I'm glad you answered the question about the Australian rabbits versus the Chinese rabbits it was on my mind when you first mentioned it. Thanks for the video
@@ASmithee67 Right, the rabbits eat the willows in the desert, but are raised in captivity, and escapees would destroy the food..... it doesn't make sense. Are they captive, or in the desert??
Having raised over 1000 goats I can assure you they don't dig or like dirty food. They can kill the roots of grass or brush by over grazing (leaves) if the manager so chooses.
@@Ali-7676 Like I wrote. Over 1000 in 20 years. Bottoms. Sheer cliffs. Native grass, fescue. Clovers. Timber. My 3 farms. National Forest. My neighbors. How many goats have you ran for fun and a little profit? Don't forget, when I was raising goats 60% of the world's population preferred goat meat as their red meat. Have a blessed day!
It is really economically amazing how certain creatures are perfectly suited for certain self-sustaining tasks instead of using machine pollution and fuel. This science is truly green. Chinese scientists are keen observers of nature and behavior.
@@HAPPYPLANTGAL Happy Nah. We split from the chimps some 6 million years ago. Perhaps God made it so. Perhaps its just entropy, perhaps its Type 10 civilization.... Whatever it was, all DNA creatures on earth arent separate creation.
I've raised Rex rabbits here in the US. They are lovely to work with too. You can always keep[ a few back for pets to sell at holidays to make you a few extra here and there.
My grandparents had many pasture chickens in a farm in Argentina in the 40’s and when the locusts came one year the chickens only wanted to eat the locusts, my mother said you could not eat the eggs , I think she said they tasted fishy 😂.
So much fascinating content! THANK YOU for sharing the wisdom of China and other countries when we usually only hear about the negative things. I think the world will ALL be wise when peoples cease seeking power and concentrate more on survival and innovation using the gifts of Nature we already have! GREAT VIDEO!
Intelligent grazing rotation has been understood for a very long time. Thanks for showing photovoltaic use for mitigating desertification. Shade, wind calming, growth of grass underneath with animals to graze. Who would've thought it could lead to all this & produce electricity as well?
@@GiorniVenibato I have NEVER had a 'gamey' rabbit! besides, these are domestic breeds. Their meat is almost sweet. I'm actually not a fan of it, but its not 'gamey'.
It's called high intensity grazing. Where a lot of animals eat and sleep in one place and are moved daily. Then resting the ground where they have been for sometimes up to a year. Depending on the environment and recovery rate of the grass. When grass is kept short so are the root systems so it needs to be left to grow out which helps with keeping the ground cooler. If they are to spread out the hoof a manure impact is too sparse. We sleep sheep in camps because of theft and one is an old shale tennis court which now has a 30cm layer of top soil.
No one be sleeping on them We be fearing their hive mind ingenuity 😂 Americans can buy shit to get it fixed China mass produce people to get shit fixed As a capitalist I love em But as someone about to get into business, I fear how just 1% of them can wreck all economies 😂😂😂
@johnnykotletti4614 and that water looks rather like sir's brew 3 minutes in. But most importantly, you're correct and I'm pleased you were able to respond to that China has lost 80% of its species diversity
They've been fighting desertification since the 70's. There was a law if you planted and took care of plants in a desert area you got the rights for the land.
@@johnnykotletti4614 Very true. China is bad. china is commie socialist, therefore they are bad. Their economy is imploding, so sayeth gordon chang. They are bad for business. How dare they put penalties n fines on big companies for breaking the law? THey should give big companies lots of tax refund like USA, Aussia and canada. How dare they make big real estate company like evergrande sell their asset to fund its own construction to fulfill its promise to its customers? Every construction is tofu construction, how dare they built vast networks of roads and rails that cover the country?
