The Everyday Ingredient Destroying the Planet

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 4. 04. 2023
  • Kal Penn investigates the damage being done by the palm oil industry in Indonesia. The product is used in everything from cookies to shampoo, but its production has laid waste to forests all over the globe. With only 20% of palm oil deemed sustainable, Penn looks for solutions, including a UK startup with a lab-made version. But can fake palm oil compete with nature in quality and price?
    ---
    Getting Warmer is Bloomberg's exclusive new show about climate, clean energy and business, anchored by actor and former White House aide Kal Penn.
    Accompany him on his journey as he takes an up-close look at bold climate solutions and discovers new facets of the global transition to clean energy.
    In a hosted studio segment, Penn sifts through the overwhelming news about our climate and breaks down the facts and trends to understand with a dose of humor and optimism. Why are the recycling symbols on your plastic cups misleading? How does the carbon credit market work and does it actually help? And what is the future of water in a drought-ridden world?
    On the road, Penn meets the innovators, researchers, communities and businesses pivoting to new energy sources and spearheading low-carbon technologies. In documentary segments, Penn speaks to the self-declared “crypto cowboys” of Texas who claim Bitcoin mining can help stabilize the state’s troubled electrical grid, and travels to Nevada to visit the company attempting to build America’s first closed-loop supply chain for electric vehicles. In New York, Penn explores the urban designs proposed to save the city from the next Superstorm Sandy and goes inside New York’s Empire State building to investigate the challenges of decarbonizing our cities and landmarks.
    The show builds on, and includes contributions from, Bloomberg Green’s award-winning team of climate journalists as well as London-based climate storytellers Jack Harries and Alice Aedy. With a focus on the most pressing questions for young viewers, Jack and Alice unpack one big idea each episode. From recycled wastewater to regenerative agriculture and the challenges of a just transition for workers in the energy sector, they’ll break down how countries across the world are finding intriguing solutions to our climate crisis, and outline the challenges ahead.
    Watch Getting Warmer starting February 1st at 8p EST streaming on Bloomberg channels on Connected TV Devices including Samsung TV+, LG Channels, and Fire TV. And on & Bloomberg.com.
    You can also watch on Bloomberg TV (BTV) at 10p ET.
    --------
    Like this video? Subscribe: czcams.com/users/Bloomberg?sub_...
    Become a Quicktake Member for exclusive perks: czcams.com/users/bloombergjoin
    Bloomberg Originals offers bold takes for curious minds on today’s biggest topics. Hosted by experts covering stories you haven’t seen and viewpoints you haven’t heard, you’ll discover cinematic, data-led shows that investigate the intersection of business and culture. Exploring every angle of climate change, technology, finance, sports and beyond, Bloomberg Originals is business as you’ve never seen it.
    Subscribe for business news, but not as you've known it: exclusive interviews, fascinating profiles, data-driven analysis, and the latest in tech innovation from around the world.
    Visit our partner channel Bloomberg Quicktake for global news and insight in an instant.

Komentáře • 107

  • @johnsamuel1999
    @johnsamuel1999 Před rokem +21

    Palm oil has the highest yield out of all oil plants. So if we want to meet the same oil demand with another crop we would have to clear a lot more land for this. Not to mention other oils cost more BECAUSE they have lower yields than palm oil. So replacing palm oil will make cooking oil more expensive

    • @danielcaceres9971
      @danielcaceres9971 Před rokem +1

      So learn how to cook without it

    • @AdinnaKhairilIkhwani-xl9ry
      @AdinnaKhairilIkhwani-xl9ry Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@danielcaceres9971 how????
      can you tell me that???

    • @vyhozshu
      @vyhozshu Před 10 měsíci +1

      so the demand should stop then, so it doesnt have to be met.

