المدة الزمنية 42:26

Superfoods and the environment - Avocados and blueberries from South America | DW Documentary

بواسطة DW Documentary
860 504 مشاهدة
0
5.5 K
تم نشره في 2023/02/03

Superfood fruits - good for us, but bad for the environment? Growing avocados and blueberries requires a lot of water; and because they’re usually transported to Germany from other continents, that also leaves a large carbon footprint. Avocados and blueberries are marketed as superfoods in Europe. Nutrient-rich fruits bursting with health benefits. But in Chile, avocado farming is already causing massive water shortages; blueberry farms in Peru are currently undergoing huge expansion. The journalist Matthias Ebert went to Peru and Chile to research the environmental and human cost of the superfood industry. Smallholders in the Chilean province of Petorca have been growing avocados for many years. But a sharp increase in demand for the fruit in Europe and the US in the 1990s triggered a production surge. Since then, the avocado market has been dominated by big landowners - and is consuming huge volumes of water. One kilo, or three avocados, requires 1,000 liters of water, many times more than what’s needed to grow tomatoes or oranges. Water activist Rodrigo Mundaca has been on the frontline of this battle for years and is now one of the region’s most important politicians. He’s made it his mission to reform Chile’s water legislation. Just like avocados in Chile, Peruvian blueberries have also experienced a boom in recent years. The sweet fruits are grown in black plastic sacks on the arid desert soil and exported to Germany, primarily in the months of November and December. Peru hasn’t yet been hit by water shortages, but producers plan to expand cultivation on a massive scale, requiring larger and larger amounts of water, which they’d very much like to divert from the Andes to the desert-like blueberry farms. Avocados and blueberries from South America - superfood or climate killer? #documentary #dwdocumentary #superfood ______ DW Documentary gives you knowledge beyond the headlines. Watch top documentaries from German broadcasters and international production companies. Meet intriguing people, travel to distant lands, get a look behind the complexities of daily life and build a deeper understanding of current affairs and global events. Subscribe and explore the world around you with DW Documentary. Subscribe to: ⮞ DW Documentary (English): /dwdocumentary ⮞ DW Documental (Spanish): /dwdocumental ⮞ DW Documentary وثائقية دي دبليو (Arabic): /dwdocarabia ⮞ DW Doku (German): /dwdoku ⮞ DW Documentary हिन्दी (Hindi): /dwdochindi For more visit: http://www.dw.com/en/tv/docfilm/s-3610 Follow DW Documentary on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dwdocumentary/ Follow DW Documental on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/dwdocumental We kindly ask viewers to read and stick to the DW netiquette policy on our channel: https://p.dw.com/p/MF1G

الفئة

عرض المزيد

تعليقات - 898
  • @
    @Tenavatuokioالعام الماضي The forests in Finland are full of natural blueberries and yet they import cultivated blueberries from Peru - 14 000 kilometres away. It’s simply madness. 612
  • @
    @sulthannext4470العام الماضي Almost 5 years ago I saw the documentary about Avacado in this Channel and I remember Rodrigo Mundaca.Now he is the governor of that province.Feeling happy for him.Keep fight for the Water. 21
  • @
    @avocadokenyaالعام الماضي As an avocado exporter from Kenya to the European market, this is an insightful documentary by DW. When it comes to water consumption, we know about this id="hidden4" class="buttons"> issue and we ensure an environmentally sustainable and responsible irrigation of avocado production at our farms. ....وسعت 90
  • @
    @bugsalmudafar2973العام الماضي For those who owns a home with a yard..try planting food in your yard (fruits, vegetables) so you don't have to constantly buy food from other places. 122
  • @
    @dontcallmebaby6927العام الماضي This makes me so sad that greedy individuals make so many suffer just for more money. Money will not help them when our planet dies from greed. Thak you DW for such good docos. 66
  • @
    @ArghMateyالعام الماضي Thankful for documentaries like these to keep us informed on what's going on in other countries <3 193
  • @