It sounds good but it actually would have disastrous effects. 1) it would be a financial nightmare to pay for that many, get the electricity to where it is needed, and to maintain that many of them. 2) it would cause substantial environmental changes. According to recent studies, if 20% of the Sahara Desert were covered with solar panels, it could raise local temperatures by 1.5°C, leading to a global temperature increase of 0.16°C. This warming effect could trigger a feedback loop where the darker solar panels absorb more heat than the reflective desert sand, causing increased rainfall and vegetation growth. This transformation could alter the desert's ecosystem and potentially disrupt rainfall patterns in the Amazon rainforest, which relies on dust from the Sahara for nutrient-rich sand. Additionally, the project could lead to more frequent extreme weather events and affect polar regions, contributing to sea ice melt and rising sea levels.
What the top comment said but also you need man power to run solar farms. Do you want to move to the desert? Even if you find enough people willing to move, you need the infrastructure to house those people and to create good quality of life. But the desert heat would make this almost impossible. Think of already developed places like Phoenix AZ. They get an average of over 100 days a year having temps of over 100F. There are constant water shortages that also adds to the difficulty of desert settlements. In the end, no one is gonna invest in that kind of thing in the US. It’s way more economical and frankly more green to invest more into other electricity sources like nuclear power or thermal. While no renewable, nuclear power is zero emissions and has a small foot print that doesn’t disrupt nature too much. It also can produce a lot of power for just a few plants
At least 40 years ago westerners were concerned about the Sahara Desert. It was growing at the rate of six miles a year. They suggested Soy beans because they are a source of protein and they grow in arid conditions. The results were devastating. They lost more desert and locals were not interested in eating soy beans. They backed up and asked this question. What can the land support? It supported light grazing of small animals who were a good source of protein. Traditionally Bedouin’s would sent up camp and then move on when they saw small clouds forming. By the time they arrived to the area where they had seen the clouds, it had been a few weeks and desert plants had sprouted providing something for their animals. I can see that we want to make better use of deserts and am excited by these developments. The lesson I learned from the soy beans was to listen to the locals, learn the parameters of the land, and not be so sure we can bring our ideas from our culture into any place. I learned this in Perspectives on the World Christian Movement.
False. LIsten to local experts. Execute the plan in small scale. Apply several scenarios. Pick the the successful ones. Apply it on larger scale. Thats how china did it.
If the soy project was successful and even the locals didn't consume soybeans, can't they sell this cash crop to other countries? I know that the US is an exporter of soybeans.
In Yemen since many years ago people found the best way to deal with locusts invasion. Eating them, special barbecues are considered as a popular festival in invasion seasons.😊
You can see the difference from satellite imagery taken throughout the years. There is no need to take anyone’s word for anything. Also scientists and people from around the world have visited in person.
@MetPass🙄 burn water using electrolysis to power steam engine. Otherwise just burn petrol or gas. Solar destroyes land and creates extreemly toxic waste.
Gee, that's interesting, as my solar system has paid for itself (in vanished electricity bills) in 3 years (Australia) I wonder what the 30 or so companies that specialize in recycling solar panels do. A mystery.
The energy "debate" is so dumb. Wouldnt the best option be to utilize any/all energy sources in combination with eachother? And any forms that "fall behind" should still be utilized for low consumption things, like sensors, switches, etc. diversity in energy sources, only creates more competition which the people need to fight energy monopolies..
China has the best piece of land in Asia....they can practise water diversion from the south to the north...and re-vitalise grassland...ideally for husbandry and dairy farming !
Since your content is so informative, and your 'one unobtrusive like' comment was so 'unobtrusive', I decided to give you a like. Although, since I respect your right to remain a mystery, I do not know who I am liking. Keep up the unobtrusively good content.
Solar panels are subject to be totally destroyed by large hailstones in minutes and then polluting the ground below them with the shattered debris. This has already happened to one large farm just in the last few years.
You like taking subtle pokes. I didnt see any plants or grazing animals around the solar panels. Sounds good though. As we sell off our farm land and give up food for energy. Let's see how that works for us.
Bio gas. So they are going to capture rabbit farts, perhaps by attaching balloons to their asses? Or will the locals chase those farts with scoop-nets?
