We know that the solutions 
are there today. 
We all have the power 
to change. 
So what are we waiting for?
Hallo, 
eco-conscious viewers, 
and welcome to 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
Today we present Part 1 
of a three part series 
featuring the acclaimed 
2009 documentary 
“Home” directed 
by world famous 
French photographer 
Yann Arthus–Bertrand.  
He is particularly 
renowned for 
his aerial photography. 
Entranced by 
the beauty of nature, 
Mr. Arthus Bertrand 
has taken scores 
of photographs 
of majestic landscapes 
from helicopters 
and hot air balloons. 
Yann Arthus-Bertrand 
established the 
GoodPlanet Foundation 
in 2005.
The Foundation focuses 
on raising public awareness 
of global warming 
and helps to implement 
various innovative 
programs to offset 
carbon emissions.
Recognizing his 
commitment to the planet, 
the United Nations 
Environment Programme 
presented him 
with the 
“Champions of the Earth”
award and appointed him 
as a Goodwill 
Ambassador in 2009.
I think that as journalists, 
we have a real power of 
informing and certainly 
this title of
“Goodwill Ambassador” 
will allow me 
to do things perhaps 
I could not do before.
“Home” explores 
issues impacting 
our planet’s viability
such as 
the environmental 
devastation caused by 
the livestock industry, 
serious water shortages, 
rapidly rising sea levels, 
dependency 
on fossil fuels,
and the severe depletion 
of natural resources. 
With high definition 
aerial views of our abode, 
the documentary 
clearly illustrates 
the extent to which 
our precious Earth has been 
enormously damaged 
by humanity’s actions.
The film’s ultimate message 
is that we have only
a few short years left 
to reverse 
the tremendous destruction. 
Home was filmed on 
location in 54 countries 
over a period 
of 18 months,
generating 488 hours 
of footage in the process. 
Filming was done 
using helicopter-mounted 
high definition 
Cineflex cameras 
that are able to record 
moving images smoothly. 
True to Home’s eco-ideals, 
the producers mitigated 
the emissions released 
during the making of it 
through carbon offsets. 
It took approximately 
three years for the 
93-minute documentary 
to be finally completed. 
On June 5, 2009, 
coinciding with 
World Environment Day, 
Home premiered in 
over 100 countries.  
The producers say 
it is the first movie ever 
to be released 
simultaneously through
all media channels, 
including theaters, TV, 
DVD, and Internet and 
across five continents. 
Many cinemas 
offered free screenings 
and it was on shown 
on big screens 
at the Champ de Mars 
in Paris, France as well as 
in London, England 
and New York, USA. 
In France, 
8 million viewers 
watched Home 
on France2 Television 
the day it debuted. 
As a gift to the world, 
the work is distributed 
free of charge and 
is available for viewing 
on the website YouTube. 
We now present Part 1 
of the landmark 
documentary, “Home”
with narration
by award-winning 
US actress Glenn Close.
Listen to me, please. 
You're like me, 
a homo sapiens, 
a wise human. 
Life, a miracle 
in the Universe, 
appeared around 
4 billion years ago.
And we humans 
only 200,000 years ago. 
Yet we have succeeded 
in disrupting the balance 
that is so essential to life. 
Listen carefully to this
extraordinary story, 
which is yours, 
and decide what 
you want to do with it.
These are traces 
of our origins. 
At the beginning, 
our planet was no more 
than a chaos of fire, 
a cloud of agglutinated 
dust particles, similar to 
so many similar clusters 
in the Universe, yet was 
where the miracle of life 
occurred.
Today, life, our life, 
is just a link in a chain of 
innumerable living beings 
that have succeeded 
one another on Earth 
over nearly 4 billion years. 
And even today, 
new volcanoes continue 
to sculpt our landscapes. 
They offer a glimpse 
of what our Earth 
was like at its birth, 
molten rock surging
from the depths, 
solidifying, cracking, 
blistering or spreading 
in a thin crust, before 
falling dormant for a time.
These wreaths of smoke 
curling from the bowels 
of the Earth bear
witness to the Earth's 
original atmosphere. 
An atmosphere devoid 
of oxygen. 
A dense atmosphere, 
thick with water vapor, 
full of carbon dioxide. 
A furnace. 
The Earth cooled. 
The water vapor 
condensed and fell in 
torrential downpours. 
At the right distance 
from the Sun, not too far, 
not too near, 
the Earth's perfect 
balance enabled it
to conserve water 
in liquid form. 
The water cut channels. 
They are like 
the veins of a body, 
the branches of a tree, 
the vessels of the sap
that the water 
gave to the Earth. 
The rivers tore minerals 
from the rocks, and 
gradually added them 
to the freshwater 
of the oceans. 
And the oceans 
became heavy with salt.
Where do we come from? 
Where did life 
first spark into being? 
A miracle of time, 
primitive life forms 
still exist in the globe's
hot springs. 
They give them their colors. 
They're called 
archeobacteria. 
They all feed off 
the Earth's heat. 
All except 
the cyanobacteria, 
or blue-green algae. 
They alone have the 
capacity to turn to the Sun 
to capture its energy. 
They are a vital ancestor 
of all yesterday's 
and today's plant species. 
These tiny bacteria 
and their billions 
of descendants
changed the destiny 
of our planet. 
They transformed 
its atmosphere.
What happened 
to the carbon that 
poisoned the atmosphere? 
It's still here, imprisoned 
in the Earth's crust. 
Here, there once was a sea, 
inhabited by 
micro-organisms. 
They grew their shells 
by tapping into carbon 
from the atmosphere 
dissolved in the ocean. 
These strata are 
the accumulated shells of 
those billions and billions 
of micro-organisms.
Thanks to them, 
the carbon drained 
from the atmosphere 
and other life forms 
could develop. 
It is life that 
altered the atmosphere. 
Plant life fed off 
the Sun's energy, which 
enabled it to break apart 
the water molecule 
and take the oxygen. 
And oxygen filled the air. 
The Earth's water cycle 
is a process 
of constant renewal. 
Waterfalls, water vapor, 
clouds, rain, 
springs, rivers,
seas, oceans, glaciers... 
The cycle is never broken. 
There's always 
the same quantity of water 
on Earth. 
All the successive species 
on Earth have drunk 
the same water. 
The astonishing matter 
that is water; one of 
the most unstable of all. 
It takes a liquid form 
as running water, 
gaseous as vapor, 
or solid as ice.
In Siberia, 
the frozen surfaces 
of the lakes in winter 
contain the trace of the 
forces that water deploys 
when it freezes. 
