How to transform apocalypse fatigue into action on global warming | Per Espen Stoknes

102,289 views ・ 2017-12-08

TED


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

00:12
How do we get people engaged in solving global warming?
0
12760
3480
00:17
I'd like to start with running two short experiments with you all.
1
17440
4040
00:22
So your task is to notice if you feel any difference as I speak.
2
22560
5216
00:27
OK?
3
27800
1200
00:30
Here we go.
4
30120
1200
00:32
We are seeing rising carbon dioxide levels,
5
32200
3216
00:35
now about 410 ppms.
6
35440
2280
00:38
To avoid the RCP 8.5 scenario,
7
38960
2856
00:41
we need rapid decarbonization.
8
41840
2480
00:45
The global carbon budget
9
45240
2056
00:47
for 66 percent likelihood to meet the two-degree target
10
47320
3496
00:50
is approximately 800 gigatons.
11
50840
2640
00:55
(Laughter)
12
55640
2536
00:58
OK, now let me try something else.
13
58200
2240
01:01
We are heading for an uninhabitable earth:
14
61600
4040
01:06
monster storms,
15
66520
2096
01:08
killer floods,
16
68640
1736
01:10
devastating wildfires,
17
70400
2296
01:12
crazy heat waves that will cook us under a blazing sun.
18
72720
3519
01:18
2017 is already so unexpectedly warm,
19
78840
3656
01:22
it's freaking out climate scientists.
20
82520
2296
01:24
We have a three-year window to cut emissions, three years.
21
84840
3936
01:28
If not, we will soon live in a boiling earth, a hellhole.
22
88800
3920
01:36
OK. So --
23
96000
2296
01:38
(Applause)
24
98320
1496
01:39
Now your task:
25
99840
1320
01:42
How did these ways of speaking make you feel?
26
102600
2936
01:45
The first, detached maybe or just confused?
27
105560
4096
01:49
What's this guy talking about?
28
109680
1429
01:52
The other, fearful or just numb?
29
112040
3320
01:56
So again, the question I asked:
30
116960
1496
01:58
How do we get people engaged in solving global warming?
31
118480
3496
02:02
And why don't these two ways of communicating work?
32
122000
2680
02:06
You see, the biggest obstacle to dealing with climate disruptions
33
126000
4336
02:10
lies between your ears.
34
130360
1600
02:13
Building on a rapidly growing body of psychology and social science,
35
133360
3976
02:17
I spent years looking into the five inner defenses
36
137360
3976
02:21
that stop people from engaging.
37
141360
1760
02:23
When people hear news about the climate coming straight at them,
38
143960
3656
02:27
the first defense comes up rapidly:
39
147640
2520
02:31
distance.
40
151280
1200
02:33
When we hear about the climate,
41
153040
1536
02:34
we hear about something far away in space --
42
154600
2096
02:36
think Arctic ice, polar bears --
43
156720
2656
02:39
far away in time -- think 2100.
44
159400
2400
02:43
It's huge and slow-moving -- think gigatons and centuries.
45
163320
3560
02:48
So it's not here. It's not now.
46
168480
2960
02:53
Since it feels so far away from me,
47
173000
1696
02:54
it seems outside my circle of influence,
48
174720
2680
02:58
so I feel helpless about it.
49
178520
1896
03:00
There's nothing I can do.
50
180440
1360
03:03
In our everyday lives,
51
183000
1416
03:04
most of us prefer to think about nearer things,
52
184440
2856
03:07
such as our jobs, our kids,
53
187320
2216
03:09
how many likes we get on Facebook.
54
189560
2816
03:12
Now, that, that's real.
55
192400
1600
03:16
Next defense is doom.
56
196080
2920
03:20
Climate change is usually framed
57
200040
2976
03:23
as a looming disaster,
58
203040
2056
03:25
bringing losses, cost and sacrifice.
59
205120
2776
03:27
That makes us fearful.
60
207920
1480
03:30
But after the first fear is gone,
61
210240
3456
03:33
my brain soon wants to avoid this topic altogether.
62
213720
3800
03:38
After 30 years of scary climate change communications,
63
218360
3376
03:41
more than 80 percent of media articles still use disaster framings,
64
221760
4816
03:46
but people habituate to and then --
65
226600
2520
03:51
desensitize
66
231160
1656
03:52
to doom overuse.