Covering the Sahara Desert with solar panels could generate significant amounts of renewable energy but also cause substantial environmental changes. According to recent studies, if 20% of the Sahara Desert were covered with solar panels, it could raise local temperatures by 1.5°C, leading to a global temperature increase of 0.16°C. This warming effect could trigger a feedback loop where the darker solar panels absorb more heat than the reflective desert sand, causing increased rainfall and vegetation growth. This transformation could alter the desert's ecosystem and potentially disrupt rainfall patterns in the Amazon rainforest, which relies on dust from the Sahara for nutrient-rich sand. Additionally, the project could lead to more frequent extreme weather events and affect polar regions, contributing to sea ice melt and rising sea levels.
WATOP: Which feels like otter fur. ME: Oh ... oh, ok. yea.. i know exactly what that feels like. (( types otter fur into google just to realize you still cant feel it) )
China produces as much as three times the green energy as the US while per capita produces less than the US in emissions. The green investments made by China in 2023 is $890bn which is on par with the entire US military expenditure. This is no joke.
LOL great idea look at Australia with their rabbit epidemics destroying crops, farmers spending fortunes establishing rabbit proof fences going deep underground 😂🎉😂
@@alliejones9864 Like what about the fire hazard & the triple water needed to put those fires out and the toxicians released into the environment at every fire site so not worth it. Lithium is toxic in mining toxic and unstable in usage and toxic in disposal I ain't understanding it at all
@@matildamarmaduke1096 precisely, often the end does not justify the means, especially when there so often does not appear to be a worst case scenario plan in place. Nuclear reactors being a prime example.
The key is mimicking natural grazing patterns that would occur without human development. How would animals naturally graze? They'd bunch up for protection against predators, hit an area hard and fast, and then move on quickly, not to return to that area until it had recovered.
If desert make green, does it takes away water from other place? I imagine its same amount of water in air and if balance is disturbed some other place will lack water cos new green desert takes more water?
That's a great question! Fortunately, plant roots help aerate soil to enable recharge of groundwater aquifers. Roots also hold on to water and share with neighbors (especially if related to them), and biomass on the ground (fallen leaves, stems, flowers, poo, etc) also helps hold onto water and reduce evaporation from the ground. Finally, transpiration from leaves shares stored water through the air. So while plants consume water, they also help retain and manage it, and if they are native plants and aren't given any extra water once they're established, they can maintain a local ecosystem on whatever is available to them. It's very remarkable and you can see some awesome work if you look up the World Food Program in Africa for one example.
@@notashroom Thanks for answer. If those new plants retain water from the air and less water evaporate, its do not disturb balance water vapour in the air? I imagine wind blows water vapour over the desert and its settles somewhere else, making that place green and full of life, kinda balanced out over time. We never had so big projects, its may not be a problem I guess.
@@FonFreeze you are right that the air is constantly trying to maintain moisture balance and that wind will try to carry away moisture. How successful it will be in a given spot depends on various factors: how large is the planted area? is it surrounded by open desert on all sides, or does it have a canyon, butte, oasis, wall, trees, or any such thing to protect it on some of its edges? how much of the soil is covered (by biomass usually, but even solar panels or sheep standing around matter), and how much is shaded by trees, shrubs, walls, or shadecloth? Even a very small area, say your height wide and long, can create a microclimate once it has enough growth. It will be cooler in summer and warmer in winter, if winter is cold, because of the difference the ground cover and shade and retained soil moisture make, the taller plants (trees and shrubs) providing protection from wind and the sand that it blows (as well as reducing erosion of the healthier soil it's making). And then that cooler microclimate loses less of its moisture to the air, because hot air can hold more moisture, which means your plants can start to draw moisture toward them when there are enough of them. But you do have to tend and protect the plants until they get established, keep the animals from eating them and make sure they have enough water to get their roots in good. If you just plant and walk away in a dry region, likely nothing survives.
Rabbit manure is one of the best fertilizers.
But their piss is the opposite, ive raise New Zealand whites for 45 years and there isn't a better thing to put in the rotisserie.
And they have the best breast milk
A million is a lie
Their just feeding the snakes
I'm glad you answered the question about the Australian rabbits versus the Chinese rabbits it was on my mind when you first mentioned it. Thanks for the video
Rabbits work differently when upside-down. Everything under the equator is deadly.