Lighter than water, 
the ice floats. 
It forms a protective mantle 
against the cold, 
under which life can go on. 
The engine of life 
is linkage. 
Everything is linked. 
Nothing is self-sufficient. 
Water and air 
are inseparable, 
united in life and 
for our life on Earth. 
Sharing is everything.
The green expanse 
peeking through the clouds 
is the source of oxygen 
in the air. 
Seventy percent of this gas, 
without which 
our lungs cannot function, 
comes from the algae 
that tint the surface 
of the oceans. 
Our Earth relies on 
a balance, in which 
every being has a role 
to play and exists only 
through the existence 
of another being. 
A subtle, fragile harmony 
that is easily shattered. 
Thus, corals are born 
from the marriage 
of algae and shells. 
Coral reefs cover less than 
1% of the ocean floor, 
but they provide a habitat 
for thousands of species 
of fish, mollusks 
and algae.
The equilibrium 
of every ocean 
depends on them.
The Earth counts time 
in billions of years. 
It took more than 
four billion years 
for it to make trees. 
In the chain of species, 
trees are a pinnacle, 
a perfect, living sculpture. 
Trees defy gravity. 
They are 
the only natural element 
in perpetual movement 
toward the sky. 
They grow unhurriedly 
toward the Sun that 
nourishes their foliage.
They have inherited 
from those miniscule 
cyanobacteria the power 
to capture light's energy. 
They store it and feed off it, 
turning it into wood 
and leaves, which then 
decompose into a mixture 
of water, mineral, 
vegetable and living matter. 
And so, gradually, 
soils are formed. 
Soils teem with 
the incessant activity 
of micro-organisms, 
feeding, digging, 
aerating and transforming. 
They make the humus, 
the fertile layer to which 
all life on land is linked.
 What do we know 
about life on Earth? 
How many species 
are we aware of? 
A tenth of them? 
A hundredth perhaps? 
What do we know about 
the bonds that link them?
The Earth is a miracle. 
Life remains a mystery. 
Families of animals form, 
united by customs 
and rituals 
that are handed down 
through the generations. 
Some adapt to the nature 
of their pasture and their 
pasture adapts to them. 
And both gain. 
The animal sates its hunger 
and the tree can 
blossom again. 
In the great adventure 
of life on Earth, 
every species 
has a role to play, 
every species has its place. 
None is futile or harmful. 
They all balance out. 
And that's where you, 
homo sapiens, wise human, 
enter the story. 
You benefit from a fabulous 
4-billion-year-old legacy 
bequeathed by the Earth. 
You are only
200,000 years old, 
but you have changed 
the face of the world.
Despite your vulnerability, 
you have taken possession 
of every habitat 
and conquered swathes 
of territory, like 
no other species before you. 
After 180,000 nomadic 
years, and thanks to 
a more clement climate, 
humans settled down. 
They chose to 
live in wet environments. 
Even today, the majority 
of humankind lives on 
the continents' coastlines 
or the banks of rivers 
and lakes. 
Across the planet, 
one person in four lives 
as humankind 
did 6,000 years ago, 
their only energy that 
which nature provides 
season after season. 
It's the way of life 
of 1.5 billion people, 
more than 
the combined population 
of all the wealthy nations. 
But life expectancy is short 
and hard labor 
takes its toll. 
The uncertainties of nature 
weigh on daily life. 
Education is 
a rare privilege. 
Children are a family's 
only asset as long as 
every extra pair of hands 
is a necessary contribution 
to its subsistence.
Humanity's genius is to 
have always had a sense 
of its weakness. 
The physical energy 
and strength, with which 
nature insufficiently 
endowed humans, 
is found in animals 
that help them to 
discover new territories. 
But how can you 
conquer the world 
on an empty stomach?
The invention 
of agriculture turned
our history on end. 
It was less than 
10,000 years ago. 
Agriculture was 
our first great revolution. 
It resulted in the first 
surpluses and gave birth 
to cities and civilizations. 
The memory 
of thousands of years 
scrabbling for food faded.
Having made grain 
the yeast of life, 
we multiplied the number 
of varieties and 
learned to adapt them 
to our soils and climates. 
We are like every species 
on Earth. 
Our principal daily concern 
is to feed ourselves. 
When the soil is 
less than generous and 
the water becomes scarce, 
we are able to deploy 
prodigious efforts 
to extract from the land 
enough to live on.
Humans shaped the land 
with the patience 
and devotion 
that the Earth demands 
in an almost 
sacrificial ritual 
performed over and over. 
Agriculture is still 
the world's most 
widespread occupation. 
Half of humankind 
tills the soil, 
over three-quarters of them 
by hand. 
Agriculture is like 
a tradition handed down 
from generation 
to generation in sweat,
graft and toil, 
because for humanity it is 
a prerequisite of survival. 
But after relying on 
muscle-power for so long, 
humankind found a way 
to tap into the energy 
buried deep in the Earth.
After these brief messages, 
we will continue 
our presentation of the 
powerful documentary 
“Home.”  
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master 
Television.
Welcome back to 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home 
on Supreme Master 
Television. 
We now continue 
with our presentation 
of the eco-documentary 
“Home.”
These flames are also 
from plants. 
A pocket of sunlight. 
Pure energy. 
The energy of the Sun, 
captured over 
millions of years 
by millions of plants 
more than 
100 million years ago. 
It's coal. It's gas. 
And, above all, it's oil.
And this pocket of sunlight 
freed humans from 
their toil on the land. 
With oil began 
the era of humans 
who break free 
of the shackles of time. 
With oil,
some of us acquired 
unprecedented comforts. 
And in 50 years, 
in a single lifetime, 
the Earth has been 
more radically changed 
than by all previous 
generations of humanity. 
Faster and faster. 
In the last 60 years, 
the Earth's population 
has almost tripled. 
And over 2 billion people 
have moved to the cities.
Faster and faster. 
Shenzhen, in China, 
with its hundreds 
of skyscrapers and 
millions of inhabitants, 
was just 
a small fishing village 
barely 40 years ago. 
Faster and faster. 
In Shanghai, 3,000 
towers and skyscrapers 
have been built in 20 years. 
Hundreds more 
are under construction. 
Today, over half of 
the world's seven billion 
inhabitants live in cities.
New York. 
The world's 
first megalopolis is the 
symbol of the exploitation 
of the energy 
the Earth supplies 
to human genius. 
The manpower of 
millions of immigrants, 
the energy of coal, 
the unbridled power of oil. 
America was the first to 
harness the phenomenal, 
revolutionary power 
of “black gold.” 