    @RaduManuالعام الماضي I won't eat a single avocado ever again! As an european consumer i think that I should be more careful about other peoples' suffering. Thank you DW for exposing the cruel reality that this people suffer! 14
  • @
    @oscarkelly3378العام الماضي Literally trade is something that people starts to communicate, trade is something people exchange culture and values.. 94
  • @
    @TheDoorsHK21العام الماضي Thank you for coming to Valparaiso - the place I've called home for years. Increasing water scarcity in the past few years has caused me great alarm id="hidden8" class="buttons"> and forced me to rethink the most basic of my daily habits, especially given the exorbitant rates that ESVAL, the regional water company charges per cubic meter of H2O. I frequently talk to merchants at the farmer's markets who tell me of the lack of water in their producers' fields and that some resort to irrigating with river water contaminated with "treated" wastewater from Santiago. Water is scarce here and what is left is often heavily polluted and dangerous for all life. The only waterfall in Valparaiso is now fed exclusively with treated sewage from ESVAL, leading the water at the Placilla waterfall to assume a green hue and pungent odor. ....وسعت 6
  • @
    @grilledmeالعام الماضي we can live without those super fruits right? but not without water 31
  • @
    @ashdgeeالعام الماضي I love avocados and they are an important part of my diet. But I didn't know of this. And they are soo expensive here (South Africa).Very eye opening and DW never fails to deliver good quality documentaries 113
  • @
    @gostodemaisdaroca4052العام الماضي It's funny how things are . Growing up in Brazil ,we had avocados, mangos,and citrus as "poor people fruits" because they would grow anywhere id="hidden10" class="buttons"> even without someone taking care of the trees properly. But now avocados have become "super food". ....وسعت 10
  • @
    @pacificislander8503العام الماضي Water is LIFE and it should not be privatize 58
  • @
    @10actualالعام الماضي Water is life. In the desert country we recognize this. If people shall grow fruit & vegetables they need to grow them in climatic locations that have id="hidden11" class="buttons"> those conditions that those crops are suited for. California is experiencing the effects of growing plants that would not survive without an "artificial" water supply and more "artificial" fertilizer. ....وسعت 39
  • @
    @angelawildman122العام الماضي Superfoods are really overrated. There are already plenty of local, seasonal superfoods in every part of the world; why not eat those? 86
  • @
    @perryjackson6812العام الماضي Thank you for that. I work on a blue berry orchard.
    Do I understand that properly? They're going to divert water from the largest natural rainforest id="hidden12" class="buttons"> to their blueberries? I guess they'd have a limit to how much water the can use before it's detrimental.
    ....وسعت 15
  • @
    @cherylcarlson3315العام الماضي Thanks for answering why off season blueberries were so cheap. Hard to stick to only seasonal,local when so much would go to waste as gets marked down but don't want to encourage bad practices. 19
  • @
    @andreamarton3648العام الماضي Eating local seasonal food is so much more important for the environment than going vegan. 105
  • @
    @lmcognitio2049العام الماضي Yes, it is important to raise awareness in Europe (and everywhere) to reduce the environmental impact. These are healthy and delicious fruits, avocados id="hidden14" class="buttons"> have a lot of vitamins and minerals and other nutrients that makes it a very healthy food and an excellent choice to replace saturated fat sources like margarine (terrible food), butter, egg, cheese, or processed meats which,according to studies, reduces the risk of cardiovascular diseases to up to 22 % . And blueberries are full of nutrients, too, they contain one of the highest antioxidant levels amongst commonly consumed fruit and vegetables. We should never think that these fruits are themselves the issue, just like we cannot blame a cow for deforestation or pollution. The problem is, how we humans grow and raise them and consume them (if we should consume meat at all; controversial, I know). If the whole planet worked together as a team we would certainly find a way to produce and consume these fruits and other healthy foods that doesn't harm the environment. As long as we produce food and other things just for profit and not for the benefit of everyone (including animals and the planet) we will continue to have these challenges. Water should not be privatized, the management of this precious natural resource should always be in the hands of the people, It's a human right. “There’s a fundamental problem here: the end goal for our water is to make money, not wellbeing for people,” - a Chilean protester- . Ps I wonder (it's not irony) how much water, wine and meat production (which they export, as well) consumes in Chile. I sincerely hope the Chilean people can find a peaceful and effective way around all this. Saludos. ....وسعت 6
