100 solutions to reverse global warming | Chad Frischmann

353,011 views ・ 2018-12-19

TED


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00:13
Hello.
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I'd like to introduce you to a word you may never have heard before,
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but you ought to know:
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drawdown.
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Drawdown is a new way of thinking about and acting on global warming.
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It's a goal for a future that we want,
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a future where reversing global warming is possible.
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Drawdown is that point in time
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when atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases begin to decline
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on a year-to-year basis.
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More simply, it's that point
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when we take out more greenhouse gases than we put into Earth's atmosphere.
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Now, I know we're all concerned about climate change,
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but climate change is not the problem.
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Climate change is the expression of the problem.
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It's the feedback of the system of the planet telling us what's going on.
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The problem is global warming,
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provoked by the increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases
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caused by human activity.
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So how do we solve the problem?
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How do we begin the process of reversing global warming?
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The only way we know how is to draw down,
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to avoid putting greenhouse gases up
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and to pull down what's already there.
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I know.
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Given the current situation, it sounds impossible,
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but humanity already knows what to do.
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We have real, workable technologies and practices
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that can achieve drawdown.
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And it's already happening.
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What we need is to accelerate implementation
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and to change the discourse
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from one of fear and confusion, which only leads to apathy,
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to one of understanding and possibility,
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and, therefore, opportunity.
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I work for an organization called Project Drawdown.
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And for the last four years,
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together with a team of researchers and writers from all over the world,
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we have mapped, measured and detailed
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100 solutions to reversing global warming.
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Eighty already exist today,
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and when taken together, those 80 can achieve drawdown.
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And 20 are coming attractions, solutions on the pipeline,
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and when they come online,
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will speed up our progress.
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These are solutions
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that are viable, scalable and financially feasible.
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And they do one or more of three things:
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replace existing fossil fuel-based energy generation with clean, renewable sources;
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reduce consumption through technological efficiency
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and behavior change;
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and to biosequester carbon in our plants' biomass and soil
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through a process we all learn in grade school,
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the magic of photosynthesis.
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It's through a combination of these three mechanisms
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that drawdown becomes possible.
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So how do we get there?
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Well, here's the short answer.
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This is a list of the top 20 solutions to reversing global warming.
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Now, I'll go into some detail,
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but take a few seconds to look over the list.
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It's eclectic, I know,
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from onshore wind turbines to educating girls,
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from plant-rich diets to rooftop solar technology.
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So let's break it down a little bit.
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To the right of the slide, you'll see figures in gigatons,
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or billions of tons.
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That represents the total equivalent carbon dioxide
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reduced from the atmosphere
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when the solution is implemented globally over a 30-year period.
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Now, when we think about climate solutions,
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we often think about electricity generation.
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We think of renewable energy as the most important set of solutions,
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and they are incredibly important.
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But the first thing to notice about this list
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is that only five of the top 20 solutions relate to electricity.
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What surprised us, honestly,
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was that eight of the top 20 relate to the food system.
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The climate impact of food may come as a surprise to many people,
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but what these results show is that the decisions we make every day
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about the food we produce, purchase and consume
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are perhaps the most important contributions
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every individual can make to reversing global warming.
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And how we manage land is also very important.
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Protecting forests and wetlands
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safeguards, expands and creates new carbon sinks
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that directly draw down carbon.
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This is how drawdown can happen.
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And when we take food and land management together,
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12 of the top 20 solutions relate to how and why we use land.
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This fundamentally shifts traditional thinking on climate solutions.
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But let's go to the top of the list,
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because I think what's there may also surprise you.
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The single most impactful solution,
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according to this analysis, would be refrigeration management,
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or properly managing and disposing of hydrofluorocarbons, also known as HFCs,
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which are used by refrigerators and air conditioners to cool the air.
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We did a great job with the Montreal Protocol
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to limit the production of chlorofluorocarbons, CFCs,
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because of their effect on the ozone layer.
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But they were replaced by HFCs,
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which are hundreds to thousands of times more potent a greenhouse gas
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than carbon dioxide.
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And that 90 gigatons reduced is a conservative figure.
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If we were to account for the impact of the Kigali agreement of 2016,
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which calls for the phaseout of hydrofluorocarbons
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and replace them with natural refrigerants, which exist today,
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this number could increase to 120, to nearly 200 gigatons
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of avoided greenhouse gases.
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Maybe you're surprised, as we were.
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Now, before going into some details of specific solutions,
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you may be wondering how we came to these calculations.
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Well, first of all, we collected a lot of data,
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and we used statistical analysis to create ranges
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that allow us to choose reasonable choices
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for every input used throughout the models.
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And we chose a conservative approach, which underlies the entire project.
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All that data is entered in the model,
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ambitiously but plausibly projected into the future,
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and compared against what we would have to do anyway.
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The 84 gigatons reduced from onshore wind turbines, for example,
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results from the electricity generated from wind farms
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that would otherwise be produced from coal or gas-fired plants.
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We calculate all the costs to build and to operate the plants
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and all the emissions generated.
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The same process is used to compare recycling versus landfilling,
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regenerative versus industrial agriculture,
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protecting versus cutting down our forests.
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The results are then integrated within and across systems
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to avoid double-counting
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and add it up to see if we actually get to drawdown.
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OK, let's go into some specific solutions.
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Rooftop solar comes in ranked number 10.
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When we picture rooftop solar in our minds
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we often envision a warehouse in Miami covered in solar panels.
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But these are solutions that are relevant in urban and rural settings,
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high and low-income countries,
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and they have cascading benefits.
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This is a family on a straw island in Lake Titicaca
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receiving their first solar panel.
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Before, kerosene was used for cooking and lighting,
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kerosene on a straw island.
