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  • 5 months ago
Around the world, multinationals are taking advantage of carbon credits to allow them to burn their waste. Beneath the s | dG1fbGRROXJPd1duYjQ
Transcript
00:00In 1997, 178 countries signed the Kyoto Protocol.
00:13Due to the rising levels of carbon emissions around the world,
00:17a carbon market was established as one of the primary means to reduce pollution.
00:22Carbon credits allow polluters in the affluent global north to continue their activities unchecked,
00:28as long as someone somewhere in a developing nation is simultaneously doing something green.
00:34But what impact are these offsets having?
00:58It's a big deal.
01:01I'm considering that I'm capturing carbon to not burn the planet,
01:05but I'm letting the communities die.
01:07This is not acceptable.
01:09Everybody knows that recycling saves more carbon than if you burn something.
01:15They have privatized the water system, which forbids people from fishing,
01:32from drinking the water, so that they will all be able to get carbon credits.
01:38They have carbon credits.
01:41And they started to shoot them.
01:43They died five companions,
01:45and even my person is one of the affected people.
01:51A united people!
01:55The problem is that we always see the solution from the point of view of the capital,
02:01and not from the point of view of the human beings and the planet.
02:08The human beings are more important than the capital and the money.
02:12abusing the situation,
02:17and be forests
02:22The human beings are more important than the nature weevils,
02:25and create problems
02:27and the growth of the potess.
02:29See you later.
02:32The human beings are more important and human beings thannode sure.
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