The Tipping Point | Climate Change: The Facts | BBC Earth A tipping point is where even a slight amount of warming can move the climate into an irreversible state https://youtu.be/febBRv2Vftk
What Is the Most Sustainable City in the World?......We visited the world's most sustainable cities to find out what is the most sustainable city in the world. In these green cities, we found architecture & sustainable developments which are saving our future. From Copenhagen to Singapore to Songdo, you will see a range of eco-friendly cities in this video before the most sustainable city in the world is revealed! https://youtu.be/fsWr0LfM_uQ
One Earth is an environmental short film I created and edited to help raise awareness about our impact on our environment day to day. It tells the story of how we globally, and massively around the world, use resources for our short term profit, by deforestation, mining, burning fossil fuels, consuming and expanding. This sadly leads to the many environmental issues we face today in 2021, including global pollution, climate change, and the extinction of animal species.
https://youtu.be/QQYgCxu988s
WWF....Plastics are durable, light and versatile. However, they take up to 400 years to decompose. This will affect people’s lives for the next 16 generations. Our excessive use of plastics is impacting ocean health and biodiversity. By 2050, there could be more plastics in the ocean than fish by weight.
https://youtu.be/IA9O9YUbQew
This is the story of how one man's actions can change the world. Afroz Shah cleaned the most polluted beach in India. UN called it the biggest cleanup project in the world. #trashtag #trashtagchallenge The real heroes are among us. This story is a part of Bored Panda's series about amazing people changing the world. https://youtu.be/jXcoPO76UyA
It’s simple. Sir David Attenborough explains how humans can take charge of our future and save our planet. What is Our Planet?......A Netflix original documentary series and groundbreaking collaboration between WWF, Netflix and Silverback Films, Our Planet showcases the world's natural wonders, iconic species and wildlife spectacles that still remain. We're all a part of this amazing planet, but we're changing it like never before. Discover the story of the one place we all call home. Watch Our Planet on Netflix: https://www.netflix.com/ourplanet https://youtu.be/0Puv0Pss33M
Stephen Axford: How fungi changed my view of the world.....REVIEW.....Stephan, absolutely beautiful.! What an epic journey. You were gifted a little purple mushroom and found the entire planet. People like you are a gift to us all. You give us knowledge and you discover beauty. This is the biggest thumbs-up I've ever awarded a nature programme. Thank you for sharing this with us all.
https://youtu.be/KYunPJQWZ1o
Most of the forest lives in the shadow of the giants that make up the highest canopy. These are the oldest trees, with hundreds of children and grandchildren. They check in with their neighbors, share food, supplies and wisdom gained over their lives, all while rooted in place. How do they do this?
Learn how trees are able to communicate with each other through a vast root system and symbiotic fungi, called mycorrhizal. Camille Defrenne and Suzanne Simard explore the vast root system and intricate communication of trees. https://youtu.be/V4m9SefyRjg
We envision two scenarios: what life could look like on Earth in 2050 if we do nothing and what life could look like if we take action, now.
Watch this video to take a glimpse into the future and to find out what you can do to prevent global climate catastrophe. There is still hope.
https://youtu.be/RVcsV_-erys
When The World Gets 1℃ Hotter | Climate Change: The Facts | BBC Earth.
From the moment we wake up to when we go to sleep we are all using energy, this emissions from this constant generation of energy has caused the world to warm by roughly 1℃. Subscribe: http://bit.ly/BBCEarthSub https://youtu.be/dIsjcG7hTmo
If global temperatures rise three degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, the results would be catastrophic. It’s an entirely plausible scenario, and this film shows you what it would look like. 00:00 - What will a 3°C world look like? 00:57 - Climate change is already having devastating effects 02:58 - How climate modelling works 04:06 - Nowhere is safe from global warming 05:20 - The impact of prolonged droughts 08:24 - Rising sea levels, storm surges and flooding 10:27 - Extreme heat and wet-bulb temperatures 12:51 - Increased migration and conflict 14:26 - Adaptation and mitigation are crucial https://youtu.be/uynhvHZUOOo
A lot has happened since Donald Trump took office. Here’s one presidential term, as told through climate change. https://youtu.be/zQN-EUr8FV0
Take These Video Tours to Unpack Four Vancouver Neighbourhoods. Council for Canadian Urbanism has taken its Vancouver conference virtual this year. Because no urbanism conference is complete without a sampling of city streets, the tours are virtual too. CanU offered four video tours this year, two of the city’s oldest areas and two of its newest. You can watch them all here.....1.Downtown South was led by Larry Beasley, the planning co-chief who helped reshape the old Yaletown rail yard into an urban community for everyone from kids to seals. Vancouver had been called an “unspectacular city in a spectacular setting” until the city builders of Beasley’s era got to work. Beasley would go on to write Vancouverism, a book on the urban design principles that professionals from around the world look to the city for. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rtzLiWdIWvU&feature=emb_rel_end 2, Olympic Village was led by Scot Hein, who was Vancouver’s senior urban designer before going on to teach at UBC. The city wanted the new neighbourhood to be a model of sustainability and was in a race against time to complete it for the 2010 winter games. https://youtu.be/rtzLiWdIWvU 3. Mount Pleasant was led by Alicia Medina, an architect who opened a brewery in the neighbourhood called Faculty. Mount Pleasant is a mishmash of houses from the turn of the 20th century, buildings from post-war industry and the latest wave of breweries and tech offices. An eclectic mix, with pressure as new comes to head with the old. https://youtu.be/1RqO9zZ1jcc 4. Chinatown- Tyee urban affairs reporter Chris Cheung, it’s easy to get lost in the aesthetics of the area, from the old buildings to the red lampposts, much of which is tourist-facing chinoiserie, what geographers call an “imagined western version of Chinese difference.” You could do a tour just on this. But what I believe visitors miss is the view of Chinatown as an actual neighbourhood, not just a museum. In its early decades over a century ago, it was a welcoming place for immigrants looking for work and community amid exclusion. Anyone who lives in a city with a Chinatown will know this. https://youtu.be/R0SWuukyzhY
Stephen Axford: How fungi changed my view of the world....Review- Stephan, absolutely beautiful.! What an epic journey. You were gifted a little purple mushroom and found the entire planet. People like you are a gift to us all. You give us knowledge and you discover beauty. This is the biggest thumbs-up I've ever awarded a nature programme. Thank you for sharing this with us all.
https://youtu.be/KYunPJQWZ1o
The Last Time the Globe Warmed.......Always thought that this planet as a living entity. It continues through its cycle regardless of what animal was living on it. Now it's our turn to experience it's present change. https://youtu.be/ldLBoErAhz4