Innovating to zero! | Bill Gates

4,560,984 views ・ 2010-02-20

TED


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

00:16
I'm going to talk today about energy and climate.
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And that might seem a bit surprising,
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because my full-time work at the foundation
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is mostly about vaccines and seeds,
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about the things that we need to invent and deliver
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to help the poorest two billion live better lives.
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But energy and climate are extremely important to these people;
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in fact, more important than to anyone else on the planet.
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The climate getting worse means that many years, their crops won't grow:
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there will be too much rain, not enough rain;
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things will change in ways their fragile environment simply can't support.
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And that leads to starvation, it leads to uncertainty, it leads to unrest.
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So, the climate changes will be terrible for them.
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Also, the price of energy is very important to them.
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In fact, if you could pick just one thing
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to lower the price of to reduce poverty, by far you would pick energy.
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Now, the price of energy has come down over time.
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Really advanced civilization is based on advances in energy.
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The coal revolution fueled the Industrial Revolution,
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and, even in the 1900s, we've seen a very rapid decline
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in the price of electricity,
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and that's why we have refrigerators, air-conditioning;
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we can make modern materials and do so many things.
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And so, we're in a wonderful situation with electricity in the rich world.
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But as we make it cheaper -- and let's say,
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let's go for making it twice as cheap --
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we need to meet a new constraint,
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and that constraint has to do with CO2.
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CO2 is warming the planet,
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and the equation on CO2 is actually a very straightforward one.
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If you sum up the CO2 that gets emitted,
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that leads to a temperature increase,
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and that temperature increase leads to some very negative effects:
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the effects on the weather; perhaps worse, the indirect effects,
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in that the natural ecosystems can't adjust to these rapid changes,
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and so you get ecosystem collapses.
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Now, the exact amount of how you map from a certain increase of CO2
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to what temperature will be, and where the positive feedbacks are --
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there's some uncertainty there, but not very much.
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And there's certainly uncertainty about how bad those effects will be,
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but they will be extremely bad.
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I asked the top scientists on this several times:
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Do we really have to get down to near zero?
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Can't we just cut it in half or a quarter?
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And the answer is, until we get near to zero,
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the temperature will continue to rise.
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And so that's a big challenge.
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It's very different than saying,
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"We're a twelve-foot-high truck trying to get under a ten-foot bridge,
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and we can just sort of squeeze under."
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This is something that has to get to zero.
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Now, we put out a lot of carbon dioxide every year --
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over 26 billion tons.
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For each American, it's about 20 tons.
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For people in poor countries, it's less than one ton.
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It's an average of about five tons for everyone on the planet.
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And somehow, we have to make changes that will bring that down to zero.
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It's been constantly going up.
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It's only various economic changes that have even flattened it at all,
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so we have to go from rapidly rising to falling,
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and falling all the way to zero.
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This equation has four factors, a little bit of multiplication.
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So you've got a thing on the left, CO2, that you want to get to zero,
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and that's going to be based on the number of people,
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the services each person is using on average,
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the energy, on average, for each service,
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and the CO2 being put out per unit of energy.
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So let's look at each one of these,
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and see how we can get this down to zero.
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Probably, one of these numbers is going to have to get pretty near to zero.
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(Laughter)
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That's back from high school algebra.
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But let's take a look.
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First, we've got population.
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The world today has 6.8 billion people.
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That's headed up to about nine billion.
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Now, if we do a really great job on new vaccines,
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health care, reproductive health services,
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we could lower that by, perhaps, 10 or 15 percent.
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But there, we see an increase of about 1.3.
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The second factor is the services we use.
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This encompasses everything:
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the food we eat, clothing, TV, heating.
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These are very good things.
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Getting rid of poverty means providing these services
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to almost everyone on the planet.
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And it's a great thing for this number to go up.
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In the rich world, perhaps the top one billion,
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we probably could cut back and use less,
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but every year, this number, on average, is going to go up,
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and so, overall, that will more than double
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the services delivered per person.
