A climate change solution that's right under our feet | Asmeret Asefaw Berhe

121,965 views ・ 2019-09-26

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So one of the most important solutions
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to the global challenge posed by climate change
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lies right under our foot every day.
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It's soil.
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Soil's just the thin veil that covers the surface of land,
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but it has the power to shape our planet's destiny.
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See, a six-foot or so of soil,
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loose soil material that covers the earth's surface,
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represents the difference between life and lifelessness in the earth system,
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and it can also help us combat climate change
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if we can only stop treating it like dirt.
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(Laughter)
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Climate change is happening,
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the earth's atmosphere is warming,
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because of the increasing amount of greenhouse gases
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we keep releasing into the atmosphere.
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You all know that.
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But what I assume you might not have heard
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is that one of the most important things our human society could do
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to address climate change
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lies right there in the soil.
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I'm a soil scientist who has been studying soil since I was 18,
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because I'm interested in unlocking the secrets of soil
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and helping people understand this really important climate change solution.
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So here are the facts about climate.
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The concentration of carbon dioxide in the earth's atmosphere
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has increased by 40 percent
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just in the last 150 years or so.
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Human actions are now releasing 9.4 billion metric tons of carbon
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into the atmosphere,
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from activities such as burning fossil fuels
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and intensive agricultural practices,
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and other ways we change the way we use land,
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including deforestation.
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But the concentration of carbon dioxide that stays in the atmosphere
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is only increasing by about half of that,
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and that's because half of the carbon we keep releasing into the atmosphere
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is currently being taken up by land and the seas
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through a process we know as carbon sequestration.
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So in essence, whatever consequence you think we're facing
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from climate change right now,
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we're only experiencing the consequence of 50 percent of our pollution,
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because the natural ecosystems are bailing us out.
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But don't get too comfortable,
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because we have two major things working against us right now.
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One: unless we do something big,
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and then fast,
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emissions will continue to rise.
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And second: the ability of these natural ecosystems
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to take up carbon dioxide from the atmosphere
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and sequester it in the natural habitats
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is currently getting compromised,
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as they're experiencing serious degradation because of human actions.
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So it's not entirely clear
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that we will continue to get bailed out by these natural ecosystems
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if we continue on this business-as-usual path that we've been.
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Here's where the soil comes in:
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there is about three thousand billion metric tons of carbon in the soil.
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That's roughly about 315 times the amount of carbon
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that we release into the atmosphere currently.
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And there's twice more carbon in soil than there is in vegetation and air.
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Think about that for a second.
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There's more carbon in soil
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than there is in all of the world's vegetation,
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including the lush tropical rainforests and the giant sequoias,
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the expansive grasslands,
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all of the cultivated systems,
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and every kind of flora you can imagine on the face of the earth,
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plus all the carbon that's currently up in the atmosphere, combined,
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and then twice over.
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Hence, a very small change in the amount of carbon stored in soil
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can make a big difference in maintenance of the earth's atmosphere.
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But soil's not just simply a storage box for carbon, though.
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It operates more like a bank account,
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and the amount of carbon that's in soil at any given time
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is a function of the amount of carbon coming in and out of the soil.
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Carbon comes into the soil through the process of photosynthesis,
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when green plants take carbon dioxide from the atmosphere
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and use it to make their bodies,
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and upon death, their bodies enter the soil.
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And carbon leaves the soil
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and goes right back up into the atmosphere
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when the bodies of those formerly living organisms
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decay in soil by the activity of microbes.
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See, decomposition releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere,
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as well as other greenhouse gases such as methane and nitrous oxide,
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but it also releases all the nutrients we all need to survive.
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One of the things that makes soil such a fundamental component
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of any climate change mitigation strategy
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is because it represents a long-term storage of carbon.
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Carbon that would have lasted maybe a year or two
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in decaying residue if it was left on the surface
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can stay in soil for hundreds of years, even thousands and more.
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Soil biogeochemists like me
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study exactly how the soil system makes this possible,
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by locking away the carbon in physical association with minerals,
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inside aggregates of soil minerals,
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and formation of strong chemical bonds
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that bind the carbon to the surfaces of the minerals.
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See when carbon is entrapped in soil,
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in these kinds of associations with soil minerals,
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even the wiliest of the microbes can't easily degrade it.
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And carbon that's not degrading fast
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is carbon that's not going back into the atmosphere as greenhouse gases.
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But the benefit of carbon sequestration
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is not just limited to climate change mitigation.