67
232840
1496
03:54
So many of us are now suffering a kind of apocalypse fatigue,
68
234360
3520
03:59
getting numb from too much collapse porn.
69
239080
2760
04:03
The third defense is dissonance.
70
243760
3016
04:06
Now, if what we know,
71
246800
2896
04:09
that fossil fuel use contributes to global warming,
72
249720
2416
04:12
conflicts with what we do -- drive, fly, eat beef --
73
252160
2696
04:14
then so-called cognitive dissonance sets in.
74
254880
2320
04:18
This is felt as an inner discomfort.
75
258280
1896
04:20
We may feel like hypocrites.
76
260200
1560
04:22
To get rid of this discomfort,
77
262600
1560
04:25
our brain starts coming up with justifications.
78
265000
3136
04:28
So I can say, for instance,
79
268160
2016
04:30
"My neighbor, he has a much bigger car than I do."
80
270200
2800
04:34
Or, "Changing my diet doesn't amount to anything
81
274480
3816
04:38
if I am the only one to do it."
82
278320
2160
04:41
Or, I could even want to doubt climate science itself.
83
281720
3656
04:45
I could say, "You know, climate is always changing."
84
285400
3640
04:51
So these justifications make us all feel better,
85
291000
2936
04:53
but at the expense
86
293960
2616
04:56
of dismissing what we know.
87
296600
2096
04:58
Thus, behavior drives attitudes.
88
298720
3360
05:03
My personal cognitive dissonance comes up
89
303920
2736
05:06
when I recognize that I've been flying from Oslo to New York
90
306680
3336
05:10
and back to Oslo
91
310040
1256
05:11
in order to speak about the climate.
92
311320
2896
05:14
(Laughter)
93
314240
1736
05:16
For 14 minutes.
94
316000
1256
05:17
(Laughter)
95
317280
3896
05:21
So that makes me want to move on to denial.
96
321200
2696
05:23
(Laughter)
97
323920
2256
05:26
So if we keep silent,
98
326200
1776
05:28
ignore or ridicule facts about climate disruptions,
99
328000
4056
05:32
then we might find inner refuge
100
332080
2816
05:34
from fear and guilt.
101
334920
1440
05:37
Denial doesn't really come from lack of intelligence or knowledge.
102
337200
3696
05:40
No, denial is a state of mind
103
340920
3296
05:44
in which I may be aware of some troubling knowledge,
104
344240
2856
05:47
but I live and act as if I don't know.
105
347120
2280
05:50
So you could call it a kind of double life,
106
350560
2120
05:53
both knowing and not knowing,
107
353280
1496
05:54
and often this is reinforced by others,
108
354800
2336
05:57
my family or community,
109
357160
1416
05:58
agreeing not to raise this tricky topic.
110
358600
3120
06:03
Finally, identity.
111
363240
1680
06:07
Alarmed climate activists
112
367440
1720
06:10
demand that government takes action,
113
370680
2296
06:13
either with regulation or carbon taxes.
114
373000
2696
06:15
But consider what happens
115
375720
1856
06:17
when people who hold conservative values, for instance,
116
377600
3736
06:21
hear from an activist that government ought to expand even further.
117
381360
3800
06:26
Particularly in rich Western democracies,
118
386760
2016
06:28
they are then less likely to believe that science.
119
388800
2920
06:33
How is that?
120
393320
1336
06:34
Well, if I hold conservative values, for instance,
121
394680
3416
06:38
I probably prefer big proper cars and small government
122
398120
4736
06:42
over tiny, tiny cars and huge government.
123
402880
3000
06:47
And if climate science comes and then says
124
407240
3376
06:50
government should expand further,
125
410640
2016
06:52
then I probably will trust that science less.
126
412680
3760
06:58
In this way, cultural identity
127
418320
2080
07:01
starts to override the facts.
128
421320
1976
07:03
The values eat the facts,
129
423320
2176
07:05
and my identity trumps truth any day.
130
425520
3840
07:11
So, after recognizing how these five D's kill engagement,
131
431240
5016
07:16
how can we move beyond them?
132
436280
1680
07:19
New research shows how we can flip these five defenses
133
439240
3576
07:22
over into key success criteria
134
442840
2136
07:25
for a more brain-friendly climate communication.