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Here we have a very basic service:
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Do you have lighting in your house to be able to read your homework?
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And, in fact, these kids don't,
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so they're going out and reading their schoolwork
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under the street lamps.
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Now, efficiency, "E," the energy for each service --
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here, finally we have some good news.
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We have something that's not going up.
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Through various inventions and new ways of doing lighting,
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through different types of cars, different ways of building buildings --
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there are a lot of services
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where you can bring the energy for that service down
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quite substantially.
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Some individual services even bring it down by 90 percent.
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There are other services, like how we make fertilizer,
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or how we do air transport,
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where the rooms for improvement are far, far less.
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And so overall, if we're optimistic, we may get a reduction
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of a factor of three to even, perhaps, a factor of six.
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But for these first three factors now,
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we've gone from 26 billion to, at best, maybe 13 billion tons,
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and that just won't cut it.
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So let's look at this fourth factor -- this is going to be a key one --
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and this is the amount of CO2 put out per each unit of energy.
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So the question is: Can you actually get that to zero?
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If you burn coal, no.
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If you burn natural gas, no.
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Almost every way we make electricity today,
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except for the emerging renewables and nuclear, puts out CO2.
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And so, what we're going to have to do at a global scale,
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is create a new system.
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So we need energy miracles.
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Now, when I use the term "miracle," I don't mean something that's impossible.
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The microprocessor is a miracle.
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The personal computer is a miracle.
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The Internet and its services are a miracle.
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So the people here have participated in the creation of many miracles.
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Usually, we don't have a deadline
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where you have to get the miracle by a certain date.
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Usually, you just kind of stand by, and some come along, some don't.
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This is a case where we actually have to drive at full speed
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and get a miracle in a pretty tight timeline.
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Now, I thought, "How could I really capture this?
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Is there some kind of natural illustration,
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some demonstration that would grab people's imagination here?"
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I thought back to a year ago when I brought mosquitoes,
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and somehow people enjoyed that.
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(Laughter)
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It really got them involved in the idea of, you know,
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there are people who live with mosquitoes.
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With energy, all I could come up with is this.
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I decided that releasing fireflies
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would be my contribution to the environment here this year.
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So here we have some natural fireflies.
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I'm told they don't bite; in fact, they might not even leave that jar.
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(Laughter)
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Now, there's all sorts of gimmicky solutions like that one,
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but they don't really add up to much.
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We need solutions, either one or several,
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that have unbelievable scale and unbelievable reliability.
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And although there's many directions that people are seeking,
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I really only see five that can achieve the big numbers.
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I've left out tide, geothermal, fusion, biofuels.
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Those may make some contribution,
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and if they can do better than I expect, so much the better.
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But my key point here is that we're going to have to work on
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each of these five,
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and we can't give up any of them because they look daunting,
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because they all have significant challenges.
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Let's look first at burning fossil fuels,
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either burning coal or burning natural gas.
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What you need to do there seems like it might be simple, but it's not.
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And that's to take all the CO2,
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after you've burned it, going out the flue,
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pressurize it, create a liquid, put it somewhere,
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and hope it stays there.
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Now, we have some pilot things
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that do this at the 60 to 80 percent level.
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But getting up to that full percentage -- that will be very tricky.
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And agreeing on where these CO2 quantities should be put will be hard,
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but the toughest one here is this long-term issue:
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Who's going to be sure?
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Who's going to guarantee
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something that is literally billions of times larger
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than any type of waste you think of in terms of nuclear or other things?
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This is a lot of volume.
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So that's a tough one.
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Next would be nuclear.
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It also has three big problems:
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cost, particularly in highly regulated countries, is high;
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the issue of safety, really feeling good about nothing could go wrong,
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that, even though you have these human operators,
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the fuel doesn't get used for weapons.
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And then what do you do with the waste?
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Although it's not very large, there are a lot of concerns about that.
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People need to feel good about it.
