100 solutions to reverse global warming | Chad Frischmann

351,972 views ・ 2018-12-19

TED


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

00:13
Hello.
0
13359
1497
00:14
I'd like to introduce you to a word you may never have heard before,
1
14880
3736
00:18
but you ought to know:
2
18640
1616
00:20
drawdown.
3
20280
1240
00:22
Drawdown is a new way of thinking about and acting on global warming.
4
22760
4120
00:27
It's a goal for a future that we want,
5
27840
3336
00:31
a future where reversing global warming is possible.
6
31200
3840
00:36
Drawdown is that point in time
7
36440
2216
00:38
when atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases begin to decline
8
38680
4416
00:43
on a year-to-year basis.
9
43120
1400
00:45
More simply, it's that point
10
45400
2016
00:47
when we take out more greenhouse gases than we put into Earth's atmosphere.
11
47440
5240
00:54
Now, I know we're all concerned about climate change,
12
54040
3840
00:58
but climate change is not the problem.
13
58800
2936
01:01
Climate change is the expression of the problem.
14
61760
3696
01:05
It's the feedback of the system of the planet telling us what's going on.
15
65480
5720
01:12
The problem is global warming,
16
72360
2696
01:15
provoked by the increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases
17
75080
4296
01:19
caused by human activity.
18
79400
1640
01:21
So how do we solve the problem?
19
81880
1576
01:23
How do we begin the process of reversing global warming?
20
83480
4240
01:29
The only way we know how is to draw down,
21
89120
3776
01:32
to avoid putting greenhouse gases up
22
92920
2536
01:35
and to pull down what's already there.
23
95480
1960
01:39
I know.
24
99080
1256
01:40
Given the current situation, it sounds impossible,
25
100360
3200
01:44
but humanity already knows what to do.
26
104960
2920
01:49
We have real, workable technologies and practices
27
109160
3576
01:52
that can achieve drawdown.
28
112760
1440
01:55
And it's already happening.
29
115480
1286
01:57
What we need is to accelerate implementation
30
117760
4096
02:01
and to change the discourse
31
121880
2016
02:03
from one of fear and confusion, which only leads to apathy,
32
123920
4480
02:09
to one of understanding and possibility,
33
129720
3616
02:13
and, therefore, opportunity.
34
133360
1800
02:16
I work for an organization called Project Drawdown.
35
136560
2400
02:19
And for the last four years,
36
139880
1415
02:21
together with a team of researchers and writers from all over the world,
37
141320
3856
02:25
we have mapped, measured and detailed
38
145200
3376
02:28
100 solutions to reversing global warming.
39
148600
3200
02:32
Eighty already exist today,
40
152920
2536
02:35
and when taken together, those 80 can achieve drawdown.
41
155480
3840
02:40
And 20 are coming attractions, solutions on the pipeline,
42
160240
3536
02:43
and when they come online,
43
163800
1936
02:45
will speed up our progress.
44
165760
1760
02:48
These are solutions
45
168880
1776
02:50
that are viable, scalable and financially feasible.
46
170680
4936
02:55
And they do one or more of three things:
47
175640
2120
02:58
replace existing fossil fuel-based energy generation with clean, renewable sources;
48
178760
6376
03:05
reduce consumption through technological efficiency
49
185160
3456
03:08
and behavior change;
50
188640
1240
03:10
and to biosequester carbon in our plants' biomass and soil
51
190760
4376
03:15
through a process we all learn in grade school,
52
195160
2376
03:17
the magic of photosynthesis.
53
197560
1680
03:19
It's through a combination of these three mechanisms
54
199920
3096
03:23
that drawdown becomes possible.
55
203040
2760
03:26
So how do we get there?
56
206680
1200
03:28
Well, here's the short answer.
57
208480
2000
03:31
This is a list of the top 20 solutions to reversing global warming.
58
211480
4456
03:35
Now, I'll go into some detail,
59
215960
1456
03:37
but take a few seconds to look over the list.
60
217440
2560
03:45
It's eclectic, I know,
61
225000
2096
03:47
from onshore wind turbines to educating girls,
62
227120
3296
03:50
from plant-rich diets to rooftop solar technology.
63
230440
3560
03:54
So let's break it down a little bit.
64
234680
1736
03:56
To the right of the slide, you'll see figures in gigatons,
65
236440
3136
03:59
or billions of tons.
66
239600
2456
04:02
That represents the total equivalent carbon dioxide
67
242080
3296
04:05
reduced from the atmosphere
68
245400
1736
04:07
when the solution is implemented globally over a 30-year period.
69
247160
3920
04:11
Now, when we think about climate solutions,
70
251840
3376
04:15
we often think about electricity generation.
71
255240
2936
04:18
We think of renewable energy as the most important set of solutions,
72
258200
3936
04:22
and they are incredibly important.