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Soil that stores large amounts of carbon is healthy, fertile, soft.
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It's malleable. It's workable.
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It makes it like a sponge.
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It can hold on to a lot of water and nutrients.
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Healthy and fertile soils like this
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support the most dynamic, abundant and diverse habitat for living things
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that we know of anywhere on the earth system.
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It makes life possible for everything from the tiniest of the microbes,
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such as bacteria and fungi,
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all the way to higher plants,
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and fulfills the food, feed and fiber needs for all animals,
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including you and I.
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So at this point, you would assume that we should be treating soil
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like the precious resource that it is.
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Unfortunately, that's not the case.
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Soils around the world are experiencing unprecedented rates of degradation
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through a variety of human actions that include deforestation,
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intensive agricultural production systems,
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overgrazing,
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excessive application of agricultural chemicals,
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erosion and similar things.
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Half of the world's soils are currently considered degraded.
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Soil degradation is bad for many reasons,
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but let me just tell you a couple.
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One: degraded soils have diminished potential to support plant productivity.
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And hence, by degrading soil,
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we're compromising our own abilities to provide the food and other resources
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that we need for us
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and every member of living things on the face of the earth.
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And second:
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soil use and degradation, just in the last 200 years or so,
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has released 12 times more carbon into the atmosphere
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compared to the rate at which we're releasing carbon
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into the atmosphere right now.
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I'm afraid there's even more bad news.
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This is a story of soils at high latitudes.
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Peatlands in polar environments
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store about a third of the global soil carbon reserves.
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These peatlands have a permanently frozen ground underneath,
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the permafrost,
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and the carbon was able to build up in these soils over long periods of time
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because even though plants are able to photosynthesize during the short,
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warm summer months,
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the environment quickly turns cold and dark,
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and then microbes are not able to efficiently break down the residue.
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So the soil carbon bank in these polar environments
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built up over hundreds of thousands of years.
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But right now, with atmospheric warming,
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the permafrost is thawing and draining.
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And when permafrost thaws and drains,
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it makes it possible for microbes to come in
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and rather quickly decompose all this carbon,
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with the potential to release hundreds of billions of metric tons of carbon
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into the atmosphere in the form of greenhouse gases.
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And this release of additional greenhouse gases into the atmosphere
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will only contribute to further warming
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that makes this predicament even worse,
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as it starts a self-reinforcing positive feedback loop
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that could go on and on and on,
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dramatically changing our climate future.
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Fortunately, I can also tell you that there is a solution
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for these two wicked problems of soil degradation and climate change.
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Just like we created these problems,
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we do know the solution,
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and the solution lies in simultaneously working
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to address these two things together,
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through what we call climate-smart land management practices.
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What do I mean here?
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I mean managing land in a way that's smart
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about maximizing how much carbon we store in soil.
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And we can accomplish this
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by putting in place deep-rooted perennial plants,
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putting back forests whenever possible,
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reducing tillage and other disturbances from agricultural practices,
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including optimizing the use of agricultural chemicals and grazing
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and even adding carbon to soil, whenever possible,
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from recycled resources such as compost and even human waste.
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This kind of land stewardship is not a radical idea.
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It's what made it possible for fertile soils
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to be able to support human civilizations since time immemorial.
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In fact, some are doing it just right now.
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There's a global effort underway to accomplish exactly this goal.
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This effort that started in France is known as the "4 per 1000" effort,
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and it sets an aspirational goal
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to increase the amount of carbon stored in soil by 0.4 percent annually,
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using the same kind of climate-smart land management practices
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I mentioned earlier.
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And if this effort's fully successful,
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it can offset a third of the global emissions
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of fossil-fuel-derived carbon into the atmosphere.
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But even if this effort is not fully successful,
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but we just start heading in that direction,
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we still end up with soils that are healthier, more fertile,
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are able to produce all the food and resources that we need
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for human populations and more,
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and also soils that are better capable
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of sequestering carbon dioxide from the atmosphere
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and helping with climate change mitigation.
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I'm pretty sure that's what politicians call a win-win solution.
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And we all can have a role to play here.
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We can start by treating the soil with the respect that it deserves:
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respect for its ability as the basis of all life on earth,
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respect for its ability to serve as a carbon bank
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and respect for its ability to control our climate.
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And if we do so,
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we can then simultaneously address
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two of the most pressing global challenges of our time:
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climate change and soil degradation.
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And in the process, we would be able to provide food and nutritional security
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to our growing human family.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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