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So three very tough problems that might be solvable,
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and so, should be worked on.
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The last three of the five, I've grouped together.
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These are what people often refer to as the renewable sources.
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And they actually -- although it's great they don't require fuel --
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they have some disadvantages.
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One is that the density of energy gathered in these technologies
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is dramatically less than a power plant.
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This is energy farming,
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so you're talking about many square miles, thousands of times more area
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than you think of as a normal energy plant.
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Also, these are intermittent sources.
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The sun doesn't shine all day, it doesn't shine every day,
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and likewise, the wind doesn't blow all the time.
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And so, if you depend on these sources,
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you have to have some way of getting the energy
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during those time periods that it's not available.
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So we've got big cost challenges here.
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We have transmission challenges;
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for example, say this energy source is outside your country,
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you not only need the technology,
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but you have to deal with the risk of the energy coming from elsewhere.
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And, finally, this storage problem.
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To dimensionalize this,
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I went through and looked at all the types of batteries made --
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for cars, for computers, for phones, for flashlights, for everything --
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and compared that to the amount of electrical energy the world uses.
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What I found is that all the batteries we make now
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could store less than 10 minutes of all the energy.
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And so, in fact, we need a big breakthrough here,
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something that's going to be a factor of 100 better
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than the approaches we have now.
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It's not impossible, but it's not a very easy thing.
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Now, this shows up when you try to get the intermittent source
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to be above, say, 20 to 30 percent of what you're using.
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If you're counting on it for 100 percent,
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you need an incredible miracle battery.
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Now, how are we going to go forward on this -- what's the right approach?
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Is it a Manhattan Project? What's the thing that can get us there?
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Well, we need lots of companies working on this -- hundreds.
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In each of these five paths, we need at least a hundred people.
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A lot of them, you'll look at and say, "They're crazy."
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That's good.
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And, I think, here in the TED group,
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we have many people who are already pursuing this.
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Bill Gross has several companies, including one called eSolar
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that has some great solar thermal technologies.
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Vinod Khosla is investing in dozens of companies
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that are doing great things and have interesting possibilities,
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and I'm trying to help back that.
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Nathan Myhrvold and I actually are backing a company
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that, perhaps surprisingly, is actually taking the nuclear approach.
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There are some innovations in nuclear: modular, liquid.
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Innovation really stopped in this industry quite some ago,
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so the idea that there's some good ideas laying around
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is not all that surprising.
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The idea of TerraPower is that, instead of burning a part of uranium --
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the one percent, which is the U235 --
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we decided, "Let's burn the 99 percent, the U238."
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It is kind of a crazy idea.
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In fact, people had talked about it for a long time,
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but they could never simulate properly whether it would work or not,
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and so it's through the advent of modern supercomputers
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that now you can simulate and see that, yes,
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with the right materials approach, this looks like it would work.
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And because you're burning that 99 percent,
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you have greatly improved cost profile.
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You actually burn up the waste, and you can actually use as fuel
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all the leftover waste from today's reactors.
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So instead of worrying about them, you just take that, it's a great thing.
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It breeds this uranium as it goes along, so it's kind of like a candle.
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You see it's a log there, often referred to as a traveling wave reactor.
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In terms of fuel, this really solves the problem.
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I've got a picture here of a place in Kentucky.
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This is the leftover, the 99 percent,
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where they've taken out the part they burn now,
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so it's called depleted uranium.
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That would power the US for hundreds of years.
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And simply by filtering seawater in an inexpensive process,
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you'd have enough fuel for the entire lifetime of the rest of the planet.
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So, you know, it's got lots of challenges ahead,
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but it is an example of the many hundreds and hundreds of ideas
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that we need to move forward.
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So let's think: How should we measure ourselves?
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What should our report card look like?
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Well, let's go out to where we really need to get,
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and then look at the intermediate.
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For 2050, you've heard many people talk about this 80 percent reduction.
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That really is very important, that we get there.
