Sylvia Earle: How to protect the oceans (TED Prize winner!)

325,932 views ・ 2009-02-19

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:20
Fifty years ago, when I began exploring the ocean,
0
20160
3000
00:23
no one -- not Jacques Perrin, not Jacques Cousteau or Rachel Carson --
1
23160
6000
00:29
imagined that we could do anything to harm the ocean
2
29160
3000
00:32
by what we put into it or by what we took out of it.
3
32160
3000
00:35
It seemed, at that time, to be a sea of Eden,
4
35160
3000
00:38
but now we know, and now we are facing paradise lost.
5
38160
6000
00:44
I want to share with you
6
44160
3000
00:47
my personal view of changes in the sea that affect all of us,
7
47160
3000
00:50
and to consider why it matters that in 50 years, we've lost --
8
50160
4000
00:54
actually, we've taken, we've eaten --
9
54160
3000
00:57
more than 90 percent of the big fish in the sea;
10
57160
3000
01:00
why you should care that nearly half of the coral reefs have disappeared;
11
60160
4000
01:04
why a mysterious depletion of oxygen in large areas of the Pacific
12
64160
6000
01:10
should concern not only the creatures that are dying,
13
70160
3000
01:13
but it really should concern you.
14
73160
3000
01:16
It does concern you, as well.
15
76160
2000
01:18
I'm haunted by the thought of what Ray Anderson calls "tomorrow's child,"
16
78160
5000
01:23
asking why we didn't do something on our watch
17
83160
4000
01:27
to save sharks and bluefin tuna and squids and coral reefs and the living ocean
18
87160
5000
01:32
while there still was time.
19
92160
2000
01:34
Well, now is that time.
20
94160
3000
01:37
I hope for your help
21
97160
3000
01:40
to explore and protect the wild ocean
22
100160
3000
01:43
in ways that will restore the health and,
23
103160
3000
01:46
in so doing, secure hope for humankind.
24
106160
4000
01:50
Health to the ocean means health for us.
25
110160
3000
01:53
And I hope Jill Tarter's wish to engage Earthlings includes dolphins and whales
26
113160
7000
02:00
and other sea creatures
27
120160
2000
02:02
in this quest to find intelligent life elsewhere in the universe.
28
122160
3000
02:05
And I hope, Jill, that someday
29
125160
3000
02:08
we will find evidence that there is intelligent life among humans on this planet.
30
128160
7000
02:15
(Laughter)
31
135160
2000
02:17
Did I say that? I guess I did.
32
137160
3000
02:22
For me, as a scientist,
33
142160
3000
02:25
it all began in 1953
34
145160
3000
02:28
when I first tried scuba.
35
148160
3000
02:31
It's when I first got to know fish swimming
36
151160
3000
02:34
in something other than lemon slices and butter.
37
154160
3000
02:37
I actually love diving at night;
38
157160
3000
02:40
you see a lot of fish then that you don't see in the daytime.
39
160160
3000
02:43
Diving day and night was really easy for me in 1970,
40
163160
4000
02:47
when I led a team of aquanauts living underwater for weeks at a time --
41
167160
5000
02:52
at the same time that astronauts were putting their footprints on the moon.
42
172160
7000
02:59
In 1979 I had a chance to put my footprints on the ocean floor
43
179160
4000
03:03
while using this personal submersible called Jim.
44
183160
3000
03:06
It was six miles offshore and 1,250 feet down.
45
186160
4000
03:10
It's one of my favorite bathing suits.
46
190160
3000
03:15
Since then, I've used about 30 kinds of submarines
47
195160
4000
03:19
and I've started three companies and a nonprofit foundation called Deep Search
48
199160
3000
03:22
to design and build systems
49
202160
3000
03:25
to access the deep sea.
50
205160
2000
03:27
I led a five-year National Geographic expedition,
51
207160
3000
03:30
the Sustainable Seas expeditions,
52
210160
3000
03:33
using these little subs.
53
213160
2000
03:35
They're so simple to drive that even a scientist can do it.
54
215160
3000
03:38
And I'm living proof.
55
218160
2000
03:40
Astronauts and aquanauts alike
56
220160
2000
03:42
really appreciate the importance of air, food, water, temperature --
57
222160
5000
03:47
all the things you need to stay alive in space or under the sea.
58
227160
4000
03:51
I heard astronaut Joe Allen explain
59
231160
3000
03:54
how he had to learn everything he could about his life support system
60
234160
3000
03:57
and then do everything he could
61
237160
3000
04:00
to take care of his life support system;
62
240160
3000
04:03
and then he pointed to this and he said, "Life support system."
