Why you should be a climate activist | Luisa Neubauer

90,741 views ・ 2019-10-04

TED


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

00:13
I never planned to become a climate activist.
0
13071
2944
00:16
But things have changed,
1
16579
2265
00:18
and now, standing here as a climate activist,
2
18868
3060
00:21
I ask you all to become one, too.
3
21952
2356
00:25
Here's why,
4
25193
1497
00:26
and most importantly, how.
5
26714
2154
00:30
Ten years ago, when I was 13 years old,
6
30821
3491
00:34
I first learned about the greenhouse effect.
7
34336
2599
00:37
Back then, we spent 90 minutes on this issue,
8
37887
3818
00:41
and I remember finding it quite irritating
9
41729
2136
00:43
that something so fundamental
10
43889
2217
00:46
would be squeezed into a single geography lesson.
11
46130
2829
00:50
Some of this irritation remained, so when I graduated from high school,
12
50123
3846
00:53
I decided to study geography,
13
53993
2298
00:56
just to make sure I was on the right track with this whole climate change thing.
14
56315
4226
01:01
And this is when everything changed.
15
61487
2875
01:05
This was the first time I looked at the data,
16
65492
2198
01:07
at the science behind the climate crisis,
17
67714
2389
01:10
and I couldn't believe what I was reading.
18
70881
2458
01:13
Like many of you,
19
73985
2119
01:16
I thought that the planet wasn't really in a good state.
20
76128
3204
01:20
I had no idea that we are rushing into this self-made disaster
21
80562
5016
01:25
in such a rapid pace.
22
85602
1998
01:28
There was also the first time I understood what difference it makes
23
88636
3335
01:31
when you consider the bigger picture.
24
91995
2154
01:34
Take the CO2 concentration in the atmosphere, for instance,
25
94173
3710
01:37
the number one driver for global warming.
26
97907
2172
01:40
Yes, this looks bad.
27
100487
1787
01:42
This looks like we are on a pretty bad track.
28
102298
3484
01:46
But it's only once you don't just consider the last 60 years
29
106362
3223
01:49
but the last 10,000 years
30
109609
1614
01:51
that you understand how terrifying this really is.
31
111247
2926
01:55
And this is just one aspect of the crisis we're seeing.
32
115512
3635
01:59
I'm not going to get into details here, but let me tell you so much:
33
119922
3362
02:04
we are in a point of history
34
124546
2933
02:07
that the most destructive force on the planet is humanity itself.
35
127503
5283
02:12
We are in a point of history
36
132810
2414
02:15
that no scientist could guarantee you that you will survive this.
37
135248
4338
02:20
We are in a point of history
38
140547
2599
02:23
that humanity is creating an environment
39
143170
3712
02:26
that's not safe for humans anymore.
40
146906
3352
02:32
Yeah, there I was,
41
152353
1597
02:34
first year of geography,
42
154878
1336
02:36
and felt pretty overwhelmed.
43
156238
1451
02:37
But ...
44
157713
1166
02:39
there was good news.
45
159329
1297
02:42
The very same year I first learned about all this,
46
162087
3511
02:45
leaders from across the globe came together in Paris
47
165622
3603
02:49
to decide on the common target to limit global warming to below two degrees.
48
169249
5806
02:55
Pictures went around the world,
49
175763
1613
02:57
and I was told that history was made that day.
50
177400
2485
03:00
How relieving, right?
51
180949
1556
03:04
Except ...
52
184358
1161
03:06
something didn't quite work out about this.
53
186430
3376
03:11
After this agreement was signed,
54
191314
2818
03:14
things didn't really get better.
55
194156
2069
03:16
Actually, they got much worse.
56
196249
2550
03:19
Decision makers and industries, leaders and politicians,
57
199823
4044
03:23
they went back to business as usual,
58
203891
3543
03:27
exploiting our livelihoods like there is literally no tomorrow,
59
207458
3968
03:32
building coal power plants again and again,
60
212252
3640
03:35
even though we know that needs to stop,
61
215916
2551
03:38
according to the Paris Agreement.
