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13.07.2023
26 Minuten
If we look at biodiversity loss, time is really running out.
Especially the young generation is complaining about this. Why are
farmers not adapting quickly enough? And what can be done to
mitigate the biodiversity and climate crises that are exacerbated
by industrialized agriculture? The agricultural sector in Europe is
highly subsidized. But is the money from the Common Agricultural
Policy (CAP) being used wisely? Will the European Commission
succeed in initiating a trend reversal or is one catastrophe – the
war in Ukraine – being played off against the other? A Podcast
with: • Ariel Brunner - Head of EU Policy „BirdLife Europe“,
Brussels, Belgium • Silvia Bender - State Secretary at the Federal
Ministry of Food and Agriculture (BMEL), Berlin, Germany • Dr. Jörn
Wogram - Director of the Pesticides Department of the Federal
Environment Agency (UBA), Dessau, Germany • Bernhard Krüsken -
Secretary General of the German Farmers' Association, DBV, Berlin
Germany • Martin Häusling - MdEP Greens, Brussels, Belgium • Nina
Holland - Researcher at Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO),
Brussels, Belgium • Marilda Dhaskali - EU Agriculture &
Bioenergy Policy Officer, BirdLife Europe and Central Asia,
Brussels, Belgium Shownotes: Original research; The conducted
interviews and original sound recordings come from Europe (Berlin,
Brussels and the region of Brandenburg). Open Letter to the EU
Commission on Pesticide Reduction and Farm to Fork (F2F)
strategy:https://www.birdlife.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/Joint-open-letter_F…
“Sustainable Use Regulation:
https://food.ec.europa.eu/plants/pesticides/sustainable-use-pesticides_…
Study: Federal Environment Agendy (UBA) sees room for improvement
to achieve the goals set in the European Green Deal:
https://www.umweltbundesamt.de/en/press/pressinformation/eu-regulation-…
This podcast is an English adaptation of the German podcast
series "Stummer Frühling" published in December 2022.
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13.07.2023
36 Minuten
While in summer 2022, the EU Commission presented ambitious plans
to reduce pesticide use in Europe, it encounters massive resistance
by the pesticide industry and, very recently, the conservative EPP
group in Parliament. Even in the (re)approval process of
glyphosate, the arguments of the industry seem to impress the
authorities. In a clever way, economic arguments are being
highlighted, following typical public relations playbooks, in order
to prevent binding reduction targets. At the same time,
toxicologists are criticizing that still today – despite the
scandals around glyphosate in the past – authorities are using
studies that do not follow scientific standards and even contradict
OECD guidelines. Is all the progress being nullified due to the war
in Ukraine? A Podcast with: • Nina Holland - Researcher at
Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO), Brussels, Belgium • Peter
Clausing - Toxicologist at PAN Germany, Brandenburg, Germany •
Siegfried Knasmüller - PhD. Ao. Univ.- Prof. Mag. Dr. Medical
University of Vienna Center for Cancer Research, Vienna, Austria •
Silvia Bender - State Secretary at the Federal Ministry of Food and
Agriculture (BMEL), Berlin, Germany Shownotes: Many years of
original research; The conducted interviews and original sound
recordings come from Europe (Berlin, Brussels and the region of
Brandenburg). According to the "Farm to Fork Strategy" (as part of
the “European Green Deal"), the EU wants to reduce the use of
pesticides and their toxicity by 50% by 2030. Here is the proposal
from the EU Commission to the Sustainable Use Regulation:
https://food.ec.europa.eu/plants/pesticides/sustainable-use-pesticides_…
The study by Viennese gene toxicologists examining the methodology
of the industrial studies (in German):
https://www.global2000.at/sites/global/files/Analyse-Glyphosat-Studien
This podcast is an English adaptation of the German podcast
series "Stummer Frühling" published in December 2022.
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13.07.2023
33 Minuten
When the book „Silent Spring“ was published 60 years ago, author
Rachel Carson shaped the environmental movement as we now know it.
But globally, the use of pesticides is still rising steadily, with
devastating impacts on human health and the environment: in Europe
biodiversity is declining rapidly. Already ten years ago, the
International Agency for Research on Cancer classified glyphosate
as probably carcinogenic. Now the European Commission finally wants
to act and reduce the use of pesticides by 50 percent until 2030
and reassess the approval of glyphosate. But the pesticide lobby,
together with the conservative EEP group in Parliament, is up in
arms against binding reduction targets and blames the war in
Ukraine to justify the need for high-input agriculture. In this
episode, we will learn about pesticide scandals in recent years and
how millions of Europeans are raising their voices against toxic
pesticides. The podcast includes interviews with: • Nina Holland -
researcher at Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO), Brussels, Belgium
• Jeffrey Smith - consumer activist and author, Iowa, USA • John
Barton - Corporate Communications Officer at Monsanto (today:
Bayer), St. Louis, Missouri, USA • Dr. Kate Guyton - Senior
Toxicologist at the International Agency for Research on Cancer
(IARC), Lyon, France • Christopher Portier - Toxicologist,
Switzerland • Karl Bär – Parliamentarian The Greens, Berlin,
Germany • Veronika Feicht – Umweltinstitut München, Munich, Germany
Shownotes: Many years of original research; The conducted
interviews and original sound recordings come from Europe and the
USA. Study: “Loud lobby for a silent spring” by Corporate Europe
Observatory (CEO):
https://corporateeurope.org/en/2022/03/loud-lobby-silent-spring
Study: „Nature’s Dangerous Decline ‘Unprecedented’; Species
Extinction Rates ‘Accelerating’” by the Intergovernmental
Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services
(IPBES): https://ipbes.net/news/Media-Release-Global-Assessment
Study: „Assessment Report on Pollinators, Pollination and Food
Production“ by the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on
Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES):
https://ipbes.net/assessment-reports/pollinators New York Times
article: „Attack of the „Super Weeds“:
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/18/magazine/superweeds-monsanto.html
Evaluation Study: „The Carcinogenicity of Glyphosate“ by Kate
Guyton, International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC):
https://www.europarl.europa.eu/cmsdata/129121/PH%20Glyphosate_Guyton.pdf
This podcast is an English adaptation of the German podcast
series "Stummer Frühling" published in December 2022.
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10.08.2017
17 Minuten
Everyone who has ever been to one of the Southeast Asian urban
centers knows that traffic is a big problem. It is a problem for
life quality of the city citizens as the endless traffic jams are
health hazards and time consuming. Beyond this, transportation also
cause emissions that contribute to climate change. However,
solutions to free the streets from cars are yet to be implemented.
By Johanna SonJohanna Son, a Filipino journalist/editor based in
Bangkok for 17 years, follows a mix of regional issues, including
ASEAN. She also works on programs around the capacity-building of
journalists from Asia. Picture: Ines Meier/Lizenz: cc-by-nc-nd
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25.07.2017
16 Minuten
The haze agreement is the first agreement in ASEAN on an explicit
environmental issue. It has entered into force 2003 in order to
manage forest fires and reduce environmental destruction as well as
air pollution with joint regional efforts. However, in 2015
Singaporean citizens saw themselves confronted with a major haze,
zero visibility and a thick smoke smell coming over from Indonesia.
Today, the struggle between environmental, regional foreign and
economic policy has still not been decided despite these immediate
consequences. By Johanna SonJohanna Son, a Filipino
journalist/editor based in Bangkok for 17 years, follows a mix of
regional issues, including ASEAN. She also works on programs around
the capacity-building of journalists from Asia. Bild: Ines
Meier/Lizenz: cc-by-nc-nd
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The english podcast of the Heinrich-Böll-Foundation.
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