    • @vyhozshu
      @vyhozshu Před 10 měsíci

      there are many different methods of cooking, as well dont need prepackaged foods and all the cosmetics to have it.@@AdinnaKhairilIkhwani-xl9ry

    • @AdinnaKhairilIkhwani-xl9ry
      @AdinnaKhairilIkhwani-xl9ry Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@vyhozshu it can't
      if it's that easy, europe would done it long time ago

  • @sheedyaja6465
    @sheedyaja6465 Před rokem +12

    Fyi, the Minyakita brand shown in this video is subsidized product only targeted for poor people

    • @alexh4436
      @alexh4436 Před rokem

      Well you don't think that Bloomberg would target a product that rich people, use do you?

  • @sniper7.62x51
    @sniper7.62x51 Před rokem +13

    Seems pretty sustainable to me.

  • @user-yq8ck8yf3u
    @user-yq8ck8yf3u Před rokem +1

    It can be at a high level in butter as cows are often feed palm kernel as a cheap by product of the oil extraction process. this can alter the outcome of baking as oil incorporates differently to produce a unexpected outcome to the cook.

  • @rendyputra423
    @rendyputra423 Před rokem +14

    I dont know firstly where the palm oli is comes from but when i looked the brand of the cooking oil "minyak kita" i know its from indonesia. That is the subsidized brand from the goverment to the people. We use palm oil every day for cooking.
    Cheers from Indonesia.😊😊😊

    • @VijaygKamat
      @VijaygKamat Před rokem +1

      Anyways Palm Oil can be used as Environment Destroyer and Population Reducer.

    • @myname-jj9oi
      @myname-jj9oi Před rokem

      ​@@VijaygKamatyes, mostly when the country doesn't has palm oil tree but the importer. And the importer country pursue the world to do the forestation without looking at the mirror his/her own country is CO2 producer.

    • @charlessimbolon7333
      @charlessimbolon7333 Před rokem

      @@myname-jj9oi In 2021, China, the United States, the EU27, India, Russia and Japan remained the world's largest CO2 emitters.

  • @mbonisigumede7950
    @mbonisigumede7950 Před rokem +20

    I use plam oil on a daily basis. It's a great substitute to sunflower oil. It's much cheaper and with great healthy benefits

  • @linmal2242
    @linmal2242 Před rokem +2

    Also what happens to trade with Indonesia if it becomes the Iran of South East Asia?

  • @charlessimbolon7333
    @charlessimbolon7333 Před rokem +11

    Our forests, oceans, water, and climate are strained to the breaking point. Food insecurity and poverty lead to untold suffering. Palm oil already lifted millions of people from Poverty in Malaysia and Indonesia.
    Palm oil is the most efficient vegetable oil . At the very best practice one single acre of palm oil can produce up to 5.6 ton of vegetable oil , compare to soy just produce about 0,16 ton of vegetable oil. It is a miracle product . And ubiqtuous or versatile

    • @danielward7008
      @danielward7008 Před 20 dny

      If it's such a miracle product why is it responsible for the destruction of millions of hectares of rainforest?

    • @charlessimbolon7333
      @charlessimbolon7333 Před 20 dny

      @@danielward7008it is black campaign from the europe and USA. if we want to talk climate justice you have to look at the CO2 percapita and legacyemissions percapita from around the globe The people from developed nations has bigger carbon footprint than those the poor and disadvantaged communities from developing nations such as Indonesia .

    • @charlessimbolon7333
      @charlessimbolon7333 Před 20 dny

      @@danielward7008 who is the most responsible for climate change??? The rich, those people from developed nations such as US, UK, China, Japan , UEA, Arab etc. The disadvantaged communities and the small holders farmer from developing country has much lower CO2 emissions per capita than the rich from developed country

    • @charlessimbolon7333
      @charlessimbolon7333 Před 20 dny

      @@danielward7008 the elephant in the rooms are energy, manufacturing and food loss and food wasted, beef and animal farming from developed country

    • @danielward7008
      @danielward7008 Před 20 dny

      @@charlessimbolon7333 I didn't mention climate change. I asked you a question about palm oil and deforestation which you haven't attempted to answer.