  • @
    @AnirbanDas21989العام الماضي Great documentary! Would be good if you could bring out the names of the companies that buy fruits from these regions. Then good-willed consumers can try to avoid them. 96
  • @
    @carbonwarriorالعام الماضي Great documentary, as always. However, you never asked the consumers in Netherlands what do they think about the impact that their eating habits have on id="hidden16" class="buttons"> Chile. You kind of avoided the issue regarding the consumer responsibility. ....وسعت 97
  • @
    @shazzoramaالعام الماضي I admit to buying citrus and pineapple when they are in season, but I guess it could come down to eating only what grows near you. Worldwide greed for id="hidden17" class="buttons"> exotic fruits on demand, year round should never come at such expense to the exporting nation’s own people. ....وسعت 11
  • @
    @subliminalfalllenangel2108العام الماضي The key for a healthier ecosystem is for the consumers to have access to a wide ranged and diverse diet with various types of plants and animals. Ideally, id="hidden18" class="buttons"> a human typical meal diet should consist of at least 20-30 types of plants(spices, herbs, whole grains, tubers, leafy greens etc) and a very small portion of meat/fish/animal products. The lack of variety in humans diet is one of the main reasons why monocropping is so prevalent nowadays. Farmers planting only corns and soybeans to raise cattles also has the same effects on the ecosystem
    Even if the soil, water and climate is 100% suitable for planting avocadoes, it's a really bad idea to plant ONLY avocadoes in such a large scale, as doing so would also mean depleting the nutritions and water from the soil and kill other organisms living in that area.
    ....وسعت 6
  • @
    @bobpineapplesafrica170العام الماضي an integrated approach of avocados and the water systems is important, we support the planting of indigenous trees too that improve the microenvironment id="hidden19" class="buttons"> for water production. As Nilecado we are pushing for Avocado production by small holder farmers largely. ....وسعت 5
  • @
    @abcde__hii6383قبل 10 أشهر Great video❤ I would like to express my appreciation for this video, thank you very much 1
  • @
    @mohammedsaysrashid3587العام الماضي A wonderful documentary coverage about avocado plantation as healthy, delicious fruits ,financial beneficial for several commercial companies & ca id="hidden20" class="buttons">use drying of rivers & underground water resources even cause thirsty of residents while Chileans authority supporting Avocado plantation .climate changes around the world made that views more bleaker in Chile ..blueberries usages booming around the world & European countries bringing financial benefit for Peru ..it was enjoyable & interested documentary shared by excellent, respected DW documentary channel ....وسعت 3
  • @
    @almalyncabansag4442العام الماضي This is a problem when large corporations grow crops that is not native to the place. It consume large amount of resources that is a necessity to the survival of the local community. 6
  • @
    @ecofriend93قبل 10 أشهر Hopefully, DW will do a doc on the water usage of animal husbandry soon.
  • @
    @graemelee5701العام الماضي To all the good people of Chile, the better good of the majority of citizens should always come first. Clean drinking water is a priority for human life. 6
  • @
    @benjaminechorالعام الماضي Excellently researched documentary. A perfect example of what humans and cooperate greed can achieve.
    We can be better as humans.
    I equally id="hidden23" class="buttons"> see this as a challenge and business opportunity for researchers to develop better irrigation technologies and less water consuming plant varieties.
    ....وسعت 2
  • @
    @arbaz79العام الماضي Thank you DW for this knowledgeable documentary.