62
218491
2010
03:42
So while there are also good developments, of course --
63
222369
3192
03:45
there are installations of wind and solar energy all over the globe, yes --
64
225585
4142
03:49
but these positive changes are slow -- too slow, in fact.
65
229751
4120
03:53
So since the Paris Agreement was signed,
66
233895
2675
03:56
climate graphs keep racing to the top,
67
236594
3055
03:59
smashing records every year.
68
239673
2735
04:02
The five hottest years ever recorded
69
242432
2432
04:04
were the previous five years,
70
244888
2503
04:07
and at no time have global emissions been higher than today.
71
247415
5431
04:15
So there I was,
72
255003
1181
04:16
seeing and understanding the science on the one side,
73
256208
3007
04:19
but not seeing answers, not seeing the action, on the other side.
74
259239
5056
04:25
At that point, I had enough.
75
265684
2933
04:28
I wanted to go to the UN Climate Conference myself,
76
268641
3407
04:32
that very place that was created to bring people together
77
272072
4552
04:36
to fix the climate --
78
276648
1863
04:38
except not really, apparently.
79
278535
2471
04:41
This was last year.
80
281030
1150
04:42
I traveled to the Climate Conference and wanted to find out
81
282204
3248
04:45
what this is really like, what this is about.
82
285476
2366
04:49
For political realists, this might be no surprise,
83
289344
4115
04:54
but I found it hard to bear:
84
294253
2125
04:56
that fossil fuel industries and political leaders
85
296402
5452
05:01
are doing everything, everything to prevent real change from happening.
86
301878
4514
05:06
They are not keen to set targets that are ambitious enough
87
306823
3608
05:10
to put us on a below-two-degree pathway.
88
310455
2616
05:14
After all, these are the only ones who benefit from this climate crisis, right?
89
314163
5478
05:19
The fossil fuel industry generates profits,
90
319665
2891
05:22
and political leaders, well, they look at the next election,
91
322580
3574
05:26
at what makes them popular,
92
326178
1481
05:27
and I guess that's not asking the inconvenient questions.
93
327683
3262
05:31
There is no intention for them to change the game.
94
331760
3305
05:35
There is no country in the world where either companies or political powers
95
335393
5126
05:40
are sanctioned for wrecking the climate.
96
340543
3268
05:46
With all the strangeness and the sadness about this conference,
97
346201
5772
05:51
there was one someone who was different,
98
351997
2234
05:54
someone who seemed to be quite worried,
99
354255
4241
05:58
and that was Greta Thunberg.
100
358520
1871
06:01
I decided right there that everything else seemed hopeless
101
361129
4341
06:05
and didn't seem to make sense,
102
365494
1477
06:06
so I joined her climate strike right there at the conference.
103
366995
3273
06:10
It was my very first climate strike ever
104
370292
2795
06:13
and an incredibly strange setting,
105
373111
2222
06:15
just me and her sitting there at this conference hall,
106
375357
3217
06:18
surrounded by this busyness of the suit-wearing conference crowd
107
378598
4948
06:23
who had no idea what to do with us.
108
383570
3107
06:27
And yet, this felt more powerful
109
387602
3998
06:31
than anything I had expected in a very long time.
110
391624
3427
06:36
And it was right there that I felt it was maybe time
111
396279
3727
06:40
to start striking in Germany.
112
400030
1643
06:41
I was now certain that no one else was going to fix this for us,
113
401697
3546
06:45
and if there was just the slightest chance that this could make a difference,
114
405267
5842
06:51
it seemed almost foolish not to give it a go.
115
411133
3062
06:55
So I --
116
415482
2138
06:57
(Applause)
117
417644
6980
07:06
So I traveled back to Berlin.
118
426805
1760
07:08
I found allies who had the same idea at the same time,
119
428589
3830
07:12
and together we thought we'd give this "Fridays For Future" thing a go.
