Latest update: 08/11/2011 

- electricity - environment - France - gas - Germany - pollution - UK - water


Green living, green dying

It's one thing to live in an eco-friendly way, but is it possible to be environmentally friendly in death too? This week, we take a look at new ways to live and die green.

By Joanna SITRUK / Kate WILLIAMS / Mairead DUNDAS / Marina BERTSCH

This week, we take a look at ways to live - and die - green.

First, we're in Germany, where an architect has designed a house that doesn't need any gas or electric to heat it.

Next, we head to the UK, where engineers are flushed with pride over their design for a waterless toilet. 

And finally, we ask if cardboard coffins are the answer to dying without harming the environment.

SOS: Plants in danger
07/05/2012 - ENVIRONMENT

SOS: Plants in danger

Across the world, plants and flowers are increasingly reaching the brink of extinction. We get the chance the hold one of the rarest plants in the world, find out how invasive species are killing precious forests in New Caledonia, and check out a controversial scheme to keep back the encroaching sands of the Sahara desert.
Into the deep
21/04/2012 - ENVIRONMENT

Into the deep

This week we head to the French island of Corsica to investigate an almost invisible pollution choking the Mediterranean Sea. Up to 250 billion fragments of plastic are believed to be swarming just below the water's surface.
Dry Horizons
07/04/2012 - ENVIRONMENT

Dry Horizons

Rising global temperatures mean drought is increasingly commonplace across the world. Farmers are seeing crop yields diminish as once-fertile lands dry up. This week we’re out exploring innovative water-saving techniques in France, Israel and Peru.
Green in the city
24/03/2012 - ENVIRONMENT

Green in the city

Is it possible to be eco-friendly and live in a city? We check out the ways urbanites are changing their city lifestyles to become greener.
World Water Forum: thirst for change
10/03/2012 - ENVIRONMENT

World Water Forum: thirst for change

This week we're in the French city of Marseille for the 6th World Water Forum. Over 25,000 leaders, experts and volunteers are gathering to discuss how to approach the most critical and endangered resource of all time: water.

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