Skip to main content

tv   Made in Germany  Deutsche Welle  January 9, 2025 3:30am-4:01am CET

3:30 am
the car is actually also condense stuff. okay, that's the nanda foundation. one back to the find out about robina story in some language. reliable news for migraines? wherever they may be. do you sometimes get mountains of packages that has from stressed out delivery people who only seem to stop at every 2nd address for wes yet of a wasted for a package that never arrives because the driver is stuck in traffic for hours, polluting the environment with exhaust good news, business solution and the so it will require new rules. the last one today showed victim from serbia. a new mine stocks protests. are we running out of
3:31 am
oil? how long the reserves lost? and a miracle material, that's the base desk system. the cell drones have long been seen as the future of delivery services from parcels to food and even medical supplies. let's traffic, fewer emissions delivering even to remote areas. sounds perfect, right? well, not quite. this guys above us are crowded with more and more aircraft. if thousands of drones are added to the mix, how can they all share the same air space, especially in densely populated urban areas? the idea of sharing the sky is simple. the lower aerospace belongs to drones, while higher altitudes are reserved for airplanes, just like roads on the ground,
3:32 am
highways for drones will be a central drone car. doors are currently being tested and developed around the world. britain is working on a pretty big one. a 265 kilometer route connecting several towns and cities. drones can enter the carter at any point the a monitoring system will detect a potential collisions and redirect the unmanned aircraft. it's still a work in progress, but once completed, it promises to be a significant step forward in drill delivery. the system is set to be available for commercial use by early 2025. i think that's one of the best ways we could organize a lot of drones, lying and one aerospace at the same time because we do the same thing with man deviation and most man aircraft. they don't fly wherever they want. they follow
3:33 am
court orders. and ms. scott, the drone corridors are just one piece of the infrastructure puzzle. a major challenge would be integrating drawings victim r. s based system, because that's where the mean of safety aspect comes into place. heavier drones require a remote id, basically a license plate for drones. they can be tracked and assigned to an owner crucial in the case of accidents. for example, the drones are also controlled by a detect and avoid system to prevent collisions after a hopefully safe journey they need somewhere to touch down at the moment. drones are still not allowed anywhere near airports, but in the future landing areas could be added to them. that would also be arrival pads and city centers. but even if you live in this city, you probably won't get your delivery at your doorstep. you still need to go somewhere to pick it up, or if the landing spot is close by,
3:34 am
you might be notified by this tell tale sound to the most people when they think of a drawing based on think of a small di john quad copper and it doesn't make a lot of noise, but if you're doing something for drone package, delivery needs to be a much larger unit. it sounds like homeless long hours running next year has when amazon tested drone delivery and college station texas residents complained about the noise, prompting the mayor to write a letter to the federal aviation administration. amazon insists that the new drones are quieter. let's assume everything works out. drones aren't too loud, flying happily in their drone corridors, monitored by sage systems and kept away from airplanes that solves lots of issues except for one major legal, one in countries such as the us and india. the aerospace above homes belongs to
3:35 am
land owners. we are still in a piece of added that is our decision making to be done as to what might be done to make sure i'd rich or above which the drawings can be up in the us, the idea of a marketplace has been introduced to offer land owners on monetary incentives, they can rent or sell their air space to be used by drones. besides the challenges of integration, the global market for drone services is forecast of growth significantly in the years to come to one country that wants to be part of that is india. with liberalized regulations and incentive scheme, the country wants to become a drone hub. by 2030 we can see it approximately on brandy 13. we might have a basic infrastructure of i received an integration of drawings that mind has been in the with the matter. so when will your piece it'd be delivered by a drone,
3:36 am
not for a while yet. although the technology is advanced, various uncertainties remain regarding regulations, safety, and disruptions to everyday life. and honestly, we'd better take it slow because drones dropping out of the sky could cause serious injuries or material damage. drones could revolutionize delivery services that whether they will actually deliver to your doorstep isn't clear yet. and who knows whether it's really safe to have countless drones buzzing around in the air. drones need have a full back to ease to fly to. and these usually contain lithium, but known lithium supplies unlimited. china has had the monopoly of most of the world's reserves fee is to decrease reliance on china the and will soon also be mind in europe to but what price in serbia residents via it could home the
