Lenticular clouds over Mount Fuji, Japan. These are stationary lens-shaped clouds that form at high altitudes, usually perpendicular to the direction of the wind.
Months after the tsunami and earthquake that triggered the nuclear meltdown, the government still had no policy on what to do with the waste - is it any clearer now??
Dr. Masaru is the author of the best-selling books Messages from Water, The Hidden Messages in Water, and The True Power of Water. He is a long-time advocate for peace in relation to water.
A presentation of how spoken and written words change the structure of water. This ground breaking work from Dr Masuro Emoto shows us that what we say, and feel and well as what we listen to has an effect on water because we are made up of water.
Masaru Emoto was born in Yokohama, Japan in July 1943 and a graduate of the Yokohama Municipal University’s department of humanities and sciences with a focus on International Relations.In 1986 he established the IHM Corporation in Tokyo. In October of 1992 he received certification from the Open International University as a Doctor of Alternative Medicine. Subsequently he was introduced to the concept of micro cluster water in the US and Magnetic Resonance Analysis technology. The quest thus began to discover the mystery of water.
He has gained worldwide acclaim through his ground breaking research and discovery that water is deeply connected to our individual and collective consciousness.
Japan’s Pollution Experience: Island of Waste Part 4 of 4
Japan’s waste problems are far from over. The film ends with the key question: How can production and consumption minimise waste generation in the future?
Japan’s Pollution Experience: Island of Waste Part 3 of 4
This film features Japanese citizens who questioned their waste legislation and voluntarily started recycling campaign. It recalls the challenges that Nagoya city faced when it withdrew a new reclamation plan, and looks at a typical illegal dumping site in Teshima island, Kagawa prefecture.
Japan’s Pollution Experience: Bringing Water Back to Life Part 2 of 4
Stricter regulation and penalties on industrial waste water discharges forced Japanese industry to treat and purify waste water. These also spurred development of water disposal technologies. Meanwhile, households started using soap instead of chemical detergents. This originated in the Biwa Lake area, Japan’s largest lake, to prevent the lake from eutrophication.
Japan’s Pollution Experience: Bringing Water Back to Life Part 1 of 4
Untreated discharges from factories and homes polluted rivers and lakes that became so contaminated that even mosquito could not survive…
Both people and factories learned that controlling pollution at the sources is the best way of cleaning water. Freshwater fish slowly returned to the Tama river in the Tokyo Metropolitan area. But there are still problems like eutrophication of lakes, which shows how hard it is to restore aquatic ecosystems once polluted.