Battle against the Deserts | | Extra Long Documentary

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 534

  • @duncanmaina7491
    @duncanmaina7491 Год назад +21

    Very moving, scaring and eye-opening documentary. Reversing desertification should be a priority of every government in the world. If every country combats the deserts within its borders, then the whole world will conquer. To those who are already doing this, I take off my hat.

    • @hugodias2449
      @hugodias2449 9 месяцев назад +3

      The priority should be to reverse the stupidification of mankind 😅

  • @ChristopherBowly
    @ChristopherBowly 9 месяцев назад +8

    Really excellent documentary. Very interesting & very informative.

  • @benbronson-oo1mx
    @benbronson-oo1mx Год назад +9

    I retract my previous comment.
    A fine and very relevant documentary.

  • @PeterMilanovski
    @PeterMilanovski 4 года назад +118

    Came here to watch the adds but the documentary kept getting in the way!

    • @susukumutajapan7194
      @susukumutajapan7194 4 года назад +22

      Annoying ads? Easy! As you open the video, drag the cursor to the very end part of the video then click 'replay' ..say bye bye to ads 😘😘

    • @silkoakranchpitchforkranch1205
      @silkoakranchpitchforkranch1205 Год назад +10

      Well they did say it’s “extra long”. Must have meant the ads not the doc. 😂

    • @JuarezDerrick
      @JuarezDerrick Год назад +8

      @@susukumutajapan7194 two years ago when you wrote that comment it worked but it doesn't anymore. I just pay the $10 a month and don't have any ads or commercials.

    • @mub3ady
      @mub3ady Год назад +2

      😂😂😂

    • @desertrose7318
      @desertrose7318 Год назад

      @@susukumutajapan7194 does it work on Android phone ❤️?

  • @JaimeBird-n8m
    @JaimeBird-n8m 11 месяцев назад +8

    More people need to follow Geoff Lawton's permiculure gardening .green the desert

  • @littlespinycactus
    @littlespinycactus 4 года назад +55

    Respect to all the unsung heroes in this outstanding doc for their tireless efforts to arrest/reverse desertification.

    • @Crashed131963
      @Crashed131963 4 года назад +4

      The entire Sahara Desert was once green with lakes 7000 years ago.
      Are we to blame primative people that it turned to a desert a few thousand years ago?

    • @saulteanuts-vg8iu
      @saulteanuts-vg8iu Год назад

      @@Crashed131963 You are braindead.

    • @saulteanuts-vg8iu
      @saulteanuts-vg8iu Год назад

      @@Crashed131963 DON'T LOOK UP!!!

    • @saulteanuts-vg8iu
      @saulteanuts-vg8iu Год назад

      @@Crashed131963 Life is being snuffed out by greed and overpopulation all around the world. You are a simpleton.

    • @saulteanuts-vg8iu
      @saulteanuts-vg8iu Год назад

      @@Crashed131963 LOSER! SHAME!

  • @sadimasson8734
    @sadimasson8734 Год назад +10

    I could be wrong, but the largest desert is in Antartica. That is about to change!

  • @harishrv
    @harishrv Год назад +8

    Each nation as far as possible must grow its own food to feed its population instead of heavily depending upon borrowed food from elsewhere.

  • @davidsullivan8236
    @davidsullivan8236 Год назад +19

    Imagine if we spent as much as we do on wars on recovering the damaged earth, I think we could conquer the climate problem without cessation of farming.

  • @joankirby1944
    @joankirby1944 Год назад +5

    Spain should save every drop of water by building ponds and digging trenches and mounds to stop water runoff. And planting trees and grasses to stop evaporation etc.

  • @kendallkahl8725
    @kendallkahl8725 2 года назад +35

    The key is to supply the hotels with desalination water and save the runoff water for farming. Its what they have had to do here in Hawaii. The tourists don't even notice the extra few dollars.

    • @888Longball
      @888Longball Год назад +2

      I didn't know that Hawaii desalinated. Interesting.

    • @floridaman4073
      @floridaman4073 Год назад +2

      @@888Longballthey have to, there are no major rivers and minimal reservoirs.