3:37 am
environment and costs and then likelihood lod, google kind of which is a 7th generation farm, or he tends to is to, doesn't cows every day. and loves village live here in going, you know, needs, uh, i love you must sit for the cattle farmer. and every year we sell about a $100000.00 leaders of milk. my family, my 5 children, we live from that and we don't plan to change anything on the middle. the medium was way navigate you stories that are these. just like many other farmers on the western edge of serbia. but a global mining giant does have plans for the yadda valley due to its large deposits of lithium, a key component and electric vehicle batteries. rio tend to has bought up land and farms across the valley. the plans to mine 58000 tons of the metal annually, enough to supply batteries for over a 1000000 vehicles. where aware of savvy is rich resources and the enormous
3:38 am
potential with confirmed reserves of 158000000 tons of lithium bar. it's on all of it and it has to be. the government insists mining operations will meet the use strict environmental standards. while serbia isn't a member, it's seeking to join the block. so most of the only state institutions can control this industry. the investor will say, i'll give you the documentation, that's the basis of luck and also and then up to the government of the republic of serbia to monitor the public is to be adopted. a 2nd tool, many in the opposition don't believe these words member of parliament alexander giovanna. vege takes part in mass protests against olivia mine to godaddy. every way we are to into has been around the world is left behind devastation and misery . and that's wake, including civil wars and the destruction of nature and cultural monuments. here the
3:39 am
quite a name of his skepticism is shared. this expert has seen studies on the potential environmental impact more after that. most problem you have to chat with us about the just talking the or his mind with the help of intensive subterranean explosions . and the lithium processing will involve 1100 tons of concentrated. so if your gas in daily, it will lead behind a mountain of ways that will pollute the environment for century also be met quite to basically my that's what he is a guide you is you what the civilian. okay. 3. 01030 says it's willing to talk. it's invested 600000000 euro so far with plans for a further 2000000000. the company claims the mining will be done using precise planning and environmentally friendly methods and create thousands of new jobs. while i want to assure everybody this project is 100 percent size, it's been designed to the high standards in the world, and we will not be a big hole in the grand. in contrast, we're in, i'm the grandma on agriculture co exist on the surface with them on together. and
3:40 am
in terms of what we would not impact any agriculture, water, any drinking water, we would not be poisoning any water sources. but it's not cool kind of edge and his neighbors don't trust any of the parties involved. the corporation, the government, the courts, or the state controlled media. style is always this fear about whether the mine is coming or not. the dollar late should be the not, of course i'm against the mind. it's not good for us. there's always an exception to be in the does it when nobody lives will be left with no will test, then moved, and the yadda valley is tons. this farmer is determined to keep his land and his livelihood. not only so the nichol you mustn't take up these graves and i am prepared to sacrifice my life to prevent that that's boise. what zillow's name is that the one that sits on at this compromise on the list of mine is a long way off base trust and started
3:41 am
b as institutions and rewards. vento is to grade so the government has announced that it will approve the mine in 2 years at the earliest the future may be electric, but there's still a long road ahead. e v have yet to become widespread, and most of our economy is still based on fossil fuels. so will be reliance on oil for a while to come. so based on various studies, as we use, should we have run out of oil long ago. let's check it out. in 1956, a g, a scientist for a show and professor at stanford projected the global oil production with peak around the year 2000. this came as a huge shock at a time. one well was driving more and more of the economy. some people thought it would meet a global financial crisis and others a full on apocalypse. since then,
3:42 am
