Headlines
    China to deliver global ecological advancement?
    (Jan. 4, 2010, John D. Liu, The Guardian Weekly) China's successful approach to the ecological restoration of degraded land along the Yellow River could deliver an ecological breakthrough of global importance.
Newest Release
71 organizations in 29 nations are hosting facilitated discussions and screenings of the film that is airing globally on BBC World, and premiered at COP15 in Copenhagen.
www.hopeinachangingclimate.org
Featured Content
Lessons of the Loess (Dec. 10, 2009, Op-Ed, International Herald Tribune)
Growing recognition of the important role of ecosystem restoration in stabilizing the changing climate
Thursday
10Dec2009

Hope in a Changing Climate

(22 min) The BBC World broadcasts the film, "Hope in a Changing Climate," on November 27th, and The World Bank and ICUN will screen the film in Copenhagen during COP-15, the climate change summit in December 2009. Join with us to watch the film, discuss the issues, tell the story, and shape our common future.

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Thursday
10Dec2009

Lessons of the Loess Plateau

(52 min) Covering an area that is the size of France, the Loess Plateau is home to more than 50 million very poor farmers who have suffered centuries of severe soil erosion, leading to massive environmental degradation and poverty.

The film documents a remarkable paradigm shift: the rebirth of a self-sustaining ecosystem in the dry and remote Loess Plateau region of China, and identifies why and how a World Bank/government joint project has completely changed the landscape of the region.

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Thursday
10Dec2009

Scaling Up Poverty Reduction in China

(30 min) China has raised hundreds of millions of people out of poverty since reforming its economy in 1978. But still tens of millions of poor people remain. The Chinese government together with the World Bank hosted an International Poverty Conference in Shanghai in May 2004.

EEMP produced the opening film on China's accomplishments in poverty reduction and shows three case studies on "The Southwest Poverty Reduction Project", "Growth and Transition in Wenzhou and Suzhou" and "The Loess Plateau".

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Thursday
10Dec2009

Beating the Drum Loudly

(25 min) Uganda is where HIV/AIDS was first discovered. Everyone in the country has been affected by this unprecedented public health crisis and while effective prevention has made Uganda one of the few countries in Africa where prevalence has decreased, in the past little could be done for those who were already infected.

After years of waiting, antiretroviral medications have finally become more available thanks to several international initiatives. With the scaling up of antiretroviral therapies and new community-based support systems bringing hope there are many reasons to beat the drum loudly.

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Thursday
10Dec2009

A Line in the Sand

(25 min) In Alashan, a remote region of grassland or steppe in the Mongolian Autonomous Region of China, the desert is growing by 1000 square kilometers per year. Fifty years ago there were 50 springs in the area, three rivers and 800 small lakes.

Today, sand dunes roll across the plain and the springs, rivers and most of the lakes are gone. This Earth Report film travels to Alashan to find out what has gone so drastically wrong over so short a time, and to see what the Chinese authorities and development agencies are doing to draw a line in the sand.

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Thursday
10Dec2009

Because They're Worth It

(25 min) Internationally, the definition for absolute poverty is living on an income of under a dollar a day. But the Chinese Government has a lower threshold for poverty: 66 US cents a day. Out of a total Chinese population of 1.3 billion, there are 42 million Chinese who are poor.

This film looks at a scheme which is helping poor people break out the cycle of poverty and ignorance – by providing them with small loans, basic health information and education – and hope.

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Thursday
10Dec2009

The Long March

(26 min) More people are on the move in China than ever before in human history. Twelve million people are leaving the countryside for the cities every year, and, within a generation, there will be more people living in the towns and cities than in the countryside.

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Thursday
10Dec2009

Women of the Gobi

(27 min) Over time a traditional way of life based on semi-nomadic herding; well suited to the arid environment evolved here. This way of life has continued to the present and for many people in the Gobi remains the basis of their social and economic lives. Since the collapse of communism, the people of the Gobi have had to be more self-reliant and the women have emerged as leaders of new communities called Nukhaluls.

The communities' accomplishments are inspiring others, spreading a grass roots democratic movement that is pioneering people-centered conservation, helping to ensure a sustainable future for the land and the people and empowering women to replace failed state social services.

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Thursday
10Dec2009

Millennium Ecosystem Assessment Report in 15 minutes

(15 min) Changes in biodiversity have been greater in the last 50 years than at any point of human history. The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment Report is the first comprehensive investigation on the status of all terrestrial and ocean ecosystems on a global scale -- and the results are alarming. Wealth could be achieved for more human beings than ever, but at the same time all natural systems have been negatively affected and altered. Ecosystems are under stress and the life-support functions of our planet at risk. Scientific reports can help to ensure that the best possible decisions are made based upon valid analysis but ultimately the survival of ecosystems will be determined by society as a whole. And it is only an informed public that can wisely decide.

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Thursday
10Dec2009

Biodiversity - UNEP

(8 min) Even if our knowledge about earth is incomplete and our concepts are far from being coherent – one disturbing trend is becoming increasingly obvious: biodiversity, the richness of animal and plants, is currently being lost at unprecedented rates. Direct human impacts are the main cause. More species have become extinct in the last 150 years than in all recorded history. Today almost 30% of all species are threatened with extinction and probably less than 1% of all human beings are aware of that. The world as we know it might never have existed.

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Thursday
10Dec2009

The Vivaldi Ants

(6 min) Leaf cutter ants march to the sounds of Vivaldi through the untouched tropical underbrush, themselves like notes on a sheet of music following a rigid order to compose rhythmical succession. They carry their self-carved leaf cuttings over collapsed "tree giants" and across cliff-like gaps in the red tropical soil. The camera seems to be carried along by their constant movement, and yet despite the harmony we cannot ignore the impacts humans are having on such increasingly rare and fragile global ecosystems.

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