Climate change is becoming a problem you can taste | Amanda Little

99,199 views ・ 2020-11-17

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Transcriber: Ivana Korom Reviewer: Joanna Pietrulewicz
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In the early months of the pandemic,
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chef José Andrés circulated two photos
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that have come to symbolize a modern American food crisis.
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The first shows mountains of potatoes
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that have been left to rot in a field in Idaho.
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The restaurants and cafeterias and stadiums that had consumed them
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were shuttered during the pandemic.
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The second shows a devastating scene outside of the San Antonio food bank.
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Thousands of carloads of people lined up,
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waiting for food with not enough supply to go around.
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"How is it possible these two photos exist at the same time,
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in the most prosperous
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and technologically advanced moment in our history," tweeted Andrés.
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In the months after the photos were published,
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the crisis got worse.
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Billions of pounds of potatoes and other fresh produce
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were chucked by American farmers.
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At the same time,
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food banks all over the country were reporting demand increases
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and 40 percent were facing critical shortfalls.
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Outside the US,
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especially in the Middle East and throughout Southeastern Africa,
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COVID-19 was paralyzing food systems that were already vulnerable.
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Oxfam has predicted that by the end of 2020
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12,000 people per day could die of hunger related to COVID.
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That's more than the highest daily mortality rate
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recorded so far.
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But what's worse
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and what's much more concerning to all of us
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is that COVID is just one of many major disruptions
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that have been predicted
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in the years and decades ahead.
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More chronic and complex than the pressures of COVID
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are the pressures of climate change.
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And those of you who live in California have seen this on your farms.
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You've seen withering heat and drought and fires
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disrupt avocado and almond and citrus and strawberry farms.
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This summer, we saw the devastating impacts of storms
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on corn and soy farms.
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I've seen the various pressures of drought,
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heat, flooding, superstorms,
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invasive insects, bacterial blight,
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shifting seasons and weather volatility
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from Washington to Florida,
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and from Guatemala to Australia.
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The upshot is this.
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Climate change is becoming something we can taste.
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This is a kitchen-table issue in the literal sense.
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The International Panel on Climate Change
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has predicted that by mid-century
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the world may reach a threshold of global warming
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beyond which current agricultural practices
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can no longer support large human civilizations.
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The USDA scientist Jerry Hatfield put it to me this way:
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the single biggest threat of climate change
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is the collapse of food systems.
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The reality we face,
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one that was exposed by those mountains of potatoes
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and the cars lined up during the pandemic,
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is that our supply chains are antiquated.
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Our food systems have not been designed
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to adapt to major disruptions or preempt them.
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Addressing this challenge as much as any other
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is going to define our progress in the coming century.
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But there's good news.
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And the good news is that farmers and entrepreneurs and academics
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are radically rethinking national and global food systems.
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They are marrying principles of old-world agroecology
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and state-of-the-art technologies
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to create what I call a third way to our food future.
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We're going to see radical changes
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in what we grow and how we eat in the coming decades,
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as these environmental and population
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and public health pressures intensify.
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I studied these changes for my book "The Fate of Food:
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What We'll Eat in a Bigger, Hotter, Smarter World."
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I traveled for five years into the lands and the minds
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and the machines that are shaping the future of food.
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My travels took me through 15 countries and 18 states,
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from apple orchards in Wisconsin to tiny cornfields in Kenya,
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to massive Norwegian fish farms
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and computerized foodscapes in Shanghai.
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I investigated new ideas,
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like robotics and CRISPR and vertical farms.
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And old ideas, like edible insects and permaculture and ancient plants.
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I began to see the emergence of this third way to food production.
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A synthesis of the traditional and the radically new.
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There's a growing controversy
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about the best path to future food security in the US.
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Food is ripe for reinvention, Bill Gates has proclaimed.
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Huge flows of investment
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are funding new methods of climate-smart and high-tech agriculture.
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But many sustainable food advocates bristle at this idea of reinvention.
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They want food deinvented.
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They argue for a return to preindustrial
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and pre-green revolution,
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biodynamic and organic farming.
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To which skeptics inevitably respond,
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"Nice, but does it scale?
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Sure, a return to traditional farming methods
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could produce better food,
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but can it produce enough food that's affordable?"
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The rift between the reinvention camp and the deinvention camp
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has existed for decades.
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But now it's a raging battle.
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One side covets the past,
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the other side covets the future
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and as someone observing this from the outside,
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I began to wonder, why must it be so binary?
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Can't there be a synthesis of the two approaches?
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Our challenge is to borrow from the wisdom of the ages,
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and from our most advanced science,
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to forge this third way.
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One that allows us to improve and scale our harvests,
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while restoring rather than degrading
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the underlying web of life.
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I belong to neither camp.
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I'm a failed vegan and a lapsed vegetarian,
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and a terrible backyard farmer.
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If I'm honest,
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I will keep trying at this, but I may fail.