63
243160
5000
04:08
We need to learn everything we can about it
64
248160
3000
04:11
and do everything we can to take care of it.
65
251160
3000
04:14
The poet Auden said, "Thousands have lived without love;
66
254160
4000
04:18
none without water."
67
258160
3000
04:21
Ninety-seven percent of Earth's water is ocean.
68
261160
3000
04:24
No blue, no green.
69
264160
3000
04:27
If you think the ocean isn't important,
70
267160
2000
04:29
imagine Earth without it.
71
269160
3000
04:32
Mars comes to mind.
72
272160
2000
04:34
No ocean, no life support system.
73
274160
2000
04:36
I gave a talk not so long ago at the World Bank
74
276160
3000
04:39
and I showed this amazing image of Earth
75
279160
3000
04:42
and I said, "There it is! The World Bank!"
76
282160
3000
04:45
That's where all the assets are!
77
285160
4000
04:51
And we've been trawling them down
78
291160
3000
04:54
much faster than the natural systems can replenish them.
79
294160
3000
04:57
Tim Worth says the economy is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the environment.
80
297160
3000
05:00
With every drop of water you drink,
81
300160
2000
05:02
every breath you take,
82
302160
2000
05:04
you're connected to the sea.
83
304160
3000
05:07
No matter where on Earth you live.
84
307160
2000
05:09
Most of the oxygen in the atmosphere is generated by the sea.
85
309160
3000
05:12
Over time, most of the planet's organic carbon
86
312160
3000
05:15
has been absorbed and stored there,
87
315160
3000
05:18
mostly by microbes.
88
318160
2000
05:20
The ocean drives climate and weather,
89
320160
2000
05:22
stabilizes temperature, shapes Earth's chemistry.
90
322160
2000
05:24
Water from the sea forms clouds
91
324160
2000
05:26
that return to the land and the seas
92
326160
3000
05:29
as rain, sleet and snow,
93
329160
2000
05:31
and provides home for about 97 percent of life in the world,
94
331160
4000
05:35
maybe in the universe.
95
335160
2000
05:37
No water, no life;
96
337160
2000
05:39
no blue, no green.
97
339160
2000
05:41
Yet we have this idea, we humans,
98
341160
3000
05:44
that the Earth -- all of it: the oceans, the skies --
99
344160
3000
05:47
are so vast and so resilient
100
347160
3000
05:50
it doesn't matter what we do to it.
101
350160
2000
05:52
That may have been true 10,000 years ago,
102
352160
3000
05:55
and maybe even 1,000 years ago
103
355160
3000
05:58
but in the last 100, especially in the last 50,
104
358160
2000
06:00
we've drawn down the assets,
105
360160
2000
06:02
the air, the water, the wildlife
106
362160
3000
06:05
that make our lives possible.
107
365160
3000
06:08
New technologies are helping us to understand
108
368160
3000
06:11
the nature of nature;
109
371160
3000
06:14
the nature of what's happening,
110
374160
2000
06:16
showing us our impact on the Earth.
111
376160
3000
06:19
I mean, first you have to know that you've got a problem.
112
379160
3000
06:22
And fortunately, in our time,
113
382160
3000
06:25
we've learned more about the problems than in all preceding history.
114
385160
3000
06:28
And with knowing comes caring.
115
388160
3000
06:31
And with caring, there's hope
116
391160
2000
06:33
that we can find an enduring place for ourselves
117
393160
3000
06:36
within the natural systems that support us.
118
396160
3000
06:39
But first we have to know.
119
399160
3000
06:42
Three years ago, I met John Hanke,
120
402160
3000
06:45
who's the head of Google Earth,
121
405160
2000
06:47
and I told him how much I loved being able to hold the world in my hands
122
407160
3000
06:50
and go exploring vicariously.
123
410160
2000
06:52
But I asked him: "When are you going to finish it?
124
412160
3000
06:55
You did a great job with the land, the dirt.
125
415160
3000
06:58
What about the water?"
126
418160
3000
07:01
Since then, I've had the great pleasure of working with the Googlers,
127
421160
4000
07:05
with DOER Marine, with National Geographic,
128
425160
3000
07:08
with dozens of the best institutions and scientists around the world,
129
428160
5000
07:13
ones that we could enlist,
130
433160
3000
07:16
to put the ocean in Google Earth.