  • @lesliefish4753
    @lesliefish4753 Год назад +11

    Spain has plenty of sea-coast and sunlight. Put them together as *passive solar distillation* of sea-water. Then you only have to pump the distilled water inland (not cheap), and sell the resulting salt. Use the money from selling the salt to get the water to the farmers first.

    • @lesliefish4753
      @lesliefish4753 Год назад +2

      This won't happen at a profit, but it will rescue the land and produce *some* money to offset the cost.

  • @cruisepaige
    @cruisepaige Год назад +11

    I know these topics are important, but these are also helping me sleep.

    • @Mystery13x
      @Mystery13x Год назад

      Exactly how I ended up here 😂

  • @alyxiastarling7990
    @alyxiastarling7990 Год назад +5

    Humanity is going to burn for its greed and abandonment of its responsibility to maintain the garden.

  • @carlduplessis31
    @carlduplessis31 Год назад +4

    I loved this documentary. Thank you very much .

  • @SecondTake123
    @SecondTake123 4 года назад +38

    Thank you for sharing this very informative documentary!

    • @gbh5912
      @gbh5912 Год назад +1

      take a real, deeper look

  • @immoosiesmom
    @immoosiesmom Год назад +9

    Sheep grazing needs to be managed so that there are paddocks that contain the sheep and so they can be moved daily for grazing and the plants can regenerate.

  • @johngreen4147
    @johngreen4147 Год назад +12

    Politicians in Europe especially in Spain should learn from this great documentary.

    • @desertrose7318
      @desertrose7318 Год назад +1

      They should look at western USA 😔 we are running out of water Scottsdale by Phoenix has you cannot live in a desert and have golf courses and manicured lawns. And water sucking "northern plants "

    • @dennissmeets4573
      @dennissmeets4573 Год назад +1

      They created the problem.....

    • @fireblade2681
      @fireblade2681 Год назад

      Europe has been destroyed as much as it can be by humans. America is ripe land fresh for destruction.

    • @amarahk6759
      @amarahk6759 Год назад

      What will they learn? They've probably got dollar signs infront of their eyes!

    • @associaçãoResmalhar
      @associaçãoResmalhar 8 месяцев назад

      and in POrtugal also, onde a imbecilidade não tem limites

  • @forestgreen916
    @forestgreen916 4 месяца назад

    1:31:19 The family/group that is replanting the desert is AMAZING !

  • @loulouknox124
    @loulouknox124 4 месяца назад +1

    I live on a farm in the Appalachian Mountains. We grow a lot of our own food and have a rainwater collection system. When the home was built in 1940, it had hundreds of acres of land. Before we bought the home, the majority of that land had been sold off over many decades. New housing developments surround us on what once was farmland and thick forests. Our land still has 5 elder oak trees among other giants. They are estimated to be around 150 years old. We have had 3 people come to our door, offering us tens of thousands of dollars for the wood from the oak trees. It is not uncommon for people to cut down and "steal" trees around here and because the wood is so valuable. We had to put cameras around our farm. Greed will be the demise of us all.

  • @Ineedanewbrainwashagent1.
    @Ineedanewbrainwashagent1. Год назад +21

    This is a top quality documentary, and thank you very much it was very informative.

  • @TheFitnessPapadaOonmeangpia
    @TheFitnessPapadaOonmeangpia 11 месяцев назад +2

    #Thanks

  • @PurpleSixBeats
    @PurpleSixBeats Год назад +3

    Kudos to Island...Spain should take a few lessons.

  • @winnepeterson6570
    @winnepeterson6570 Год назад +5

    Excellent video. Thank you!

  • @stephenMc-b1j
    @stephenMc-b1j Год назад +11

    They should visit China and see how they are re greening the deserts , it's amazing

    • @fernly2
      @fernly2 9 месяцев назад

      China has adopted the model of Alexander Hamilton to bring farmers through inventions to increase energy flux density per capita of workers as well as providing credit to support entrepreneurial ventures of farmers to a level of productivity heretofore unimagined. USA farmers on the other hand are being strangled into an outmoded feudal model which reduces quality and quantity of productivity.

