we harvest those mushrooms at the perfect time of brightness and maturity. it's estimated that almost 80 percent of all the food produced globally is consumed in cities. so growing crops in urban areas make sense. proven agriculture could cover some 10 percent of the world wide demand for vegetables, except that this would require an enormous amount of land. parents, for example, would need one and a half times its size of farm land in order to become self sufficient. imagine a coffee house where you can't even get a lot take, let alone
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a double espresso. unthinkable but not beyond the realm of the impossible. thanks to climate change, wreaking havoc here to you might soon be having that rendezvous over a cup of i see the coffee, the world 2nd most consumed of average. and so ingrained in our lives that it's made it into paintings and oliver pop culture. i'm gonna get some coffee also coffee. there's a lot of regular sleep. i can dream fast. i always copy what i watch right. are you know that this is, excuse me, a damn fine. couple of. com, but you're wanting habits, you know, might not be guaranteed. climate change is threatening rules like coffee crop, production, drought rising temperatures, and a regular ring far ruining coffee, harvest. some studies say the amount of suitable land for coffee production kitchens i half by 2050. today, people drink over 2000000000 cups of coffee worldwide every day. consumption has almost doubled over the past 3 decades alone. se asia is expected to have nearly
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doubled the global growth rate as westernize in taste and the rising middle class increased demand. and let's not forget china solver expense, open a coffee shop every 9 hours, so we can reach 9000 locations across the country by 2025. which means we need to be growing a lot more coffee. the climate instability is already taking huge tolan production in 2021, a severe frost and brazil's coffee region of minnesota. and i swiped out coffee trees in an area of roughly the size of nutritious coffee, price of search. nearly 13 percent re generation of across and ecosystem will take years. meaning losses will continue. such a regular temperatures also make the plants more vulnerable to pest and disease. for the last 15 years, a rough step at the coffee beef dressed, arrived in, in strong force across the central and south america in central america alone. 1.7000000 people lost work during that period. so there are human consequences to the challenging part of the difficulties that coffee is a relative resending. the plant. it goes through
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a delicate flowering face before the cherries come in and takes 4 years for a single coffee tree to get a 1st harvest or another problem. is that what is a $120.00 research pieces of coffee? we only during 2 of them coffee, our abaca and coffee are kind of 4 otherwise known as for booster. a raw because the higher end stuff that has all those settled flavor nights. we live. as a plant, it needs the temperature between roughly $18.00 to $21.00 degrees celsius, around 30 percent shade cover with plenty of consistent rainfall. it's more sensitive to high heat disease and produces fewer beans. over 60 percent of global production is around. okay. it's sibling robust as a more resilient plan, but tastes not as great and ends up in mostly stuff like in some coffee. and that's it. we're almost entirely reliant on just to varietals. coffee also has a small gene pool and at least 60 percent of world coffee species are at risk of extinction. this makes our current supply extremely vulnerable to copy research is so behind relative to what other commodities,
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as we can do so much with traditional technologies. just taking collin from one place, putting it on another, creating a seed of something new, collecting data at a global scales and it's not rocket science. it's very straightforward. what needs to happen. thankfully, there's some good news. so if the new new bite is coming up and in that of some type did the 3rd spread by like seats. so there is so cute jennings, that's and that's the failure to because it's how smart it's difficult to find a match. and that you see at the starbucks recently announced that it had developed 6 new varieties of coffee seats, including hybrids that resist leave for us to and generate higher yields in a short period of time. this is big news, considering the chain by is about 3 percent of all the worlds coffee from 400000 farmers across 30 countries. a few researchers are also trying to fish these. these out of the wild trophy has done a fella, for example, is making a splash. it's a rare and threatened species from west africa that tolerates much warmer temperatures and actually takes comfortable to arrive, okay. by this fluoride,