  • @
    @AlexLopez-yk8xoقبل 8 أشهر If avocado is a super food. The best avocado I've ever eaten found in the Philippines. It's creamy melts in your mouth
  • @
    @manasseskamau5327العام الماضي In Kenya we don't need irrigation to grow avocados but selling for less than €0.10 a piece is not incentive enough. 4
  • @
    @nishmamanandhar1225قبل 8 أشهر DW is the best when it comes to fair n transparent reporting
  • @
    @delawaresurf5422العام الماضي Refreshing station without bias. Thank you dw world
  • @
    @katecarlisle8383العام الماضي Proud to say avocados & blueberries are locally grown in N.Z. 11
  • @
    @Gate11auالعام الماضي I had no idea no more imported food I think just local and in season for me thank u for informing me 2
  • @
    @helenarakel3964قبل 10 أشهر I live in Peru but I stoped eating avocados three times a week. Eating it one time a week instead (sometimes I don’t) because I knew about the water waste in the avocado plantations, but I had no idea the blueberries are issue as well… ....وسعت 1
  • @
    @argao6021قبل 10 أشهر Here in the Philippines it's almost free and it's cheap because it's a common backyard fruit tree. It's a bit expensive in major urban id="hidden25" class="buttons"> areas though. And rainy season starts usually lastweek of May to February that 9 mos of rainy season. ....وسعت 1
  • @
    @jimmybindraالعام الماضي b'ful docmentary ..muchas gracias por eso ..q tan importante ..me voy a ver eso in mi tiempo libre. salud de India .muchas amor por LATAM, Mexico - Peru - Colombia. Chao Chao.
  • @
    @redsteedproperties2405قبل 11 أشهر I’ve stopped eating avocados and rarely have any imported foods anymore. I buy the majority of my meats from a local regenerative rancher and get plant foods from my own land. Later today I plan to forage for wild strawberries on my land. They are not store friendly, they are super flavorful, tiny, and don’t keep in the fridge. Either eat them right away or dry them. In a few weeks some of the other local wild berries will start ripening. I do still get my dairy and eggs from the store, but hope to get my own chickens in the future. ....وسعت
  • @
    @maylanjow8126العام الماضي Thank you, and more people must watch this video
  • @
    @dorkstain5455العام الماضي Avacados are OK to grow in Australia but I note that most of the frozen berries are largely from South America. 3
  • @
    @polishthedayقبل 9 أشهر We grow blueberries in Canada too but not in winter. What we need is information about what we’re buying, something like labels on coffee indicating that it’s fair trade.
  • @
    @claire2470العام الماضي In my childhood, we climbed a mountain and run out of drinking water. . .from there, i always know how precious water is. . .and until now, i know how id="hidden29" class="buttons"> to save and reuse water. . we do not appreciate or know the importance if we didn't experience how to have nothing even just a drop. . .
    WATER IS LIFE.
    ....وسعت
  • @
    @zuzanazuscinova5209العام الماضي I eat both avocados and blueberries on a weekly basis. The health benefits are immense. Hope a more sustainable solution can be found. 9
  • @
    @pkumar18العام الماضي Such documentaries are like creating market and demand for such countries. Avacado is not grown only in South Africa but other countries also..
  • @
    @lavonageorge7274قبل 10 أشهر I've been wondering why one can get boxes and "value" bags of avocado's at very low prices. This "bargain" price of avocados id="hidden30" class="buttons"> has surfaced in recent years. I attended a food demonstration where we were shown how to freeze avocado's so that we could have daily portions.
    This plentiful avacadoe was available and is still available in the western cape province and in the Eastern Cape Province where I have been living for the past 4 years.
    Thank you for this documentary. I shall return to eating avocado's in season only.
    ....وسعت
  • @
    @sernanlloren8432قبل 11 أشهر Peirce Morgan gonna love this documentary
  • @
    @SA-ks9vzقبل 10 أشهر I only buy or pick local blueberries and when out of season I buy them locally frozen. 1
  • @
    @deerichardzالعام الماضي Whatever the cost it takes to supply the villagers with usable water, should be charged to the avocado growers until a solution can be found. If that increases id="hidden31" class="buttons"> the price of avocados, the company should pay for the increases. They will find a solution with that kind of 'motivation'. ....وسعت 4
  • @
    @mbachoirالعام الماضي There was a mistake in minute , when they said the journey starts in Valparaiso. Valparaiso is not in Peru, it is 1000s of Kilometers south of the blueberries plantations. They should have mentioned one of the many international ports in Peru. ....وسعت
  • @
    @shreeyasingh8948العام الماضي Guys you should now buy it from Nepal. We’ve avocado farms but no local demand. 1
  • @
    @OPGamer-wp1siالعام الماضي Very hard to believe.. But true. Same is the case in India . Sugar industries are making new records of manufacturing. Sugarcane plantation increasing id="hidden33" class="buttons"> rapidly in less or no water areas. While 80 % of faemers are no water for even in rainy season.