    • @Aoj-h8t
      @Aoj-h8t 4 месяца назад

      Did they do a documentary on china where they found hillside painted green or covered woth green tarps to fool the satellite images ?

  • @heather-vs9qe
    @heather-vs9qe Год назад +8

    My goodness very educational and great content, will watch again and learn.

    • @gbh5912
      @gbh5912 Год назад

      How can you learn from misinformation?

    • @gamingtonight1526
      @gamingtonight1526 Год назад +1

      @@gbh5912 Stop trolling, and get a life!

    • @gbh5912
      @gbh5912 Год назад +1

      @@gamingtonight1526
      Trolling is an attack on someone who comments or posts about a specific subject and adds nothing about the subject, which is this case is load of fake information for weak minded people to absorb and ironically start to defend-
      So, how does that turd taste now that you know you are a troll?
      Grammer is your next faulter.

  • @jorgwestermann434
    @jorgwestermann434 4 года назад +10

    Impressiv and also frightening. Thanks for ubloading👍👍😎✌

    • @hazardsandcatastrophes
      @hazardsandcatastrophes  4 года назад +1

      Hi thank you very much for your comment. We are totally happy that you like this documentary. Feel free to keep checking our channel and we have other exciting documentaries that you might like.

    • @7hilladelphia
      @7hilladelphia 3 года назад

      @@hazardsandcatastrophes yup, I'm subbed because of this. Not even bothered by the ads

  • @garyjohnson1466
    @garyjohnson1466 Год назад +2

    This very good documentary was made three years ago, be nice to get a update on how things are going, much can happen in three years…

  • @nazuddin6346
    @nazuddin6346 Год назад +1

    Awesome documentrys ❤

  • @zuzannazmud9043
    @zuzannazmud9043 Год назад

    Great documentary! I really appreciate the English dubbing. Not depressing at all.

  • @osvaldocristo
    @osvaldocristo Год назад +9

    It is heartbreaking see that catastrophe happening! Sad. Sadder because ignorance and pursuit for money at any cost are significant part of a such tragedy.

  • @cristopherordonio8802
    @cristopherordonio8802 11 месяцев назад +1

    Fighting the NATURES FIGHT BACK❤

  • @hvmlovecomayforever
    @hvmlovecomayforever Год назад +1

    infomative

  • @mpha_nita1991
    @mpha_nita1991 Год назад +3

    Amazing documentary

  • @mars-cs4uk
    @mars-cs4uk Год назад +1

    Eye-opener video. Thanks

  • @ddz1375
    @ddz1375 Год назад +13

    The Dimming is real. I recently moved away from the city to a much more rural area to live off grid. I use less than a gallon of water a day, this includes bathing and bathroom use. Im near a free flowing creek and boil what water i glean from the creek. Working on building a filtration system. Get out of urban areas. Hard times are coming.

    • @dylan-en5ch
      @dylan-en5ch Год назад

      Another doomsday weirdo out in the woods alone. Sad.

    • @toni4729
      @toni4729 Год назад

      Supermarkets are people's downfall. Advertising everything but natural food.

  • @sammychannel960
    @sammychannel960 Год назад +3

    So the upper land was watered for decades/centuries by man made terraces to catch seasonal rain volumes in dry seasons. So historically there were dry seasons such as what they are seeing today but homosapiens compensated with terraces and proper water storage creating usable land.

  • @delzworld2007
    @delzworld2007 2 года назад +8

    I hope there is a Spanish narration for this highly important report!

    • @toni4729
      @toni4729 Год назад

      Perhaps the Spanish government should stop the migrants from coming in and taking over. They're coming in from all over Europe and enjoying the sunshine.

  • @louisebarnes1181
    @louisebarnes1181 Год назад +1

    Spain’s Water Situation : I hope that the fresh water for the water parks, swimming pools is recycled, instead of draining into the ocean. That water could be used for the badly needed irrigation where the crops are drying up.