120
432443
3991
07:16
Obviously, we had no idea what we were getting into.
121
436458
3105
07:19
Before our first strike, many of us, including me,
122
439991
2988
07:23
had never organized a public demonstration or any kind of protest before.
123
443003
4924
07:27
We had no money, no resources
124
447951
1892
07:29
and absolutely no idea what climate striking really is.
125
449867
3855
07:33
So we started doing what we were good at:
126
453746
2793
07:37
we started texting,
127
457099
1811
07:38
texting en masse, night and day, everyone we could reach,
128
458934
2878
07:41
organizing our first climate strike via WhatsApp.
129
461836
3258
07:46
The night before our first strike, I was so nervous I couldn't sleep.
130
466105
3986
07:50
I didn't know what to expect, but I expected the worst.
131
470481
3501
07:56
Maybe it was because we weren't the only ones
132
476188
5884
08:02
who had been longing to have a voice in a political environment
133
482096
4462
08:06
that had seemingly forgotten how to include young people's perspective
134
486582
4228
08:10
into decision-making, maybe.
135
490834
2584
08:14
But somehow this worked out.
136
494049
2421
08:16
And from one day to the other,
137
496987
2503
08:19
we were all over the place.
138
499514
1553
08:21
And I, from one day to the other,
139
501666
3224
08:24
became a climate activist.
140
504914
1601
08:29
Usually,
141
509459
1295
08:31
in these kind of TED Talks,
142
511983
2267
08:34
I would now say how it's overly hopeful,
143
514274
2989
08:37
how we young people are going to get this sorted,
144
517287
2476
08:39
how we're going to save the future and the planet and everything else,
145
519787
3444
08:43
how we young people striking for the climate
146
523255
2341
08:45
are going to fix this.
147
525620
1291
08:47
Usually.
148
527671
1184
08:50
But this is not how this works.
149
530677
1537
08:52
This is not how this crisis works.
150
532238
2970
08:56
Here's a twist:
151
536223
1175
08:59
today, three and a half years after that Paris Agreement was signed,
152
539049
5501
09:04
when we look at the science,
153
544574
2641
09:07
we find it's still possible to keep global warming
154
547239
3080
09:10
to below two degrees --
155
550343
1572
09:13
technically.
156
553107
1315
09:15
And we also see it's still possible to hold other disastrous developments
157
555442
3864
09:19
we're seeing, such as mass extinction and soil degradation --
158
559330
2990
09:22
yes, technically.
159
562344
2059
09:25
It's just incredibly, incredibly unlikely.
160
565668
5157
09:33
And in any case,
161
573341
2459
09:35
the world would have to see changes
162
575824
3327
09:39
which we have never experienced before.
163
579175
2259
09:42
We'd have to fully decarbonize our economies by 2050
164
582102
3910
09:46
and transform the distribution of powers
165
586036
2661
09:48
that is currently allowing those fossil fuel giants and political leaders
166
588721
3955
09:52
to stay on top of the game.
167
592700
1816
09:55
We are talking of nothing less than the greatest transformation
168
595562
4149
09:59
since the Industrial Revolution.
169
599735
1958
10:01
We are talking, if you want to put it that way,
170
601717
2201
10:03
we are talking of a climate revolution
171
603942
2235
10:07
in a minimum amount of time.
172
607637
2161
10:09
We wouldn't have a single further year to lose.
173
609822
3187
10:14
And in any case, for any of that change to happen,
174
614875
4014
10:19
the world needs to stop relying on
175
619889
3489
10:23
one or two or three million school strikers to sort this out.
176
623402
4089
10:28
Yes, we are great, we are going to keep going,
177
628286
2541
10:30
and we are going to go to places no one ever expected us, yes.
178
630851
3513
10:34
But we are not the limit;
179
634888
1845
10:36
we are the start.
180
636757
1521
10:39
This is not a job for a single generation.
181
639414
2437
10:41
This is a job for humanity.