73
262160
2656
04:24
But the first thing to notice about this list
74
264840
2496
04:27
is that only five of the top 20 solutions relate to electricity.
75
267360
3440
04:32
What surprised us, honestly,
76
272399
2657
04:35
was that eight of the top 20 relate to the food system.
77
275080
3560
04:40
The climate impact of food may come as a surprise to many people,
78
280400
4096
04:44
but what these results show is that the decisions we make every day
79
284520
4056
04:48
about the food we produce, purchase and consume
80
288600
3416
04:52
are perhaps the most important contributions
81
292040
2816
04:54
every individual can make to reversing global warming.
82
294880
3200
04:59
And how we manage land is also very important.
83
299200
3856
05:03
Protecting forests and wetlands
84
303080
3016
05:06
safeguards, expands and creates new carbon sinks
85
306120
4296
05:10
that directly draw down carbon.
86
310440
3016
05:13
This is how drawdown can happen.
87
313480
1760
05:16
And when we take food and land management together,
88
316480
3776
05:20
12 of the top 20 solutions relate to how and why we use land.
89
320280
6456
05:26
This fundamentally shifts traditional thinking on climate solutions.
90
326760
5400
05:33
But let's go to the top of the list,
91
333360
1736
05:35
because I think what's there may also surprise you.
92
335120
2936
05:38
The single most impactful solution,
93
338080
2480
05:41
according to this analysis, would be refrigeration management,
94
341560
3256
05:44
or properly managing and disposing of hydrofluorocarbons, also known as HFCs,
95
344840
4696
05:49
which are used by refrigerators and air conditioners to cool the air.
96
349560
4880
05:55
We did a great job with the Montreal Protocol
97
355640
2336
05:58
to limit the production of chlorofluorocarbons, CFCs,
98
358000
3256
06:01
because of their effect on the ozone layer.
99
361280
2016
06:03
But they were replaced by HFCs,
100
363320
2576
06:05
which are hundreds to thousands of times more potent a greenhouse gas
101
365920
4176
06:10
than carbon dioxide.
102
370120
1200
06:12
And that 90 gigatons reduced is a conservative figure.
103
372120
4400
06:17
If we were to account for the impact of the Kigali agreement of 2016,
104
377480
4416
06:21
which calls for the phaseout of hydrofluorocarbons
105
381920
2936
06:24
and replace them with natural refrigerants, which exist today,
106
384880
3520
06:29
this number could increase to 120, to nearly 200 gigatons
107
389880
4896
06:34
of avoided greenhouse gases.
108
394800
2216
06:37
Maybe you're surprised, as we were.
109
397040
1800
06:40
Now, before going into some details of specific solutions,
110
400160
3216
06:43
you may be wondering how we came to these calculations.
111
403400
2600
06:47
Well, first of all, we collected a lot of data,
112
407040
3016
06:50
and we used statistical analysis to create ranges
113
410080
3416
06:53
that allow us to choose reasonable choices
114
413520
2976
06:56
for every input used throughout the models.
115
416520
2360
07:00
And we chose a conservative approach, which underlies the entire project.
116
420160
4000
07:05
All that data is entered in the model,
117
425120
2016
07:07
ambitiously but plausibly projected into the future,
118
427160
3136
07:10
and compared against what we would have to do anyway.
119
430320
2477
07:13
The 84 gigatons reduced from onshore wind turbines, for example,
120
433680
4576
07:18
results from the electricity generated from wind farms
121
438280
3016
07:21
that would otherwise be produced from coal or gas-fired plants.
122
441320
3960
07:26
We calculate all the costs to build and to operate the plants
123
446040
6216
07:32
and all the emissions generated.
124
452280
1560
07:34
The same process is used to compare recycling versus landfilling,
125
454960
3680
07:39
regenerative versus industrial agriculture,
126
459560
2616
07:42
protecting versus cutting down our forests.
127
462200
3080
07:46
The results are then integrated within and across systems
128
466880
4056
07:50
to avoid double-counting
129
470960
1576
07:52
and add it up to see if we actually get to drawdown.
130
472560
3360
07:57
OK, let's go into some specific solutions.
131
477720
3240
08:02
Rooftop solar comes in ranked number 10.
132
482040
3120
08:06
When we picture rooftop solar in our minds
133
486560
2576
08:09
we often envision a warehouse in Miami covered in solar panels.
134
489160
6040
08:16
But these are solutions that are relevant in urban and rural settings,
135
496080
4376
08:20
high and low-income countries,
136
500480
2016
08:22
and they have cascading benefits.
137
502520
1640
08:25
This is a family on a straw island in Lake Titicaca
138
505360
4736
08:30
receiving their first solar panel.
139
510120
2256
08:32
Before, kerosene was used for cooking and lighting,
140
512400
3496
08:35
kerosene on a straw island.