  • @MrBoliao98
    @MrBoliao98 Před rokem +1

    If you don't consume so much oil, so much soap, so much basic needs, then maybe you wouldn't need the most efficient oil crop in the world. And I think it is unfair to label that Palm Oil Plantation involve burning down forests. In Malaysia, the reason states like Johor is covered 38% by the palm oil plantation would be that these are the legacy of the Rubber Plantations left behind the British. It is not exactly as damaging as we like to think.
    And perhaps, yeast on the grapes might be better. And well who knows, we might finally not need plantations. But where are you going to get that much waste proteins and sugars?

  • @tengchuankhoo6585
    @tengchuankhoo6585 Před rokem +1

    Is palm oil superior given clever scientists spend nearly a decade trying to mimic a lab produced palm oil rather than olive, soya or fish oils

  • @silverflame2501
    @silverflame2501 Před rokem

    I always go for
    coconut oil and olive oil

  • @twilightgardenspresentatio6384

    All we ask for is reasonable standards and regulations for businesses and their owners

    • @VijaygKamat
      @VijaygKamat Před rokem +2

      When a person / business is there to make money, there is no REASONING.

  • @MrJustCallMeJames
    @MrJustCallMeJames Před rokem +31

    People really don't get it. Palm oil is saving these areas. Palm oil is extremely area effective crop, you don't need as much space to make the same amount of money as with almost all other crops, and those have downsides. If palm oil didn't exist, these people would plant cash crops that demand far larger areas. Clearing far larger areas than currently.

    • @ecoideazventures6417
      @ecoideazventures6417 Před rokem +7

      The fundamental issue you need to get is farmers in Asia slash and burn new forest areas to cultivate palm. Regular cash crops are grown in available land

    • @techcafe0
      @techcafe0 Před rokem +7

      If I may paraphrase on old Cree proverb:
      Only when the last (palm) tree has been cut down, the last river poisoned, and the last fish caught... only then will man realize that he cannot eat money.

    • @MrJustCallMeJames
      @MrJustCallMeJames Před rokem +8

      @@ecoideazventures6417 No, you have no idea what you are talking about.
      First off palm is a regular cash crop in asia, not some sort of special one, like people in west seem to think. The other cash stables of rubber/coffee/cocoa. Take huge amount of time to grow before any return, so are categorically different kind of cultivation.
      So eliminate palm oil, and they change into a slash and burn crop that takes immensely more space for the same cash return.

    • @d2nd21st
      @d2nd21st Před rokem

      @@MrJustCallMeJames yea, these western thinkers think they know everything and know the best, less and lesser people outside them are buying their bs anymore these days

    • @timjones1184
      @timjones1184 Před rokem +4

      @@ecoideazventures6417 These available land you mentioned used to be forest as well, so why dont the western country turned it into forest instead of generating income from the land if they are concerned about the environment. Or maybe profits from their income be shared to these southeast asean community to maintain the forest. Ppl need to eat, so by complaining wont resolve this issue

  • @scatologica
    @scatologica Před měsícem

    Since when planting stuff for our consumption is a bad thing.

  • @eaglestar2962
    @eaglestar2962 Před rokem +3

    If we use corn, olive, soy, peanut, sunflower, or safflower oil, we will need to clear much more ground, ruin more rain forrest and destroy more environment problems. It is better to use palm oil because palm oil has much higher oil yields per acre or per hectare.

    • @vyhozshu
      @vyhozshu Před 10 měsíci +2

      or cut down on all that sh*t.

