Ken broke up with Barbie after finding out some of the paper in her packaging comes from a Singapore company, Asian Pulp & Paper (APP), who clearcuts rain forests and destroys biodiversity in Indonesia.
Marcel Dicke makes an appetizing case for adding insects to everyone's diet. His message to squeamish chefs and foodies: delicacies like locusts and caterpillars compete with meat in flavor, nutrition and eco-friendliness.
Picture the scenario. We've destroyed our own world but instead of dying
with it, everyone jumps on an elevator to the moon. Unbelievably, it's
not as far fetched as it sounds. With global warming threatening the
Earth's ecosystems and energy demands far exceeding supplies, society
could be on the verge of collapse. But there is a solution. We could
build a space elevator and colonise Mars. Or obtain the next generation
of fuel from asteroids. This visionary, and ahead-of-its-time
documentary, examines how we could save the earth by exploiting the
planets.
“Experiments prove you can actually grow your own food in moon soil”, states Dr Alan Binder from Lunar Prospector.
Ken broke up with Barbie after finding out some of the paper in her packaging comes from a Singapore company, Asian Pulp & Paper (APP), who clearcuts rain forests and destroys biodiversity in Indonesia.
Marcel Dicke makes an appetizing case for adding insects to everyone's diet. His message to squeamish chefs and foodies: delicacies like locusts and caterpillars compete with meat in flavor, nutrition and eco-friendliness.