182
641875
2081
10:44
And this is when all eyes are on you.
183
644692
3831
10:50
For this change to happen,
184
650411
1343
10:51
we will have to get one million things sorted.
185
651778
3699
10:56
It's an incredibly complex thing, after all.
186
656051
2430
10:59
But ...
187
659897
1151
11:02
there are some things that everyone can get started with.
188
662376
2864
11:05
Bad news first: if you thought I would tell you now to cycle more
189
665721
3768
11:09
or eat less meat, to fly less, or to go secondhand shopping,
190
669513
3371
11:12
sorry, this is not that easy.
191
672908
2545
11:15
But here comes the good news:
192
675477
1681
11:17
you are more than consumers and shoppers,
193
677633
4249
11:21
even though the industry would like you to keep yourselves limited to that.
194
681906
3696
11:25
No; me and you -- we are all political beings,
195
685626
4771
11:30
and we can all be part of this answer.
196
690421
3547
11:33
We can all be something that many people call climate activists.
197
693992
4562
11:38
Yay?
198
698578
1164
11:39
(Laughter)
199
699766
1530
11:41
So what are the first steps?
200
701320
1418
11:42
Four first steps that are essential to get everything else done,
201
702762
3946
11:46
four first steps that everyone can get started with,
202
706732
3773
11:50
four first steps that decide about everything that can happen after.
203
710529
5903
11:57
So what's that?
204
717178
1375
11:59
Number one:
205
719573
1210
12:02
we need to drastically reframe our understanding of a climate activist,
206
722086
3968
12:06
our understanding of who can be the answer to this.
207
726078
4938
12:11
A climate activist isn't that one person that's read every single study
208
731977
3691
12:15
and is now spending every afternoon handing out leaflets about vegetarianism
209
735692
4958
12:20
in shopping malls.
210
740674
1166
12:21
No.
211
741864
1212
12:23
A climate activist can be everyone,
212
743100
3126
12:26
everyone who wants to join a movement of those who intend to grow old
213
746250
5191
12:31
on a planet that prioritizes protection of natural environments
214
751465
3904
12:35
and happiness and health for the many
215
755393
2713
12:38
over the destruction of the climate and the wrecking of the planet
216
758130
4320
12:42
for the profits of the few.
217
762474
1635
12:45
And since the climate crisis is affecting every single part of our social,
218
765232
4673
12:49
of our political and of our private life,
219
769929
2539
12:52
we need climate activists everywhere on every corner,
220
772492
3053
12:55
not only in every room,
221
775569
1378
12:56
but also in every city and country and state and continent.
222
776971
3421
13:02
Second:
223
782478
1252
13:05
I need you to get out of that zone of convenience,
224
785341
4598
13:09
away from a business as usual that has no tomorrow.
225
789963
3103
13:14
All of you here, you are either a friend or a family member,
226
794931
3962
13:18
you are a worker, a colleague, a student, a teacher
227
798917
2596
13:21
or, in many cases, a voter.
228
801537
1613
13:23
All of this comes along with a responsibility
229
803632
3024
13:26
that this crisis requires you to grow up to.
230
806680
3046
13:30
There's the company that employs you
231
810776
3482
13:34
or that sponsors you.
232
814282
1655
13:36
Is it on track of meeting the Paris Agreement?
233
816477
2788
13:39
Does your local parliamentarian know that you care about this,
234
819932
3096
13:43
that you want this to be a priority in every election?
235
823052
2597
13:45
Does your best friend know about this?
236
825673
1936
13:48
Do you read a newspaper or write a newspaper? Great.
237
828077
3974
13:52
Then let them know you want them to report on this in every issue,
238
832075
3360
13:55
and that you want them to challenge decision makers in every single interview.
239
835459
4809
14:01
If you're a singer, sing about this. If you're a teacher, teach about this.
240
841878
3573
14:05
And if you have a bank account, tell your bank you're going to leave
241
845475
3252
14:08
if they keep investing in fossil fuels.