131
436160
3000
07:19
And as of just this week, last Monday,
132
439160
2000
07:21
Google Earth is now whole.
133
441160
3000
07:24
Consider this: Starting right here at the convention center,
134
444160
3000
07:27
we can find the nearby aquarium,
135
447160
2000
07:29
we can look at where we're sitting,
136
449160
2000
07:31
and then we can cruise up the coast to the big aquarium, the ocean,
137
451160
3000
07:34
and California's four national marine sanctuaries,
138
454160
3000
07:37
and the new network of state marine reserves
139
457160
3000
07:40
that are beginning to protect and restore some of the assets
140
460160
4000
07:44
We can flit over to Hawaii
141
464160
3000
07:47
and see the real Hawaiian Islands:
142
467160
3000
07:50
not just the little bit that pokes through the surface,
143
470160
3000
07:53
but also what's below.
144
473160
3000
07:56
To see -- wait a minute, we can go kshhplash! --
145
476160
3000
07:59
right there, ha --
146
479160
2000
08:02
under the ocean, see what the whales see.
147
482160
3000
08:05
We can go explore the other side of the Hawaiian Islands.
148
485160
5000
08:10
We can go actually and swim around on Google Earth
149
490160
4000
08:14
and visit with humpback whales.
150
494160
4000
08:18
These are the gentle giants that I've had the pleasure of meeting face to face
151
498160
5000
08:23
many times underwater.
152
503160
3000
08:26
There's nothing quite like being personally inspected by a whale.
153
506160
3000
08:29
We can pick up and fly to the deepest place:
154
509160
4000
08:33
seven miles down, the Mariana Trench,
155
513160
3000
08:36
where only two people have ever been.
156
516160
2000
08:38
Imagine that. It's only seven miles,
157
518160
3000
08:41
but only two people have been there, 49 years ago.
158
521160
3000
08:44
One-way trips are easy.
159
524160
3000
08:47
We need new deep-diving submarines.
160
527160
3000
08:50
How about some X Prizes for ocean exploration?
161
530160
3000
08:53
We need to see deep trenches, the undersea mountains,
162
533160
4000
08:57
and understand life in the deep sea.
163
537160
3000
09:00
We can now go to the Arctic.
164
540160
3000
09:03
Just ten years ago I stood on the ice at the North Pole.
165
543160
4000
09:07
An ice-free Arctic Ocean may happen in this century.
166
547160
5000
09:12
That's bad news for the polar bears.
167
552160
4000
09:16
That's bad news for us too.
168
556160
3000
09:19
Excess carbon dioxide is not only driving global warming,
169
559160
3000
09:22
it's also changing ocean chemistry,
170
562160
3000
09:25
making the sea more acidic.
171
565160
3000
09:28
That's bad news for coral reefs and oxygen-producing plankton.
172
568160
3000
09:31
Also it's bad news for us.
173
571160
3000
09:34
We're putting hundreds of millions of tons of plastic
174
574160
3000
09:37
and other trash into the sea.
175
577160
2000
09:39
Millions of tons of discarded fishing nets,
176
579160
3000
09:42
gear that continues to kill.
177
582160
3000
09:45
We're clogging the ocean, poisoning the planet's circulatory system,
178
585160
4000
09:49
and we're taking out hundreds of millions of tons of wildlife,
179
589160
3000
09:52
all carbon-based units.
180
592160
3000
09:57
Barbarically, we're killing sharks for shark fin soup,
181
597160
5000
10:02
undermining food chains that shape planetary chemistry
182
602160
3000
10:05
and drive the carbon cycle, the nitrogen cycle,
183
605160
3000
10:08
the oxygen cycle, the water cycle --
184
608160
3000
10:11
our life support system.
185
611160
3000
10:14
We're still killing bluefin tuna; truly endangered
186
614160
4000
10:18
and much more valuable alive than dead.
187
618160
3000
10:22
All of these parts are part of our life support system.
188
622160
5000
10:27
We kill using long lines, with baited hooks every few feet
189
627160
6000
10:33
that may stretch for 50 miles or more.
190
633160
2000
10:35
Industrial trawlers and draggers are scraping the sea floor
191
635160
4000
10:39
like bulldozers, taking everything in their path.
192
639160
3000
10:42
Using Google Earth you can witness trawlers --
193
642160
3000
10:45
in China, the North Sea, the Gulf of Mexico --
194
645160
4000
10:49
shaking the foundation of our life support system,
195
649160
4000
10:53
leaving plumes of death in their path.
