Let's make the world wild again | Kristine Tompkins

103,542 views ・ 2020-06-16

TED


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

00:00
Transcriber: Ivana Korom Reviewer: Krystian Aparta
0
0
7000
00:12
My siblings and I grew up on our great-grandfather's farm
1
12881
3992
00:16
in California.
2
16897
1150
00:18
It was a landscape of our family and our home.
3
18825
3278
00:22
When it was clear that nobody in our generation
4
22490
2674
00:25
wanted to take on the heavy burden of ranching,
5
25188
2921
00:28
the ranch was sold to a neighbor.
6
28133
2200
00:30
The anchor of our lives was cut,
7
30696
3199
00:33
and we felt adrift in the absence of that land.
8
33919
3597
00:38
For the first time, I came to understand
9
38125
4467
00:42
that something valuable can be best understood
10
42616
3415
00:46
not by its presence,
11
46055
2998
00:49
but by its absence.
12
49077
1587
00:52
It was impossible to know then
13
52387
1735
00:54
just how powerful the absence of those things we love
14
54146
4661
00:58
would have an impact far into my future.
15
58831
4117
01:03
For 23 years, my working life was with Yvon Chouinard.
16
63527
4032
01:08
I started when he was designing and manufacturing
17
68139
2682
01:10
technical rock and ice climbing equipment
18
70845
1970
01:12
in a tin shed near the railroad tracks in Ventura.
19
72839
3230
01:16
And when Yvon decided to start making clothes for climbers
20
76093
3198
01:19
and call this business Patagonia,
21
79315
2913
01:22
I became one of the first six employees,
22
82252
2960
01:25
later becoming CEO
23
85236
1913
01:27
and helping build a company
24
87173
2388
01:29
where creating the best products and doing good by the world
25
89585
4048
01:33
was more than just a tagline.
26
93657
1933
01:36
Doug Tompkins, who would become my husband years later,
27
96198
4952
01:41
was an old friend and climbing companion of Yvon's
28
101174
3840
01:45
and also an entrepreneur.
29
105038
2285
01:47
He cofounded The North Face and Esprit company.
30
107919
3333
01:51
All three of these businesses
31
111276
2055
01:53
were created by people who had grown up through the '60s,
32
113355
3532
01:56
shaped by the civil rights, antiwar, feminist and peace movements.
33
116911
4872
02:01
And those values were picked up in those years
34
121807
4191
02:06
and carried throughout the values of these companies.
35
126022
3873
02:09
By the end of the 1980s,
36
129919
1587
02:11
Doug decided to leave business altogether
37
131530
2857
02:14
and commit the last third of his life to what he called
38
134411
3539
02:17
"paying his rent for living on the planet."
39
137974
2381
02:20
At nearly the same time, when I hit 40,
40
140379
3547
02:23
I was ready to do something completely new with my life.
41
143950
3416
02:27
The day after retiring from the Patagonia company,
42
147676
3667
02:31
I flew 6,000 miles to Patagonia the place
43
151367
5087
02:36
and joined Doug as he started what was the first conservation project
44
156478
5798
02:42
of that third of his life.
45
162300
1733
02:44
There we were, refugees from the corporate world,
46
164371
3371
02:47
holed up in a cabin on the coast in southern Chile,
47
167766
2952
02:50
surrounded by primaeval rainforest
48
170742
2325
02:53
where alerce trees can live for thousands of years.
49
173091
3349
02:56
We were in the middle of a great wilderness
50
176464
2529
02:59
that forms one of the only two gaps in the Pan-American highway,
51
179017
4183
03:03
between Fairbanks, Alaska, and Cape Horn.
52
183224
2928
03:06
A radical change to our daily lives
53
186176
2290
03:08
spurred on as we had begun to recognize
54
188490
2778
03:11
how beauty and diversity were being destroyed
55
191292
3079
03:14
pretty much everywhere.
56
194395
1484
03:15
The last wild protected places on earth
57
195903
3468
03:19
were still wild
58
199395
1199
03:20
mostly because the relentless front lines of development
59
200618
4094
03:24
simply hadn't arrived there yet.
60
204736
2237
03:26
Doug and I were in one of the most remote parts on earth,
61
206997
3239
03:30
and still around the edges of Pumalín Park,
62
210260
3158
03:33