Lol
@@nunya___. Hahahahaha!
Rabbits have nationalities now?
Chinese rabbits use chop stix😮
and not a single video of rabbits in that desert 🙄
He states rabbits eat the willows food crop at 2 to 3 years old. Any escape rabbits in the desert would destroy the food crop for the caged rabbits.
Because they never leave cages and are just murdered.
The truth😅
@@rodagrail3231what you think there’s no rabbits? That’s dumb also do you know how hard it is to get near a basically wild rabbit
@@ASmithee67 Right, the rabbits eat the willows in the desert, but are raised in captivity, and escapees would destroy the food..... it doesn't make sense. Are they captive, or in the desert??
The problem with goats is that if they can they will eat the plants, roots and all. No roots, no regrowth.
Wrong.
@@markpalmer7832 wrong. Goats can, do, and will rip out the roots if they can, and they most definitely can in loose sandy soil.
Having raised over 1000 goats I can assure you they don't dig or like dirty food.
They can kill the roots of grass or brush by over grazing (leaves) if the manager so chooses.
@@Ghostofachance-iw8pr how many goats have you raised by allowing them to graze on loose sandy soil? Exactly
@@Ali-7676
Like I wrote. Over 1000 in 20 years. Bottoms. Sheer cliffs.
Native grass, fescue. Clovers.
Timber. My 3 farms. National Forest. My neighbors.
How many goats have you ran for fun and a little profit?
Don't forget, when I was raising goats 60% of the world's population preferred goat meat as their red meat.
Have a blessed day!
It is really economically amazing how certain creatures are perfectly suited for certain self-sustaining tasks instead of using machine pollution and fuel. This science is truly green. Chinese scientists are keen observers of nature and behavior.
The narrator sounds like Khermit the Frog.
Rabbit's shite is great for soil and growing things
Great example of people being PART of the environment. We are animals.
P.s. my cat loves your videos
We are Humans made in Gods own image, wonderfully and fearfully created. Animals are completely seperate creation.
@@HAPPYPLANTGALYou and my cat have the same RUclips taste, but he is eager to learn
We are beautiful creatures of the primate kind!🐒🦍🦧
@@HAPPYPLANTGAL chimps look an awful lot like god too then man...
@@HAPPYPLANTGAL
Happy
Nah. We split from the chimps some 6 million years ago.
Perhaps God made it so. Perhaps its just entropy, perhaps its Type 10 civilization....
Whatever it was, all DNA creatures on earth arent separate creation.
I certainly appreciate the work you do getting all this information because I.m not sure I would have learned about this in school, any school.
Geology or Biology class. If the teacher is any good
Has a soft spot for China.
I've raised Rex rabbits here in the US. They are lovely to work with too. You can always keep[ a few back for pets to sell at holidays to make you a few extra here and there.
That is a sad profit for all the work !!! Not worth it as a business
Make a little here and there????? Gfy
My grandparents had many pasture chickens in a farm in Argentina in the 40’s and when the locusts came one year the chickens only wanted to eat the locusts, my mother said you could not eat the eggs , I think she said they tasted fishy 😂.
Actually that makes them rich in nutrients.
YES, CO-2 is needed by plants, vegetables to grow!
No dummy.
Rabbits are the number one predated animal
I really enjoy your channel. Thank you.
The rabbits pictures are checkered giants, California giants, New Zealand, lops, cottontails, no Rex :/
This guy knows more about China than the Chinese 😅
Great information as usual, complete and fun to watch, now just a bit smarter than a few minutes ago...WIN WIN!
Hats off to the ingenuity of the Chinese. 👍
Haha WTHeck dude
China has zero waste... Yeah, right! 😂😂😂
Oh my God has Peter just dropped his most accurate prediction based on facts and not bias? I like this one... keep it up
So much fascinating content! THANK YOU for sharing the wisdom of China and other countries when we usually only hear about the negative things. I think the world will ALL be wise when peoples cease seeking power and concentrate more on survival and innovation using the gifts of Nature we already have! GREAT VIDEO!
china needs to chill out first
Thought the US was sold to China in the 70s on a 50yr plan.