196
653160
2000
10:55
The next time you dine on sushi -- or sashimi,
197
655160
3000
10:58
or swordfish steak, or shrimp cocktail,
198
658160
2000
11:00
whatever wildlife you happen to enjoy from the ocean --
199
660160
3000
11:03
think of the real cost.
200
663160
3000
11:06
For every pound that goes to market,
201
666160
2000
11:08
more than 10 pounds, even 100 pounds,
202
668160
4000
11:12
may be thrown away as bycatch.
203
672160
4000
11:16
This is the consequence of not knowing
204
676160
3000
11:19
that there are limits to what we can take out of the sea.
205
679160
3000
11:22
This chart shows the decline in ocean wildlife
206
682160
4000
11:26
from 1900 to 2000.
207
686160
3000
11:29
The highest concentrations are in red.
208
689160
3000
11:32
In my lifetime, imagine,
209
692160
2000
11:34
90 percent of the big fish have been killed.
210
694160
4000
11:38
Most of the turtles, sharks, tunas and whales
211
698160
2000
11:40
are way down in numbers.
212
700160
4000
11:44
But, there is good news.
213
704160
2000
11:46
Ten percent of the big fish still remain.
214
706160
2000
11:48
There are still some blue whales.
215
708160
2000
11:50
There are still some krill in Antarctica.
216
710160
3000
11:53
There are a few oysters in Chesapeake Bay.
217
713160
2000
11:55
Half the coral reefs are still in pretty good shape,
218
715160
3000
11:58
a jeweled belt around the middle of the planet.
219
718160
3000
12:01
There's still time, but not a lot,
220
721160
3000
12:04
to turn things around.
221
724160
2000
12:06
But business as usual means that in 50 years,
222
726160
2000
12:08
there may be no coral reefs --
223
728160
3000
12:11
and no commercial fishing, because the fish will simply be gone.
224
731160
4000
12:15
Imagine the ocean without fish.
225
735160
4000
12:19
Imagine what that means to our life support system.
226
739160
4000
12:23
Natural systems on the land are in big trouble too,
227
743160
3000
12:26
but the problems are more obvious,
228
746160
2000
12:28
and some actions are being taken to protect trees, watersheds and wildlife.
229
748160
6000
12:34
And in 1872, with Yellowstone National Park,
230
754160
4000
12:38
the United States began establishing a system of parks
231
758160
3000
12:41
that some say was the best idea America ever had.
232
761160
5000
12:46
About 12 percent of the land around the world is now protected:
233
766160
4000
12:50
safeguarding biodiversity, providing a carbon sink,
234
770160
4000
12:54
generating oxygen, protecting watersheds.
235
774160
2000
12:56
And, in 1972, this nation began to establish a counterpart in the sea,
236
776160
5000
13:01
National Marine Sanctuaries.
237
781160
2000
13:03
That's another great idea.
238
783160
2000
13:05
The good news is
239
785160
2000
13:07
that there are now more than 4,000 places in the sea, around the world,
240
787160
4000
13:11
that have some kind of protection.
241
791160
2000
13:13
And you can find them on Google Earth.
242
793160
2000
13:15
The bad news is
243
795160
2000
13:17
that you have to look hard to find them.
244
797160
2000
13:19
In the last three years, for example,
245
799160
2000
13:21
the U.S. protected 340,000 square miles of ocean as national monuments.
246
801160
6000
13:27
But it only increased from 0.6 of one percent
247
807160
3000
13:30
to 0.8 of one percent of the ocean protected, globally.
248
810160
5000
13:35
Protected areas do rebound,
249
815160
3000
13:38
but it takes a long time to restore
250
818160
2000
13:40
50-year-old rockfish or monkfish, sharks or sea bass,
251
820160
4000
13:44
or 200-year-old orange roughy.
252
824160
2000
13:46
We don't consume 200-year-old cows or chickens.
253
826160
3000
13:50
Protected areas provide hope
254
830160
3000
13:53
that the creatures of Ed Wilson's dream
255
833160
3000
13:56
of an encyclopedia of life, or the census of marine life,
256
836160
4000
14:00
will live not just as a list,
257
840160
4000
14:04
a photograph, or a paragraph.
258
844160
4000
14:08
With scientists around the world, I've been looking at the 99 percent of the ocean
259
848160
3000
14:11
that is open to fishing -- and mining, and drilling, and dumping, and whatever --
260
851160
4000
14:15
to search out hope spots,
261
855160
2000
14:17
and try to find ways to give them and us a secure future.
