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Source to Sale #1 - Micro-Financing Albania

For forty six years Albania was cut off from the world by a Stalinist regime and when the Iron Curtain fell, many people were unprepared for the pitfalls, and the oppotunities that the free-market economy would offer. But now, as Julie Donnelly reports, a micro-finance organisation has stepped in to offer small loans to entrepreneurs.

IN: "For 46 years..."
OUT: SOC
DUR: 4:15
Dur with intro: 4:35
Dur with intro and music pad: 5:30
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Source to Sale #2 - Going Tropical in London

Tropical fruits like papaya and coconut don't grow on trees in places like Great Britain. But a new enterprise is helping to make mangoes just that plentiful. Fruit that would have gone to waste in Africa - is ending up London's kitchens.
Julie Donnelly reports.

IN: "London's early morning..."
OUT: SOC
DUR: 3:32
Dur with intro: 3:48
Dur with intro and music pad: 5:30
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Source to Sale #3 - Restoring Rattan

The international rattan trade is worth six and a half billion dollars. But only a small portion of that money ends up in West and Central Africa, due to dwindling rattan stocks. A new program in Cameroon aims to change that - by teaching artisans who work with rattan, to grow it as well.
Julie Donnelly reports.

IN: "The town of..."
OUT: SOC
DUR: 3:50
Dur with intro:4:07
Dur with intro and music pad: 4:20
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Source to Sale #4 - Combatting the Bottle Mountain

Recycling glass has become so expensive, than many beverage manufacturers in Britain are refusing to take back bottles from consumers. The result is an ever growing mountain of glass products that have only been used once. But now an idea from the developing world is putting these bottles to good use.
Julie Donnelly reports.

IN:"The goal of..."
OUT: SOC
DUR: 4:18
Dur with intro:4:37
Dur with intro and music pad:5:05
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Source to Sale #5 - Restocking Cameroon's Forests

An estimated 240 million people depend on forest products  - other than timber - for their income. As forests disappear, those who rely on selling fruit, nuts, and medicines are seeing their livelihood ebb away. But a program in Cameroon is helping to replenish the forests' abundance.
Julie Donnelly reports.

IN:"In Cameroon,... "
OUT: SOC
DUR:4:52
Dur with intro:5:08
Dur with intro and music pad:5:38