As usual, another very interesting perspective. Thanks for your continuing research and analysis
Be careful of any monoculture without a balanced ecosystem.
Interesting. Can you please elaborate?
Yeh like taking mankind out of nature?
Rabbits do not bury their feces like cats.
Nope sure don't they also kick it outta there cage to mine do
They are herbivores.... their shit don't stink so bad as cat shit
He takes dramatic license
Learn this. Rabbits also consumed their own peep and poops. Another way to their survival in any condition and situation.
rabbits like to dig - no they don't bury their feces, but they tunnel, and they poop in their tunnels.
Intelligent grazing rotation has been understood for a very long time. Thanks for showing photovoltaic use for mitigating desertification. Shade, wind calming, growth of grass underneath with animals to graze. Who would've thought it could lead to all this & produce electricity as well?
Rabbits, they taste better than chicken.
Rabbits is super gamey!
@@GiorniVenibato Depends on their diet, but you do have to cook/season them properly.
@@GiorniVenibato I have NEVER had a 'gamey' rabbit! besides, these are domestic breeds. Their meat is almost sweet. I'm actually not a fan of it, but its not 'gamey'.
It's called high intensity grazing. Where a lot of animals eat and sleep in one place and are moved daily. Then resting the ground where they have been for sometimes up to a year. Depending on the environment and recovery rate of the grass. When grass is kept short so are the root systems so it needs to be left to grow out which helps with keeping the ground cooler. If they are to spread out the hoof a manure impact is too sparse. We sleep sheep in camps because of theft and one is an old shale tennis court which now has a 30cm layer of top soil.
It's not a mono culture. It's a duo culture. Willows and rabbits :D
The increasing CO2 in the atmosphere is helping green everything.
Australia used to have a rabbit meat and fur industry. Only specialised butchers deal in game meats so you can make bunny pies if you want.
Yes door to door. Rabbit Stew.
Man these thumbnails are so ridiculous 😆
Y’all be sleeping on the Chinese. They are some of the most determined and smartest people in the world.
No one be sleeping on them
We be fearing their hive mind ingenuity 😂
Americans can buy shit to get it fixed
China mass produce people to get shit fixed
As a capitalist I love em
But as someone about to get into business, I fear how just 1% of them can wreck all economies 😂😂😂
90% of the groundwater in China is not safe to consum anymore ... such smart ppl.
@johnnykotletti4614 and that water looks rather like sir's brew 3 minutes in.
But most importantly, you're correct and I'm pleased you were able to respond to that
China has lost 80% of its species diversity
They've been fighting desertification since the 70's.
There was a law if you planted and took care of plants in a desert area you got the rights for the land.
@@johnnykotletti4614 Very true. China is bad. china is commie socialist, therefore they are bad. Their economy is imploding, so sayeth gordon chang.
They are bad for business.
How dare they put penalties n fines on big companies for breaking the law? THey should give big companies lots of tax refund like USA, Aussia and canada.
How dare they make big real estate company like evergrande sell their asset to fund its own construction to fulfill its promise to its customers?
Every construction is tofu construction, how dare they built vast networks of roads and rails that cover the country?
Pretty sure rabbit fur cannot be like an otters, mink yes
Good morning, Steve! How are you? Hope you have a great day! Great information on rabbits, thank you! See you again in your next video!
Spain is known for successful growing plants on salt marshes and shores.
There are plenty of naturally occurring plants on salt marshes, so what are they planting sea cabbage?
....china started mass "seawater rice" planting 2 years ago.
Basically, planting rice on saline soil.
Its successful.
Except those are places that should be left alone to protect the coast
Deserts are great for photovoltaic plants! The Sahara would be great for photovoltaic plants! And the USA has a lot of deserts!
Yet nothing is done for usa desert. Not by the dems, not by the reps.
