Intelligent viewers,
welcome to Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home
where we are presenting
the first in a two-part
program featuring
a number of short films
from
“The Gathering Storm:
The Human Cost
of Climate Change.”
This series is comprised
of 16 brief films and
covers the effects of
climate change
across Asia and Africa.
“The Gathering Storm”
was produced
by the United Nations
Environment Programme
and the Integrated
Regional Information
Networks (IRIN),
a humanitarian news
and analysis service of
the United Nations Office
for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs.
The work has garnered
numerous awards,
including being named
a winner at the 2009
Bangkok HRA Festival
and Kos International
Film Festival.
This week we will show
five chapters
from the series:
“Harvesting Rain,”
“Drip Irrigation,”
“Escaping Floods,”
“Highland Malaria,”
and “Coastal Erosion.”
As we will see in some of
these films, communities
have found ways to
adapt to aspects of
global warming
and still survive.
However such measures
cannot be considered
permanent solutions
as even more extreme
weather patterns and
natural disasters are
projected if we take
no action to stop the
warming of our planet.
We begin with
“Harvesting Rain.”
The Gathering Storm
Harvesting Rain
Ithumba
Kitui, Kenya
It’s 8 o’clock
in the morning.
And Mary Maticia is
cleaning the house
while her friend from
a neighboring district,
Grace Niva, sets off
to fetch water
from the nearest river.
It’s a six kilometer walk
for Grace.
And when she gets there,
she finds the river dry.
So she starts to dig.
Back in her village,
Mary has finished
her housework.
And now she, too,
sets off to fetch water.
But no long walk or
digging in the sand for her.
Her water's on tap.
And it’s all thanks to
this rock.
When it rains, water runs
down the face of the rock
and gathers
in this reservoir,
then down through
these pipes,
and into a storage tank.
This one holds
150,000 liters and can
keep the community
going for months.
The project was built
and is now managed by
the community it serves.
And everyone who
joins the project
shares its benefits.
Now we have time to
take care of our cows
and crops, because
we have water
near our homes.
Before, we only had time
to fetch water.
Most communities levy
a charge for the water,
three US cents
per 20 liter-jerry can
is typical.
And some well-established
communities are now
turning a profit
and reinvesting.
Here the community has
bought a plot of land
and is setting up a model
farm to teach farmers
how to use techniques
like drip irrigation.
The money
we collected from
the water catchment,
we put into an additional
work project.
And the way to extend it
to the farmers, is to
prepare an experimental
farm where people can
learn what to do
in their shambas
(vegetable gardens).
Back at the dry river bed,
Grace is still scraping
water from the bottom
of a hole.
And as long as women
are left to carry
this burden,
their communities will
remain rooted in poverty.
The Gathering Storm
Drip Irrigation
Ngohe Ndioffogor,
Senegal
Michel Dember is
on his way
to work the fields.
Life as a farmer here
in southern Senegal
has never been easy.
But lately it’s been
harder than ever.
Droughts have become
more frequent, and
last year Michel lost
his entire peanut crop
because of a lack of rain.
Rain has been unreliable
for the past few years.
Our harvests
have been bad.
But instead of driving out
to their ancestral lands,
which now lie
largely unused, Michel
and his brother Engor
are heading off to school,
farming school.
Here, Michel and
a hundred other farmers
are being taught how to
drip irrigate their crops.
Water is stored
in the tanks and is then
released through
the pipes and directly
onto the plants.
Agronomists believe
drip irrigation is twice
as efficient in its use
of water than normal
methods of irrigation.
And Michel is putting
the technology to the test
with a field of okra
and cucumbers.
Here we have control.
We don’t have to wait
for the rains.
I am sure my harvest
will be better.
The Gathering Storm
Escaping Floods
Chokwé, Mozambique
Amelia Michaiae
has lived in the village of
Chicadala all her life.
At the heart of
the Limpopo River Basin,
this place is used to be
Mozambique's
breadbasket.
But years of war
and neglect mean that
farmers produce little
more than subsistence.
To make matter worse,
heavy rainfall along
the length of the river
in recent years means
that floods are now
common here.
So although the land is
fertile and crops flourish,
they’re always in danger
of being washed away
before they can be
harvested.
We prepare the area
and plant maize,
then the flood comes
and destroys everything.
The flood of 2001 was
the worst we’ve ever had.
We’d never seen anything
like it.
We weren’t prepared.
But since then,
Amelia has learned to be
better prepared.
