Transcripts For ALJAZ 20240709

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michigan. ah, top of krycek headlines here on the algebra. heads of states from around the world have addressed the un general assembly in new york keynote speeches warned about the corona virus. pandemic afghanistan. climate change was u. s. and chinese leaders both address the assembly on the 1st day, joe biden promised a new era of intensive diplomacy and an end to relentless war. she pings at his nation would not bully others score. you go up differences and problems among countries. hotly, avoidable need to be handled through dialogue and corporation on the basis of equality and mutual respect. one country says he does not have to mean another country's failure and well is big enough to accommodate common development and progress of all countries. we need to pursue dialogue and inclusiveness over confrontation and exclusion and condemnation knocked out a video of us border patrol agents on horseback, aggressively pushing bad migraines went viral. un stop official on refugee says the white house policy of deporting haitians could be in violation of international law . and more people have been forced on their homes up to a new volcanic venue, blue open on one of spain's canary islands, rivers of lava. i've been flowing across la palmer since an erection on sunday. more than 190 homes have been destroyed. and a red magnitude, 6 earthquake has rattled se australia shaking buildings and causing some damage in melbourne, but no reported injuries. it's one of australia's strongest earthquakes on record. well, there's a headline. news continues here now to 0 after earth, right? that you've done. so watching bye for now on the streets of grief and team grin, violence is on the rise. the road you have to go from. i will turn key and this is from foxes and increasingly migrant farm workers of victims of vicious beatings. jo reed is helping the pakistani community to find a voice. the stories we don't often hear told by the people who live them undocumented and under attack. this is europe on al jazeera. ah ah, populations grow and then comes rise, but it's more and more animal protein. double the amount of milk has the 1960 s and 4 times the right thought. the average now contains a 40 kilogram to meet the chip thing, 350 pounds. and some of this is about the waiting you to go vehicle of edge a tarion. that's a personal choice. so we have a big warning like what all this meeting very consumption. the thing paul planted live got farming is highly polluting, recalls huge amounts resources, automate large quantities of greenhouse gases for them to one point. 3000000000 people around the world depends on life for that's why i don't see that it's less animal protein, not at all. we'll get it from sustainable and ethical sources in this program. revisit napa states in the u. k, with farmers producing made on the stores. dairy and crop plans. the 1st of the santiago chile, where a pioneering company is revolutionizing the food industry because and artificial intelligence of the world growing leaks and made some money. my products, many of them process is increasing not only lesser levels, but also our environment footprint. scientists say we have to curve a craving to meet in the area, not only for i don't health, but also for the planet. but how would the man just keeps on growing? well, the answer may not come from human hearing. santiago, chile, well start. if anything to help part the patient intelligence are you the media? welcome to not good. thank you. i. this is actually the experimental key chain of not go. so what you're going to see here is the interaction between technology and human. in this kitchen, there is a very special chef, an artificial intelligence algorithm called you separate. so where if you say here, oh you said it is here in the experimental keaton. nice. one more member of the shifting you flip, it generates recipes which reinvent anymore. base dishes using plants and then the shift follow them. basically if it's trying to get a technology that would allow us to predict what combination of this ingredients for solving the same sort of experience, take texture, smell of corners for human being, that might sound really crazy. by for an algorithm, it doesn't. the process starts with giving to say a dish to recreate with a try something i love less than. yeah. for instance. yeah. yeah. we can try. all right, to go to the fun. yeah, we have the meet also we have the egg that he seen dental of california. we have the teeth and also you have bitten us that he's made it from milks presently, but i'm go and generating the recipes. so you said a us more than a 100 different recipes. we have things we didn't suggest. think she dug a mushroom lemonade or dried, also baking soda. we have a new talent, but not less fun. yeah. so let's go with them. turn that teeth that come else, but not with the financial and me he was willing, you know, stuff. i've been assigned to the team. my recipe includes red, sceptre, olive, and nuts. while victor, you think, carrots, sympathetic. oh ok. so my chief isn't quite working as the source. yes. so here we have to be friend. we self combining different plans. we are trying to achieve this threaded cheese for breaking the fun. yeah. and this is non read. it quite good. more salty. so they're very different. the aim of both the efforts here isn't actually to make up the dice and dishes, or to enabled you separate to learn more about the quality of different plants ingredients. so the mishaps like my most rela, are just as useful as the successes. so we have the results and now we're giving the input the smell, the flavor, the text. so you said base actually learning from our sensory experience. yes. going to take the shift a week to go through for the recipes that you said we have