  • @khaledaouameur7116
    @khaledaouameur7116 3 года назад +2

    A beautiful documentary tape, welcome to the desert of the Tuareg family 😊👌👋💯

  • @mairepcod4063
    @mairepcod4063 2 месяца назад

    Thanks,

  • @jamesharkins6799
    @jamesharkins6799 3 месяца назад

    Here in Alabama ranchers are using adaptive multi paddock high impact grazing to regenerate soil health. It's working very well

  • @mazer4112
    @mazer4112 Год назад +3

    People in these changing landscapes can reverse the desertification process.
    First watch the film The Biggest Little Farm. Then implement their business model by reinvigorating the soil.

    • @toni4729
      @toni4729 Год назад

      First, we have to stop the people breeding. People are still breeding too much.

  • @sabineblume5341
    @sabineblume5341 Год назад +1

    If people are not beleave that they are the Problem, they will change nothing

  • @LillyMelody01
    @LillyMelody01 Год назад +3

    Eye opening for sure 🤔😳🥹

  • @toni4729
    @toni4729 Год назад +1

    Forest fires are the wrong thing to do. As an Australian I see where fires are the biggest mistakes that have ever been made. It just makes the worst disasters even worse. You can only grow death from ashes.

  • @secretgeheim1243
    @secretgeheim1243 Год назад +2

    The use of composting toilets by humans can provide the humus needed for regeneration.

  • @VaxtorT
    @VaxtorT Год назад +2

    The Far Majority of desertificaion has been happening naturally over the course of thousands of years. Poor Farming practices in some areas have excellerated the process.
    A Healthy Balance between Farming, Hunting, and Fishing...and Conservation is possible.

  • @blusoull6968
    @blusoull6968 Год назад +2

    At about 1hr 24mins there is what can only be described as a rather large object in the upper right hand corner of your screen. It’s admitting light and is maneuvering too abruptly to be humanly possible. I hope someone else sees before it’s scrub out or something.

  • @1eagleeyez
    @1eagleeyez 2 года назад +2

    I love desert!

  • @feltongailey8987
    @feltongailey8987 2 года назад +3

    Sadly, the poor and disenfranchised, will be the ones left to reap the horrors the wealthy ultimately caused. The rich can afford to uproot and live where water and food are plentiful. You can only run for so long, however.

  • @chucknewman7076
    @chucknewman7076 4 года назад +6

    Thank you for sharing!

  • @theCosmicQueen
    @theCosmicQueen Год назад +1

    to be fair, some countries are also reclaiming desrt-- like china; and the usa sometimes does this but we don't have a lot of recently desertified land ourselves. It definitley can be reclaimed- as in the mideast , israel and i think it's jordan, are doing.. their deserts got bad thousands of years ago by human causes.

  • @joankirby1944
    @joankirby1944 Год назад +1

    Iceland should build more ponds and swales to stop water run off.

  • @marypatten9655
    @marypatten9655 Год назад +2

    Cutting down the trees is not helping their problem.

  • @joankirby1944
    @joankirby1944 Год назад +1

    What about posts with plast mesh here and there to stop the wind gathering up speed an power then plant the trees and tough grasses in front of them.

  • @kendallkahl8725
    @kendallkahl8725 2 года назад +2

    Now Iceland is being overgrown with Alaskan Lupine. It fixes its own nitrogen. Its a love hate relationship. It recovers barren ground but takes over ground that has cover.

    • @annebell565
      @annebell565 Год назад

      there is a local lupine-like plant they can use (N-fixer) it is a pioneer plant, grasses, shrubs & then trees follow ... just fence off the bl&^%y sheep!

  • @LarryLaird-if6sc
    @LarryLaird-if6sc 6 месяцев назад

    This will happen across the world if we don't seriously change our ways. It's not too late for humanity but the people who elect our leaders need to send a message that we need change to help our environment for the better 😊😊

  • @sandraphoenix441
    @sandraphoenix441 4 месяца назад

    Have you heard of the water boxes developed in Spain? Growth rates of trees are highly excelarated. The design collects water from dew as well as rain and snow melt.