    It's very sad. But it happens now a days everywhere.
    ....وسعت 3
  • @
    @Cerceifyالعام الماضي Perhaps I just bought the new little 99cent Avocados. I used to live on Avocado Drive in Florida. Mostly paved over now. Farmers complained for years about id="hidden34" class="buttons"> Mexico flooding the market for tomatoes and the Feds making it difficult to get foreign farm labor in. We once had 30K acres of Tomatoes plus Avocados and limes in South Florida. I'd guess 90% is gone . ....وسعت 1
  • @
    @richardbird5697العام الماضي Geoff lawton has great information on permaculture food forest and water swales .people need to learn this type of gardening even if one farm in 3 grew this style the world would be better 1
  • @
    @carlsmith8815العام الماضي This documentary could be so much better . If it had given a lot more information about the distribution of water in Chile & Peru, the nutritional id="hidden36" class="buttons"> values of each fruit ( are they super foods ? ), the importance of fruit exports to the countries involved ( how it affects their tax bases etc ) the rival competitors for the blueberry & avocado markets ( their use of water ) and give the viewer some idea of the numbers of people affected and the political forces in play. 
    I felt the documentary aired the views of a political faction and point of view which was summed up as " we mustn't allow women fighting for human rights to receive death threats ".that is reminiscent of "grandmothers and blue berry pies ". I think there is a crucial issue here, but this documentary didn't do its job in properly exploring the matter and maybe offering a balanced critique .
    ....وسعت 8
  • @
    @dovepiranha6543العام الماضي Bullseye! I live in the netherlands and everytime i walk in the supermarket seeing tropical products i ask myself what an impact non european countries.. and we don't care; as long as there is banana in the store. .. 8
  • @
    @SilverMiraiiقبل 9 أشهر Water is never lost, it goes into the ground or evaporates and makes clouds and then rains back down. The issue lies in redirecting water.
  • @
    @tanmaypatra9455العام الماضي Carbon footprint to Europe?
    We get blueberries from Peru in almost all metro cities in India. Quite costly but fresh and plumply..
    1
  • @
    @eatshmoogle3573قبل 10 أشهر Do one on Alfalfa farming in the Arizona desert
  • @
    @0warami_7ooالعام الماضي there's fruit growing on trees in Australian towns, but most ignore these fruit and instead they buy imported supermarket superfoods and think they are eating healthy. then they attend rallies for saving the earth !! 6
  • @
    @Daniel-fl5oqالعام الماضي Quite a sharp topic.
    Good job
  • @
    @FeyTheBinقبل 11 أشهر Makes me wonder of the prospect of solving it by introducing an avocado blight.
  • @
    @archsword2446العام الماضي in philippines we have a lot of rain but no avocado plantations only mangoes, bananas, dragonfruit and pineapples taste better than avocados and healthy id="hidden39" class="buttons"> too. Avocados in philippines are bigger and houseplant only and never cultivated like this. ....وسعت 3
  • @
    @thinklocallyالعام الماضي In my county in the Philippines, almost everyday rains.
  • @
    @kendallkahl8725العام الماضي You can add wine from Chile using water up in arid regions. It doesn't matter where they are from farmed blueberries are more tasteless than wild harvested id="hidden40" class="buttons"> blueberries. If Noth America and Eurasia and the labor force and could overcome the logistics they could swamp the world with wild blueberries and main concern would be having enough for wildlife. ....وسعت 1
  • @
    @peshangbakr2442العام الماضي eating regionally and seasonally is the key
  • @
    @minakokataoka7112قبل 11 أشهر Thanks for a great documentary. So sad to know locals have been fighting for a fundamental right, water. The only thing that will work is not to buy Chilean avocados… 1
  • @
    @skylineXpertالعام الماضي As a european I can live with my avocados coming from spain & morocco, berries I prefer to grow In the garden and pick myself.