141
515920
1520
08:38
So by installing solar, this family is not only helping to reduce emissions,
142
518200
4856
08:43
but providing safety and security for their household.
143
523080
2640
08:46
And tropical forests tell their own story.
144
526760
2039
08:49
Protecting currently degraded land in the tropics
145
529679
4057
08:53
and allowing natural regeneration to occur
146
533760
2576
08:56
is the number five solution to reversing global warming.
147
536360
3240
09:00
We can think of trees as giant sticks of carbon.
148
540760
2760
09:04
This is drawdown in action every year,
149
544680
3696
09:08
as carbon is removed from the atmosphere through photosynthesis,
150
548400
3640
09:12
which converts carbon dioxide to plants' biomass and soil organic carbon.
151
552880
4920
09:19
And we need to rethink how we produce our food
152
559240
2856
09:22
to make it more regenerative.
153
562120
1880
09:24
There are many ways to do this, and we researched over 13 of them,
154
564720
3696
09:28
but these aren't new ways of producing food.
155
568440
2216
09:30
They have been practiced for centuries, for generations.
156
570680
3560
09:35
But they are increasingly displaced by modern agriculture,
157
575640
3416
09:39
which promotes tillage, monocropping
158
579080
3376
09:42
and the use of synthetic fertilizers and pesticides which degrade the land
159
582480
5296
09:47
and turn it into a net emitter of greenhouse gases.
160
587800
2800
09:51
Regenerative agriculture, on the other hand,
161
591360
2816
09:54
restores soil health and productivity,
162
594200
2696
09:56
increases yield,
163
596920
1856
09:58
improves water retention,
164
598800
1696
10:00
benefits smallholder farmers and large farming operations alike
165
600520
3936
10:04
and brings carbon back to the land.
166
604480
1960
10:07
It's a win-win-win-win-win.
167
607480
4296
10:11
(Laughter)
168
611800
2160
10:15
And it's not just how we produce food,
169
615040
1920
10:17
but what we consume
170
617920
1496
10:19
that has a massive impact on global warming.
171
619440
2520
10:22
A plant-rich diet is not a vegan or a vegetarian diet,
172
622600
2576
10:25
though I applaud any who make those choices.
173
625200
2080
10:28
It's a healthy diet in terms of how much we consume,
174
628240
3296
10:31
and particularly how much meat is consumed.
175
631560
2720
10:35
In the richer parts of the world,
176
635160
1616
10:36
we overconsume.
177
636800
1200
10:38
However, low-income countries
178
638800
2536
10:41
show an insufficient caloric and protein intake.
179
641360
3536
10:44
That needs rebalancing,
180
644920
1696
10:46
and it's in the rebalancing
181
646640
2096
10:48
that a plant-rich diet becomes the number four solution
182
648760
2616
10:51
to reversing global warming.
183
651400
1360
10:54
Moreover, approximately a third of all food produced is not eaten,
184
654600
4320
10:59
and wasted food emits an astounding eight percent of global greenhouse gases.
185
659920
4920
11:06
We need to look where across the supply chain
186
666320
2576
11:08
these losses and wastage occurs.
187
668920
1720
11:11
In low-income countries, after food leaves the farm,
188
671240
2936
11:14
most food is wasted early in the supply chain
189
674200
2656
11:16
due to infrastructure and storage challenges.
190
676880
2240
11:19
Food is not wasted by consumers in low-income countries
191
679920
2896
11:22
which struggle to feed their population.
192
682840
1920
11:26
In the developed world, instead, after food leaves the farm,
193
686080
2856
11:28
most food is wasted at the end of the supply chain
194
688960
2376
11:31
by markets and consumers,
195
691360
1456
11:32
and wasted food ends up in the landfill
196
692840
2136
11:35
where it emits methane
197
695000
1200
11:37
as it decomposes.
198
697720
1400
11:40
This is a consumer choice problem.
199
700760
1960
11:43
It's not a technology issue.
200
703520
1360
11:46
Preventing food waste from the beginning
201
706360
2296
11:48
is the number three solution.
202
708680
1400
11:51
But here's the interesting thing.
203
711760
2256
11:54
When we look at the food system as a whole
204
714040
2376
11:56
and we implement all the production solutions
205
716440
2456
11:58
like regenerative agriculture,
206
718920
1440
12:01
and we adopt a plant-rich diet,
207
721200
2176
12:03
and we reduce food waste,
208
723400
1896
12:05
our research shows that we would produce enough food on current farmland
209
725320
5856
12:11
to feed the world's growing population a healthy, nutrient-rich diet
210
731200
4016
12:15
now until 2050 and beyond.
211
735240
2160
12:18
That means we don't need to cut down forests for food production.
212
738720
3640
12:23
The solutions to reversing global warming are the same solutions to food insecurity.