to get this. in the meantime, i'm going to find out more about the science behind the operation. get some off a lot of buttons that you said that you're going to. so you're going to see almost got a lot going on for more, have them they cannot go multiple, going to pick up it or use it. but if somewhat of the company in the system, we're going to set the movie that i'm and we will have to use the exact, i'm in thank you. on a lighting ingredients and breaking them down to their molecular level. you said, be able to work out what make them face, feel, look, smell, and behave as they do, and to understand their nutritional properties. then he can determine how to use different plant items in order to simulate the quality, find him a product. to use that computer scientists and the brains behind you, super close to those start. there was city in my office in the university and my d. s. came and told me what have you come up with or even the final plan base formulas to mimic. ready animal based target and i had no idea how to come up with the solution, but we could create the 1st algorithm that was already able to generate the 1st plan based formulas after we tried them in the kitchen we were and i said they were actually working and we do, and as we have something since the moment we never saw what is your goal? climate change or the deforestation condemning so all that comes because we are using the animal to produce food at scale. the biggest goal is like one day, we want to see that the whole food industry changed face to the hospital to push the system to come up with new solutions. we've disrupted formulas with great products. i'll turn that he's not exploiting the animal anymore. me have a challenge for you here. you have the not products that are currently sold in the market out of these vegetables here. you must guess each of these products. what is the vegetables containers? so let's start with not milk grapes. no pen. apple. yes. you can continue with the burger. are there any great in this printer? not really true. very know. coco. yeah. actually has cocoa, i q ones are not going to combine this creasing radius. just happy. he said to without any prior bias, find this mind blowing in reading combinations that actually match the animal based target. the only way to really make people to change their current was based products and start consuming plan based progress. he's one, they have a really tasty alternative. and it seems people do find the spread of stacy from a start up of 10 people in 2016 not go now has a brick and throughout latin america and has recently into the us. it's one of a number of food tech companies. we are writing a global trend towards us with less credit or no, not all. one predictions is that in 10 years time, the alternative meeting, the 3 will be bored to $140000000000.00 per market. some faster brands are jumping on the bandwagon. i've been l review. we're going to bother you. here's a lot of people making up to our plan make diet. and we want to be part of all for the ones that reduce our footprint and how many people are. 1 consuming it, we're prone to deliver in between then and both health and fee for each month. now before we try to make the not meet. yeah, well it seems like an actual keith to see if we go for a week left time to see how they've been getting on the well. so what has happened since the last time i was here? we do the trial error. i lot of times maybe with the teeth pen formula. we think ah, in this point i can say in care of ingredients here inside you have you have technology. here, you have to be there, go my chances of making these at home. it's a competitive and secretive business. ah, macy type. right. use it. me. me feel free or less on. yeah. i love it. is it not listening as he sees? the thing is actually amazing him for me that i probably take that many things. what i've seen here is they're leaving a sample of healthy combination to sort of a very challenging problem can go a long way. you didn't have a turn going to radically change over night. but these are feeling the hope that it could be possible to curb the world. so sustainable addiction. so anyway, product so we all thing a ship that are so month to put it this way. if all the wells mammals weighs and talked about, then 4 percent would be was 36 percent would be human. i'm 60 percent would be livestock. i'm not 60 percent needs posture and photographs which take up around 40 percent of as possible. lab. so ecosystems a disruptive virus is wildlife, more likely to come into contact with livestock, human after this cancer, obesity stroke and all the illnesses that can be associated with excessive meat consumption. ticking time bomb, the science is today clear f food is so important that if we don't fix food, we are very unlikely to fix the planet. and over consumption of red meeting continuity towards undermine the both planetary health and human health. this does not mean that we all have to go to terry and we carry out a global scientific assessment. the last commission trying to define scientifically a healthy diet from sustainable from systems. and what we find is that flex attorney diet gives the best outcomes in terms of life expectancy and healthy conditions. what is the flex? a turn died well as a diet that quite drastically reduces red meat consumption compared to the high per capita levels in the industrialized parts of the world, animal protein dishes can be served me to 4 times per week to from fish to from white meat and one from red. so if i turn dice is a more balance diet, it has reduced every products, more nuts, more fruit, more vegetables, less sold, less sugar, and a very large increase in whole grain. and if you apply this across the world, we find that it's not difficult to adapt to different cultures. if all of us eat the healthiest diet, the one that benefits us the most, we would also have a significant positive impact on the health of the planet. and the couldn't use is that we have so much evidence that what we eat is probably the single largest contribution towards not only improving the climate, but also less pollution, better water management, and saving biodiversity. so every day our food choices really matter how kind of makes it seem as part of the flex apparent, actually help you find it. but in the course of restoring that thomas farmland, a husband wife discovered a highly sustainable way of racing livestock. in the conversion of wildlife habitat into farmland is a primary driver by diversity laws and ecosystem collapse. the u. k. 