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And that 20 percent will be used up by things going on in poor countries --
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still some agriculture; hopefully, we will have cleaned up forestry, cement.
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So, to get to that 80 percent,
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the developed countries, including countries like China,
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will have had to switch their electricity generation altogether.
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The other grade is: Are we deploying this zero-emission technology,
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have we deployed it in all the developed countries
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and are in the process of getting it elsewhere?
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That's super important.
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That's a key element of making that report card.
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Backing up from there, what should the 2020 report card look like?
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Well, again, it should have the two elements.
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We should go through these efficiency measures to start getting reductions:
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The less we emit, the less that sum will be of CO2,
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and therefore, the less the temperature.
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But in some ways, the grade we get there,
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doing things that don't get us all the way to the big reductions,
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is only equally, or maybe even slightly less, important than the other,
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which is the piece of innovation on these breakthroughs.
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These breakthroughs, we need to move those at full speed,
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and we can measure that in terms of companies,
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pilot projects, regulatory things that have been changed.
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There's a lot of great books that have been written about this.
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The Al Gore book, "Our Choice,"
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and the David MacKay book, "Sustainable Energy Without the Hot Air."
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They really go through it and create a framework
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that this can be discussed broadly,
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because we need broad backing for this.
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There's a lot that has to come together.
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17:16
So this is a wish.
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It's a very concrete wish that we invent this technology.
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17:22
If you gave me only one wish for the next 50 years --
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I could pick who's president,
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17:27
I could pick a vaccine, which is something I love,
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or I could pick that this thing
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17:32
that's half the cost with no CO2 gets invented --
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this is the wish I would pick.
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This is the one with the greatest impact.
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If we don't get this wish,
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the division between the people who think short term and long term
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will be terrible,
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between the US and China, between poor countries and rich,
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and most of all,
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the lives of those two billion will be far worse.
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So what do we have to do?
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What am I appealing to you to step forward and drive?
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We need to go for more research funding.
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When countries get together in places like Copenhagen,
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they shouldn't just discuss the CO2.
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18:09
They should discuss this innovation agenda.
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18:11
You'd be stunned at the ridiculously low levels of spending
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on these innovative approaches.
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We do need the market incentives -- CO2 tax, cap and trade --
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something that gets that price signal out there.
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We need to get the message out.
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We need to have this dialogue be a more rational,
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18:29
more understandable dialogue,
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including the steps that the government takes.
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This is an important wish, but it is one I think we can achieve.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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(Applause ends)
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Thank you.
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Chris Anderson: Thank you. Thank you.
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(Applause)
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CA: Thank you.
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So to understand more about TerraPower.
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I mean, first of all, can you give a sense of what scale of investment this is?
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Bill Gates: To actually do the software, buy the supercomputer,
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hire all the great scientists, which we've done,
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that's only tens of millions.
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19:19
And even once we test our materials out in a Russian reactor
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to make sure our materials work properly,
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then you'll only be up in the hundreds of millions.
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19:28
The tough thing is building the pilot reactor --
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finding the several billion, finding the regulator, the location
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that will actually build the first one of these.
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Once you get the first one built, if it works as advertised,
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then it's just clear as day,
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because the economics, the energy density, are so different
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19:47
than nuclear as we know it.
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CA: So to understand it right,
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this involves building deep into the ground,
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almost like a vertical column of nuclear fuel, of this spent uranium,
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19:57
and then the process starts at the top and kind of works down?
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BG: That's right.
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Today, you're always refueling the reactor,
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so you have lots of people and lots of controls that can go wrong,
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20:07
where you're opening it up and moving things in and out --
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that's not good.
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20:12
So if you have very --
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(Laughter)
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very cheap fuel that you can put 60 years in --
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just think of it as a log --
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put it down and not have those same complexities.
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20:22
And it just sits there and burns for the 60 years, and then it's done.
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CA: It's a nuclear power plant that is its own waste disposal solution.
