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CNN Newsroom With Fredricka Whitfield

for this huge ecosystem value that the system is provide for us every single day. and it will change how we think we can make it change. how we do business. >> so then in your view, what, what are the biggest threats to these ecosystems right now? >> the biggest threat to these ecosystems of first of all, that we don't value them when we don't recognize what they do for us and after that, we're looking at how we treat them because we don't recognize them. so let me give you an example. if you think today of how cities expand or how real estate develops, the first thing that happens is we look at engineering we take away the landscape we put in an engineered structure and then, we put back the landscape. this can change it to say, what is the value of that ecosystem that's there? how do we align with that ecosystem to give us more benefits great livelihoods. and of course, investors that all, all important return on investment, we can literally changed the way we protect our planet. and that in turn will benefit are resilient and ourselves to the

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CNN Newsroom With Fredricka Whitfield

the industrial revolution, they have absorbed about a third of the excess carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. they do it better and they do it faster than any other ecosystem so are you hoping out of this that what it will help launch is perhaps greater urgency to protect these ecosystems absolutely because if we protect nature& these ecosystems, these ecosystems protect us so mangroves not only sequester four times more carbon than tropical rainforest, but they stopped storm surge. >> if you have about a half-mile of a mangrove fringe, the water level coming in and a storm goes down by about a fraudulent big quarters. that's a huge difference between getting flooded and not getting flooded and then there are a major source of fisheries. and one-and-a-half billion people, particularly in developing nations, depend on fisheries. so what i'm hoping is that it's going to make people more aware of not just the carbon and climate value

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CNN Newsroom With Fredricka Whitfield

ecosystems. be an advocate for doing in business in the world differently dr. deborah brosnan. >> thank you so much. >> sure. to tune in everybody two, the cnn films presents blue carbon natures, hidden power. >> it premieres tonight at 9:00 p.m. eastern pacific only on cnn all right. straight ahead. >> taylor swift's new album has ushered in a whole new era for the pop star will share how fans are reacting to the tortured poets department. that's next hour in the cnn newsroom. >> central weekdays that's seven eastern with chewy save 20% on your first pharmacy order. >> so you can put an end to the edge get flea and tick medication delivered right to your door dude, what are you doing i'm protecting my car.

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CNN Newsroom With Fredricka Whitfield

tune of trillions of dollars. and a better lifestyle so this documentary is unique, right? >> because it brings together film, music a science to highlight climate crisis. as a scientist who works to create so real world solutions. what are some other ways that people can get involved in caring about this issue? what are you hoping this documentary is going to help enlighten? >> so beyond raising awareness and letting you realize that ecosystems really are very cool. i think the best thing it can do as to galvanize people to get involved. now there's many ways you can get involved locally. and the kinds of restoration projects that are going on around the world, whether it's seagrass whether it's mangrove restoration, there are lots of opportunities to engage with non-profit organizations are for-profit organizations to do this kind of work either professionally or as a volunteer. that's one of the major things you can do. the second is to educate yourself and raise awareness b. and advocate for these

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CNN Newsroom With Fredricka Whitfield

instead of forcing them to do something different because of something that might happen in future, in the future. >> so what might some of those solutions for the here and now be? >> well, i think one of the key things is doing more american energy of all energy sources. i mean, it is cheaper and more environmentally friendly for us to do energy in the united states, energy production. so that means more natural gas in the short-term, that means more wind, more solar, more nuclear, more hydro-power, more of everything. because not only will that draw down carbon emissions as we've already started to do in this country, which is really important to keep, keep doing, but it also allows people to spend less on their utility bill. people cannot afford to pay more for the energy bill. in california, energy prices have skyrocketed& new york, energy prices have skyrocketed,& it's one of the main reasons that people are leaving as those increased costs of life if and so, i think having closer to home energy is a really big, big part of it. i also think the resiliency measures of restoring ecosystems along or coastlines that the effects of hurricanes and sea level rise