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But I'm hell-bent on hope,
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and if my travels have taught me anything,
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it's that there's good reason for hope.
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Plenty of solutions are merging
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that can help build sustainable, resilient food systems.
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Even if we can't rely on a critical mass
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of backyard-farming vegetarians to do this on their own,
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from the ground up.
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Let's start with artificial intelligence and robotics.
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Jorge Heraud is a Peruvian-born engineer
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who now lives in Silicon Valley,
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and his company developed a robotic weeder named See and Spray,
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and I went to Arkansas to see the maiden voyage of See and Spray.
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And I was half expecting a battalion of C3PO-style robots
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to march into the fields with pincer hands to pluck the weeds.
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And instead, I found this.
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A tractor with a big, white hoop skirt off the back of it.
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And inside that hoop skirt are 24 cameras
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that use computer vision to see the ground beneath
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and to distinguish between the plants and the weeds.
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And to deploy with sniper-like precision
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these tiny jets of concentrated fertilizer,
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or herbicide,
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that incinerate the baby weeds.
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I learned how robotics can end the practice
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of broadcast spraying chemicals across millions of acres of land
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and how we can reduce the use of herbicides
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by up to 90 percent.
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But the bigger picture is even more exciting.
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Intelligent machines can treat plants individually,
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applying not just herbicides
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but fungicides and insecticides
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and fertilizers on a plant-by-plant, rather than field-by-field basis.
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So that eventually,
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this kind of hyperspecific farming
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can allow for more diversity and intercropping on fields.
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And big farms can begin to mimic natural systems
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and improve soil health.
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Heraud is the embodiment of third-way thinking, right?
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Robots, he told me,
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don't have to remove us from nature,
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they can bring us closer to it, they can restore it.
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Increasing crop diversity will be crucial
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to building resilient food systems.
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And so will decentralizing agriculture
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so that when farmers in one region are disrupted,
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the others around, they can keep growing.
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The rise of vertical farms,
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like this farm, built inside a former steel mill in Newark, New Jersey,
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can play a key role in decentralizing agriculture.
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Aeroponic farms use a tiny fraction
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of the water that is used in in-ground farms.
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And they can grow food much faster, about 40 percent faster.
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And when located in and near cities,
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where the food is consumed,
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they eliminate a huge amount of trucking and food waste.
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It struck me at first as creepy
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in kind of a "Silent Running" way
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that we'd be growing our future fruits and vegetables
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inside, without soil or sun.
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And after weeks of spending time in these plant factories,
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I began to see it as oddly, almost perfectly natural
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to deliver the plants only and exactly what they need,
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with zero herbicides and radical efficiency.
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Here again, we see innovators borrowing from,
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and perhaps even elevating the wisdom of natural ecosystems.
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Developments in plant-based and alternative meats
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are also profoundly hopeful.
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And they follow a similar trend
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toward local, resilient, low-carbon protein production.
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Consumers are excited about this,
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and during the pandemic,
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we've seen a 250 percent increase
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in demand for alternative meats.
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A study by the Journal of Clinical Nutrition
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found that the participants who were eating the plant-based proteins
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saw a drop in their cholesterol levels,
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in their weight
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and eventually, a drop in their risk of heart disease.
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The potential environmental benefits of plant-based meats are astounding.
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And there's even potential in lab-grown or cell-based meats.
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Uma Valeti fed me my first plate of lab-grown duck breast,
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harvested fresh from a bioreactor.
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It had been grown from a small sampling of cells
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taken from muscle tissue and fat and connective tissues,
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which is exactly what we eat when we eat meat.
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This lab-grown or cell-based duck meat
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has very little threat of bacterial contamination,
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it's about 85 percent lower CO2 emissions associated with it.
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Eventually it can be grown
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like those crops inside vertical farms in decentralized facilities
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that aren't vulnerable to supply-chain disruptions.
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Valeti started out as a cardiologist,
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who understood that doctors have been developing
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human and animal tissues in laboratories for decades.
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He was inspired as much by that
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as he was by a 1931 quote from Winston Churchill that says,
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"We shall escape the absurdity of growing the whole chicken
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in order to eat the breast or the wing,
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by growing them separately in suitable mediums."
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Like Heraud, Valeti is a quintessential third-way thinker.
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He's reimagined an old idea using new technology,
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to usher in a solution whose time has come.
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I've met with dozens of farmers and entrepreneurs and engineers
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who emulate third-way thinking, all over the world.
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They're using modern breeding tools like CRISPR
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to develop nutritious heirloom crops that can withstand drought and heat.
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They're using AI to make aquaculture sustainable.
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They're finding ways to eliminate food waste.
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They are scaling up
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conservation agriculture and managed grazing.
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And they're reviving ancient plants,
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and they're recycling sewage and gray water
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to develop a drought-proof water supply.
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The upshot is this:
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Human innovation that marries old and new approaches to food production
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can, and I believe, will usher in this third way
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and redefine sustainable food on a grand scale.
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