It sounds good but it actually would have disastrous effects. 1) it would be a financial nightmare to pay for that many, get the electricity to where it is needed, and to maintain that many of them. 2) it would cause substantial environmental changes. According to recent studies, if 20% of the Sahara Desert were covered with solar panels, it could raise local temperatures by 1.5°C, leading to a global temperature increase of 0.16°C. This warming effect could trigger a feedback loop where the darker solar panels absorb more heat than the reflective desert sand, causing increased rainfall and vegetation growth. This transformation could alter the desert's ecosystem and potentially disrupt rainfall patterns in the Amazon rainforest, which relies on dust from the Sahara for nutrient-rich sand. Additionally, the project could lead to more frequent extreme weather events and affect polar regions, contributing to sea ice melt and rising sea levels.
What the top comment said but also you need man power to run solar farms. Do you want to move to the desert? Even if you find enough people willing to move, you need the infrastructure to house those people and to create good quality of life. But the desert heat would make this almost impossible. Think of already developed places like Phoenix AZ. They get an average of over 100 days a year having temps of over 100F. There are constant water shortages that also adds to the difficulty of desert settlements. In the end, no one is gonna invest in that kind of thing in the US. It’s way more economical and frankly more green to invest more into other electricity sources like nuclear power or thermal. While no renewable, nuclear power is zero emissions and has a small foot print that doesn’t disrupt nature too much. It also can produce a lot of power for just a few plants
For a part of the video the soundtrack made me think I was stuck in an underwater cave
At least 40 years ago westerners were concerned about the Sahara Desert. It was growing at the rate of six miles a year. They suggested Soy beans because they are a source of protein and they grow in arid conditions. The results were devastating. They lost more desert and locals were not interested in eating soy beans. They backed up and asked this question. What can the land support? It supported light grazing of small animals who were a good source of protein. Traditionally Bedouin’s would sent up camp and then move on when they saw small clouds forming. By the time they arrived to the area where they had seen the clouds, it had been a few weeks and desert plants had sprouted providing something for their animals. I can see that we want to make better use of deserts and am excited by these developments. The lesson I learned from the soy beans was to listen to the locals, learn the parameters of the land, and not be so sure we can bring our ideas from our culture into any place. I learned this in Perspectives on the World Christian Movement.
yuk
Africa doing african things "It is the west's fault".
False.
LIsten to local experts.
Execute the plan in small scale. Apply several scenarios.
Pick the the successful ones.
Apply it on larger scale.
Thats how china did it.
If the soy project was successful and even the locals didn't consume soybeans, can't they sell this cash crop to other countries? I know that the US is an exporter of soybeans.
😂 desertification is extreemly easy to combat, and ideally you'd grow cattails to create a base grass layer to compost.
Wonderfully and Excellently explained 🌾🐇 Thankyou!
Dude, new subscriber here, you sound like the Hollywood actor Seth Rogens
This is so encouraging.
Another great video
They multiply like crazy
Nature always wins!!!
The coffee in your intro looks so weak haha
In Yemen since many years ago people found the best way to deal with locusts invasion.
Eating them, special barbecues are considered as a popular festival in invasion seasons.😊
Desertification will be reversed when their is both political and economic will to do so. Not before.
Did not even realized that this is a new 20 minutes ago video... lucky me xD
Rex rabbits are domesticated.....
Yeah, and?
@daniellejarvis157 he said they were not
One problem. You can not believe what China says.
you got it
Comment should be higher up
You can see the difference from satellite imagery taken throughout the years. There is no need to take anyone’s word for anything. Also scientists and people from around the world have visited in person.
Seeing is believing! You should go check it out and tell us
Your bias is your downfall
Loose leaf green tea huh?
Hahahahaha, People still think that Solar is a good thing. Too bad that they can't be recycled and NEVER get back the energy used to make them!!!!
I am not putting rabbits on my roof.
@MetPass🙄 burn water using electrolysis to power steam engine. Otherwise just burn petrol or gas. Solar destroyes land and creates extreemly toxic waste.
@MetPass HUGH?
Gee, that's interesting, as my solar system has paid for itself (in vanished electricity bills) in 3 years (Australia) I wonder what the 30 or so companies that specialize in recycling solar panels do. A mystery.
The energy "debate" is so dumb.