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BG: Yeah; what happens with the waste,
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you can let it sit there -- there's a lot less waste under this approach --
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then you can actually take that
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20:40
and put it into another one and burn that.
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And we start out, actually, by taking the waste that exists today
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that's sitting in these cooling pools or dry-casking by reactors --
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that's our fuel to begin with.
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So the thing that's been a problem from those reactors
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is actually what gets fed into ours,
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and you're reducing the volume of the waste quite dramatically
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21:01
as you're going through this process.
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21:03
CA: You're talking to different people around the world
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about the possibilities.
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Where is there most interest in actually doing something with this?
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BG: Well, we haven't picked a particular place,
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21:15
and there's all these interesting disclosure rules
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21:18
about anything that's called "nuclear."
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21:21
So we've got a lot of interest.
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People from the company have been in Russia, India, China.
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21:27
I've been back seeing the secretary of energy here,
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21:29
talking about how this fits into the energy agenda.
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21:33
So I'm optimistic.
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21:34
The French and Japanese have done some work.
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21:36
This is a variant on something that has been done.
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21:40
It's an important advance, but it's like a fast reactor,
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21:44
and a lot of countries have built them,
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1976
21:46
so anybody who's done a fast reactor is a candidate
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2574
21:48
to be where the first one gets built.
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21:51
CA: So, in your mind,
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3442
21:54
timescale and likelihood of actually taking something like this live?
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21:59
BG: Well, we need -- for one of these high-scale, electro-generation things
404
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22:05
that's very cheap,
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22:06
we have 20 years to invent and then 20 years to deploy.
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22:10
That's sort of the deadline
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22:12
that the environmental models have shown us that we have to meet.
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22:17
And TerraPower -- if things go well, which is wishing for a lot --
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22:23
could easily meet that.
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22:24
And there are, fortunately now, dozens of companies --
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22:27
we need it to be hundreds --
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22:29
who, likewise, if their science goes well,
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22:31
if the funding for their pilot plants goes well,
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22:34
that they can compete for this.
415
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22:36
And it's best if multiple succeed,
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22:38
because then you could use a mix of these things.
417
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22:41
We certainly need one to succeed.
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22:43
CA: In terms of big-scale possible game changers,
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22:46
is this the biggest that you're aware of out there?
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22:49
BG: An energy breakthrough is the most important thing.
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22:53
It would have been, even without the environmental constraint,
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22:56
but the environmental constraint just makes it so much greater.
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23:00
In the nuclear space, there are other innovators.
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23:03
You know, we don't know their work as well as we know this one,
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23:06
but the modular people, that's a different approach.
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There's a liquid-type reactor, which seems a little hard,
427
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23:13
but maybe they say that about us.
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23:15
And so, there are different ones,
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but the beauty of this is a molecule of uranium
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23:21
has a million times as much energy as a molecule of, say, coal.
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And so, if you can deal with the negatives,
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23:29
which are essentially the radiation, the footprint and cost,
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23:32
the potential, in terms of effect on land and various things,
434
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23:36
is almost in a class of its own.
435
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23:41
CA: If this doesn't work, then what?
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23:44
Do we have to start taking emergency measures
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23:48
to try and keep the temperature of the earth stable?
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23:51
BG: If you get into that situation,
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23:53
it's like if you've been overeating, and you're about to have a heart attack.
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23:58
Then where do you go?
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You may need heart surgery or something.
442
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24:02
There is a line of research on what's called geoengineering,
443
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24:06
which are various techniques that would delay the heating
444
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24:09
to buy us 20 or 30 years to get our act together.
445
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Now, that's just an insurance policy; you hope you don't need to do that.
446
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24:16
Some people say you shouldn't even work on the insurance policy
447
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24:19
because it might make you lazy,
448
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24:21
that you'll keep eating because you know heart surgery will be there to save you.