135
445000
2440
07:28
So this is where it gets really exciting
136
448880
3096
07:32
and where we find the five S's,
137
452000
1840
07:35
the five evidence-based solutions for what does work.
138
455040
3880
07:40
First, we can flip distance to social.
139
460120
2800
07:43
We can make climate feel near, personal and urgent
140
463960
3456
07:47
by bringing it home,
141
467440
3056
07:50
and we can do that by spreading social norms
142
470520
3096
07:53
that are positive to solutions.
143
473640
2136
07:55
If I believe my friends or neighbors,
144
475800
2336
07:58
you guys, will do something,
145
478160
1656
07:59
then I will, too.
146
479840
1200
08:02
We can see, for instance, this from rooftop solar panels.
147
482000
2840
08:05
They are spreading from neighbor to neighbor like a virus.
148
485360
2776
08:08
It's contagious.
149
488160
1496
08:09
This is the power of peer-to-peer creating the new normal.
150
489680
3480
08:14
Next, we can flip doom to supportive.
151
494120
3080
08:17
Rather than backfiring frames
152
497800
1896
08:19
such as disaster and cost,
153
499720
2040
08:22
we can reframe climate as being really about human health,
154
502720
3720
08:28
for instance, with plant-based delicious burgers,
155
508520
4016
08:32
good for you and good for the climate.
156
512560
2696
08:35
We can also reframe climate as being about new tech opportunities,
157
515280
3456
08:38
about safety and about new jobs.
158
518760
3120
08:43
Solar jobs, for instance, are seeing an amazing growth.
159
523000
2616
08:45
They just passed the three million jobs mark.
160
525640
2560
08:49
Psychology says, in order to create engagement,
161
529440
2575
08:52
we should present, on balance,
162
532039
2577
08:54
three positive or supportive framings
163
534640
3416
08:58
for each climate threat we mention.
164
538080
1720
09:00
Then we can flip dissonance
165
540680
1720
09:03
to simpler actions.
166
543360
2136
09:05
This is often called nudging.
167
545520
1456
09:07
The idea is, by better choice architecture,
168
547000
4360
09:12
we can make the climate-friendly behaviors
169
552680
3816
09:16
default and convenient.
170
556520
1920
09:19
Let me illustrate this. Take food waste.
171
559480
2200
09:22
Food waste at buffets goes way down
172
562400
3416
09:25
if the plate or the box size is reduced a little,
173
565840
3576
09:29
because on the smaller plate it looks full
174
569440
3256
09:32
but in the big box it looks half empty,
175
572720
2696
09:35
so we put more in.
176
575440
1456
09:36
So smaller plates make a big difference for food waste.
177
576920
3536
09:40
And there are hundreds of smart nudges like this.
178
580480
2696
09:43
The point is, dissonance goes down as more behaviors are nudged.
179
583200
4040
09:47
Then we can flip denial
180
587840
3616
09:51
by tailoring signals that visualize our progress.
181
591480
3696
09:55
We can provide motivating feedback
182
595200
2416
09:57
on how well we're doing with our problem-solving.
183
597640
2320
10:01
Say you improved your transport footprint
184
601000
2296
10:03
or cut energy waste in your buildings.
185
603320
2520
10:06
Then one app that can share this well is called Ducky.
186
606480
3240
10:10
The idea is, you log your actions there,
187
610240
1936
10:12
and then you can see how well your team or company is doing,
188
612200
3816
10:16
so you get real-time signals.
189
616040
1840
10:18
Finally, identity.
190
618720
2000
10:22
We can flip identity with better stories.
191
622120
2200
10:25
Our brain loves stories.
192
625520
2000
10:28
So we need better stories of where we all want to go,
193
628880
2506
10:31
and we need more stories of the heroes and heroines
194
631400
2816
10:34
of all stripes that are making real change happen.
195
634240
3400
10:39
I'm proud that my hometown of Oslo
196
639560
3736
10:43
is now embarking on a bold journey of electrifying all transport,
197
643320
4336
10:47
whether cars, bikes or buses.
198
647680
2840
10:51
One of the people spearheading this is Christina Bu.
199
651240
2880
10:54
She is heading the Electric Vehicle Association for years
200
654760
3736
10:58
and she has been fighting every day.
