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Bill Moyers Reports: Earth On Edge
Tuesday, June 19 at 8:00pm
Acclaimed
journalist Bill Moyers and an award-winning team of producers reveal recent
scientific evidence that Earth is approaching a key environmental threshold.
Bill Moyers Reports: Earth On Edge showcases new data depicting the scale
of human impact on the planet's life-support systems. The two-hour program
explores one of the most important questions of the new century: What
is happening to Earth's capacity to support nature and civilization?
The documentary coincides with the launch of the Millennium Ecosystem
Assessment, an international effort to gauge the health of the world's
forests, grasslands, coastal and freshwater areas. Preliminary findings
were featured in the World Resources Institute's (WRI) World Resources
2000-2001: People and Ecosystems: The Fraying Web of Life. The statistics
from their preliminary findings are staggering: half the world's wetlands
lost in one century, half the world's forests chopped down, 70 percent
of the world's major marine fisheries depleted, the world's reefs at risk.
But Earth On Edge pushes well past the numbers. Moyers and his team also
take viewers on a journey of hope to meet people from the American Midwest
to Mongolia who are pioneering sustainable solutions to ecological problems.
Each story takes place in one of five major ecosystems: forest, agriculture,
coastal, grassland, and fresh water. Reports from Kansas, British Columbia,
Brazil, South Africa, and Mongolia illuminate the ways in which human
demands over the past century have been wearing holes in the fabric of
life. The program profiles individuals who are confronting the challenge
head on, people who understand how their lives depend on Earth's ecosystems,
and how their own energy and dedication might help restore them.
In South Africa, Moyers visits Working for Water, an innovative government
program that has trained 40,000 unemployed people to cut down thousands
of invasive trees and restore the precious water that flows from the mountains
to the rivers. Traveling to Vancouver, British Columbia, Moyers' team
tells the story of an experimental collaboration with one of Canada's
biggest timber companies. Viewers join loggers as they fly in and out
of the forest by helicopter to harvest trees in a way that mimics the
natural process and allows the ancient rainforests and the wildlife they
support to survive. In Mongolia, where the size of the herd determines
wealth, Moyers spotlights the need to train new herders in the ancient
techniques of migration to restore the overgrazed and parched landscape.
From the coral reefs and mangroves of Brazil, the program examines a $4
million government project to close off some areas of an endangered reef
in hopes that the coral and marine life will recover and allow fishermen
and tourists to use and enjoy the coast in a sustainable way. And, finally,
Moyers returns to America's Kansas prairies, where one farmer is bucking
the tide against excessive herbicides, pesticides and fertilizers that
sap the soil of nutrients and pollute drinking water.
Moyers tells individual stories, in far-flung locations, but in the end
it is strikingly clear that the program is about what has been done to
the Earth and what can still be done to turn things around.
Bill Moyers Reports: Earth On Edge will be augmented by an extensive web
site, as well as an education and outreach campaign directed by WRI. The
site will provide in-depth information about ecosystems as well as updates
on their status and instructions for taking action. WRI is also organizing
a series of live events and panel discussions promoting public dialogue
around the issues raised by Earth On Edge and the Millennium Ecosystem
Assessment.
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