predictions about peak oil have popped up again and again. supply problems were supposed to start in 2011 for the effects noticeable by 2015. there was talk of high prices for food and fuel, supposed to impact agriculture and electricity. but none of this ever happened. the supply problems that everyone freaked out about never came. so what did happen and try to be worried about running out of oil 1st, looking at this question now is completely different from decades ago because there have been huge changes in our lives, in the early 2, thousands, 2 weren't really thinking about life, that fossil fuel electric vehicles for nearly unheard of, to an end of our oil supplies seems like i just central crisis for the planet. the going awareness of climate change, renewables of taken off, and the amount of them in the mix is gross. usually it's not cheaper to generate electricity from solar and wind then from the cost of or there's also a way more attention on electric vehicles. 14 percent of new vehicles sold globally
3:43 am
and 2022 or electric compared to just 5 percent and 2020. even the united states and china to huge polluters are making, has the investments into green technology. and something pretty special happened in 2023. when we're looking at renewables, investment, which clearly is been growing rapidly in trends, trends to connect the dots from top to field in 2023. far see to maybe not stock doctors or any set, dividing one that much would move without fossil fuels. and oil, in particular, the future of renewables is looking brighter and brighter. and that is mean the end of oil take on a whole new meaning. you go up to say about 15 to 20 years back there was a concern that bio supply is going to be we want to run out of all of that. now the concern is somewhere there from the ridges that we're going to hit the p card or applied towards the demand. this is a really huge shift. in october 2023, the international energy agency published a report predicting the end as well, and other fossil fuels. only this time, the end of the peak and demands not supply. and it's predicted to come in 2035
3:44 am
demand and low supply means a high price, low demand and high supply means a low priced oil executives around the world were up in arms over the report because less demand, but the same amount of supply to mean following prizes for fossil fuels and less profit for the industry. this is a big deal since demand for oil, it's been growing every year except 2021 covet hit. this wouldn't mean that we wouldn't use fossil fuels anymore for that it would become much harder to justify new fossil fuel projects. because our supply of fossil fuels is doing great. the oil. and i'm probably not going to the base of the kind of the reserves we have about 40 years old. i am. and that doesn't even count on the new plan projects. this is mostly thanks to newest technology called hydraulic fracturing. or fracking tracking is a process that involves injecting a slushy of water and chemicals into rock, getting tons of tiny cracks. this allows oil and gas to escape and be collected at the surface. the waste water has been often injected deep under ground,
3:45 am
which can contaminate the local environment and cause earthquakes. fracking took off in the united states in the early 2, thousands and the country now produces more oil per year than any other nation in the world. so much, but it's affecting other countries to solve the area or you or your corvettes. and i'm actually right now because of so much over supply the market. they're producing lot less than what they can produce on the one handy might have an over supply of oil and on the other plateauing demand. also, investors turning away from fossil fuels. the oil companies are used to expanding and major oil producers like show exxon until towel. energies are also bedding on rising demand. data suggested that to companies, i think that means the p were increasing. that will production, total energy stated it was it was full costs to spend 25 percent of its carfax to 2022 and renewables in that tricity. but when you look at what that includes,
3:46 am
it also includes some kind of gas fired power. they may seem like they're shifting towards the renewables put, they're actually still banking on a fossil fuel future. the business operations on changing particularly, or the pace made it set well says it will be against policies that would polls that change or bringing about quicker. but at the same time promoting this very public narrative that they are doing well, they can state on the oil companies like russian ross, enough and saudi around color, also betting on future money from fossil fuels. even though projects approved now may never be profitable. new sites take years to build up infrastructure and to get ready for drilling and financial times they might be come stranded assets, something that was invested in that became obsolete for some countries to 40 percent of intox, fiscal budget could be at risk as the foundation of folds quite an old price is full. that's gonna have a massive impact on the economies. these countries increased on livingston to today's, in these countries. and that impact could also have individual citizens directly. many pension funds around the world are invested in oil and gas. these companies
3:47 am