Wouldnt the best option be to utilize any/all energy sources in combination with eachother?
And any forms that "fall behind" should still be utilized for low consumption things, like sensors, switches, etc.
diversity in energy sources, only creates more competition which the people need to fight energy monopolies..
Great video, thanks.
What a great video!! I see many possibilities here !
China has the best piece of land in Asia....they can practise
water diversion from the south to the north...and re-vitalise grassland...ideally for husbandry and dairy farming !
What about Australia?
O Yea, what about them?
Have they budgeted or initiated any reforestation program so far?
Why would you expect anyone to join this group if we don’t know who we are signing on to?
That is not coffee
Since your content is so informative, and your 'one unobtrusive like' comment was so 'unobtrusive', I decided to give you a like. Although, since I respect your right to remain a mystery, I do not know who I am liking. Keep up the unobtrusively good content.
With all the stories that you've been doing lately about China, I get the feeling you want us to like China.
Or.., stop being so ignorant about China. I know it's going to be hard on the American psyche. I've been with these whiners for 50 years.
The more money people make, the more taxable income the government creates. It's in their best interest.
Best. Intro. Ever!! Haha!!
Being good stewards of the earth! Smart!
How could it be? Isnt commie china evil?
Great Ideas!!! Need more world wide cooperation!!
Solar panels are subject to be totally destroyed by large hailstones in minutes and then polluting the ground below them with the shattered debris. This has already happened to one large farm just in the last few years.
Sand/dust doesn't help either.
Everyone has to eat? 😅 including animals 🐇
IMAGINE WHATS UNDER ALL THE DESERTS IN THE WORLD!...
You like taking subtle pokes. I didnt see any plants or grazing animals around the solar panels. Sounds good though. As we sell off our farm land and give up food for energy. Let's see how that works for us.
Bunnies saving the world lol
😊Needs to plant loads of carrots😂
Bio gas. So they are going to capture rabbit farts, perhaps by attaching balloons to their asses? Or will the locals chase those farts with scoop-nets?
Man I haven't found a voice like this, just the best narrator
Know that voice 😄
How are those trees are being irrigated ?!
It's a desert no water !😮
Greatest information, I wish Governments take this more seriously
All living creatures need grass for food.
A million of rabbits in the desert 🏜️🏝️😮
Yes, never mind the toxic waste stream created by solar panels when their end of life occurs.
I think an animal that can drink saltwater and converts it into clean water could be really useful for the desert of atacama in chile and bolivien
So not only deep seek … now this! Damn the Chinese are freaking cool! 😎
It's almost like thay learnd somthing from there war on the sparrow 😮
Inevitably a couple of these bunnies will escape and we have the Australian ecological disaster all over again
This is really insightful. I wonder why America is not involved in these kinds of projects anymore.
Because we have destroyed everything that we haven't intentionally left alone
The reason is now USA is wasting the time in creating awar among nations
paper and rabbits beats sand, sand and sand.
I read that the large solar forms push a lot of heat back into the atmosphere. Did you read anything about that?
Covering the Sahara Desert with solar panels could generate significant amounts of renewable energy but also cause substantial environmental changes. According to recent studies, if 20% of the Sahara Desert were covered with solar panels, it could raise local temperatures by 1.5°C, leading to a global temperature increase of 0.16°C. This warming effect could trigger a feedback loop where the darker solar panels absorb more heat than the reflective desert sand, causing increased rainfall and vegetation growth. This transformation could alter the desert's ecosystem and potentially disrupt rainfall patterns in the Amazon rainforest, which relies on dust from the Sahara for nutrient-rich sand. Additionally, the project could lead to more frequent extreme weather events and affect polar regions, contributing to sea ice melt and rising sea levels.
WABBIT SEASON!
DUCK SEASON!
WABBIT SEASON!
DUCK SEASON!
.... had to share... :D
WATOP: Which feels like otter fur.
ME: Oh ... oh, ok. yea.. i know exactly what that feels like. (( types otter fur into google just to realize you still cant feel it) )
Australian locals are in reservations…
Maybe some google earth imagery of the area you are talking about would help.