262
857160
4000
14:21
Such as the Arctic --
263
861160
2000
14:23
we have one chance, right now, to get it right.
264
863160
3000
14:26
Or the Antarctic, where the continent is protected,
265
866160
3000
14:29
but the surrounding ocean is being stripped of its krill, whales and fish.
266
869160
6000
14:35
Sargasso Sea's three million square miles of floating forest
267
875160
5000
14:40
is being gathered up to feed cows.
268
880160
3000
14:43
97 percent of the land in the Galapagos Islands is protected,
269
883160
4000
14:47
but the adjacent sea is being ravaged by fishing.
270
887160
4000
14:51
It's true too in Argentina
271
891160
2000
14:53
on the Patagonian shelf, which is now in serious trouble.
272
893160
3000
14:56
The high seas, where whales, tuna and dolphins travel --
273
896160
5000
15:01
the largest, least protected, ecosystem on Earth,
274
901160
3000
15:04
filled with luminous creatures,
275
904160
3000
15:07
living in dark waters that average two miles deep.
276
907160
3000
15:10
They flash, and sparkle, and glow
277
910160
3000
15:13
with their own living light.
278
913160
3000
15:16
There are still places in the sea as pristine as I knew as a child.
279
916160
3000
15:19
The next 10 years may be the most important,
280
919160
4000
15:23
and the next 10,000 years the best chance our species will have
281
923160
4000
15:27
to protect what remains of the natural systems that give us life.
282
927160
6000
15:33
To cope with climate change, we need new ways to generate power.
283
933160
3000
15:36
We need new ways, better ways, to cope with poverty, wars and disease.
284
936160
6000
15:42
We need many things to keep and maintain the world as a better place.
285
942160
4000
15:46
But, nothing else will matter
286
946160
3000
15:49
if we fail to protect the ocean.
287
949160
3000
15:52
Our fate and the ocean's are one.
288
952160
4000
15:56
We need to do for the ocean what Al Gore did for the skies above.
289
956160
4000
16:00
A global plan of action
290
960160
3000
16:03
with a world conservation union, the IUCN,
291
963160
2000
16:05
is underway to protect biodiversity,
292
965160
2000
16:07
to mitigate and recover from the impacts of climate change,
293
967160
4000
16:11
on the high seas and in coastal areas,
294
971160
4000
16:15
wherever we can identify critical places.
295
975160
4000
16:19
New technologies are needed to map, photograph and explore
296
979160
4000
16:23
the 95 percent of the ocean that we have yet to see.
297
983160
4000
16:27
The goal is to protect biodiversity,
298
987160
3000
16:30
to provide stability and resilience.
299
990160
2000
16:32
We need deep-diving subs,
300
992160
2000
16:34
new technologies to explore the ocean.
301
994160
3000
16:37
We need, maybe, an expedition --
302
997160
3000
16:40
a TED at sea --
303
1000160
2000
16:42
that could help figure out the next steps.
304
1002160
2000
16:45
And so, I suppose you want to know what my wish is.
305
1005160
3000
16:49
I wish you would use all means at your disposal --
306
1009160
5000
16:54
films, expeditions, the web, new submarines --
307
1014160
3000
16:57
and campaign to ignite public support
308
1017160
3000
17:00
for a global network of marine protected areas --
309
1020160
3000
17:03
hope spots large enough to save and restore the ocean,
310
1023160
4000
17:07
the blue heart of the planet.
311
1027160
3000
17:10
How much?
312
1030160
2000
17:12
Some say 10 percent, some say 30 percent.
313
1032160
3000
17:15
You decide: how much of your heart do you want to protect?
314
1035160
4000
17:20
Whatever it is,
315
1040160
2000
17:22
a fraction of one percent is not enough.
316
1042160
3000
17:26
My wish is a big wish,
317
1046160
2000
17:28
but if we can make it happen, it can truly change the world,
318
1048160
4000
17:32
and help ensure the survival
319
1052160
3000
17:35
of what actually -- as it turns out -- is my favorite species;
320
1055160
6000
17:41
that would be us.
321
1061160
2000
17:43
For the children of today,
322
1063160
2000
17:45
for tomorrow's child:
323
1065160
2000
17:47
as never again, now is the time.
324
1067160
4000
17:52
Thank you.
325
1072160
1000
17:53
(Applause)
326
1073160
15000
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7