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CNN Newsroom

master's in the environmental toxicology. >> and what did you think you wanted to do with your i wanted to be a professor like i wanted to go the full academic route the club's got, or what hard, right. >> turn and changed my life music was the other love of her life. >> and when she began making it as dj, dj to g a whole new career took off. she worked with megastars and book gigs and festivals, all wall finishing her masters and the effects of toxins on killer whales, the two loves merge in her film, blue carbon and immersive journey through the watery landscapes that serve as massive allies and fighting the climate crisis. >> so blue carbon is basically these ecosystems that are amazing at pulling carbon out of the atmosphere. i'm putting it deep until the ground. >> you're saying this is blue car business, blue carbon. so yeah, it's not blue, brown. and remember, but but it is

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CNN Newsroom

blue carbon. >> they're like ten times better at it than the amazon rain forest for example, those ecosystems are mango for us seagrass meadows and salt marshes. we were taking field recordings throughout the whole film. and then i took all those field recordings and made a song out of it essentially, and you get to hear that song at the end of the fell, i want to make a new anthem for nature by recording the sounds of coastal habitats that we don't value enough you play these and festivals yeah. yeah. how do you connect your music audience with what you care about as a biologist, as an ecologist, incorporating those sounds automatically gives me something to talk about because people really care and they're interested. there's your j to g, the dj persona but then there's j to the biologist and that's a paradox at times given the footprint, the energy use ship festivals, and all of that, well, it definitely is a paradox like i'm a turing dj. i have to fly to my gigs and so

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CNN This Morning Weekend

changed my life music was the other love of her life and when she began making it as dj, dj to g, a whole new career took off. >> she worked with mega stocks and book gigs and festival all while finishing her masters on the effects of toxins on killer whales, the two loves merge in her film, blue carbon and immersive journey through the watery landscapes that serve as massive allies and fighting the climate crisis. >> so blue carbon is basically these ecosystems that are amazing at pulling carbon out of the atmosphere and putting it deep into the ground. >> you're saying this is blue car business, blue carbon. so yeah, it's not blue, brown. and remember, but but it is blue carbon. >> they're like ten times better at it than the amazon rain forest. for example, those ecosystems are mango for us seagrass meadows and salt marshes. we were taking field recordings throughout the whole film. >> and then i took all those field recordings and made a song out of it essentially, and

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The Source With Kaitlan Collins

hard, right turn and changed my life music was the other love of her life and when she began making it as dj, dj to g a whole new career took off. >> she worked with mega stars and book gigs and festivals, all wall finishing her mask misters on the effects of toxins on killer whales. >> the two loves merge in her film, blue carbon and immersive journey through the watery landscapes that survey was massive allies and fighting the climate crisis. so blue carbon is basically these ecosystems that are amazing at pulling carbon out of the atmosphere and putting it deep into the ground. >> you're saying this is blue harb business, blue carbon. >> so yeah, it's not blue brown and remember but but it is blue carbon they're like ten times better at it than the amazon rain forest. >> for example, those ecosystems are mango forests, seagrass meadows, and salt marshes. we were taking field recordings throughout the whole film. >> and then i took all those

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CNN Newsroom Live

heat stress on record according to australia's reef authority experts are calling it one of the most serious and extensive coral bleaching events in recorded history. street meanwhile, scientists are now using artificial intelligence and a new kind of drone to monitor the health of coral reefs. rosemary church has the story deep. >> under, the ocean surface, a little robot wanders through australia's great barrier reef. >> it's an ai powered drone called hydrous. and it's doing important work for the environment examining the coral reefs the diverse ecosystems protect coastlines from erosion and storms as. >> well as providing jobs and food for local communities the effects of climate change are threatening the coral causing it to expel our algae and lose its color. sometimes permanently. >> since 2016, there had been four major coral bleaching activities due to just say, heat stress on coral reefs in the grid binary. when the midst

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