201
658520
2016
11:00
Now, the UK and France, India and China have also announced plans
202
660560
4496
11:05
for ending the sales of fossil cars.
203
665080
2816
11:07
Now, that's massive.
204
667920
1856
11:09
And in Oslo, we can see how enthusiastic EV owners
205
669800
4976
11:14
go and tell their electric stories to friends and neighbors
206
674800
3456
11:18
and bring them along.
207
678280
1296
11:19
So we come full circle from story back to social.
208
679600
3870
11:25
So thousands of climate communicators
209
685520
3176
11:28
are now starting to use these solutions
210
688720
2416
11:31
all over the world.
211
691160
1200
11:32
It is clear, however, that individual solutions
212
692800
3216
11:36
are not sufficient to solving climate alone,
213
696040
2840
11:39
but they do build stronger bottom-up support
214
699920
4760
11:46
for policies and solutions that can.
215
706000
3216
11:49
That is why engaging people is so crucial.
216
709240
2830
11:54
I started this talk
217
714120
2176
11:56
with testing two ways of communicating climate with you.
218
716320
3600
12:01
There is another way, too,
219
721720
1936
12:03
I'd like to share with you.
220
723680
1320
12:05
It starts with reimagining climate itself
221
725800
2736
12:08
as the living air.
222
728560
1760
12:11
Climate isn't really about some abstract, distant climate
223
731080
2896
12:14
far, far away from us.
224
734000
1256
12:15
It's about this air that surrounds us.
225
735280
2520
12:18
This air, you can feel in this room, too,
226
738720
3056
12:21
the air that moves right now in your nostrils.
227
741800
2840
12:25
This air is our earth's skin.
228
745800
2680
12:29
It's amazingly thin,
229
749320
2096
12:31
compared to the size of the earth and the cosmos it shields us from,
230
751440
4656
12:36
far thinner than the skin of an apple
231
756120
2496
12:38
compared to its diameter.
232
758640
1920
12:41
It may look infinite when we look up,
233
761840
2040
12:45
but the beautiful, breathable air is only like five to seven miles thin,
234
765280
5136
12:50
a fragile wrapping around a massive ball.
235
770440
3680
12:55
Inside this skin,
236
775640
1856
12:57
we're all closely connected.
237
777520
2160
13:00
The breath that you just took
238
780920
2416
13:03
contained around 400,000 of the same argon atoms
239
783360
4736
13:08
that Gandhi breathed during his lifetime.
240
788120
3000
13:12
Inside this thin, fluctuating, unsettled film,
241
792960
3456
13:16
all of life is nourished, protected and held.
242
796440
3800
13:21
It insulates and regulates temperatures
243
801440
1936
13:23
in a range that is just right for water and for life as we know it,
244
803400
4016
13:27
and mediating between the blue ocean and black eternity,
245
807440
3040
13:31
the clouds carry all the billions of tons of water
246
811440
3016
13:34
needed for the soils.
247
814480
1200
13:36
The air fills the rivers,
248
816480
2896
13:39
stirs the waters,
249
819400
1616
13:41
waters the forests.
250
821040
1200
13:42
With a global weirding of the weather,
251
822920
2096
13:45
there are good reasons for feeling fear and despair,
252
825040
4360
13:51
yet we may first grieve today's sorry state and losses
253
831120
5336
13:56
and then turn to face the future with sober eyes and determination.
254
836480
4720
14:02
The new psychology of climate action
255
842640
1920
14:05
lies in letting go, not of science,
256
845720
2816
14:08
but of the crutches of abstractions and doomism,
257
848560
3040
14:12
and then choosing to tell the new stories.
258
852600
2160
14:15
These are the stories
259
855640
1816
14:17
of how we achieve drawdown, the reversing of global warming.
260
857480
3336
14:20
These are the stories of the steps we take
261
860840
3040
14:25
as peoples, cities, companies
262
865080
3816
14:28
and public bodies
263
868920
1376
14:30
in caring for the air
264
870320
1896
14:32
in spite of strong headwinds.
265
872240
2800
14:36
These are the stories of the steps we take
266
876040
2096
14:38
because they ground us in what we are as humans:
267
878160
3720
14:42
earthlings inside this living air.
268
882840
4520
14:48
Thank you.
269
888640
1216
14:49
(Applause)
270
889880
3280
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