In the fields, 
machines replaced men. 
A liter of oil generates 
as much energy 
as 100 pairs of hands 
in 24 hours.
In the United States, only 
3 million farmers are left. 
They produce 
enough grain to feed
2 billion people. 
But most of that grain 
is not used to feed people. 
Here, and in all other 
industrialized nations, 
it is transformed into 
livestock feed or biofuels. 
The pocket 
of sunshine's energy 
chased away 
the specter of drought 
that stalked farmland. 
No spring escapes 
the demands of agriculture, 
which accounts for 
70% of humanity's 
water consumption. 
Bad harvests and famine 
became a distant memory. 
The biggest headache now 
was what to do with 
the surpluses engendered 
by modern agriculture. 
But toxic pesticides 
seeped into the air, soil, 
plants, animals, rivers 
and oceans. 
They penetrated 
the heart of cells 
similar to the mother cell 
that is shared 
by all forms of life. 
Are they harmful 
to the humans that 
they released from hunger? 
These farmers in their 
yellow protective suits 
probably have a good idea. 
Then came fertilizers, 
another 
petrochemical discovery. 
They produced 
unprecedented results 
on plots of land 
thus far ignored.
Crops adapted 
to soils and climates 
gave way to the most 
productive varieties and 
the easiest to transport. 
And so, in the last century, 
three-quarters 
of the varieties 
developed by farmers 
over thousands of years 
have been wiped out.
As far as the eye can see, 
fertilizer below, 
plastic on top. 
The greenhouses 
of Almeria in Spain, are 
Europe's vegetable garden. 
A city of uniformly
sized vegetables 
waits every day 
for the hundreds of trucks 
that will take them to the 
continent's supermarkets. 
The more 
a country develops, 
the more meat 
its inhabitants consume. 
How can growing 
worldwide demand 
be satisfied without 
recourse to concentration 
camp-style cattle farms?
Faster and faster. 
Like the life cycle 
of livestock, which may
never see a meadow, 
manufacturing meat 
faster than the animal 
has become a daily routine. 
In these vast foodlots, 
trampled by 
millions of cattle, 
not a blade of grass grows. 
A fleet of trucks 
from every corner 
of the country 
brings in tons of grain, 
soy meal and 
protein-rich granules that 
will become tons of meat.
The result is that 
it takes 100 liters of water 
to produce 
one kilogram of potatoes, 
4,000 liters 
for one kilogram of rice 
and 13,000 liters 
for one kilogram of beef. 
Not to mention the oil 
guzzled in the production 
process and transport.
Our agriculture 
has become oil-powered. 
It feeds twice as many 
humans on Earth, but 
has replaced diversity 
with standardization. 
It has offered 
many of us comforts 
we could only dream of, 
but it makes our way of life 
totally dependent on oil. 
This is the new measure
of time. 
Our world's clock now 
beats to the rhythm 
of these indefatigable 
machines tapping into 
the pocket of sunlight. 
The whole planet 
is attentive 
to these metronomes of 
our hopes and illusions.
The same hopes and 
illusions that proliferate 
along with our needs, 
increasingly insatiable 
desires and profligacy. 
We know that the end 
of cheap oil is imminent, 
but we refuse to believe it. 
For many of us, 
the American dream 
is embodied by 
a legendary name – 
Los Angeles. 
In this city that stretches 
over 100 kilometers, 
the number of cars 
is almost equal to the 
number of inhabitants. 
Here, energy puts on 
a fantastic show 
every night. 
The days seem to be 
no more than 
the pale reflection of nights 
that turn the city 
into a starry sky.
Faster and faster. 
Distances are no longer
counted in miles, 
but in minutes. 
The automobile shapes 
new suburbs, where 
every home is a castle, 
a safe distance from the 
asphyxiated city centers, 
and where neat rows 
of houses huddle around 
dead-end streets. 
The model 
of a lucky-few countries 
has become 
a universal dream 
preached by televisions 
all over the world. 
Even here in Beijing, 
it is cloned, copied 
and reproduced 
in these formatted houses 
that have wiped pagodas 
off the map.
The automobile 
has become the symbol 
of comfort and progress. 
If this model were 
followed by every society, 
the planet wouldn't have 
900 million vehicles, 
as it does today, 
but 5 billion.
Faster and faster. 
The more the world develops,
the greater 
its thirst for energy. 
Everywhere, 
machines dig, bore and rip 
from the Earth 
the pieces of stars 
buried in its depths since 
its creation... minerals. 
As a privilege of power, 
80% of this 
mineral wealth
is consumed by 20% 
of the world's population. 
Before the end 
of this century, 
excessive mining will 
have exhausted nearly 
all the planet's reserves.
Faster and faster. 
Shipyards churn out 
oil tankers, container ships 
and gas tankers 
to cater for the demands 
of globalized 
industrial production. 
Most consumer goods 
travel thousands 
of kilometers from 
the country of production 
to the country 
of consumption. 
Since 1950, the volume 
of international trade has 
increased 20 times over.
90% of trade goes by sea. 
500 million containers 
are transported every year, 
headed for the world's 
major hubs of consumption, 
such as Dubai. 
Dubai is 
a sort of culmination 
of the Western model, 
a country 
where the impossible 
becomes possible. 
Building artificial islands 
in the sea, for example. 
Dubai has 
few natural resources, 
but with the oil money it 
can bring millions of tons 
of material and workers 
from all over the planet. 
Dubai has no farmland, 
but it can import food. 
Dubai has no water, but 
it can afford to expend 
immense amounts of energy 
to desalinate seawater 
and build the highest 
skyscrapers in the world. 
Dubai has endless sun, 
but no solar panels. 
It is the totem 
to total modernity 
that never fails 
to amaze the world. 
Dubai is like the new beacon 
for all the world's money. 
Nothing seems further 
removed from nature 
than Dubai, although 
nothing depends on nature 
more than Dubai. 
Dubai is 
a sort of culmination 
of the Western model. 
We sincerely thank
Yann Arthus-Bertrand 
for producing 
this significant film that 
serves as a wake-up call 
to aid our planet.
Let us all now 
take immediate action 
to save our fragile abode.
For more details 
on “Home,” 
please visit 
www.Home-2009.com
Treasured viewers, please 
join us next Wednesday 
on Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home 
for the presentation of 
Part 2 of our three-part 
series featuring 
the eco-documentary 
“Home.” 
May your life be filled 
with peace and grace 
from Heaven.
Auntie Jia-Jia is the 
founder of the non-profit 
organization Homeless 
& Orphan Pets Exist 
(HOPE) which provides 
a haven for stray 
and abandoned dogs 
in the small town 
of Lima Kedai in 
Johor state, Malaysia.