During floods, we learned
to build silos in trees,
not only for the seeds but
goods and people, too.
I have a silo myself and
if the floods come, I grab
the blankets and clothes,
and we run and put
everything in the silo.
As global weather
patterns become
ever more extreme,
simple technologies
like this one can make
a world of difference
to people like Amelia.
The Gathering Storm
Highland Malaria
Mount Kenya
When we were young
there was no malaria
here.
But nowadays
there’s a lot more.
If you go to the hospital,
you only find malaria.
In the highlands around
Mount Kenya, malaria
used to be unheard of.
The cold nights and
thin air better suited to
tea farming than
the malarial mosquito.
But warmer temperatures
mean that the disease
that already kills
a million Africans a year
now threatens hundreds
of communities that
thought they were safe.
The local hospital is now
filling up with
malaria patients.
Children are the worst hit.
Most of the children
are coming here with
high temperatures and
when we take a slide
for malaria,
it comes out positive.
Malaria is really
increasing.
In the olden days,
you would not see people
coming with malaria
positive.
Nowadays, most of
the people are coming
malaria positive.
Esther Kinyua meanwhile
has arrived at the hospital
and is helping
her 86-year- old mother
to eat.
She’s suffering from
cerebral malaria, and
frequent fits of delirium
mean hospital stuff have
had to restrain her.
And as temperatures
continue to warm
around the world,
malaria looks set to
strengthen its hold over
communities like this.
The Gathering Storm
Coastal Erosion
Saint Louis, Senegal
Forty-five-year-old
Mukhtar Gaye works as
a laborer in the historic
town of Saint Louis.
But no matter how hard
he works, he can’t
take his mind off events
back at home.
Two kilometers away
on the Senegal’s Atlantic
coast, rising sea levels
threaten to claim
the homes of thousands
of people like Mukhtar.
Every year,
the sea gets closer.
It used to be far and now
it’s next to us.
Everyone is affected,
everyone.
You see, from here
to there, everyone
has the same problem.
Mukhtar spends an
average of two full days
a week, trying to
keep the sea at bay.
But he knows that he’s
fighting a losing battle.
And as the sun sets and
the tide comes in, he’s
left wondering if tonight
is the night that a wave
will take away his house.
You don’t sleep well.
You can’t eat well.
You can’t go to work.
You leave and you think
that at any time
(your house could be
taken away).
As we’ve seen today
in five chapters from
“The Gathering Storm,”
climate change is
severely disrupting
the lives of people
across Africa.
The conditions for many
are becoming more and
more arduous every day.
What can be done about
this frightening situation?
The organic vegan diet
is simply the fastest and
most effective way for
people around the world
to put a halt
to climate change.
An organic vegan
lifestyle is ecologically
friendly in all aspects and
helps prevent the release
of human-induced
toxic greenhouse gases
that accelerate
planetary warming,
the majority of which
come from the production
and consumption
of animal products.
Please join us
next Wednesday on
Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home
for the conclusion of
our program where
we will present
further chapters from
“The Gathering Storm”
that show how
climate change is
affecting people
living in Asia.
To view and download
“The Gathering Storm”
and other films
produced by
the Integrated Regional
Information Networks (IRIN),
please visit
www.IRINNEWS.org
Find out about
the United Nations
Environment Programme
at
www.UNEP.org
Virtuous viewers,
thank you
for your presence today
on our program.
Next on Supreme Master
Television
is Enlightening
Entertainment,
after Noteworthy News.
May a brighter tomorrow
soon be ours through more
eco-conscious living.
Honored viewers,
welcome to Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home
where we are presenting
the conclusion
of a two-part program
featuring a number of
short films from
“The Gathering Storm:
The Human Cost
of Climate Change.”
This series is comprised
of 18 brief films and
covers the effects of
climate change
across Asia and Africa.
“The Gathering Storm”
was produced
by the United Nations
Environment Programme
and the Integrated
Regional Information
Networks (IRIN),
a humanitarian news
and analysis service of
the United Nations Office
for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs.
The work has garnered
numerous awards,
including being named
a winner at the 2009
Bangkok HRA Festival
and Kos International
Film Festival.
This week we will show
another five chapters
from the series:
all focusing on Asia.
We begin with
“Melting Glaciers.”
The Gathering Storm
Melting Glaciers
Khumjung, Nepal
The Nepal Himalaya
is home to most of
the world's highest peaks.
But it’s also on
the front line on the fight
against climate change.
