Detroit's Climate Crisis — and How to Build a Resilient Future Everywhere | Anika Goss | TED

39,160 views

2023-07-14 ・ TED


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Detroit's Climate Crisis — and How to Build a Resilient Future Everywhere | Anika Goss | TED

39,160 views ・ 2023-07-14

TED


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

00:04
I’m a third-generation Detroiter.
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My grandmother moved to Detroit in 1936
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during the Great Migration
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and brought all of her Southern ways with her.
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She had an abundant garden
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with flowers for butterflies and honeybees and birds.
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She preferred to take the bus to Eastern Market
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to purchase all of her meat just to make sure that it was fresh.
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She owned a home on Mendota Street
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and knew that home ownership would create wealth and opportunity
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for her growing family.
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My family's story is not an unusual Detroit story,
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and up until the late 1950s,
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Detroit was a haven for middle-class families
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living in neighborhoods where there was green space
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01:00
and community connectivity and opportunity.
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01:04
But my grandmother's Detroit is not the Detroit that I live in today.
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The Detroit today is not sustainable.
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84 percent of Detroiters identify as Black or Latino,
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and five percent are foreign-born.
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That makes this not just a climate and economic issue
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but an equity issue.
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And I know this
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because I have spent my entire career
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focused on the intersection between race and poverty.
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More recently, the work I do with my colleagues
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focuses on how climate impacts neighborhoods and communities
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that are isolated from economic prosperity.
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Being financially secure and climate resilient
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should be the most important priority for communities across the country.
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That is what I want to talk with you about today.
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Detroit is not generally thought of as a city
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that is at risk for climate impact,
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but in fact it is.
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We define resilience as places where residents can have their needs met
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and are free from long-term chronic stress,
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giving them the ability to withstand and recover from acute shocks.
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If you are financially stable,
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then you are much more likely to withstand and recover
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from the acute shock of climate change.
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Detroit's economic inequity and climate vulnerability
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began over 100 years ago
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under the guise of innovation.
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Detroit not only led the way for automobiles
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but manufacturing.
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Manufacturing was a part of our community fabric.
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Industrial sites were nestled in neighborhoods throughout the city
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so that workers could walk to their factory jobs.
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Our economy was booming.
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And although Detroit was not necessarily equal across racial lines,
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it was still a city of stable, middle-class neighborhoods.
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In 75 years,
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our city went from a peak population of 1.8 million
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down to a population of 620,000 in 2022.
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All of those sites where there was manufacturing
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and industrial sites that led to our economic boom,
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many of those industrial sites stand vacant and abandoned.
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We now have about 19 square miles of vacant land in Detroit.
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These industrial sites have led to dangerous contamination,
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both to our land and our water and our air.
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About two years ago,
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eight inches of rain fell over Detroit over a period of three days.
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And not just Detroit, but southeast Michigan.
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Scientists describe this as a more-than-500-year rain event.
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Now, eight inches of rain doesn't seem like a lot of rain,
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but this one rain event flooded our streets.
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Basements became filled with storm water and sewage.
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The repair costs were insurmountable for many families,
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and with nearly half of Detroiters renting,
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it often led to homelessness.
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Climate change exacerbates and compounds
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economic inequity in our city.
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But I believe there are three things that we can do
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to begin to change the resilient future for Detroit.
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First, we have to begin to create an economic environment
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in which all Detroiters can grow wealth.
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Advanced technology and tech-based businesses
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are the fastest-growing industries in Detroit, but also the nation.
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It's these businesses that will contribute to solving our climate dilemma
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and make millions, even billions, doing it.
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But unless we include Black and brown Detroiters,
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both as workers
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and investing in founders,
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we will leave our largest demographic out of our future.
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Second, we have to stop only responding
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when there’s a crisis situation, like flooding and air quality control,
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and begin to think about green stormwater infrastructure
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and solar and renewable energy proactively.
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I was having this conversation with my sister
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because that's what sisters do,
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talk about manufacturing and infrastructure investment.
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This is my sister, I have two of them.
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So she lives in Washington, DC.
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Eight inches of rain, in her opinion,
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was just not enough rain to create that much flooding.
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And she kind of didn't believe me
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that Detroit was at risk for climate impacts.
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And I explained to her that Detroit is not different from other cities
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in its process for making municipal investment decisions.
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Municipal investment decisions are made for primarily two ways:
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new development and crisis repair.
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Detroit is not unique.
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What makes Detroit unique
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is it has 100-year-old gray infrastructure
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supporting 139 square miles of Detroit.
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We can no longer only make decisions for crisis.
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We don't have that luxury.
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We have to make decisions differently
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to improve the quality of life for Detroiters
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and improve the quality of the neighborhoods
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that we're all living in for the future.
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Finally, we have to begin to invest in neighborhoods
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so that they are free from blight and deterioration.
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As an urbanist and a futurist,
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I want to help Detroiters imagine the city they deserve to live in.
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You shouldn't have to live in a suburb to be surrounded by beautiful gardens,
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parks and trees.
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We can plant urban forests here.
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08:07
(Applause)
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So that we can reduce urban heat-island impacts and improve air quality.
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We can plant sustainable gardens and food gardens
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just like the ones you are seeing on the screen,
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that my team and community partners have planted all over Detroit.
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We can do this.
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We have to do this.
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And we need to do this
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because investing in neighborhoods,
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not just as a social program,
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but we must do this
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because climate equity and climate economics
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require investment in order to see the actual results.
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This is true, not only in this nation's largest Black city,
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but in every city where inequality is on the rise
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and climate equity will surely follow.
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My grandmother's house still stands on Mendota long after she passed away.
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Her expectation of me and of you
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is that a Black family just like mine
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that migrated north 90 years ago
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will be able to prosper 90 years from now
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because they are economically thriving.
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Their neighborhood has parks, gardens, trees and community spaces.
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And they are still Black.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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