Seeing the dogs 
living happily every day 
is my biggest motivation. 
Seeing them healthy, 
happy and running 
around freely is my 
biggest motivation. 
Join us for
the presentation 
of the Shining World 
Compassion Award 
to the deserving 
Auntie Jia -Jia, 
Thursday, March 18, 
on Animal World: 
Our Co-Inhabitants.
People told me 
that “Home” is 
an impossible initiative. 
So I would like to tell you, 
“Let’s believe together 
in impossible initiatives. 
Let’s believe in it.” 
We can all change 
many things. 
We need actions; 
it’s too late 
to be pessimistic. 
Hallo, 
eco-conscious viewers, 
and welcome to 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
Today we present Part 2 
of a three part series 
featuring the acclaimed 
2009 documentary 
“Home” directed 
by world famous 
French photographer 
Yann Arthus–Bertrand.
He is particularly 
renowned for 
his aerial photography. 
Entranced by 
the beauty of nature, 
Mr. Arthus Bertrand 
has taken scores 
of photographs 
of majestic landscapes 
from helicopters 
and hot air balloons. 
Yann Arthus-Bertrand 
established the 
GoodPlanet Foundation 
in 2005.
The Foundation focuses 
on raising public awareness 
of global warming 
and helps to implement 
various innovative 
programs to offset 
carbon emissions.
Recognizing his 
commitment to the planet, 
the United Nations 
Environment Programme 
presented him 
with the 
“Champions of the Earth”
award and appointed him 
as a Goodwill 
Ambassador in 2009.
I think that as journalists, 
we have a real power of 
informing and certainly 
this title of
“Goodwill Ambassador” 
will allow me 
to do things perhaps 
I could not do before.
“Home” explores 
issues impacting 
our planet’s viability
such as 
the environmental 
devastation caused by 
the livestock industry, 
serious water shortages, 
rapidly rising sea levels, 
dependency 
on fossil fuels,
and the severe depletion 
of natural resources. 
With high definition 
aerial views of our abode, 
the documentary 
clearly illustrates 
the extent to which 
our precious Earth has been 
enormously damaged 
by humanity’s actions.
The film’s ultimate message 
is that we have only
a few short years left 
to reverse 
the tremendous destruction. 
“Home” was filmed on 
location in 54 countries 
over a period 
of 18 months,
generating 488 hours 
of footage in the process. 
Filming was done 
using helicopter-mounted 
high definition 
Cineflex cameras 
that are able to record 
moving images smoothly. 
True to  “Home’s” eco-ideals, 
the producers mitigated 
the emissions released 
during the making of it 
through carbon offsets. 
It took approximately 
three years for the 
93-minute documentary 
to be finally completed. 
On June 5, 2009, 
coinciding with 
World Environment Day, 
“Home” premiered in 
over 100 countries.  
The producers say 
it is the first movie ever 
to be released 
simultaneously through
all media channels, 
including theaters, TV, 
DVD, and Internet and 
across five continents. 
Many cinemas 
offered free screenings 
and it was on shown 
on big screens 
at the Champ de Mars 
in Paris, France as well as 
in London, England 
and New York, USA. 
In France, 
8 million viewers 
watched “Home” 
on France2 Television 
the day it debuted. 
As a gift to the world, 
the work is distributed 
free of charge and 
is available for viewing 
on the website YouTube. 
We now present Part 2
of the landmark 
documentary, “Home”
with narration
by award-winning 
US actress Glenn Close.
We haven't understood 
that we're depleting 
what nature provides.
Since 1950, fishing catches 
have increased fivefold 
from 18 to 100 million 
metric tons a year. 
Thousands of factory ships 
are emptying the oceans. 
Three-quarters 
of fishing grounds 
are exhausted, depleted 
or in danger of being so. 
Most large fish 
have been fished 
out of existence 
since they have no time 
to reproduce.
We are destroying 
the cycle of a life 
that was given to us.
At the current rate, all 
fish stocks are threatened 
with exhaustion. 
We have forgotten 
that resources are scarce. 
Five hundred million 
humans live in 
the world's desert lands, 
more than the combined 
population of Europe. 
They know 
the value of water. 
They know 
how to use it sparingly. 
Here, they depend on wells 
replenished by 
fossil water, which 
accumulated underground 
in the days when it rained 
on these deserts 
25,000 years ago. 
Fossil water also 
enables crops to be grown 
in the desert 
to provide food 
for local populations. 
The fields' circular shape 
derives from the pipes 
that irrigate them 
around a central pivot. 
But there is a heavy price 
to pay. 
Fossil water is a 
non-renewable resource.
 
In Saudi Arabia, 
the dream of
industrial farming 
in the desert has faded. 
As if on a parchment map, 
the light spots 
on this patchwork 
show abandoned plots. 
The irrigation equipment 
is still there. 
The energy 
to pump water also. 
But the fossil water reserves
are severely depleted.
Israel turned the desert 
into arable land. 
Even though 
these hothouses are now 
irrigated drop by drop, 
water consumption 
continues to increase 
along with exports.
The once mighty 
River Jordan 
is now just a trickle. 
Its water has flown 
to supermarkets 
all over the world 
in crates of fruit 
and vegetables. 
The Jordan's fate 
is not unique. 
Across the planet, 
one major river in ten 
no longer flows into the sea 
for several months 
of the year.
Deprived of 
the Jordan's water, 
the level of the Dead Sea 
goes down by 
over one meter per year.
India risks 
being the country 
that suffers most 
from the lack of water 
in the coming century. 
Massive irrigation has fed 
the growing population 
and in the last 50 years, 
21 million wells 
have been dug. 
In many parts 
of the country, 
the drill has to sink 
ever deeper to hit water. 
In western India, 
30% of wells 
have been abandoned. 
The underground aquifers 
are drying out. 
Vast reservoirs will catch 
the monsoon rains 
to replenish the aquifers. 
In the dry season, women 
from local villages dig them 
with their bare hands.
Thousands of kilometers 
away, 800 to 1,000 liters 
of water are consumed 
per person per day. 
Las Vegas was built 
out of the desert. 
Millions of people 
live there. 
Thousands more arrive 
every month. 
The inhabitants 
of Los Vegas are among 
the biggest consumers 
of water in the world.
Palm Springs is 
another desert city 
with tropical vegetation 
and lush golf courses. 
How long can this mirage 
continue to prosper?
The Earth cannot keep up. 