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all his commercial potential bringing wild spaces into production can only exist on a new scale and could take decades. the bigger problem is that at least 80 percent of the world's coffee is produced by small so they're farmers. these farmers generally work on a few hector's of land and don't have the resources to buy hybrid, see things which are roughly 40 to a 160 percent more expensive than the traditional variety or output also means more labor and carbon intensive costs like fertilizers, hybrids, use 90 percent more labor and increase the cost of other inputs by almost 50 percent. it's an investment firm is may not have the means take on. that's what you solos to sing for them to talk. but they rustic fights, timing system and not only having puppies, but also threes or other kinds of groups. you know, that will help a safety net which brings us to agra forestry. this is an approach that grows coffee alongside other plants like tree is which can increase nutrients, cycling, bio diversity, carbon storage, and provided micro climate. some can also bring extra income from fruits, timber,
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or firewood. but it's a tricky balance planting other shoes for shade, lower the air temperature and breezes swell moisture which can protect it from weather changes and fluctuating harvests. but human shape can hinder yield. we should work together with the 5 minutes in order to understand what the what, what, what width apartments squared up the scene or do you see where does the contradictions. so why not just have everyone adopt over forestry? well, any change entails risk, which is hard for farmers to justify with just one harvest per year. it also takes extra labor and sometimes extra land to support the harvest of more than one crop. lastly, it's about farmers access to resources. they don't always have access to the thing for the nation that is being produced by by site we need to combine. so did you just turn on ecological? no, no, to evidence that you've ever known that. together with the scientific knowledge, without the support, there's a big disincentive for coffee farmers who option prefer to stick with what they know given how hard it is to adopt and our current conditions,
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the future of coffee could look a little more different than we think. as in your coffee to come from some unexpected places, experts say that countries like china and australia have ramped up coffee being production in recent years and could become bigger players in the future. but for now, our coffee addictions aren't going anywhere anytime soon. and the industry strategy to keep up it's pipeline is technology technology technology. we are really focused on the technology, you know, needs, i would say in the next 5 to 10 years we'll see a flush of new variety. it's a paint brush and a, you know, spreadsheet it's very intense of data analysis, but this takes the cross disciplinary work of scientists, governments and everyone in the supply chain. that is consumers. the best we can do is pay attention to sourcing the coffee supply chain, often locks transparency as it's bad for business. so what we can do is work with smaller suppliers who give more information on the origins and production conditions of their coffee beans. a
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supermarket scene from the future. no coffee, no much rooms. no, nothing farmers world wide are seeing increasingly, meeker harvest a trend that's on stop level or reversible as so often our fate lies in our own hands. does climate change pose a threat to our food supply? know coffee for breakfast, no cocoa for the kids and no bananas for any one of a condo. so main goes coconuts and pope pius all gone to pessimistic. not necessarily the because it could soon become reality. climate change is leading to more crop failures. dictating what we can buy in stores and how much it costs. a lot of products are only grown in specific regions due to the right climate conditions. and these areas,
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too are increasingly subject to drought hurricanes in floods, leaving farm land and usable and harvests. devastated. mano cultures where the same crops have grown year in year out are particularly vulnerable to weather extremes, disease and insect pests and climate changes. commercial impact is already being felt a bacterial disease, so orange juice become scarce and expensive. spins olive oil harvest has been slashed by half in recent years with a similar fate, potentially a waiting global coffee production like 2050. while the world currently has enough food shortages and to market uncertainty are pushing up prices everywhere. one answer could be growing new varieties of crops that are more we, so you to heat storms and flooding. the same applies to crops produced in organic
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farming systems. and then there's a remedy that is actually thanks to climate change with whole new areas being turned into arable land. don't be surprised to see your mailing is coming from germany. brake lines switched from iceland or other condos imported from the border and food via an app as easy as pie. and now you can even coordinate cross harvest's remotely via smartphone. a german company has created an app for identifying m, treating crops disease as a tool that's especially vital and those parts of the world where farmers struggle to secure and do some deals in india, for example, the technology has the potential to give harvest a much needed boost if applied and the field looks unhealthy, these farms pull out the phones, take