449
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24:25
I'm not sure that's wise, given the importance of the problem,
450
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24:28
but there's now the geoengineering discussion
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24:31
about: Should that be in the back pocket in case things happen faster,
452
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24:35
or this innovation goes a lot slower than we expect?
453
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24:40
CA: Climate skeptics:
454
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24:42
If you had a sentence or two to say to them,
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24:46
how might you persuade them that they're wrong?
456
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24:50
BG: Well, unfortunately, the skeptics come in different camps.
457
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24:53
The ones who make scientific arguments are very few.
458
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24:58
Are they saying there's negative feedback effects
459
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25:01
that have to do with clouds that offset things?
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There are very, very few things that they can even say
461
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25:07
there's a chance in a million of those things.
462
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25:09
The main problem we have here -- it's kind of like with AIDS:
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25:12
you make the mistake now, and you pay for it a lot later.
464
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3803
25:16
And so, when you have all sorts of urgent problems,
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3255
25:20
the idea of taking pain now that has to do with a gain later,
466
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4061
25:24
and a somewhat uncertain pain thing.
467
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2286
25:26
In fact, the IPCC report -- that's not necessarily the worst case,
468
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6088
25:32
and there are people in the rich world who look at IPCC and say,
469
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4075
25:36
"OK, that isn't that big of a deal."
470
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1784
25:38
The fact is it's that uncertain part that should move us towards this.
471
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4149
25:42
But my dream here is that,
472
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1632
25:44
if you can make it economic, and meet the CO2 constraints,
473
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3660
25:47
then the skeptics say,
474
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1159
25:49
"OK, I don't care that it doesn't put out CO2,
475
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2280
25:51
I kind of wish it did put out CO2.
476
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1680
25:53
But I guess I'll accept it,
477
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1356
25:54
because it's cheaper than what's come before."
478
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2717
25:57
(Applause)
479
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4831
26:02
CA: So that would be your response to the BjΓΈrn Lomborg argument,
480
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3180
26:05
basically if you spend all this energy trying to solve the CO2 problem,
481
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4456
26:09
it's going to take away all your other goals
482
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2094
26:11
of trying to rid the world of poverty and malaria and so forth,
483
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26:14
it's a stupid waste of the Earth's resources
484
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2233
26:17
to put money towards that
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26:18
when there are better things we can do.
486
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1918
26:20
BG: Well, the actual spending on the R&D piece --
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3391
26:23
say the US should spend 10 billion a year more than it is right now --
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26:27
it's not that dramatic.
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1871
26:29
It shouldn't take away from other things.
490
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1976
26:31
The thing you get into big money on, and reasonable people can disagree,
491
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3420
26:34
is when you have something that's non-economic
492
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2166
26:36
and you're trying to fund that --
493
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26:38
that, to me, mostly is a waste.
494
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26:40
Unless you're very close,
495
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26:42
and you're just funding the learning curve and it's going to get very cheap,
496
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26:45
I believe we should try more things
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26:48
that have a potential to be far less expensive.
498
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2686
26:51
If the trade-off you get into is, "Let's make energy super expensive,"
499
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5192
26:56
then the rich can afford that.
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2022
26:58
I mean, all of us here could pay five times as much for our energy
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3129
27:01
and not change our lifestyle.
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1391
27:03
The disaster is for that two billion.
503
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2264
27:05
And even Lomborg has changed.
504
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2307
27:07
His shtick now is, "Why isn't the R&D getting more discussed?"
505
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4527
27:12
He's still, because of his earlier stuff,
506
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2513
27:14
still associated with the skeptic camp,
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1900
27:16
but he's realized that's a pretty lonely camp,
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2773
27:19
and so, he's making the R&D point.
509
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3258
27:22
And so there is a thread of something that I think is appropriate.
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4436
27:27
The R&D piece -- it's crazy how little it's funded.
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CA: Well, Bill, I suspect I speak on behalf of most people here
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27:34
to say I really hope your wish comes true.
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Thank you so much.
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27:37
BG: Thank you.
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27:38
(Applause)
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5392

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