    But I try to avoid buying avocados & berries that comes from across the sea.
    14
  • @
    @alipm4941العام الماضي It's so informative and Fantastic documentary , Deeply Appreciated the efforts ! 1
  • @
    @fmt0htmقبل 8 أشهر This hit me hard. I think people have reached to the point where we should stop and think : Should we keep expanding our industry or slowdown to make it sustainable ?
  • @
    @A-m-a-l-iالعام الماضي There couldn't have been a better time for this documentary. I eat avocado when I am in an environment where it is locally produced but stopped eating id="hidden44" class="buttons"> imported avocado when I discovered the environmental footprint. Rise in nutritional diversity, prestige, including decoy of environmentalism yields more consequences than we imagine. Avocado in Chile, Blueberry in Peru, Soy in Brazil . beyond water, the land degradation/carbon footprint to feed a rising European demand that claims to be pro-environment would eventually evolve as the greatest environmental scam.
    You might not like Matthias disposition/nonchalant attitude towards water plight of other people, but like every problem else, it is a demand problem. If there is no one eating it, no one will rush to grow them.
    ....وسعت 24
  • @
    @samlatooniالعام الماضي Rodrigo got an award and in the after party his European friends served him avocado sandwiches .and everybody lived happily ever After.yum and yum!!!! 2
  • @
    @___beyondhorizon4664العام الماضي Has DW done the avocado report from Mexico? It seems they are the major producers 1
  • @
    @mariacallas9962العام الماضي FYI:those big blueberry had nothing to do with the wild ones(smaller ,from Canada for example).
    They gat just a fraction of the nutritional value id="hidden46" class="buttons"> of the wild one.
    Super food is an already suspect appellation but those ones are definitely not deserving of it.
    Take care.
    ....وسعت 2
  • @
    @nlptrader8320العام الماضي DW Documentary, please make a documentary about Syntropic Farming, Agroforestry, and Permaculture. These three methods preserve the forests and create id="hidden47" class="buttons"> more abundant agriculture without destroying the environment and the soil. And without spending a lot of energy as vertical farms do. It may solve the problems of Agriculture (food production) and Climate Change (plant more trees and forests) at the same time. In a nutshell, the Swiss geneticist Ernst Götsch (the creator of Syntropic Farming), in the '80s, tested his method first on a very degraded area in the northeast of Brazil (in the state of Bahia). In the beginning, he recovered the degraded areas then he started to plant many trees and do agriculture at the same time. The area that was almost totally degraded has become totally green (a big forest) again.
    For some decades now he is planting high-value and quality cocoa - that has been exported to Europe - he can plant and harvest and at the same time preserve the forest. The trees serve as protection and even fertilizer for the plantation. Syntropic Farming is close to Agroforestry but they are not the same, as well as permaculture. Right now, Ernst is trying to create machines to test his techniques in large plantations. As conventional machines were not created to be suited to maintain and preserve forests and work next to many trees. He already started a project with the "Fazenda da Toca" (Burrow's farm or Den's Farm in simple translation) to test Syntropic Agriculture in big lands. But, probably the german advanced engineering and machinery innovation could help to accelerate this process a lot. Some machines are being made in small industries in the south of Brazil, but Germany has more technology and expertise to do that faster.
    Note: Ernst also tried his methods in almost all types of soils. Even in the Brazilian semi-arid (Caatinga) it worked marvelously. In European soils too (Portugal, Spain). In Australian soil too. I choose Syntropic Agrofloresty because it is easier to apply in big plantations. In big lands.