  • @charlessimbolon7333
    @charlessimbolon7333 Před rokem +4

    In 2021, China, the United States, the EU27, India, Russia and Japan remained the world's largest CO2 emitters. In my own opinion , it is more trustworthy and ethical if the laser focus on those people . Because when we talk about climate change, we also needs to talk about environmental justice and social justice

    • @vyhozshu
      @vyhozshu Před 10 měsíci

      the U$A is worst by far. they lobby to hide the milltary from the emissions readings. but emissions is a different topic from extinctions and deforestation. And most of these palm exports are for western multinationals. people cheering for palm for themselves are cheering for their own neo-coIonial exploitation which destroys their environment for western profits (and they get pennies buying into this economic system of relations)

  • @CadyCadwell
    @CadyCadwell Před rokem +1

    i went on study trip deep inside jungle of west borneo, there was no jungle, palm trees stretched as far as our drone could see.
    one of palm plantation we visit was owned and exclusively runs by south korean company,
    they used aggressive land clearing by burning all of those ancient forest, entire ecosystem vanish just like that. we couldn't even spot a single primate, none. let alone Rhinoceros hornbill that we hope to see outside conservation zones.
    locals and indigenous are literally in a form of modern slavery to this company, local labour were cheap or else the company hired cheaper one from other parts of the islands... many indigenous lose their way of lives of hunter and gathers because corrupt local officials sold their ancestral lands to this company... their only means to survive for now is just by working for this company where's pension and health benefits are literally non existence...

    • @vyhozshu
      @vyhozshu Před 10 měsíci

      south korea is a vassal of the U$A. all the same hands. westerm lmperialist c4pitalism and its tentacles. extracting resources from neo-coIonies who fight for their right to destroy themselves for western markets.

    • @xi_cuan
      @xi_cuan Před 7 měsíci

      Nope.. there are many forest in borneo. You only need google maps satellite view for search many forest in borneo.

  • @wilsonwan7434
    @wilsonwan7434 Před rokem +2

    Interesting. You wanna choose to pay more for RSPO certification products, or pay more for this alternative oil and let the Indonesian & Malaysia farmer lose their incomes.

  • @kunal.khanna
    @kunal.khanna Před rokem +6

    Thanks for covering this @Bloomberg. It's almost as if society forgot a while ago about how bad palm oil mass-farming is in its current form

  • @1voluntaryist
    @1voluntaryist Před 11 měsíci

    No one questions the mono-culture groves. In nature, all plants thrive together. Mono-culture doesn't exist. Is a natural palm forest grown anywhere? Why isn't it the rule, or experimented with?

  • @rakriansindhu3290
    @rakriansindhu3290 Před 2 měsíci

    How come? It's also produce oxygen for earth

  • @design.dmitri
    @design.dmitri Před rokem +6

    palm oil, meat, energy, transportation, construction… wouldn’t be such a problem, if people learned to consume as much as they need, instead of more than they can.

    • @containedhurricane
      @containedhurricane Před rokem

      It wouldn't be a problem if human population was much smaller. Billions of people means more energy, food, water and other resources are required, which will make climate change worse. Unfortunately, territorial, cultural and racial conflicts have been encouraging population growth race

  • @lissaleggs4136
    @lissaleggs4136 Před rokem +4

    Palm oil in soap gives me a rash, didn't bother me as much as a kid but now it does.
    So I try to avoid bar soap with palm oil.

  • @vipulpetkar
    @vipulpetkar Před rokem +3

    new logo really sucks, this is coming from the guy who always liked new company logos. this is the first one i geniunly dislike.

  • @kydiong
    @kydiong Před rokem +2

    Don’t accuse without the fact and evidence.. land for planting palm oil is far more save than crop and others commodity

    • @alean13
      @alean13 Před rokem

      yeah, if you compare to corn or canola (oil). but for tropical rain forest, still worst

    • @johnytakdeep4839
      @johnytakdeep4839 Před 4 měsíci

      well... if most of tropical rain forests are turned into palm oil plantation I think we all gonna face a serious issue.
      sooner or later palm oil will turn the land into desert. Maybe CCP knew this already and therefore they are turning their desert into jungle
      I think in the future clean water will be very expensive

  • @superkas
    @superkas Před měsícem

    It's like saying that the African American people are not allowed to play in NBA, just because they are naturally superior at sports.