The Colorado River, 
which brings water 
to these cities, 
is one of those rivers that 
no longer reaches the sea. 
Water levels 
in the catchment lakes 
along its course 
are plummeting.
Water shortages 
could affect
nearly 2 billion people 
before 2025.
The wetlands represent 
six percent of the surface 
of the planet. 
Under their calm water 
lies a veritable factory, 
where plants and 
micro-organisms 
patiently filter the water 
and digest all the pollution. 
These marshes are 
indispensable environments 
for the regeneration 
and purification of water. 
They are sponges that 
regulate the flow of water. 
They absorb it 
in the wet season and 
release it in the dry season.
In our race 
to conquer more land, 
we have reclaimed them 
as pasture for our livestock, 
or as land for agriculture 
or building. 
In the last century, 
half of the world's marshes 
were drained. 
We know 
neither their richness 
nor their role.
All living matter is linked. 
Water, air, soil, trees. 
The world's magic is right 
in front of our eyes.
Trees breathe groundwater 
into the atmosphere 
as light mist. 
They form a canopy 
that alleviates the impact 
of heavy rains. 
The forests provide 
the humidity 
that is necessary for life.
They store carbon, 
containing more than all
the Earth's atmosphere. 
They are the cornerstone 
of the climatic balance 
on which we all depend.
The trees are 
the primary forests 
provide a habitat 
for three-quarters of 
the planet's biodiversity, 
that's to say, 
of all life on Earth.
These forests provide 
the remedies that cure us. 
The substances secreted 
by these plants 
can be recognized 
by our bodies. 
Our cells talk 
the same language. 
We are of the same family.
But in barely 40 years, 
the world's largest 
rainforest, the Amazon, 
has been reduced by 20%. 
The forest gives way 
to cattle ranches 
or soybean farms. 
Ninety-five percent of 
these soybeans are used 
to feed livestock and 
poultry in Europe and Asia. 
And so, a forest is turned 
into meat.
Barely 20 years ago, 
Borneo, the fourth largest 
island in the world, 
was covered by 
a vast primary forest. 
At the current rate 
of deforestation, it will 
have totally disappeared 
within 10 years. 
Living matter bonds water, 
air, earth and the Sun. 
In Borneo, this bond 
has been broken in what 
was one of the Earth's 
greatest reservoirs 
of biodiversity.
This catastrophe was 
provoked by the decision 
to produce palm oil, 
one of the most productive 
and consumed oils 
in the world, on Borneo. 
Palm oil not only caters 
to our growing demand 
for food, but also 
cosmetics, detergents 
and, increasingly, 
alternative fuels. 
The forest's diversity 
was replaced 
by a single species,
the oil palm. 
For local people, 
it provides employment. 
It's an 
agricultural industry.
Another example 
of massive deforestation 
is the eucalyptus. 
Eucalyptus is used 
to make paper pulp. 
Plantations are growing 
as demand for paper 
has increased fivefold 
in 50 years. 
One forest does not replace 
another forest. 
At the foot 
of these eucalyptus trees, 
nothing grows because 
their leaves form a bed 
that is toxic 
for most other plants. 
They grow quickly, but 
exhaust water reserves. 
Soybeans, palm oil, 
eucalyptus trees... 
Deforestation destroys 
the essential to 
produce the superfluous. 
But elsewhere, deforestation 
is a last resort to survive.
Over two billion people, 
almost a third 
of the world's population, 
still depend on charcoal. 
In Haiti, one of the 
world's poorest countries, 
charcoal is 
one of the population's 
main consumables. 
Once the "Pearl 
of the Caribbean,"
Haiti can no longer 
feed its population 
without foreign aid. 
On the hills of Haiti, 
only two percent 
of the forests are left. 
Stripped bare, nothing 
holds the soils back. 
The rainwater washes them 
down the hillsides 
as far as the sea. 
What's left is increasingly 
unsuitable for agriculture.
In some parts 
of Madagascar, 
the erosion is spectacular. 
Whole hillsides 
bear deep gashes 
hundreds of meters wide. 
Thin and fragile, soil 
is made by living matter. 
With erosion, 
the fine layer of humus, 
which took 
thousands of years 
to form, disappears.
Here's one theory of 
the story of the Rapanui, 
the inhabitants 
of Easter Island, 
that could perhaps 
give us pause for thought. 
Living on the most 
isolated island in the world, 
the Rapanui exploited 
their resources until 
there was nothing left. 
Their civilization 
did not survive. 
On these lands stood 
the highest palm trees 
in the world. 
They have disappeared. 
The Rapanui chopped them 
all down for lumber. 
They then faced 
widespread soil erosion. 
There were no trees 
to build canoes.
Yet the Rapanui formed 
one of the most 
brilliant civilizations 
in the Pacific. 
Innovative farmers, 
sculptors,
exceptional navigators, 
they were caught in 
the vise of overpopulation 
and dwindling resources. 
They experienced social 
unrest, revolts and famine. 
Many did not survive 
the cataclysm.
The real mystery 
of Easter Island is not 
how its strange statues 
got there, we know now. 
It's why the Rapanui 
didn't react in time.
It's only one 
of a number of theories, 
but it has particular 
relevance to us today.
After these brief messages, 
we will continue 
our presentation of the 
powerful documentary 
“Home.”  
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master 
Television.
We saw the film “Home” 
in Champ-de-Mars. 
What was your impression?
My impression of course 
was very positive. 
And what pleased me is 
that I realized 
that now in France, 
there are many 
environmental movements. 
I believe that 
it would be necessary 
to begin to eat less meat, 
because 
that pollutes the planet, 
that’s a lot of cereals 
for animals, 
water for animals, 
not to talk about flatulence 
from cows 
that pollute the planet. 
Thus we should try 
to see things differently. 
Be more vegetarian.
Welcome back to 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home 
on Supreme Master 
Television. 
We now continue 
with the environmental 
documentary, “Home,” 
which serves 
as a clear warning 
to all humanity 
that our planet is 
in grave danger 
as our natural resources 
are being rapidly depleted 
and climate change 
is accelerating. 
Since 1950, 
the world's population 
has almost tripled. 
And since 1950, 
we have more 
fundamentally altered 
our island, the Earth, 
than in all of 
our 200,000-year history. 
Nigeria is the biggest 
oil exporter in Africa, 
yet 70% of the population 
lives under the poverty line. 
The wealth is there, but 
the country's inhabitants 
don't have access to it. 
The same is true 
all over the globe. 
Half the world's poor live 
in resource-rich countries. 
Our mode of development 
has not fulfilled 
its promises. 