's provision for nature is among the poorest on the planet. around 70 percent, the country's land surface is used for agriculture. while less than 3 percent of ancient woodland remains hundreds of times, an animal species face extinction, including iconic animals such as the turtle, dove, and the hedgehog. an increasing appetite for environmentally friendly food plus arise in domestic eco tourism could offer a lifeline to british farmers and a beacon of hope for british by diversity. ah, i've come to sussex and southern england to visit a dynamic project is proving it's possible to boost by diversity at the same time as producing food this healthy for people and the planet. ah, this is the 3 and a half 1000 acres. net with state run by husband wife team, charlie, burl and isabella treat together. they take in farming convention and kind of on his head though is well, thank you so much for having a pleasure. so this is the famous net, oak. it is, it is this tree we recognize about 50550 years old. it seen the english civil war at seeing, you know, we just can't imagine what it's witnessed. it was concerns for the health of this ancient oak that led isabella and charley to radically reconsider their intensive farming methods. the other trees in the landscape which were much younger than this one day were beginning to die back. it was what we were doing to them that was making them buffer. we were plowing pretty much up to the trunks of all these other trees and pouring chemicals over and me, sunnyside, my god. you know, those trees are dying and it's down to us. and it was a sort of moment of epiphany really, that sort of kicked off a completely different way of thinking, isabel and charlie spent years trying to make net pay, but farming the land profitably is proving impossible. miss soil is very, very heavy clay just isn't conducive to modern intensive farming. so after about 17 years, we were one and a half 1000000 pounds in debt. so in 1999, charlie said we, we've got to stop foaming. we've got to look at something else that something else was the decision to let nature take over and to stop conventional farming altogether. suddenly just letting it go, it was light, the whole land was breathing a sigh of relief. and to us felt amazing. just looking out of the windows on online that was recovering and hearing the sounds and watching wild animals. so the fun, oh dear, you know, slowly moving past it was like being in the middle of the serengeti. it just felt amazing. ah, after selling off their milking, heard isabella and charley introduced red dia from the highlands of scotland just beginning to kick off in the rock. so his roaring day and night to attract the females are just absolutely astonishing the life that poured back even the very 1st summer. ah, ah, there is no helping some of the rare species in the u. k. make a comeback. turtle doves, night jaws and purple emperor butterflies are all thriving here. not really inspired us. i think to think, could we roll this out across the whole estate? but could we actually then do something wilder? more of the estate was given over to nature with dramatic results. ah, so this is the 2nd chapter of the net while then project. and i'm told this is where things get really wild. ah, related. and so we come down to the southern block here, and we're gonna meet charlie burrell and he's the other half of the nit wildlands project. and feel free to take us and give us a bit of a tour around charlie. hello. hello i, i just thing back. it might seem strange getting in a supply vehicle to drive around the english countryside, wildlife tours to see net big fight or plato. the business mode in awe. isn't long before our 1st sighting. oh will you see and something father dear, really fly to take a look look look like that was jenny. you're saying charlie wants me to see a rare visitor. lastly, on the shores over by centuries ago, a white stork. if you look at the x ray like that and those as a brown with your binoculars, you will see that, oh gosh, i've got to go to, oh my goodness. so that is actually the 2nd this to be built in britain in 604 years. storks were almost extinct in the u. k. but charlie and isabella, helping to re establish their big draw for eco tourists wanting to see something unique. net post over $50000.00 visitors every year. these animals, we hope will be a connection for people in nature with these cosmetic animals, you can start to, to entice people into the countryside to think again about what they're looking at and what the thing i going to find some long or just some sort of them just over here in the scrub longhorn cattle one of nip, so called big 5 animals introduced to the state to mimic the behavior of the wild ancestors. these longhorn ah, the biggest, the big 5. so the, the, the proxies of the wild cattle of europe. that has got traits we hope are still there in the brain, so they are graph eating animals. they are brows eating animals brows, being eaten leaves and bark and, and how the vegetation as well as glasses. why is that important ecologically? so we consider that the drivers of creating new habitats are these big, heavy levels. they