fail spectacularly. millions of people could be plunged into financial insecurity in their old age. so faced with the end of oil, it seems like investing and renewables at the smart financial decisions. they're cheaper and there's less risk of new projects becoming stranded and unprofitable in the future. all of that is longer time for more as much, there's not going to be overnight because according to all predictions, we're going to continue to meet fossil fuels for a while. they're used as a backup power when wind and solar are running and widespread. nuclear isn't likely to come on line and time transport and energy storage also need to improve for us to be able to equip them entirely. but the more investment goes in, some more renewables improve, and we desperately need that to keep existing on this planet. it's critical for all future that we keep making breaks. what you say menu able energies want quantity or the potential for mass adoption is important. qualities
3:48 am
to, for instance, finding ways to get more energy, saving yourselves the before and using materials expection doesn't calm the environment is like perhaps the skype, for example, watching this tiny solar cell might be about the revolution. i solar energy as we know it, it's way more efficient than you'll spend that silicon solar cell. it can be easily synthesized and doesn't need to be mind like silica, as it can work on to in film. so you probably as not how speak up, but it also it can go on your roof, say hi to this crystal structure. colds. paradox caught it, promises improvements to solar cells that are almost too good to be true. to understand why they are so superior to your standard silicon cell. i went here the helm holds institute invalid. they've been researching corrupt cards as a sign of solving material for more than a decade. hey, how are you today?
3:49 am
i'm good. nice to meet the $32.00 and this is the guy in charge of the research, steve i. but he even said world right codes for the most efficient paradox guide solar cells. so on the very basic level, what does perhaps cut look like the temper off guard is a very generic term for a specific crystal structure, right? you can see that here over there. so the cost of the structure has the x $3.00 formula. and like each component is the sort and i, the element for molecule. one of the most common combinations in the structure is methyl ammonium as the a on the corners, the metal left for be in the center and chloride or iodide as the x which form around the metal. but there is a vast range of materials that can be used and combined, and it's quite wild how easily these can be put together. so this is 11 volume. and before we do that, security 1st as we're going to work with toxic less with one of steve i,
3:50 am
when i call these go look a bit like events and the red okay. times who gets in our base materials? matthew makes is methyl ammonium chloride. and let's iodide so latex 8, i want abs, free crystal structure. so what is now the advantage of these materials compared to silicon? so, i believe that one of the main advantages of prostate or silicon as material is the ease of processing. so silicon is something that is relatively energy intensive to fabricate, but this is something that can be done at post to room temperature. so it doesn't require much energy. so it's easy to do. everything is relatively abundant. and so, um it, it's, it shouldn't be a bottleneck for production. now that we have the space materials we need to produce, i'm solving corrupt. got out of it. matthew does lose by using
3:51 am
a technique called spin coating, but perhaps kind of sort of sales can also be directly printed on to surfaces using similar processes to those needed for printing. newspapers. spin coaching however can be tedious. matthew accidentally dropped the glass, not a big problem in the lab environment, but for commercial production, this is not viable. matthew gives it a 2nd try. and this time everything works. after this been coaching, it goes onto a heating plate. and the darkening shows us that the crystals are being formed. it works the same way as when salt water evaporates and you start to see salt. there are sales like this one here, which i only made out of for rough guy, but in many cases there's a silicon layout beneath. so the sales i called 10 themselves and looked like this . right now they have the most promising candidates when it comes to increasing the
3:52 am
efficiency of solar cells. but at some point, it might be also possible to abandon the silicon completely to test that 10 themselves efficiency. the research, as at how holds institute use this on simulator. it determines exactly how much sunlight is converted into electricity or what kind of efficiency that we just measure. so when we measure that almost 30 percent, it's a quite nice achievement. why don't they tend them solar cell reach that much more efficiency than single junction? so it's on them. so lot samples may much more use of the incoming lights, so we have a long so long spectrum there's a lot. so they shanell this spectrum kind of the parents guide so on. so in this case, makes use of the visible wavelength. so everything which we can see by i, it's been converted into pay arrows got installed on sale into electrical energy. where is the infrared light passa, through the parasite sale, and he's been converted into silicon sol, us,