In 50 years, the gap 
between rich and poor 
has grown wider than ever. 
Today, 
half the world's wealth is 
in the hands 
of the richest two percent 
of the population.
Can such disparities 
be maintained? 
They are the cause of 
population movements 
whose scale we have yet 
to fully realize. 
The city of Lagos had 
a population of 700,000 
in 1960 that will rise 
to 16 million by 2025. 
Lagos is one of the fastest 
growing megalopolises 
in the world. 
The new arrivals 
are mostly farmers 
forced off the land 
for economic 
or demographic reasons, 
or because of 
diminishing resources. 
This is a radically 
new type of urban growth, 
driven by the urge 
to survive 
rather than to prosper.
Every week, 
over a million people 
swell the populations 
of the world's cities. 
1 human being in 6 now 
lives in a precarious, 
unhealthy, overpopulated 
environment without access 
to daily necessities, 
such as water, sanitation, 
electricity.
Hunger is spreading 
once more. 
It affects 
nearly 1 billion people. 
All over the planet, 
the poorest scrabble 
to survive on scraps, 
while we continue 
to dig for resources 
that we can 
no longer live without. 
We look farther and farther 
afield in previously 
unspoilt territory 
and in regions that are 
increasingly difficult 
to exploit.
We're not changing 
our model. 
Oil might run out? 
We can still extract oil from 
the tar sands of Canada. 
The biggest trucks 
in the world move 
thousands of tons of sand. 
The process of heating 
and separating bitumen 
from the sand requires 
millions of cubic meters 
of water. 
Colossal amounts 
of energy are needed. 
The pollution 
is catastrophic. 
The most urgent priority, 
apparently, is to pick 
every pocket of sunlight.
Our oil tankers are 
getting bigger and bigger. 
Our energy requirements 
are constantly increasing. 
We try to power growth 
like a bottomless oven 
that demands 
more and more fuel.
It's all about carbon. 
In a few decades, 
the carbon that made 
our atmosphere a furnace 
and that nature captured 
over millions of years, 
allowing life to develop, 
will have largely 
been pumped back out. 
The atmosphere 
is heating up. 
It would have been 
inconceivable 
for a boat to be here 
just a few years ago.
Transport, industry, 
deforestation, agriculture... 
Our activities release 
gigantic quantities 
of carbon dioxide. 
Without realizing it, 
molecule by molecule, 
we have upset the Earth's 
climatic balance.
All eyes are on the poles, 
where the effects 
of global warming 
are most visible. 
It's happening fast, 
very fast. 
The Northwest Passage 
that connects America, 
Europe and Asia 
via the pole is opening up. 
The Arctic ice cap 
is melting.
Under the effect 
of global warming, 
the ice cap has lost 
40% of its thickness 
in 40 years. 
Its surface area 
in the summer 
shrinks year by year. 
It could disappear 
in the summer months 
by 2030. Some say 2015.
The sunbeams 
that the ice sheet 
previously reflected back 
now penetrate 
the dark water, 
heating it up. 
The warming process 
gathers pace.
This ice contains 
the records of our planet. 
The concentration 
of carbon dioxide 
hasn't been so high 
for several 
hundred thousand years. 
Humanity has never lived 
in an atmosphere like this.
Is excessive exploitation 
of our resources 
threatening the lives 
of every species? 
Climate change 
accentuates the threat. 
By 2050, a quarter 
of the Earth's species 
could be threatened 
with extinction. 
In these polar regions, 
the balance of nature 
has already been disrupted.
Around the North Pole, 
the ice cap has lost 
30% of its surface area 
in 30 years. 
But as Greenland 
rapidly becomes warmer, 
the freshwater 
of a whole continent 
flows into the salt water 
of the oceans.
 
Greenland's ice contains 
20% of the freshwater 
of the whole planet. 
If it melts, sea levels will 
rise by nearly seven meters.
But there is 
no industry here. 
Greenland's ice sheet 
suffers from 
greenhouse gases emitted 
elsewhere on Earth.
Our ecosystem 
doesn't have borders. 
Wherever we are, 
our actions 
have repercussions 
on the whole Earth. 
The atmosphere 
of our planet 
is an indivisible whole. 
It is an asset we share.
On Greenland's surface, 
lakes are appearing 
on the landscape. 
The ice cap has begun 
to melt at a speed 
even the most pessimistic 
scientists did not envision 
10 years ago.
More and more 
of these glacier-fed rivers 
are merging together 
and burrowing 
though the surface. 
It was thought 
the water would freeze 
in the depths of the ice. 
On the contrary, 
it flows under the ice, 
carrying the ice sheet 
into the sea, where 
it breaks into icebergs.
As the freshwater 
of Greenland's ice sheet 
gradually seeps into the 
salt water of the oceans, 
low-lying lands 
around the globe 
are threatened.
Sea levels are rising. 
Water expanding 
as it gets warmer caused, 
in the 20th century alone, 
a rise of 20 centimeters. 
Everything becomes 
unstable. 
Coral reefs, for example, 
are extremely sensitive 
to the slightest change 
in water temperature. 
Thirty percent 
have disappeared. 
They are an essential link 
in the chain of species.
In the atmosphere, 
the major wind streams 
are changing direction. 
Rain cycles are altered. 
The geography of climates 
is modified. 
The inhabitants 
of low-lying islands, 
here in the Maldives, 
for example, 
are on the front line. 
They are 
increasingly concerned. 
Some are already 
looking for new, 
more hospitable lands.
If sea levels continue 
to rise faster and faster, 
what will major cities 
like Tokyo, the world's 
most populous city, do? 
Every year, scientists' 
predictions become 
more and more alarming. 
Seventy percent of 
the world's population 
lives on coastal plains. 
Eleven of 
the 15 biggest cities 
stand on a coastline 
or river estuary. 
As the seas rise, salt will 
invade the water table, 
depriving inhabitants 
of drinking water. 
Migratory phenomena 
are inevitable. 
The only uncertainty 
concerns their scale.
In Africa, 
Mount Kilimanjaro 
is unrecognizable.
Eighty percent 
of its glaciers 
have disappeared. 
In summer, 
the rivers no longer flow.
Local peoples are affected 
by the lack of water. 
Even on the world's 
highest peaks, in the heart 
of the Himalayas, 
eternal snows and glaciers 
are receding.
Yet these glaciers 
play an essential role 
in the water cycle. 
They trap the water 
from the monsoons as ice 
and release it 
in the summer
when the snows melt.
The glaciers 
of the Himalayas 
are the source of 
all the great Asian rivers, 
the Indus, Ganges, 
Mekong, Yangtze, Kiang... 
two billion people 
depend on them 
for drinking water and 
to irrigate their crops, 
as in Bangladesh. 