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a picture and find out right away whether the plant is diseased. the app i don't know is, is the photo and is needed, provides help with the treatment plan, fix it look like it's just like a crop doctor. i it plays the same role in my life as my personal doctor does. for all your identified scrub diseases suggests treatment and prescribed medicine and treatment options. when the medicine billy sleep on taking a smart phone into the field alongside her and shovel has become part of everyday life. the indian farm is the potential of digital tools in agriculture in india is huge. almost half of the population works in the agricultural sector. it's very difficult for people to correctly identify disease within a kid. i can do this within seconds, directly in the fields, but how exactly does it work? that quote f you will not be including the using the app is very easy then 1st open
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plastics on your android phone. next, you have to take a picture. we are taking picture up particularly after snap in the photo. it needs to be uploaded to the app 1st identifies the crap football load i a valid competence and all that this data is then processed in germany by planting, which is part of the home pharmaceutical company. the found just started out as students at the university of honda is a experimenting with tomatoes. this would then be central a service analyzed by the bureau network as we, as it does is called. so it's basically a model that 6 a did unique finger print off a certain disease or past and would then return the results circle drawn. doctors help the image data base to categorize pictures that it doesn't know. this is how the a lunch so that it can lights and make recommendations. symptoms by entering news,
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just the symptoms to diagnose the disease. there's a yellowing of the main starting at the margins. the am says that there is no disease, but the potassium deficiency around a 1000000 farm is already used to apply and takes up almost exclusively in india. the apps image database contains 35000000 pictures of different client diseases ensuring an accurate diagnosis. you know, 700 different crap problems on 30 different crops, potentially not because it's just too much to know. and it's also some kind of diagnostic that's tough for human to do. if a disease is detected, the app recommends the relevant tests assigned to uses and shows where it can be patches. but local retailers don't always have all the products in store which can lead to farm is buying the wrong items or even fakes. these types of consequences, we estimate that roughly half of our product sold india,
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and probably also in other countries in the world are not suited to treat to profit . we try to make 1st of all the prescription, correct, and secondly, have farmers to buy products that are from where the kids organizations where we know that they're, that these are really good. how's the products farmers report best to harvest since using context foundation. there was a fast reluctant to trust a guy which is nicely, hey, just to the bottom as i can. if i go, but i didn't trust the app in the earlier months. but later when i started taking pictures of the diseased crops with the ab smart features of suggesting the right treatment to make me feel more confident, welcome. let's go for the, for the one of them. what today is mid? this is going say, vantage is by far more accurate? will it be always right? no. there is no absolute 100 percent correct advice and all the cases every time at
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$45.00 for none of the systems in the world. and how do you en, money with such an app? there are 2 different versions. one for farm is and one for retailers who can buy, specializes the helps if the apps for farmers generate data on what and when demand for a product increases. small scale farm is in india have enough internet fund with 5 that's smartphones even in lower areas, which is the only way they can use apps like contracts. it's an opportunity to prevent corrupt failures and show a stable income for jo, be much less than a if we use the latest agra technologies and apps like planting, we will get better, healthier crops. this is gay, which is the farming business can generate good income. if the data is used properly and soil health is maintain that software, that was most of the hey, i would replace farm is know how and experience any time soon. instead,
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artificial intelligence is a supplement that makes working in the fields just a little bit easier. the sometimes it seems we do every thing in our power to harm nature and the climate. although some people are now taking action to at least limit the effects of climate change. in addition to farm land longer drought periods are also affecting forest, leaving them in greater exposure to fires and ravenous insects. specialists and berlin are deploying customized drones to aid reforestation of fire scarred by devastating wild fires. now drone is being deployed as part of a plan to fill the gap over an area the size of several football fields. it's scattering special seed pellets from which saplings will sprout to replenish the