3:53 am
which is quite deficient you converting infrared light. so the share of the spectrum in each cell is very efficient in the region. that doesn't sound like that much, but i could tells me that this way, roughly 50 percent more sunlight can be converted into electrical energy. so more overall sunlight can be solved by just con, by any of these tendons. so yeah, because before they go into serious normal stuff that needs to be fixed. a major issue is the stability of the pearl scott structures using 10 themselves or cells. pearls. cod structures easily put together at low temperatures as we saw earlier, but they also come apart easily. even the charges that travel through the perhaps cutting the solar so it can create defects and destroy the power of god. structures . also, external factors like moisture, heat, oxygen, n, u, v light can break it down further and quickly decrease its records breaking efficiency. this whole process is called degradation,
3:54 am
which researches and companies are trying to fight with different forms of encapsulation. it's fields of the solar modules from external influences and is an essential step for commercialization. the queue sales, which is part of a european academia and industry partnership plans to develop commercial sized manuals with an efficiency of 26 percent over a lifetime of so 2 years box for tv. a company founded by oxford university graduates, has rates and efficiency of 28.6 percent and supposedly solve the degradation issue . already bought me. the company has published verifiable data yet, nor is there a lot of published research on we'll will, outdoor test. i. these are a lot of so unless you test yeah. wow. this is catalina. oh, she oversees the degradation tests of 10 them. so the sales at the helm holds institute. and what kind of the abilities are we currently looking at here?
3:55 am
sometimes to fail after a few days. so, but sometimes the last 4 years literally measured the loss of 20 percent and efficiency. and just half a year, it takes silicon solar cells roughly 20 years to reach that level of degradation. some companies say they've already fix this issue and ready to go to market next. yeah. do you believe that's possible? because sometimes here we must also have conferences, but they normally don't show the data. it's all very secret or 10 them solar cells would also need to price match existing sales at taskbar. experts view as difficult to achieve as costs for electricity from solar have declined by 8 to 9 percent since 2010. it's no more expensive to install so they can sell a penalty then to produce them. so i've found themselves have a great potential, but there's still a lot of things that need to fall into place for them to work. and i'm really,
3:56 am
really curious if they're actually going to be on the market next year or ready for another edition of mays, where we're playing high and freshly energized. let's do away with the old head into a sonia right. each. see you next time. the
3:57 am
way half way, that's a story is almost there for a moment. be like almost on this, on the on many got the almost done police police 14 mostly part of the best. they've got 3 equal payments or the gainesville support, basically, you know, they'll vote for a little that the little in a few items come on as far as the ceiling. come with the effect of being in 30 minutes on the w kitchen. influenced our emotions, our perceptions,
3:58 am
behavior and other bodily functions. the better question might be, what does it influence the baggage? and that's fine to me. my buddy, my got the under appreciated control center with move in 100 me enough selves located in it's lining, impacting our bodies was and we know in 75 minutes on d, w. the one of the main kinds, oldest ambitions to be within reach. what is it really is possible to reverse the researchers and scientists all over the world for a no race against time?
3:59 am
they are peers and arrival with one daring goals to help smart nature. the more likes watching it on youtube. dw documentary disruption is the goal. chaos is the goal. it's a wrecking crew. radically. they want to bring the system down. stream rice comes so the donald trump will be the next president of the united states. recognize in some ways, the divisions, the american society division works for him. he wants to increase polarization, have to wait for trump's rise to power. these were the foot soldiers of mazda
4:00 am
the success for the rest of the world. usa, the volumes of the altar rise starts january 18th on dw, the . this the dw news live from berlin, firefighters and los angeles, say they cannot contain multiple wildfires. tens of thousands have an order to flee different neighborhoods across the la area as hundreds of homes are and go find the flames. the . i'm here until berlin. welcome to the program firefighters and los angeles are unable to contain wildfires. region.

0 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on