Rivers that start
in these mountains provide
more than a quarter
of the world's population
with its water.
And the source of
that water is running dry.
Dawa Sherpa is
a world class mountaineer
who’s climbed Everest
twice and seen the signs
of climate change
first hand.
Kumbila –
here is a mountain that is
almost 6,000 meters,
5,800 (meters in height).
And in my father’s time,
when he was younger,
they used to have
a glacier up there
and that’s
where the fresh water
used to come from.
The ice would melt
and it would come down
these little streams here,
as you can see.
But now there is no glacier,
so the ice isn’t melting.
Now our village
is suffering
chronic water shortages.
Still only 24 years old,
Dawa Sherpa has already
won many plaudits
and awards for
his environmental work.
And right now
he’s working on a plan
to solve the water crisis
in his village.
Hi...
Okay, welcome back.
Oh, thank you.
Together with fellow
residents of Khumjung,
Dawa hopes to build
a gravity- fed water system
that will pipe water
from the nearest lake,
five kilometers away.
But until
they can raise the money,
they depend on snowfall
to keep the taps running.
A centuries-old way of life
is under threat.
Water is so scarce
everywhere.
Oh, really?
Yes, we only have access
to one source.
And even that is proving
very hard to find.
Everything looks so dry.
How much ice used to be
up there?
The whole place used
to be covered with ice.
When I was young,
one meter of snow
was very normal.
But now if we get
six inches of snow,
then that is a lot of snow.
There are many thousands
more villages like this
across the Himalayas,
all of them now facing
an uncertain future.
In our Buddhist mantra,
it says it’s like heaven here,
all around the mountain
here, and a very clean
environment here.
So if we leave here,
then where will we go?
So we have to pray, God.
Not to move, please.
The Gathering Storm
Holy Forests
Prey Koki Forest,
Cambodia
In a quiet forest
in a corner
of eastern Cambodia,
Buddhist monks
pray for peace.
Forests have always
played a crucial role
in the imagination
of Buddhists worldwide.
It was after all
beneath a tree
that the Buddha himself
achieved enlightenment.
But there’s something
special about this forest.
The Prey Koki Forest
was heavily bombed
during the Vietnam War.
And even now,
the forest is full of ponds
formed by bomb craters.
And those trees
that were left standing by
the B-52s (aircraft)
were then cleared
by the loggers.
But over the last 15 years,
Prey Koki has been reborn.
And it’s largely thanks
to this man,
the Venerable
Nhem Kim Teng.
As a local monk in need
of a forest to meditate in,
he formed a group
called Santi Sena,
or the Peace Army,
and set about replanting
the forest from scratch.
And as the relationship
between trees and climate
became better understood,
their work took on
even greater urgency.
Come on everyone.
Come and help.
Hold the tree straight
and cover it with soil.
Here in Cambodia
our climate is changing.
It’s getting hotter and
the rainfall is irregular.
But we believe that
these trees can bring rain,
and help the farmers with
their crops and daily life.
So Khan is a farmer
who has lived here
most of his 54 years,
and has faced
a growing struggle
cultivating rice.
This year the rain
has come early
so he is preparing to plant.
But last year,
the rains failed
and so did his crops.
After the rice failed,
I tried growing watermelon,
then morning glory
and then nuts.
After that failed,
I sat idle at home
until finally I was forced
to go to town and
get construction work.
Back in the forest,
the monks are preparing
to head back
to their villages,
and they’ll be carrying
an important message
with them.
Go back to your villages
and your pagodas,
and tell people
about the advantages
of planting trees.
Just outside the forest,
local farmers like So Khan
have gathered
to pray for a good harvest
and to make offerings
to the monks.
So Khan
and his fellow farmers
don’t have much to give.
But they know
that like planting trees,
every little bit counts.
The Gathering Storm
Swapping Crops
Jugedi, Nepal
In the hills
of southern Nepal,
change is afoot.
The crops that are
traditionally grown here
like rice, corn, and wheat
have been hard hit by
irregular rainfall patterns.
And over the course
of the last decade,
their cultivation has become
increasingly difficult,
leading some farmers
to think the unthinkable.
In a country
where rice enjoys
almost god-like status,
giving up its cultivation
is not an easy decision
to make.
But for 24-year-old
Pushkar Timilsina,
hardship left him no choice.
Every year we would
plant new seeds and
work hard in the field,
but the food would
only last us three months.
This left us no choice
but to try something else.