    ....وسعت
  • @
    @BamBamSrالعام الماضي Water should not be privatized ANYWHERE on the planet! This is a no-brainer! 2
  • @
    @Crime-Politicsالعام الماضي They could make it law that large-scale avocado and blueberry growers must desalinate ocean water for their production. North of Europe could harvest the id="hidden48" class="buttons"> rain water from storm drains into a parallel structure to sewage, and send the rain water to South of Europe. Then we could grow our own avocados and blueberries. Funding: saving 10s of billions on regular damage from floodings. DW, would you make a documentary on the subject 'so why don't we?' on that and many other obvious matters, pls? ....وسعت 2
  • @
    @edmondpintu5622العام الماضي Don't worry about things, god bless your place
  • @
    @RA-ms3jeالعام الماضي We have avocados in Nigeria but they are not irrigated. I did not know commercial avocado farming needed so much water
  • @
    @estherzhu8413العام الماضي If the economic development is achieved at the price of local residents and their future generations, the local government needs to think twice of the id="hidden49" class="buttons"> current practice and seek for change. The pollution, the water scarcity, the soil degradation all will have long last impact… ....وسعت 1
  • @
    @erickane7093العام الماضي Never over tax the environment, or privatize water. 1
  • @
    @tinkerbella7433قبل 11 أشهر We should always focus on where which fruits grow with less unnatural intervention like extensive watering.
  • @
    @ofwdad5893العام الماضي we in the philippines are blessed with water all year we have 24 typhoons that brings a lot of water
  • @
    @Isawwhatyoudidالعام الماضي I love avocados too, and they have become an integral part of my diet. Small Hass Avocados are 50 cents a piece at Wal Mart. If I were willing to pay 60 id="hidden50" class="buttons"> cents, a 20% increase, would that help the situation? Couldn't that help with desalination? ....وسعت 1
  • @
    @finbarryan3590العام الماضي How much water is lost from the basins through evaporation? Floating solar reduces evaporation by 75% with a 10% to 15%increase in electric production. Part of the solution?
  • @
    @bl4ckb3llالعام الماضي In Indonesia thousand of thousand new avocado farmers just open avocado orchard, the land mass could be hundreds of thousand hectare.
  • @
    @eastjavagreenschool1814العام الماضي Awesome documentation., it always pro vs contra for avocado, the story in Chile would be different if there are Philanthropic responsibility for avocado id="hidden52" class="buttons"> corporation'is it.? if water supppy is the problem why not to build a water dam to supply household and avocado farm? why not to improve ecosystem if there are good profit's? ....وسعت
  • @
    @TheMalcolmPowderالعام الماضي Peru grabbing water from the Amazon basin will just exacerbate the problems that are already happening that are destroying the climate. It is a bit like the plantations of palm oil in Indonesia. 1
  • @
    @anshul.mالعام الماضي It is the story of every country. In India, state governments are discouraging the water intensive crops, specially if they are dependent on the ground id="hidden54" class="buttons"> water, and give subsidies to grow other crops which are profitable too. We promote crops like apple, rice & sugarcane only in high rainfall or high surface water areas. Also, like India connecting every household with tap water could be a solution. ....وسعت
  • @
    @markcampbell7577قبل 10 أشهر If chlorinated water treatment is used then coal filters have to be used before showering or drinking the water.
  • @
    @markcampbell7577قبل 10 أشهر Public ownership of water resources has not been established in the USA yet.
  • @
    @mbachoirالعام الماضي It's encouraging to witness the sustainable and socially responsible management of agriculture in Peru. By utilizing the desert, there's no need id="hidden55" class="buttons"> to clear land and the reduced presence of pests means fewer chemicals are used. Additionally, by redirecting water from the Amazon basin, there's a safeguard against depriving people who depend on it. Given that the Amazon basin holds over 20% of the world's fresh water, it's reassuring that there's enough for everyone. ....وسعت 3
  • @
    @user-qq3bl6py3gقبل 8 أشهر Depends on we’re you grow them and how they grow. Were I am from blueberry’s grow like weeds
  • @
    @Neli-bs4mqالعام الماضي Yes. The fact that there are this crazies over new foods and suddenly the majority start to eat them sure causes environmentally problems. The norm is id="hidden56" class="buttons"> to eat a variety of foods, and not only a few especially if those have to be imported regularly. ....وسعت
  • @
    @frankcuritana8159العام الماضي These farmers need to learn a better management by using the drip system for their avocados and other plants