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PLANET EARTH:OUR LOVING HOME 
Green Your Roof to Uplift the Environment - P2/2  
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	If you have a flat roof, 
you plant up there. 
You don’t plant 
everywhere but you can 
use some plastic box 
or something 
or ceramic box 
and fill it with earth, 
fill your compost 
and just keep planting, 
planting - very fun. 
You go out and see 
the whole roof is green 
and edible - beautiful.
It’s really beautiful. 
  
Peaceful viewers, 
welcome to Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home 
for the conclusion
of our two-part series on 
green roofs or rooftops 
covered with vegetation 
to reduce the 
Urban Heat Island effect, 
promote energy savings, 
improve air quality, 
grow fresh produce, 
minimize 
storm water runoff and 
lessen climate change. 
  
Last week in part one 
we saw how 
the Japanese government 
is promoting green roofs 
to keep heating 
and cooling costs down 
in buildings and 
make metropolitan areas 
less warm, as 
skyscrapers, 
concrete buildings, 
infrastructure 
and pavement trap heat 
from the Sun, as well as 
waste heat from cars, 
air conditioning units, 
factories and 
other sources, creating 
“Urban Heat Islands” 
or UHIs. 
This effect can raise 
the temperature in a city 
two to 10 degrees Celsius 
higher than if it was a 
vegetation-filled rural area.
  
Today we will shift 
to Formosa (Taiwan) 
to see how growing crops 
on rooftops can not only 
bring the previously 
mentioned benefits 
but also provide 
local communities with 
highly nutritious food, 
mitigate climate change 
and help us treat our Earth 
in a gentler manner.
Let us now visit 
the National Taiwan 
Normal University’s 
Graduate Institute of 
Environmental Education’s 
rooftop agriculture 
demonstration project 
that serves 
as a model example 
of sustainable living 
in an urban setting.
  
Will you please 
introduce us 
to the special features 
of the roof-top farm 
at the National Taiwan 
Normal University? 
  
Sure, 
I will show you around. 
  
Thank you very much.
  
This is 
our vegetable garden. 
We offer the garden 
for “adoption,” 
mainly to our students. 
Apart from the students, 
in recent years local 
residents and colleagues 
from other departments 
on our campus have also 
felt that it’s meaningful 
to have a piece of land 
in a metropolis 
for planting vegetables. 
So, we’ve opened 
the vegetable garden 
to all our students 
and colleagues 
residing on the campus 
as well as the residents
of our local community 
to adopt for planting.
  
Regarding the design 
of an eco-roof, 
if it’s a new building 
we can take everything 
into consideration. 
There shouldn’t be
any problem. 
But for old buildings, 
load bearing 
is very important. 
These factors were given 
special consideration 
to make sure 
that it could bear 
the weight of the soil. 
This is 
a very important matter. 
  
When building 
an eco-farm on a rooftop, 
load bearing 
and water-proofing are 
two very important issues.
We planned it 
to be a self-sustaining 
environment. 
So, after you have 
consumed the vegetables 
that you grew, 
we hope you will collect 
the remaining leaves 
to be used as compost. 
  
Is it similar to 
kitchen-waste compost? 
  
Yes, it’s similar. 
The finished compost 
can be used as fertilizer 
for growing plants here 
in the future. 
  
According to 
the United States 
Department of Agriculture, 
approximately 15% 
of the food 
the world produces 
comes from cities. 
As large metros 
have millions of people, 
by greatly increasing 
this percentage, 
the environment would 
benefit in many ways 
including reducing the 
greenhouse gas emissions 
generated from 
transporting produce 
to these municipalities. 
Another advantage 
of locally grown crops is 
lower fruit and vegetable 
prices as transport costs 
are minimal. 
  
Humans should maintain 
a harmonious relationship 
with nature. 
We should realize that, 
excessive exploitation 
of nature will cause 
repercussions from her 
that can severely threaten 
the existence and 
development of humanity. 
In light of the problem 
of natural disasters, 
which are becoming 
more frequent, I think 
we should think carefully 
about how to live 
in harmony with nature 
and refrain 
from overexploitation 
of our natural resources. 
  
From the viewpoint 
of sustainable living, 
it’s apparent that 
our concept emphasizes 
sustainable recycling 
of natural resources. 
Without obstructing 
the process 
of sustainable recycling, 
I think nature 
will go on forever. 
As a result, humans 
can also live on forever! 
This is 
our way of thinking. Yes! 
  
Nearly a billion people 
worldwide 
are malnourished. 
Sadly, food 
that could be directly 
consumed by humans 
is instead being diverted 
to livestock. 
Approximately 43% 
of the world’s 
cereal production 
and 85% of all 
the soy produced globally 
goes to the animal 
agriculture industry. 
  
The ecological damage 
caused by animal-based 
foods is so severe that 
a 2010 United Nations 
Environment Programme 
study concluded: 
“A substantial reduction 
of impacts would 
only be possible with 
a substantial worldwide 
diet change, away from
animal products.” 
  
This is the most efficient 
way that we humans 
can use solar energy. 
Through photosynthesis 
in plants, we transform 
solar energy into energy 
in the food 
that we consume, 
and again transform it 
into energy that 
the human body can use 
for physical activities. 
So this is 
how to use energy in 
the most economical way. 
The most direct way 
is making use of plants 
through the photosynthesis 
of vegetables and fruits 
with sunlight. 
  
So, from the standpoint 
of energy use, 
I believe that eating 
more plant-based food 
is absolutely 
the most correct choice. 
The cause of the recent 
global warming is due 
to the high concentration 
of greenhouse gases 
in the atmosphere. 
So if we can reduce 
the consumption of meat, 
I think 
it will be very helpful 
in reducing the emission 
of greenhouse gases. 
Of course, from the angle 
of efficient use of energy, 
eating more plant-based 
foods is the correct way 
and to be encouraged. 
  