Do you have Google Earth? You can just look it up....
That coffee you drink always looks so week and flaccid. Get some real coffee with a proper crema will you 😅
Only saving thousands of tons isnt really that much of you think about how much coal they burn
China produces as much as three times the green energy as the US while per capita produces less than the US in emissions. The green investments made by China in 2023 is $890bn which is on par with the entire US military expenditure. This is no joke.
It's interesting, it's about ecosystems.
Your voice is very unique i could never guess what you looked like
👍👍👍👍
LOL great idea look at Australia with their rabbit epidemics destroying crops, farmers spending fortunes establishing rabbit proof fences going deep underground 😂🎉😂
Hope they have a plan if the rabbit reproduce out of control
They sell more meat and fur and make more money. What else would the plan be. Its not like they are inedible and poisonous
Yes, like the disposal of lithium batteries 😕
@@alliejones9864
Like what about the fire hazard & the triple water needed to put those fires out and the toxicians released into the environment at every fire site so not worth it. Lithium is toxic in mining toxic and unstable in usage and toxic in disposal I ain't understanding it at all
@@matildamarmaduke1096 precisely, often the end does not justify the means, especially when there so often does not appear to be a worst case scenario plan in place. Nuclear reactors being a prime example.
Did you catch the bit about eating rabbits,? He said "rabbit meat".
The key is mimicking natural grazing patterns that would occur without human development. How would animals naturally graze? They'd bunch up for protection against predators, hit an area hard and fast, and then move on quickly, not to return to that area until it had recovered.
Yes, goats will eat anything, including roots. Dessert again! SO NO GOATS.
Sheep are better for this than goats. But goats have a purpose and place.
ACTUALLY THIS PROGRAMME IS SHOWING THAT,
THE HUMAN BEINGS ARE CAN DO GOOD AND SAME TIME CAN MAKE BAD DESTROY EVERY THING SO EASILY.
i wonder if they stood still about the very long concequences.. probably not
If desert make green, does it takes away water from other place? I imagine its same amount of water in air and if balance is disturbed some other place will lack water cos new green desert takes more water?
That's a great question! Fortunately, plant roots help aerate soil to enable recharge of groundwater aquifers. Roots also hold on to water and share with neighbors (especially if related to them), and biomass on the ground (fallen leaves, stems, flowers, poo, etc) also helps hold onto water and reduce evaporation from the ground. Finally, transpiration from leaves shares stored water through the air. So while plants consume water, they also help retain and manage it, and if they are native plants and aren't given any extra water once they're established, they can maintain a local ecosystem on whatever is available to them. It's very remarkable and you can see some awesome work if you look up the World Food Program in Africa for one example.
@@notashroom Thanks for answer.
If those new plants retain water from the air and less water evaporate, its do not disturb balance water vapour in the air?
I imagine wind blows water vapour over the desert and its settles somewhere else, making that place green and full of life, kinda balanced out over time. We never had so big projects, its may not be a problem I guess.
@@FonFreeze you are right that the air is constantly trying to maintain moisture balance and that wind will try to carry away moisture. How successful it will be in a given spot depends on various factors: how large is the planted area? is it surrounded by open desert on all sides, or does it have a canyon, butte, oasis, wall, trees, or any such thing to protect it on some of its edges? how much of the soil is covered (by biomass usually, but even solar panels or sheep standing around matter), and how much is shaded by trees, shrubs, walls, or shadecloth?
Even a very small area, say your height wide and long, can create a microclimate once it has enough growth. It will be cooler in summer and warmer in winter, if winter is cold, because of the difference the ground cover and shade and retained soil moisture make, the taller plants (trees and shrubs) providing protection from wind and the sand that it blows (as well as reducing erosion of the healthier soil it's making). And then that cooler microclimate loses less of its moisture to the air, because hot air can hold more moisture, which means your plants can start to draw moisture toward them when there are enough of them.
But you do have to tend and protect the plants until they get established, keep the animals from eating them and make sure they have enough water to get their roots in good. If you just plant and walk away in a dry region, likely nothing survives.