In 2018, following a historic three-year drought, the water sources in Cape Town, South Africa ran dry. It was the first major city to face Day Zero: when you’d turn on the faucet—and nothing would come out.
The town leaders discussed expensive, environmentally disruptive projects like pipelines and desalination plants. But then an environmental nonprofit, the Nature Conservancy, proposed a radically different approach that could win Cape Town 13 billion gallons of water a year, cheaply and perpetually, using a method that worked with nature instead of against it. All they needed was a helicopter, some ropes and saws, and some of the poorest women in Cape Town.
Guests: Louise Stafford, Director of Source Water Protection in South Africa, The Nature Conservancy. Thandeka Mayiji-Rafu and Asiphe Cetywayo, Greater Cape Town Water Fund tree-cutting contractors.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
How They Found the Shipwreck Endurance
Deepfakes: Big Tech Fights Back
The Mars Helicopter That Would Not Die
ChatGPT and the End of Writing
Introducing: Season 2 of Unsung Science with David Pogue
Back to Titanic Part 2
Back to Titanic Part 1
The Secret of Baby Carrots
How Impossible Meats Might Save the Earth
The Man Who Stopped the Spammers
Where Emoji Come From
How the Fitbit Knows You're Dreaming
Subtitles for the Blind
How to Prepare for Wildfires
Where to Live in the Climate-Change Era
Leap Seconds, Smear Seconds, and the Slowing of the Earth
How the Cellphone was Born: Three Months of Craziness
How Apple and Microsoft Built the Seeing-Eye Phone
How to Prepare for Climate Change: Intro
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
DNA Today: A Genetics Podcast
The Psychic Elephant Radio Podcast
Museum of the Missing
Sasquatch Chronicles
Hidden Brain