Permaculture is about 
harmony between 
humans and nature 
and seeks to design 
biologically diverse, 
ecologically balanced 
habitats and 
food production systems. 
Professor Chiu 
of Tzu Chi University 
in Formosa (Taiwan) 
teaches courses 
on this subject 
and is a big proponent 
of growing produce 
on rooftops to improve 
food security and 
address climate change. 
  
If we go with nature today 
while we manage a rooftop 
or a piece of land, 
then we’re going 
with the laws of nature. 
As long as we have 
a correct method, 
we don’t need 
to expend too much effort 
because this is 
the direction nature has 
always intended to go to, 
while we humans 
just follow along. 
Therefore, to face 
the future water crisis, 
the impact of 
environmental changes, 
and food crises, we have 
to go along with the way 
nature manages land. 
  
We can also 
add some elements 
that we humans need. 
For example, 
we can change plants 
into edible ones. 
This way, we’re not just 
going along with nature; 
we’re also 
taking care of ourselves. 
That’s why 
we’re carrying out plans 
for green rooftops. 
  
Of course,
this is an excellent plan 
because green roofs 
can help reduce 
urban warming, 
save energy for a building, 
and more importantly, 
help us face future impacts. 
To transform a rooftop 
into a vegetable garden is 
something very important. 
That’s why we have to 
start to build food security 
and build a food forest, 
an eco-friendly 
vegetable garden 
in our own homes. 
  
We have to expand 
this movement because 
right now we’re facing 
global climate change, 
and our global 
food supply system 
is very, very fragile. 
If each individual can do it, 
it will help us pass 
through the future crisis. 
  
One smart idea 
that has been proposed 
is to use what is called 
“gray water” 
or used water from sinks, 
bathtubs and water 
fountains in a building 
to water crops 
growing on the rooftop. 
Gray water can augment 
the water supply 
from a rainwater 
collection system 
installed on the roof. 
This approach, 
along with others, can 
help further minimize the 
environmental footprint 
of a structure.
  
We also have to recycle 
the waste produced 
in our buildings or in
our living surroundings 
and reuse it in our garden. 
That’s why
it’s very important 
to have various kinds 
of compost systems. 
We should have a variety 
of compost systems, and 
each should be connected 
with the others. 
It will be a lot of fun for us 
to build such systems 
because we use the least 
resources produce the 
smallest amount of waste 
and achieve
the greatest amount 
of recycled products. 
  
As we’re designing 
the recycling system, 
every element 
is important, and
each element is closely 
related to the others, and 
all the local resources 
are completely utilized, 
be it local Sun energy, 
water, wind energy 
or nutrients, because the 
usage of them is cyclical. 
  
So, if we can build
a society in which 
every little rooftop has 
its own recycling system, 
and every community has 
its own recycling system, 
then the small recycling 
systems will combine into 
a large recycling system. 
Only this kind of design 
can help us humans 
use our limited 
planetary resources and 
pass through the global 
crisis we’ll be facing. 
  
Rooftop agriculture 
can help city dwellers 
transition to
the Earth-loving 
organic vegan diet, 
the quickest way 
to cool our planet, as the 
abundant produce grown 
can readily feed many 
people in the vicinity. 
In what other ways 
can this style 
of agriculture help 
mitigate climate change? 
Let’s hear Professor Chiu’s 
perspective.
  
Green roofs can help 
reduce global warming 
in several ways. 
First, they can help 
reduce heat because the 
soil can help absorb heat 
through evaporation 
Green roofs 
can also reduce the solar 
heat radiation gains 
over the rooftops. 
As a result, we can 
reduce the energy we use 
for air conditioning. 
Second, green roofs 
themselves are a greenery 
indicator, because
the plants on the roof 
can absorb CO2. 
  
Therefore we can quantify 
the greenery indicator 
of the nine indicators 
of a green building 
calculating how much CO2 
it can reduce. 
Also, of course, 
you can enjoy 
the vegetables you plant. 
You don’t have to buy 
imported food anymore. 
Normally, to produce 
one unit of imported food, 
we might need to spend 
22 units of energy, but
if we eat the vegetables 
we grow on our own, 
and if we grow them 
organically, we won’t 
need chemical fertilizers 
or fossil fuels 
to produce them. 
  
So this kind of lifestyle 
can greatly help to
reduce global warming. 
So, I think at this point 
in time, we must 
focus on self-sufficiency 
in our food supply. 
We don’t have 
much flexibility anymore. 
To attain self-sufficiency 
in our food supply, we 
can start from one rooftop 
and expand it 
to the entire community, 
and then we can expand it 
to an entire region, and 
then we can expand it 
to the entire island 
of Formosa (Taiwan). 
We have to develop 
from the bottom up. 
  
According to
the United Nations, 
over half of humanity 
now lives in cities. 
It is up to government 
leaders and ourselves 
to use the resources 
that we have such as
rooftops, balconies 
and even unused spaces 
in urban areas to plant 
delicious organic fruits 
and vegetables 
and splendid trees, shrubs 
and flowers. 
  
By greening our 
surrounding environment,
not only do we make 
our world more beautiful, 
we lessen climate change 
and celebrate 
the magnificence 
of our planet. 
Finally, we thank 
Professors Chang 
and Chiu for sharing 
their expert insights into 
rooftop agriculture and 
wish them the very best 
in their future research 
in the field.
  
Esteemed viewers, we 
thank you for joining us 
for today’s program. 
Coming up next is 
Enlightening Entertainment, 
after Noteworthy News. 
May we all join hands 
and work together 
for a brilliant future.        
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