which opened in 2007, and is home to bbc scotland s television, radio and online services, covering all aspects of national life. one of those crucial aspects is the future of the scottish highlands. vast areas of the countryside are being bought by wealthy individuals keen to return the land to its natural state. they want to introduce the process of rewilding and to stop what they consider ecological degradation, deforestation, and loss of bio diversity. our special correspondent allan little has been investigating. there is a juniper bush appearing and right down here we have a rowan that has got its orange autumnal colours on it there. across hundreds of thousands of acres, some of scotland s landowners are changing the way they use land. this is glenfeshie where most of the deer have been culled.
and is home to bbc scotland s television, radio and online services, covering all aspects of national life. one of those crucial aspects is the future of the scottish highlands. vast areas of the countryside are being bought by wealthy individuals, keen to return the land to its natural state. they want to introduce the process of rewilding and to stop what they consider ecological degradation, deforestation, and the loss of bio diversity. our special correspondent allan little has been investigating. there is a juniper bush appearing and right down here we have a rowan that has got its orange autumnal colours on it there. across hundreds of thousands of acres, some of scotland s landowners are changing the way they use land. this is glenfeshie, where most of the deer have been culled. do that and tree and other plant life comes back naturally. habitats and ecosystems lost to grazing for
nature, bio diversity and what can we do to protect the environment and how can we adapt or help communities to adapt. the fourth thing is coming together. so we can create new instruments for the challenges ahead. many are concerned that our allies can t trust us or depend on us because joe biden went over to the summit without passing a supplemental act that would have funded to a great degree, technology beat back the tide of climate change. are you confident in the direction of the united states that we can be a trusted partner on this issue?
it warns the science is ungive cal, a global increase of 1.5 degrees celsius above the pre-industrial average and continued loss of bio diversity risk catastrophic harm to health that will be impossible to reverse. the editorial says current climate action is insufficient and that despite the world s necessary preoccupation with covid-19, we cannot wait for the pandemic to pass to rapidly reduce emissions. earlier i spoke with the british medical journal s dr. fionna godley, and she told me if the world doesn t take action now, extreme and deadly weather events like we saw in the northeastern u.s. will only happen more often. we ve got the problem of extreme heat which in some parts of the world is making, you know, life almost unsurvivable. you can t work in those kind of temperatures. and people are dying in greater n
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