242
848751
1999
14:11
And, of course, on Fridays, you should all know what to do.
243
851410
3306
14:17
Thirdly:
244
857495
1208
14:19
leaving that zone of convenience works best when you join forces.
245
859340
5911
14:26
One person asking for inconvenient change
246
866608
3142
14:29
is mostly inconvenient.
247
869774
3623
14:33
Two, five, ten, one hundred people asking for inconvenient change
248
873421
3881
14:37
are hard to ignore.
249
877326
1557
14:38
The more you are, the harder it gets for people to justify
250
878907
2966
14:41
a system that has no future.
251
881897
2065
14:44
Power is not something that you either have or don't have.
252
884831
3137
14:47
Power is something you either take or leave to others,
253
887992
2922
14:50
and it grows once you share it.
254
890938
2273
14:54
We young people on the streets, we school strikers,
255
894317
2517
14:56
we are showing how this can work out.
256
896858
2198
14:59
One single school striker will always be one single school striker --
257
899080
4259
15:03
well, Greta Thunberg.
258
903363
1435
15:04
Two, five, ten, one thousand people striking school are a movement,
259
904822
3195
15:08
and that's what we need everywhere.
260
908041
1793
15:09
No pressure.
261
909858
1221
15:11
(Laughter)
262
911103
1253
15:12
And number four, finally --
263
912955
2921
15:15
and this is probably the most important aspect of all of this --
264
915900
4792
15:23
I need you to start taking yourselves more seriously.
265
923653
3731
15:28
If there's one thing I've learned
266
928457
2270
15:30
during seven months of organizing climate action,
267
930751
3859
15:34
it's that if you don't go for something,
268
934634
2318
15:37
chances are high that no one else will.
269
937840
2685
15:41
The most powerful institutions of this world
270
941724
3616
15:45
have no intention of changing the game they're profiting from most,
271
945364
5003
15:50
so there's no point in further relying on them.
272
950391
2742
15:54
That's scary, I know.
273
954308
1509
15:56
That's a huge responsibility, a huge burden on everyone's shoulders, yes.
274
956341
4010
16:01
But this also means,
275
961716
1868
16:03
if we want to,
276
963608
1455
16:05
we can have a say in this.
277
965857
1865
16:09
We can be part of that change. We can be part of that answer.
278
969191
3060
16:13
And that's quite beautiful, right?
279
973038
2049
16:16
So let's give it a try, let's rock and roll,
280
976484
2118
16:18
let's flood the world with climate activists.
281
978626
2453
16:21
Let's get out of the zones of convenience
282
981649
2343
16:24
and join forces and start taking ourselves more seriously.
283
984016
3646
16:29
Imagine what this world would look like,
284
989119
2575
16:31
where children would grow up,
285
991718
2915
16:34
knowing their future was this one great adventure to look forward to
286
994657
6123
16:40
and nothing to be scared of,
287
1000804
1593
16:43
what this world would look like when the next climate conference
288
1003905
3663
16:47
is this great happening of people who come together,
289
1007592
4474
16:52
who had heard the voices of millions,
290
1012090
2546
16:54
who would then roll up their sleeves, ready to create real change.
291
1014660
4253
17:00
You know,
292
1020152
1161
17:02
I dream of this world
293
1022394
1647
17:05
where geography classes teach about the climate crisis
294
1025057
5995
17:11
as this one greatest challenge
295
1031076
3047
17:14
that was won by people like you and me,
296
1034147
3679
17:18
who had started acting in time
297
1038865
2311
17:21
because they understood they had nothing to lose
298
1041200
3696
17:24
and everything to win.
299
1044920
2011
17:28
So why not give it a go?
300
1048472
1516
17:30
No one else will save the future for us.
301
1050012
2223
17:32
This is more than an invitation. Spread the word.
302
1052842
2443
17:35
Thank you.
303
1055309
1210
17:36
(Applause)
304
1056543
5140
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