On the delta of the Ganges 
and Brahmaputra, 
Bangladesh is directly 
affected by phenomena 
occurring in the Himalayas 
and at sea level. 
This is 
one of the most populous 
and poorest countries 
in the world. 
It is already hit 
by global warming. 
The combined impact 
of increasingly dramatic 
floods and hurricanes 
could make a third 
of its land mass disappear. 
When populations 
are subjected to these 
devastating phenomena, 
they eventually move away.
Wealthy countries 
will not be spared. 
Droughts are occurring 
all over the planet. 
In Australia, 
half of farmland 
is already affected.
We are in the process 
of compromising 
the climatic balance that 
has allowed us to develop 
over 12,000 years.
We sincerely thank
Yann Arthus-Bertrand 
for producing 
this significant film that 
serves as a wake-up call 
to aid our planet.
Let us all now 
take immediate action 
to save our fragile abode.
For more details 
on “Home,” please visit 
www.Home-2009.com
Esteemed viewers, please 
join us next Wednesday 
on Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home 
for the presentation of 
Part 3 of our three-part 
series featuring 
the eco-documentary 
“Home.” 
Coming up next is 
Enlightening Entertainment. 
May your days be filled 
with love and bliss.
Eating less meat 
is certainly 
a healthier way of living. 
Eating less meat is to send 
less CO2 and methane 
in the atmosphere. 
Because 
meat is responsible 
for huge deforestation 
and nowadays 
meat costs tremendously 
in terms of energy. 
Besides, livestock raising 
is one of the largest emitters 
of greenhouse gases, 
larger than transportation, 
so we must 
be aware of this. 
Since methane is 
a greenhouse gas 
20 times more potent 
than CO2, eat less meat, 
it is better for nature 
and the environment.
Hallo, 
eco-conscious viewers, 
and welcome to 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
Today we present Part 3 
of a three part series 
featuring the acclaimed 
2009 documentary 
“Home” directed 
by world famous 
French photographer 
Yann Arthus-Bertrand.  
He is particularly 
renowned for 
his aerial photography. 
Entranced by 
the beauty of nature, 
Mr. Arthus-Bertrand 
has taken scores 
of photographs 
of majestic landscapes 
from helicopters 
and hot air balloons. 
Yann Arthus-Bertrand 
established the 
GoodPlanet Foundation 
in 2005.
The Foundation focuses 
on raising public awareness 
of global warming 
and helps to implement 
various innovative 
programs to offset 
carbon emissions.
Recognizing his 
commitment to the planet, 
the United Nations 
Environment Programme 
presented him 
with the 
“Champions of the Earth”
award and appointed him 
as a Goodwill 
Ambassador in 2009.
“Home” explores 
issues impacting 
our planet’s viability
such as 
the environmental 
devastation caused by 
the livestock industry, 
serious water shortages, 
rapidly rising sea levels, 
dependency 
on fossil fuels,
and the severe depletion 
of natural resources. 
With high definition 
aerial views of our abode, 
the documentary 
clearly illustrates 
the extent to which 
our precious Earth has been 
enormously damaged 
by humanity’s actions.
The film’s ultimate message 
is that we have only
a few short years left 
to reverse 
the tremendous destruction. 
“Home” was filmed on 
location in 54 countries 
over a period 
of 18 months,
generating 488 hours 
of footage in the process. 
Filming was done 
using helicopter-mounted 
high definition 
Cineflex cameras 
that are able to record 
moving images smoothly. 
True to  “Home’s” eco-ideals, 
the producers mitigated 
the emissions released 
during the making of it 
through carbon offsets. 
It took approximately 
three years for the 
93-minute documentary 
to be finally completed. 
On June 5, 2009, 
coinciding with 
World Environment Day, 
“Home” premiered in 
over 100 countries.  
The producers say 
it is the first movie ever 
to be released 
simultaneously through
all media channels, 
including theaters, TV, 
DVD, and Internet and 
across five continents. 
Many cinemas 
offered free screenings 
and it was on shown 
on big screens 
at the Champ de Mars 
in Paris, France as well as 
in London, England 
and New York, USA. 
In France, 
8 million viewers 
watched “Home” 
on France2 Television 
the day it debuted. 
As a gift to the world, 
the work is distributed 
free of charge and 
is available for viewing 
on the website YouTube. 
We now present Part 3
of the landmark 
documentary, “Home”
with narration
by award-winning 
US actress Glenn Close.
More and more wildfires 
encroach on major cities.
In turn, they exacerbate 
global warming. 
As the trees burn, they 
release carbon dioxide. 
The system 
that controls our climate 
has been severely disrupted. 
The elements 
on which it relies 
have been disrupted.
The clock of climate change 
is ticking in these 
magnificent landscapes. 
Here in Siberia, and 
elsewhere across the globe, 
it is so cold 
that the ground 
is constantly frozen. 
It's known as permafrost. 
Under its surface 
lies a climatic time-bomb 
- methane, 
a greenhouse gas 
20 times more powerful 
than carbon dioxide.
If the permafrost melts, 
the methane released 
would cause 
the greenhouse effect 
to race out of control 
with consequences 
no one can predict.
We would literally be 
in unknown territory.
Humanity has 
no more than 10 years 
to reverse the trend 
and avoid crossing 
into this territory... 
life on Earth as 
we have never known it.
We have created phenomena 
we cannot control. 
Since our origins, water, 
air and forms of life 
are intimately linked. 
But recently we have 
broken those links. 
Let's face the facts. 
We must believe 
what we know.
All we have just seen 
is a reflection 
of human behavior. 
We have shaped the Earth 
in our image. 
We have very little time 
to change. 
How can this century 
carry the burden 
of 9 billion human beings 
if we refuse to be called 
to account for everything 
we alone have done?
20% of the world's 
population consumes 
80% of its resources.
The world spends 
12 times more 
on military expenditures 
than on aid 
to developing countries.
5,000 people a day die 
because of 
dirty drinking water.
1 billion people 
have no access 
to safe drinking water.
Nearly 1 billion people 
are going hungry.
Over 50% of grain 
traded around the world 
is used for animal feed 
or biofuels.
40% of arable land has 
suffered long-term damage.
Every year, 
13 million hectares 
of forest disappear.
One mammal in four, 
one bird in eight, 
one amphibian in three 
are threatened 
with extinction. 
Species are dying out 
at a rhythm 1,000 times 
faster than the natural rate.