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tree population. germany is covered in pine forests. the tree is an important construction materials, but is extremely vulnerable to forest fires and pests, which is white. drones belonging to a berlin company had been brought in to replenish the forested areas. bus one of the lots of areas where nothing would happen without the drones eating. gonzales. a skilled labor shortage on other factors and making it possible to keep pace. i'm on if i kept them longer. but things missed into outcomes. syndrome features a large container with a hatch that opens up mid air to release the seat pellets gets filled with a mixture of 3 seats. custom composed for the forest floor. 12 kilos of seeds are enough for a round one. hector. it takes just 20 minutes for the drone to disperse its load proceeds have no smell or chased,
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which prevents nails and mice from eating them at around $4000.00 heroes per hector . we far as the with drones costs roughly half as much as planting trees by hand. * the tree seeds grow right on the forest floor. the only around 10 percent of them actually terminate. the planting trees by hand is the most common reforestation method. but it's labor intensive and time consuming. most of the seedlings come from tree nurseries and out in nature usually proved to be less resilient than those grounds here from seen. forests are an important factor for many economies. word is used as a building material, as well as in the production of paper and packaging. in germany, more than a 1000000 people are employed in the forestry and timber sectors. in 2022,
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the german wood products industry posted a turnover of around 45000000000 euros. but it could take decades until the forest, seated from the sky, produces dividends and defense too long with reforestation efforts lacking far behind. and this is not to do so, we'll just advise that what happens is that the owner doesn't have any money coming in from the forest for the 1st 10 or 20 on the years. so you got because the trees are still very young. and so i hope that young's and they have to wait until the 3040 or 50 is old before they can harvest industrial, tim, the from that i can see. all right, so what are the options given the slow pace of growth and toners once it goes even beyond us, we have a cycle of around 7 years young and which i already have is commercially harvested ones to add to what we no longer do is clear coaching clear, we can tie areas and really far as being done with all to cause. a drone with a camera on board is sent to fly over the terrain and gather soil data. the
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resulting information is processed. beckett, sky seats, office in berlin, and then a computer is used to work out the most effective routes for this seating drone. in effect making, you'd send me your autonomy as a software program, stores the soil data for the respective client enabling sky seat to monitor forest groups. we would continuously go to this type mainly during the summer to see the development there. and we always need that information to call back on like what exactly we see that they're in what quantities in the drone workshop, 13 tinker away on new drone devices for dropping the seeds a few months after they've been so the 1st the trees start to grow with any luck, 30 years from now, they'll be tall and sturdy specimens like these from
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urban mushrooms to the very future of copy as a app and drones helping farmers on made, we're always looking out for innovative and enterprising ideas. so your next week, the
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or the v is from is involved as a skid of pollution in gina and to be able to get own fields and pro russian transmit street in the separatist authorities that won't allow them to what that own feels the impact has been catastrophic focused on europe in the 1st few minutes on d w. and to come fix loans with tim sebastian. here at the munich
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security conference i sent to you in security. i'm confident providing the politicians. alexa, so how's the world reached it's dangerous inflection point. my guess is we have the 2nd live experience of the highest levels in the us 90 below 0 who's coming in 90 minutes on dw the she's got issues with a lot say what crazy the
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old co tires have to do with the production. she has a and so the real media watch now on youtube. this is shadows of joe. these costs and video shed lights on the dog is devastating colonial horrors infected by germany across up and he employed a score, tactic, farms and destroy lives. what is the legacy of this wide spread race as depression today? history. we need to talk about here the stories, shadows of german colonialism. the
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this is vito news live from berlin. divers have recovered the bodies of 2 workers missing after the baltimore bridge collapse in the united states. officials say the remains of 2 missing men were recovered from a vehicle on the river floor. another 4 man remained missing. also coming up is ready, prime minister benjamin netanyahu, consul tolts in washington, when the us decided not to veto a un quote for a cease fire in gaza. are those tools, you know, back on and thailand moves a step closer.

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