  • @harishrv
    @harishrv Год назад +1

    There is no need for grazing too much sheep or sheep as a cattle for human consumption. This is like taking too much salt in our food. The same result has happened here also.

  • @plastruk
    @plastruk Год назад +1

    I will agree. World population needs to be cut in half or more

  • @BobJones-dq9mx
    @BobJones-dq9mx Год назад +2

    Well produced documentary!

  • @shirleyrice7093
    @shirleyrice7093 8 месяцев назад

    I saw the greenhouses. Then I watched a documentary about how migrants labored in them and suffered. On the beaches, I saw how developers built high rise apartments and sold them. Then new apartments were built in front of those buildings where the tenants had bought for the view. Now I am watching this documentary. It is so sad.

  • @rosariotapia639
    @rosariotapia639 Год назад +1

    Could you plant some fruit trees, like apple 🍎 , peaches 🍑, prune , papaya, apricots , oranges 🍊, etc.

  • @toni4729
    @toni4729 Год назад

    It isn't that man is neglecting the environment. It's that man is doing the damage that's causing desertification. Sad as it is.

  • @j.b.4340
    @j.b.4340 Год назад

    Pretentious narrator: “homo sapiens are to blame”. Drought stricken Spaniard: “We need rain”.

  • @carollever4662
    @carollever4662 10 месяцев назад

    Reforestation is essential to prevent further desertification in many areas but tourism has to end. Citizens can travel virtually to tour the glove.

  • @johnwhitehurst474
    @johnwhitehurst474 Год назад +1

    They travel around with their livestock and eat all green in desert areas, and move on, and then wonder why there is less green, as the desert expands.

  • @mickgatz214
    @mickgatz214 3 месяца назад

    MOTHER NATURE ALWAYS WINS... 👍

  • @desertrose7318
    @desertrose7318 Год назад

    Also watch the movie documentary called "kiss the ground"

  • @HDXBear
    @HDXBear 4 года назад +14

    The next phase of human history i think may be called ;; The age of the scavenger

  • @JJ-JOHNSON
    @JJ-JOHNSON Год назад +1

    Gen 8:22 While the earth remaineth, seedtime and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and winter, and day and night shall not cease.

  • @janakasanjaya6926
    @janakasanjaya6926 Год назад

    Thank you for the video clip

  • @almir-kingofpentacles7529
    @almir-kingofpentacles7529 5 месяцев назад

    1. Ban free range grazing in dry areas
    2. Dig conture canals so the water doesnt run off
    3. Mulch so the heat doesnt evaporate water from the soil
    4. Reforest
    It can be done in spain as they already did in china and india

  • @themuse11
    @themuse11 Год назад +2

    Permaculture can reclaim desert.

  • @dohnlabalaba9470
    @dohnlabalaba9470 Год назад +2

    Let us keep praying that Jesus may help us.

    • @JaimeBird-n8m
      @JaimeBird-n8m 10 месяцев назад

      People need to help them selves.stop expecting others to fix everything.even made up beings

  • @mbarker1958
    @mbarker1958 Год назад +1

    It was a long article but well-worth watching. Well done!

  • @toni4729
    @toni4729 Год назад +1

    How can Spain be so dry when the rest of Europe isn't?

  • @izanamisim6071
    @izanamisim6071 Год назад +2

    Those are some awfully nice clothes those conservationists and "farmers" are wearing while planting trees. The CCP truly loves "plants."

    • @gamingtonight1526
      @gamingtonight1526 Год назад

      OMG!

    • @gbh5912
      @gbh5912 Год назад +2

      Love this, smart people don't crumble to false guilt-
      You speak powerful truth and can spot a con, thank you!

  • @mikerockwood4475
    @mikerockwood4475 Год назад +12

    Is there a connection between rain and plants ? Or is there something in the plants or green that causes rain to fall ?
    Yes, there is. Dry land is hot and it's uplift of heat sends the rain elsewhere.