Three quarters 
of fishing grounds 
are exhausted, depleted 
or in dangerous decline.
The average temperature 
of the last 15 years 
have been 
the highest ever recorded.
The ice cap is 40% 
thinner than 40 years ago.
There may be 
at least 200 million 
climate refugees by 2050.
The cost of our actions 
is high. 
Others pay the price 
without having been 
actively involved. 
I have seen refugee camps 
as big as cities, 
sprawling in the desert. 
How many men, women 
and children will be left 
by the wayside tomorrow? 
Must we always build 
walls to break the chain 
of human solidarity, 
separate peoples and 
protect the happiness of 
some from others' misery?
After these brief messages, 
we will continue 
with our presentation of 
the documentary, “Home.” 
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master 
Television.
Welcome back to 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home 
featuring “Home” 
a film by 
Yann Arthus–Bertrand. 
The conclusion 
of this excellent 
eco-documentary suggests 
constructive solutions 
to the urgent issues 
our planet is facing. 
It's too late 
to be a pessimist. 
I know 
that a single human can 
knock down every wall. 
It's too late 
to be a pessimist. 
Worldwide, four children 
out of five attend school. 
Never has learning 
been given to 
so many human beings. 
Everyone, 
from richest to poorest, 
can make a contribution. 
Lesotho, one of the 
world's poorest countries, 
is proportionally the one 
that invests most 
in its people's education. 
Qatar, one of 
the world’s richest states, 
has opened its doors 
to the best universities. 
Culture, education, 
research and innovation 
are inexhaustible resources. 
In Bangladesh, a man 
thought the unthinkable 
and founded a bank that 
lends only to the poor. 
In 30 years, 
it has changed the lives 
of 150 million people. 
Antarctica is a continent 
with immense natural 
resources that no country 
can claim for itself, 
a natural reserve devoted 
to peace and science. 
A treaty signed by 49 states 
has made it a treasure 
shared by all humanity. 
It's too late 
to be a pessimist. 
Governments 
have acted to protect 
nearly two percent 
of territorial waters. 
It's not much 
but it's two times 
more than 10 years ago. 
The first natural parks 
were created 
just over a century ago. 
They cover over 13% 
of the continents. 
They create spaces 
where human activity is 
in step with the 
preservation of species, 
soils and landscapes. 
This harmony between 
humans and nature 
can become the rule, 
no longer the exception. 
In United States, 
New York has realized 
what nature does for us. 
These forests and lakes 
supply all the drinking 
water the city needs. 
In South Korea, 
the forests have been 
devastated by war. 
Thanks to a national 
reforestation program, 
they once more 
cover 65% of the country. 
More than 75% of paper 
is recycled.
Costa Rica has made 
a choice between 
military spending 
and land conservation. 
The country 
no longer has an army. 
It prefers to devote its 
resources to education, 
eco-tourism and 
the protection 
of its primary forest. 
Gabon is one of 
the world's leading 
producers of wood. 
It enforces 
selective logging. 
Not more than one tree 
every hectare. 
Its forests are one of the 
country's most important 
economic resources, 
but they have the time 
to regenerate. 
Programs exist that 
guarantee sustainable 
forest management. 
They must 
become mandatory. 
For consumers 
and producers, 
justice is an opportunity 
to be seized. 
When trade is fair, 
when both buyer 
and seller benefit, 
everybody can prosper 
and earn a decent living. 
How can there be justice 
and equity between people 
whose only tools 
are their hands and those 
who harvest their crops 
with a machine 
and state subsidies?
Let's be 
responsible consumers. 
Think about what we buy!
It's too late 
to be a pessimist. 
I have seen agriculture 
on a human scale. 
It can feed the whole planet 
if meat production 
doesn't take the food 
out of people's mouths. 
I have seen houses 
producing their own energy. 
Five thousand people live 
in the world's first ever 
eco-friendly district 
in Freiburg, Germany. 
Other cities 
partner with the project. 
Mumbai is the thousandth 
to join them. 
The governments 
of New Zealand, Iceland, 
Austria, Sweden and 
other nations have made 
the development of 
sustainable energy sources 
a top priority.
I know that 80% 
of the energy we consume 
comes from 
fossil energy sources. 
Every week, 
two new coal-fired 
generating plants 
are built in China alone. 
But I have also seen, 
in Denmark, a prototype 
of a coal-fired plant 
that releases its carbon 
into the soil 
rather than the air. 
A solution for the future? 
Nobody knows yet. 
I have seen, in Iceland, 
an electricity plant 
powered by the Earth's heat. 
Geothermal power. 
I have seen a sea snake 
lying on the swell 
to absorb the energy 
of the waves 
and produce electricity.
I have seen wind farms 
off the coast of Denmark 
that produce 20% of 
the country's electricity. 
The USA, China, India, 
Germany and Spain 
are the biggest investors 
in sustainable energy. 
They have already created 
over 2.5 million jobs. 
Where on Earth 
doesn't the wind blow? 
I have seen desert 
expanses baking in the sun. 
Everything on Earth 
is linked, and the Earth 
is linked to the Sun, 
its original energy source. 
Can humans 
not imitate plants 
and capture its energy? 
In one hour, 
the Sun gives the Earth 
the same amount of energy 
as that consumed by 
all humanity in one year. 
As long as the Earth exists, 
the Sun's energy 
will be inexhaustible. 
All we have to do is 
stop drilling the Earth 
and start looking to the sky. 
All we have to do is 
learn to cultivate the Sun. 
All these experiments 
are only examples, 
but they testify 
to a new awareness. 
They lay down markers 
for a new human adventure 
based on moderation, 
intelligence and sharing.
It's time to come together. 
What's important 
is not what's gone, 
but what remains.
We still have 
half the world's forests, 
thousands of rivers, lakes 
and glaciers, and thousands 
of thriving species.
We know that the solutions 
are there today. 
We all have the power 
to change. 
So what are we waiting for?
It's up to us to write 
what happens next.
Together.
We sincerely thank
Yann Arthus-Bertrand 
for producing 
this significant film that 
serves as a wake-up call 
to aid our planet.
Following
an organic vegan diet
is the simplest
and quickest way
to stop global warming
and is something that
everyone can do very easily.
Organic farming benefits 
public health and the
environment immensely.
Let us all now 
take immediate action 
to save our fragile abode.
For more details 
on “Home,” please visit 
www.Home-2009.com
Eco-conscious viewers, 
thank you for joining us 
for today’s Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
Coming up next is 
Enlightening Entertainment 
after Noteworthy News. 
May Heaven bless us all 
abundantly and protect 
our planetary home forever.