So Pushkar learned
how to grow bananas
instead, a decision
that was not popular
with his father.
For the last six years,
we have had
less and less rain
and today it’s almost
completely dry.
I shouted at him that
his plan was impossible.
What could we possibly
expect to get from bananas?
But my son said
he didn’t care
what I thought
and that he was going
to go ahead regardless.
There was no banana
farming here before.
But now it’s becoming
more common.
But now
you’re glad we did it.
Yes, you were right.
And Pushkar’s father
remembers the day
his opposition crumbled,
the day his wife came back
from market having sold
their banana crop
for double the amount
they were getting for rice.
Now the whole family's
committed
to growing bananas.
Hallo. Blessings on you.
Hallo. Blessings on you.
Hallo. Blessings on you.
So how are
the bananas doing?
Very good, thanks.
They look healthy.
Dinanath Bhandari
works for the aid agency,
Practical Action,
who run crop substitution
programs like this one.
But as he himself cautions,
climate change
will remain
a serious challenge
for the people of Nepal.
If the climate change
worsens, then one day
it might not be able to
provide them
sufficient food.
Then again they will have to
switch to other crops.
If they fail
to adapt to the changing
climate scenario,
if they cannot withstand
the impact
of climate change,
they will lose the crop.
Imagine, it’s a situation
that is do or die.
Either you adapt
or you will die.
The Gathering Storm
Boat Schools
Shidhulai, Bangladesh
Bangladesh is
one of the most
disaster prone countries
on Earth, with tens of
millions of people at risk
from floods and cyclones.
And every year
in Bangladesh,
thousands of schools
are forced to close
by the onset
of the monsoon rains.
Even though she’s only
eight years old,
Mosa Khatoon
has already missed many
school days to floods.
But thanks to a former
Shidhulai resident
turned successful
big city architect,
Mosa hasn’t missed a day
of school since 2006.
Mohammed Rezwan
was once himself
unable to go to school
during the monsoon,
so as soon as
he could afford it,
he gave up architecture and
went back to his village.
By 2050,
17% of Bangladesh land
will be under sea water.
So it is better for us
to adapt to the situation.
And our project,
the floating
education system,
it addresses ways
people can survive
during the flooding.
Imagine
that he spent 60 cents.
How much would that
leave him with?
In our country
we have floods
two or three times a year.
During the floods
other schools
go underwater,
but the boat school
never goes underwater.
We have a successful
model of using boats
for schooling, library,
and training centers.
From 18 boats,
around 1,500 children
have benefitted.
And from
the 10 boat libraries,
around 15,000 users
have benefitted from access
to information, books and
also the online resources
like the daily newspapers.
The Gathering Storm
Floating Gardens
Gopalgonj, Bangladesh
When it rains very heavily
our homes and fields
get flooded.
But these vegetables
on the floating gardens
manage to survive.
I make curries
out of these vegetables,
and this allows me
to feed my children.
Sujit Mondal and his wife
Rupashi live in one of
the most flood-prone areas
of Bangladesh, and
for six months of the year
their fields are flooded.
So every year
they build floating gardens
out of water
hyacinth and straw
and grow their crops
here instead.
The floods we see now
are much bigger than
when my grandfather
was alive.
When we have big floods,
we take refuge
on the floating gardens.
We live here
with our belongings,
our animals and harvest,
and stay here for days.
The technology behind
the floating gardens
is a simple one
that’s been practiced
for centuries.
During prolonged
flood seasons,
it can make the difference
between life and death.
So much so that
environmental researcher
Fahmi Al Zayed is trying
to encourage communities
throughout Bangladesh
to adopt the technique.
This practice should
spread to other regions
because Bangladesh
is a flood prone area.
Due to climate change,
the frequency of floods
is going to increase.
To close, we would like
to sincerely thank
the Integrated Regional
Information Networks
and the United Nations
Environment Programme
for producing
“The Gathering Storm:
The Human Cost
of Climate Change,”
an important series
that is building awareness
about climate change and
how it is affecting people
in real life.
To view and download
“The Gathering Storm”
and other films
produced by
the Integrated Regional
Information Networks
(IRIN),
please visit
www.IRINNEWS.org
Find out about
the United Nations
Environment Programme
at
www.UNEP.org
Amiable viewers,
thank you
for your presence today
on our program.
Next on Supreme Master
Television is
Enlightening Entertainment,
after Noteworthy News.
May Heaven forever
bless our planet.