The award-winning documentary of Irena Salina is exploring the conflict in the global water crisis. Most of us wear a faucet and expect it to flow: water. But in our constantly changing world, water has become one of the hottest products. International activity reaches $ 425 billion annually, growing at the expense of human rights and ecological consciousness. Scientists and activists have so far revealed the extent of the damage. Our world is becoming a place where company profits dominate all life. Is water for the benefit of man or for profit? He was nominated for the best documentary at the 2008 Bail Film Festival and was nominated for the 2008 Sundance Julie Awards
Process: For Love of Water is a 2008 documentary produced by Stephenster and supervised by Iven Salina, co-produced by Gil Holland and Yvette Tomlinson. This film interviewed Water and regional activist Mode Barlow, Peter Gray, Ashok Gazil, William Waterway, Rajendra Singh and Vandana Shiva. This film won the grand jury award at the Mumbai International Film Festival and received the Best Documentary Award at the United Nations Film Festival. As of 2008, 70% of the world's water is being used for agricultural needs. Maintaining agriculture results in the use of heavy pesticides and chemicals. When the land is discharged, these chemicals flow into the river system and change the ecosystem. The health effects on Altrazine and its mammals and amphibians are briefly discussed with regard to the EU ban, but it is still used in the United States.
'Flow: Love for Water (2008) - A movie about the world water crisis has been released and discussed. Approximately 2 million people die each year from water-borne diseases worldwide. The underlying causes of this crisis include the outflow of pesticides and chemicals and the lack of clean water access by economic or political factors. How the wolves change the river (2017) In 1995, the US Fish and Wildlife Service and Canadian biologists captured 14 wolves in Canada and placed them in the extinct Yellowstone National Park since 1926 It was. In the next few years the number of wolves has increased, but this is the smallest change in Yellowstone. The effect is more amazing than anyone else