  • @barracudastocks
    @barracudastocks Před rokem +5

    Palm oil is not only bad for the planet, but also not so kind to your health. Novel food is the way to go....only if we could let people learn more about all these alternatives and embrace them as replacement.

    • @containedhurricane
      @containedhurricane Před rokem +3

      Unfortunately, people love fried food

    • @timjones1184
      @timjones1184 Před rokem +2

      Same goes to avacado, why no one is protesting how bad it is for the planet?

    • @barracudastocks
      @barracudastocks Před rokem

      @@containedhurricane true that..choose baked over fried whenever I could in the meantime.

    • @barracudastocks
      @barracudastocks Před rokem +2

      @@timjones1184 Palm oil's carbon footprint is 50 times that of avocado. Avocado is bad but is quite niche in comparison.

    • @timjones1184
      @timjones1184 Před rokem +2

      @@barracudastocks But if you look at yields of palm oil compared to other type of edible oil grown in this world, palm oil yields are much higher. Hence it would be better for soy bean oil, grape seed oil, canola oil, sunflower oil and olive oil farm to be replanted into a forest to reduce global warming.

  • @Ryan-Fkrepublicnz
    @Ryan-Fkrepublicnz Před rokem

    Yeah well it destroys your body too....

  • @idris8153
    @idris8153 Před rokem +9

    isn't palm oil very unhealthy anyways. modern food is so bad

    • @spacetoast7783
      @spacetoast7783 Před rokem +8

      Is it really any worse than peanut oil or canola oil? This is the first I've heard of it.

    • @core-experience
      @core-experience Před rokem +3

      @@spacetoast7783 The slander stems from a smear campaign in 1980s by an American soybean company and eventually the corn oil industry. Palm oil is just too competitive in terms of prices so the campaign was used to maintain the use of domestically produced vegetable oils. If you are from the US or western Europe you will hear about the countless article and reports on the so called health effects of palm oil, whereas if you are on anywhere else of the Earth, you won't hear about them.
      The common anecdote is that when fast food companies used palm oil in their menu, it is then associated with heart diseases and obesity. But if you use your brain for a moment there, you will realise that it doesn't matter what kind of oil they are using, they are just simply using too much of it. And that is exactly what happened from 1990 to 2010, where the embargo on palm oil didn't really affected the obesity rate in America, as a matter of fact the rate climbed during the time, due to economy boom leading to increased income of average American household.

  • @shindersamra4020
    @shindersamra4020 Před rokem +3

    Nobody should use palm oil, very unhealthy.

    • @mreditor5171
      @mreditor5171 Před rokem +3

      I am 50 years old, I grow up and use it in a daily basis. I am healthy and still can run 5 to 7 km daily. That's to show you a true facts, not from 3rd parties opinions.

  • @upvotecomment2110
    @upvotecomment2110 Před rokem

    Developing Countries are evil for this industries

    • @pacresfrancis1565
      @pacresfrancis1565 Před rokem +1

      No they aren't evil per se. Its just the consequenses of Globalization. It may seem the developing countries doing all the 'bad work' but without them, europe will crumble and america will fall. Every country relies to each other, so this problem is actually evryone's proble.

    • @dydactic1112
      @dydactic1112 Před rokem +4

      What do you expect them to do? Depend on rich country for basic things like food? Rich countries with their monopoly and sanctions are evil. Not to mention snatching the best talent from developing countries because they are too selfish with comfy life to have children.

  • @ioan_jivan
    @ioan_jivan Před rokem

    Did you switch to clickbaiting? You had great videos before...

  • @0510962013
    @0510962013 Před 3 měsíci

    How about forest in Europe? 😂