213
743320
4560
12:29
Now, a solution that often does not get talked enough about,
214
749640
3760
12:34
family planning.
215
754720
1200
12:36
By providing men and women the right to choose
216
756760
2576
12:39
when, how and if to raise a family
217
759360
4016
12:43
through reproductive health clinics and education,
218
763400
3136
12:46
access to contraception
219
766560
2856
12:49
and freedom devoid of persecution
220
769440
2360
12:52
can reduce the estimated global population by 2050.
221
772680
4040
12:57
That reduced population means reduced demand
222
777960
2096
13:00
for electricity, food, travel, buildings and all other resources.
223
780080
5280
13:06
All the energy and emissions
224
786560
1376
13:07
that are used to produce that higher demand
225
787960
2416
13:10
is reduced by providing the basic human right
226
790400
3536
13:13
to choose when, how and if to raise a family.
227
793960
3680
13:18
But family planning cannot happen without equal quality of education
228
798680
4400
13:24
to girls currently being denied access.
229
804160
2160
13:27
Now, we've taken a small liberty here,
230
807320
2256
13:29
because the impact of universal education
231
809600
4456
13:34
and family planning resources
232
814080
1976
13:36
are so inextricably intertwined
233
816080
2936
13:39
that we chose to cut it right down the middle.
234
819040
2160
13:42
But taken together, educating girls and family planning
235
822360
4616
13:47
is the number one solution to reversing global warming,
236
827000
3256
13:50
reducing approximately 120 billion tons of greenhouse gases.
237
830280
4600
13:58
So is drawdown possible?
238
838120
1200
14:00
The answer is yes, it is possible,
239
840240
3416
14:03
but we need all 80 solutions.
240
843680
1720
14:06
There are no silver bullets or a subset of solutions
241
846480
2496
14:09
that are going to get us there.
242
849000
1480
14:11
The top solutions would take us far along the pathway,
243
851480
2576
14:14
but there's no such thing as a small solution.
244
854080
2200
14:17
We need all 80.
245
857080
1200
14:19
But here's the great thing.
246
859080
1286
14:21
We would want to implement these solutions
247
861240
3336
14:24
whether or not global warming was even a problem,
248
864600
2320
14:28
because they have cascading benefits to human and planetary well-being.
249
868120
4720
14:34
Renewable electricity results in clean, abundant access to energy for all.
250
874360
5160
14:41
A plant-rich diet, reduced food waste
251
881760
2776
14:44
results in a healthy global population with enough food and sustenance.
252
884560
4320
14:50
Family planning and educating girls?
253
890040
1920
14:53
This is about human rights,
254
893200
2616
14:55
about gender equality.
255
895840
1560
14:58
This is about economic improvement and the freedom of choice.
256
898800
3896
15:02
It's about justice.
257
902720
1200
15:05
Regenerative agriculture, managed grazing, agroforestry, silvopasture
258
905680
4296
15:10
restores soil health, benefits farmers
259
910000
3936
15:13
and brings carbon back to the land.
260
913960
2200
15:17
Protecting our ecosystems also protects biodiversity
261
917320
3896
15:21
and safeguards planetary health
262
921240
1640
15:23
and the oxygen that we breathe.
263
923840
1520
15:26
Its tangible benefits to all species are incalculable.
264
926720
3240
15:31
But one last point, because I know it's probably on everybody's mind;
265
931240
4056
15:35
how much is this going to cost?
266
935320
1800
15:38
Well, we estimate that to implement all 80 solutions
267
938520
4896
15:43
would cost about 29 trillion dollars over 30 years.
268
943440
4016
15:47
That's just about a trillion a year.
269
947480
1976
15:49
Now, I know that sounds like a lot,
270
949480
2936
15:52
but we have to remember that global GDP is over 80 trillion every year,
271
952440
4120
15:57
and the estimated savings from implementing these solutions
272
957480
3576
16:01
is 74 trillion dollars, over double the costs.
273
961080
3616
16:04
That's a net savings of 44 trillion dollars.
274
964720
3680
16:11
So drawdown is possible.
275
971000
1320
16:13
We can do it if we want to.
276
973320
1880
16:16
It's not going to cost that much, and the return on that investment is huge.
277
976200
5560
16:23
Here's the welcome surprise.
278
983520
1360
16:26
When we implement these solutions,
279
986280
1920
16:29
we shift the way we do business
280
989200
2496
16:31
from a system that is inherently exploitative and extractive
281
991720
4896
16:36
to a new normal that is by nature restorative and regenerative.
282
996640
4560
16:43
We need to rethink our global goals,
283
1003280
3856
16:47
to move beyond sustainability
284
1007160
2616
16:49
towards regeneration,
285
1009800
2136
16:51
and along the way reverse global warming.
286
1011960
2680
16:55
Thank you.
287
1015440
1216
16:56
(Applause)
288
1016680
4160
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