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So by installing solar, this family is not only helping to reduce emissions,
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but providing safety and security for their household.
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And tropical forests tell their own story.
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Protecting currently degraded land in the tropics
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and allowing natural regeneration to occur
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is the number five solution to reversing global warming.
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We can think of trees as giant sticks of carbon.
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This is drawdown in action every year,
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as carbon is removed from the atmosphere through photosynthesis,
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which converts carbon dioxide to plants' biomass and soil organic carbon.
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And we need to rethink how we produce our food
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to make it more regenerative.
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There are many ways to do this, and we researched over 13 of them,
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but these aren't new ways of producing food.
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They have been practiced for centuries, for generations.
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But they are increasingly displaced by modern agriculture,
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which promotes tillage, monocropping
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and the use of synthetic fertilizers and pesticides which degrade the land
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and turn it into a net emitter of greenhouse gases.
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Regenerative agriculture, on the other hand,
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restores soil health and productivity,
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increases yield,
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improves water retention,
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benefits smallholder farmers and large farming operations alike
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and brings carbon back to the land.
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It's a win-win-win-win-win.
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(Laughter)
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And it's not just how we produce food,
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but what we consume
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that has a massive impact on global warming.
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A plant-rich diet is not a vegan or a vegetarian diet,
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though I applaud any who make those choices.
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It's a healthy diet in terms of how much we consume,
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and particularly how much meat is consumed.
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In the richer parts of the world,
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we overconsume.
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However, low-income countries
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show an insufficient caloric and protein intake.
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That needs rebalancing,
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and it's in the rebalancing
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that a plant-rich diet becomes the number four solution
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to reversing global warming.
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Moreover, approximately a third of all food produced is not eaten,
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and wasted food emits an astounding eight percent of global greenhouse gases.
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We need to look where across the supply chain
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these losses and wastage occurs.
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In low-income countries, after food leaves the farm,
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most food is wasted early in the supply chain
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due to infrastructure and storage challenges.
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Food is not wasted by consumers in low-income countries
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which struggle to feed their population.
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In the developed world, instead, after food leaves the farm,
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most food is wasted at the end of the supply chain
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by markets and consumers,
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and wasted food ends up in the landfill
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where it emits methane
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as it decomposes.
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This is a consumer choice problem.
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It's not a technology issue.
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Preventing food waste from the beginning
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is the number three solution.
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But here's the interesting thing.
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When we look at the food system as a whole
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and we implement all the production solutions
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like regenerative agriculture,
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and we adopt a plant-rich diet,
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and we reduce food waste,
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our research shows that we would produce enough food on current farmland
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to feed the world's growing population a healthy, nutrient-rich diet
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now until 2050 and beyond.
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That means we don't need to cut down forests for food production.
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The solutions to reversing global warming are the same solutions to food insecurity.
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Now, a solution that often does not get talked enough about,
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family planning.
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By providing men and women the right to choose
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when, how and if to raise a family
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through reproductive health clinics and education,
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access to contraception
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and freedom devoid of persecution
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can reduce the estimated global population by 2050.
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That reduced population means reduced demand
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for electricity, food, travel, buildings and all other resources.
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All the energy and emissions
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that are used to produce that higher demand
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is reduced by providing the basic human right
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to choose when, how and if to raise a family.
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But family planning cannot happen without equal quality of education
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to girls currently being denied access.
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Now, we've taken a small liberty here,
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because the impact of universal education
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and family planning resources
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are so inextricably intertwined
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that we chose to cut it right down the middle.
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But taken together, educating girls and family planning
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is the number one solution to reversing global warming,
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reducing approximately 120 billion tons of greenhouse gases.
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So is drawdown possible?
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The answer is yes, it is possible,
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but we need all 80 solutions.
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There are no silver bullets or a subset of solutions
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that are going to get us there.
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The top solutions would take us far along the pathway,
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but there's no such thing as a small solution.
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We need all 80.
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But here's the great thing.
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We would want to implement these solutions
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whether or not global warming was even a problem,
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because they have cascading benefits to human and planetary well-being.
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Renewable electricity results in clean, abundant access to energy for all.
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A plant-rich diet, reduced food waste
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results in a healthy global population with enough food and sustenance.
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Family planning and educating girls?
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This is about human rights,
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about gender equality.
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This is about economic improvement and the freedom of choice.
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It's about justice.
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Regenerative agriculture, managed grazing, agroforestry, silvopasture
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restores soil health, benefits farmers
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and brings carbon back to the land.
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Protecting our ecosystems also protects biodiversity
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and safeguards planetary health
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and the oxygen that we breathe.
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Its tangible benefits to all species are incalculable.
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But one last point, because I know it's probably on everybody's mind;
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how much is this going to cost?
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Well, we estimate that to implement all 80 solutions
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would cost about 29 trillion dollars over 30 years.
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That's just about a trillion a year.
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Now, I know that sounds like a lot,
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but we have to remember that global GDP is over 80 trillion every year,
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and the estimated savings from implementing these solutions
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is 74 trillion dollars, over double the costs.
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That's a net savings of 44 trillion dollars.
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So drawdown is possible.
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We can do it if we want to.
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It's not going to cost that much, and the return on that investment is huge.
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Here's the welcome surprise.
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When we implement these solutions,
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we shift the way we do business
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from a system that is inherently exploitative and extractive
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to a new normal that is by nature restorative and regenerative.
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We need to rethink our global goals,
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to move beyond sustainability
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towards regeneration,
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and along the way reverse global warming.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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