    • @gbh5912
      @gbh5912 Год назад +1

      @@woodforthetrees3496
      Also, very significant and true!!

    • @liv-maritbakke1914
      @liv-maritbakke1914 Год назад +1

      and the rainforest, send out particles to tell the rain, it needs rain. because rain needs particles to make raindrops. according to another documentary about the rainforest.

    • @gbh5912
      @gbh5912 Год назад

      @@liv-maritbakke1914
      Reading,,,, hummm
      No wonder you're lost

    • @liv-maritbakke1914
      @liv-maritbakke1914 Год назад

      @@gbh5912 who is lost? investigate how rain is formed

    • @gbh5912
      @gbh5912 Год назад

      @@liv-maritbakke1914
      I'm a naturalist living in the mountains, lol
      Keep reading your books that city people write to make money off you,
      Good luck on repairing your mind

  • @michalkozakowski1
    @michalkozakowski1 Год назад +1

    Thats why we have to stop ecopropagande.

  • @ZMacZ
    @ZMacZ 3 года назад +7

    21:10 For Iceland, preventing mobility of fertile soil is key to success.
    Take terrace building, using crushed rock mixed with plastics, from garbage.
    Melt all thermoplast plastics together that melt at a relative low temperature,
    and use that to build terraces. Once it cools down, it will stay like forever and will need
    little or no maintainance for the next 100 years. Yay useful purpose for plastics.
    Now, with each terrace, take any rock sticking out above the terrace wall's level.
    Remove by either dynamite blowing, or electric jackhammer, dependant on amount.
    Crush the rocks that are the result into sand like grains, and spread evenly.
    Then get some black fertile dirt, mix in some more crushed rock, sand granularity,
    and fill till about 2/3 of the terrace heights, roughly 80 cm wall.
    Add on top black dirt, fertile sand, and plant weeds and other fast growing hard to kill
    bushes, and allow that to grow for 2 years, mowing and allowing to composting again.
    In the meantime, prepare another such a terrace.
    Once the two years of growth has been done, now the most of the terrace's
    filling will now completely be fertile, and usable for more fertility terracing.
    Use half of the soil from the first terrace, and mix in once again with crushed rock
    from the building leftovers from the second terrace.
    Use te mixtures after adding some fertilsers like sheep manure, leftover greens,
    hay, and whatnot mulch and compost.
    Allow for another 2 years for the soil to once again get fertility, after having planted
    weeds and other fast growing plants.
    Create a new terrace while you wait for the first two re-complete their fertility cycle.
    get the weeds from the topsoil of the 1st terrace, and mix that in with the new terrace and terrace no.2,
    again with leftover crushed rocks, sand granularity.
    Spread that over terrace 2 and 3.
    Burn the topsoil of terrace no.1 and turn that into 1/4 for tree growth, 1/4 for crop growth,
    and 1/2 for grass and small bushes, for replanting purposes.
    Now, wait for 2 years, while tending the 1st terrace, and allowing the 2nd and 3rd to fertilise.
    Build terrace no.4 and 5 also.
    Terrace 2 and 3 should get once again mixed with mulch, compost, manures, fertiliser etc,
    and once again mixed in with crushed rocks, sand granularity.
    Spread the result into 2,3,4 and 5.
    Grow weeds again into 2,3,4,5 for one year.
    Now terrace 2 can be used like terrace no.1. Do so.
    Terrace 3-5, mix again with soil created by crushed rock, sand granularity,
    add enough to get another for terrace 6 and 7, which should have been built by now.
    The ratio being higher, but the surface area greater, you can do the same thing,
    but only need one year weeds, fast growth plants.
    Take the top of 3 and 4 weeds and bushes, compost that for the newer terraces.
    Burn 3 and 4 till the weeds can make room for 1/2 trees, 1/2 food crops.
    The bushes and plants grown for cultivating on terrace 1 and 2 can be used for
    additional carbon capture, or replanted into soil that needs to keep it's soil in place,
    instead of being washed away.
    After these 8 cycles, you'll have 4 terraces being room for trees, en-situ crop growth,
    if temperature allows, and replantables, and by now 5 more for fertilisation expansion,
    repeatable for one terrace per year or exponentially available for fertility expansion.
    It takes time, and effort, but you can turn it into a better greener place.
    The only thing that takes a lot of work is the creation of the new terraces,
    but even that is not that much, since it only involves making a shape for the plastic/concrete
    to be fillied in with, and pouring the hot plastic/concrete nto the shape.
    You can call the mixture of plastic and pebbeled rocks plastite, a very durable building
    material that needs no hardening, but only cooling down, and will do so under ANY
    weather conditions.