are the ones that are driving a system, and they are creating the habitats where everything else is then pouring in. so you really flipping it here, rather than having a field and putting cows in the field, you're, you're essentially employing these longhorn as staff, so they have a job to do from the air. it's easy to see how this landscape is changed from neatly arranged crop yields to savannah like scrub land is kept in check by the free roaming herbivores nibbling at the scrub to keep it at b, whilst at the same time spreading seeds and enriching the biodiversity in the soil they also produced 50 tons of wild, organic free range meet every year. the benefit of all provide an important source of income for the estate. this would it be an arable field in 2005 say. so we were putting on fed lasers and pesticides. they've got double the amounts of organic matter in the soul. now, double the carbon, the soil is becoming healthy and, and holsten again. the animals known as the big fight ex more pony. red deer followed the time with pigs and longhorn cattle are allowed to move freely around the estate ecologist, laurie jackson, one of 16 scientists on site is taking us out to track down some of net the most effected ecosystem engineers. so this is one of all of the south and what she's saying is this great behavior could retailing. so you can kind of see if you get in here what they've actually done, they really sort of stroke my boss now using that to just basically back and the lift over the tasks and see what might be hiding underneath that they might like to eat is the constant disturbance of the land by these animals, the create such a diverse ecosystem. we're not sort of plowing the ground in any way and we are trying to get back to what all systems would have looked like. said he saw different types of animals that we have here. there are shaping this landscape in sort of subtly different ways because they've got different things that they want to do. different places they want to go. we are at the, in the midst of cutting edge science. yeah. it's very much about the sort of process. so it's us kind of as much as possible, taking ourselves out of the equation and to see the things just thought it's quite refreshing charlie in isabel is radical decision to stop. conventional farming is starting to pay financial dividends. their campsite is book years ahead. the wild range meat business is booming and there's a fire. it's a growing ever more popular. but it's the success in encouraging wildlife that's attracted, increasing numbers of farmers to visit nip to see her lessons learned here, to turn around britons by diversity crisis. when i was it agriculture college, you know there were the environmentalists who we called the bunny huggers and there was a proper farming fake and we were learning how to how to be productive and to and to intensively fall in the land. and it seems mad that we're still in these to campus. so what we need to do, and what this will assist us to do, the whole net project i think is to, is to bring both comes together. and so farmers finally tweaking they can weave what we can learn here into their day to day activity on the farm. profitably. ah, everyone is talking about net, everyone is looking at this wonderful island of fi diversity. and that's writing business. and where are we going to get to in the future? how are things going to change? well, i think it's begun to happen. that's what's really exciting. just projects across the whole britain, from devon to norfolk to northumberland. we have visions of wildlife co. it was and really joined up landscape again, which would be thrilling. so this is not just conservation for its own sake. we're talking about a business that has to be financially viable. at the moment, we're setting 120000 pounds worth of meet in 5 years time. we're hoping that that will turn over 3 quarters a 1000000. so we are hoping that we're going to create a business or some of the best meets in the well, could you have it dare to dream that it was well in the way that it has done? i think at the time it was just, you know, wouldn't it be interesting if we could do this experiment? and if part of us could increase just a little bit, that would be worth doing. anybody had any idea that it would take off and become a magnet for that? always incredibly rare species. so it's been beyond, beyond anybody strange. i think really what shot well avoiding or at least significantly reduced to meet some very it's probably the single biggest way we can lessen our environmental impact and replanted means to be that plant facebook as meek run in the lab. babies who may be this may take a bit of a mindset change, but they real or kind of for those of us who don't want to become vague vegetarian more and more sustainably sort animal options available. as long as there is power plate. and it's up to all of us to lucky enough to be able to choose what you i'm harry davies and kimberly, in western australia orientation is community the painting with scientists to create a new approach to marine conservation thing you learn, but we even that the, the one about what i'm offering, when do you reporting from review? if you're going to try is protecting biodiversity defending themselves against the legal invaders. brian: oh no. just 0. did you know you can watch out because they were english streaming lied and i get to channels plus thousands of our programs award winning documentaries and get new support to scribe. you choose dot com. forward slash al jazeera english. the news. the world must wake up. we are on the hedge of an obese, found the alarm, the un chief called on world latest to come together to address the multiple crises facing ah, other in terms of elvis is eligible to live from doha. also coming up.

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