    • @ZMacZ
      @ZMacZ 3 года назад +2

      Note for hotter climates, use plastics that melt at higher temperatures, ofc.
      Don't MAKE new plastics, collect from garbage, or better yet seperate garbages.
      Note that any plastics used in this way, do not require burning to diminish waste,
      and keep the carbon within in bound form.
      Don't mix in chemicals.or chemical wastes.

    • @ZMacZ
      @ZMacZ 3 года назад +2

      Note also that the same can be done in any other ergion where top soil fertilty movement causes non fertility of local soils, and can also be used for completely infertile lands.
      If there's a alot of rain, then allow for top-way draining, with only little at the bottom.
      If there's little rain, don't use bottom draining, only top-side draining, keeping the ground moist,
      from any nearby watersource.
      For extremely low precipitation, with no water sources nearby, use oceanic pipelining.
      The water can be desalinated, by using sunlight and a black plastic sheet cover,
      to get a high degree of evaporation, which can then be lead through an underground place,
      which is cooler than any surface temp, possibly even presurized with water vapor, forcing fast condensation, followed by subsequent depresurisation, refilling with water vapor and represuring with more water vapor, power provided by solar power.
      The amount of water you can get through this method may seem costly and hard to achieve,
      yet allowing a lot of land o go arid and infertile will cost a lot more.
      When planting trees for instance, you can keep more moisture in the soil by using a little more
      of the already present, like semi-transparant solar panels, meant for use in high temp areas.
      They collect like 50% of the UV light to convert to power for the water desalinisation process,
      and even much more than that, while still allowing plants to live underneath the panels.
      This may be a little more costly, but allows for both infrastructure based on electricity,
      as well as not needing seperated lands for power production, while also allowing for land to be made arable again.
      In some cases, exponential may be preffered, since some countries need fertility more
      than initial usage. Within 20-40 years almost any size of a country may then be
      created into a lush and green countryside, save the harshest of high altitude climates,
      or low sunlight ones.

    • @ZMacZ
      @ZMacZ 3 года назад +2

      Garbage plastics constructively used are a way better way than plastispheres,
      or just large scale dumping.
      (If they are made of leftover/garbage disposables, not newly created plastics for the purpose of building.)

    • @JasperKlijndijk
      @JasperKlijndijk 2 года назад +2

      Walling in nature with walls works well, yet plastic I think is a bad idea

    • @ZMacZ
      @ZMacZ 2 года назад +1

      @@JasperKlijndijk Usually plastic in nature is bad. But in this case you'd want something that really does NOT degrade to avoid continuous upkeep. And the walls are not to prevent nature, but to prevent soil motion. the seeds from plants and plants themselves can still grow elsewhere, while the soil stays in one place.
      Much like chinese old style terrace rice growing.

  • @shawn2789
    @shawn2789 Год назад +1

    Where does this water go when its "consumed"? Even if I drink it. The path leads back to where it started. If I shower with it the path is shorter.

  • @Blue1Sapphire
    @Blue1Sapphire Год назад +1

    Its not complicated. . . Look after the environment and it looks after u, destroy it and it will destroy u.

  • @rineric3214
    @rineric3214 Год назад

    You need to build Moses West AWG Industrial-size Water From Air machines!

  • @phil20_20
    @phil20_20 Год назад +1

    Nuclear Desalination 🤗

  • @vesseli123
    @vesseli123 5 месяцев назад

    As farmers put more CO2 into greenhouses and as the level of co2 has been even 3000 - 9000 co2 ppm it was in the Jurassic era. This hints to me that increasing co2 will help the re-greening of of the deserts and thus the population of earth.

  • @cacogenicist
    @cacogenicist 6 месяцев назад

    Build many thousands of stone circles with walls a meter high or so, 4 or 5 meters in diameter, just stacking up rocks. Plant inside these circles. Soil will build up faster in the rings, and the rock wall will protect rhe soil from being blown away.

  • @gamingtonight1526
    @gamingtonight1526 Год назад +1

    Human stupidity will lead to the end of humanity in just a couple of decades

    • @toni4729
      @toni4729 Год назад

      There isn't enough water for the human race yet, we continue to breed like bloody rabbits. When are people going to stop?

  • @jonathanmillner
    @jonathanmillner Год назад +1

    Iceland should look into vineyards. I've been successfully commercially growing grapes in Minnesota for 20 years now, which in many ways has harsher winters than Iceland. We have hotter summers of course, but grapes in Iceland are already possible and climate change will make it more favorable overtime. In Minnesota, our harvest dates over the last 20 years have come 10 days earlier on average. Iceland and it's summers being very borderline for ripening even the most early ripening grape varieties known to man will see more and more varieties of grapes coming into viability as their summer gets slightly longer and longer. Vineyards also help with erosion. Vineyards also love sheep to keep weeds and unwanted plants in check. Vineyards also love sandy/rocky soils like Iceland has because it allows the roots to shoot very deep. It's a semi-arid friendly plant and with current grape varieties, there are many that can survive the winters and still ripen in cool summers. It feels to me, albeit, admittedly, kind of strange, that Iceland could benefit from planting a lot of grapes. Wine... from the land of the midnight sun. I'd buy it...

  • @sfca1849
    @sfca1849 Год назад +1

    Thorium nuclear powered desalination plants could provide the water needed by Spain's coastal cities.

  • @harishrv
    @harishrv Год назад

    There is a proverb in sanatana sharma which says
    *** Eventhough there is No ONE MORSEL of Food, the hair locks are bedecked with jasmine flowers***
    Here jasmine flowers= swimming pools and golf courses as entertainment which is called as decoration.
    Which camaflagues or hides poverty ie barren lands called as ONE single morsel.

  • @SuzanneCyr-wf2ho
    @SuzanneCyr-wf2ho Год назад +1

    I asked dentists here and they heard none of this

  • @GODSpet
    @GODSpet 9 месяцев назад

    An orange co.in Florida loaded 3 tons of orange peels only and when it was gone the ground was fertile like crazy!

  • @toni4729
    @toni4729 Год назад

    You're saying that in the days of Ghenkis Kahn, thousands of horsemen could hide there but now the dust is being blamed on overgrazing. So what were the hoses eating back then? Don't blame the animals. They also feed the soil, and they can't be accused of the damage people do, and they can't be blamed for the wind.

  • @peterjohnstaples
    @peterjohnstaples Год назад

    If we put more C02 into the atmosphere it will help as it is plant food and will lower the stomata in the leaves and save water.

  • @tamaramullen9036
    @tamaramullen9036 4 месяца назад

    The farmer says all we need is rain, he needs to educate himself about how rain occurs. Trees and lots of them create rain. Once you have caused the damage removing all the trees to create a farm, then the desert is going to happen next.

  • @elsonantoniodasilva3352
    @elsonantoniodasilva3352 7 месяцев назад

    Não existe uma solução tecnologica ,o un milagre ,mas a unica solução e o reflorestamento!!! Se não agirmos logo terminaremos en un grande deserto!!!

  • @7hilladelphia
    @7hilladelphia 3 года назад +1

    They sure messed up in Iceland big time

    • @toni4729
      @toni4729 Год назад

      The trees grew there once. How did they get there in the first place, that's what I want to know. It was a volcanic Island that popped out of the ocean. Where did the trees come from?

  • @salvadorgarcia4327
    @salvadorgarcia4327 Год назад +1

    Admiration for the people of the Gobi Desert,.....beautiful