our first conservation effort,
63
213442
2254
03:35
industrial aquaculture was growing like a malignancy.
64
215720
3853
03:39
Before too long, other threats arrived to the Patagonia region.
65
219886
4056
03:43
Gold mining, dam projects on pristine rivers
66
223966
4025
03:48
and other growing conflicts.
67
228015
2031
03:50
The vibration of stampeding economic growth worldwide
68
230070
5580
03:55
could be heard even in the highest latitudes of the Southern Cone.
69
235674
4746
04:01
I know that progress is viewed, generally, in very positive terms,
70
241262
5117
04:06
as some sort of hopeful evolution.
71
246403
2699
04:10
But from where we sat,
72
250339
1667
04:12
we saw the dark side of industrial growth.
73
252030
2800
04:15
And when industrial worldviews are applied to natural systems
74
255292
4722
04:20
that support all life,
75
260038
2555
04:22
we begin to treat the Earth
76
262617
2587
04:25
as a factory that produces all the things that we think we need.
77
265228
4467
04:30
As we're all painfully aware,
78
270958
3119
04:34
the consequences of that worldview are destructive to human welfare,
79
274101
5293
04:39
our climate systems and to wildlife.
80
279418
2615
04:43
Doug called it the price of progress.
81
283167
3309
04:46
That's how we saw things,
82
286500
1619
04:48
and we wanted to be a part of the resistance,
83
288143
2868
04:51
pushing up against all of those trends.
84
291035
2784
04:53
The idea of buying private land and then donating it
85
293843
2889
04:56
to create national parks
86
296756
1992
04:58
isn't really new.
87
298772
1459
05:00
Anyone who has ever enjoyed the views of Teton National Park in Wyoming
88
300255
5338
05:05
or camped in Acadia National Park in Maine
89
305617
3206
05:08
has benefited from this big idea.
90
308847
2957
05:12
Through our family foundation,
91
312339
1587
05:13
we began to acquire wildlife habitat in Chile and Argentina.
92
313950
4397
05:19
Being believers in conservation biology,
93
319141
2532
05:21
we were going for big, wild and connected.
94
321697
3612
05:26
Areas that were pristine, in some cases,
95
326085
2675
05:28
and others that would need time to heal,
96
328784
2714
05:31
that needed to be rewild.
97
331522
2381
05:33
Eventually, we bought more than two million acres
98
333927
3158
05:37
from willing sellers,
99
337109
1611
05:38
assembling them into privately managed protected areas,
100
338744
4396
05:43
while building park infrastructure as camp grounds and trails
101
343164
5206
05:48
for future use by the general public.
102
348394
2730
05:51
All were welcome.
103
351148
1150
05:52
Our goal was to donate all of this land in the form of new national parks.
104
352879
4888
05:58
You might describe this as a kind of capitalist jujitsu move.
105
358395
5937
06:05
We deployed private wealth from our business lives
106
365101
3904
06:10
and deployed it to protect nature
107
370632
3834
06:14
from being devoured by the hand of the global economy.
108
374490
5436
06:19
It sounded good,
109
379950
1334
06:21
but in the early '90s in Chile,
110
381308
2229
06:23
where wildlands philanthropy, which is what we called it,
111
383561
3508
06:27
was completely unknown,
112
387093
2285
06:29
we faced tremendous suspicion,
113
389402
3159
06:32
and from many quarters, downright hostility.
114
392585
3143
06:36
Over time, largely by doing what we said we were doing,
115
396101
4095
06:40
we began to win people over.
116
400220
1867
06:42
Over the last 27 years,
117
402577
2008
06:44
we've permanently protected nearly 15 million acres
118
404609
4228
06:48
of temperate rainforest,
119
408861
2357
06:51
Patagonian step grasslands,
120
411242
2381
06:53
coastal areas,
121
413647
1627
06:55
freshwater wetlands,
122
415298
1793
06:57
and created 13 new national parks.
123
417115
3009
07:00
All comprised of our land donations
124
420148
2389
07:02
and federal lands adjoining those territories.
125
422561
4102
07:07
After Doug's death following a kayaking accident
126
427378
3153
07:10
four years ago,
127
430555
1857
07:12
the power of absence hit home again.
128
432436
3492
07:15
But we at Tompkins Conservation leaned in to our loss
129
435952
5134
07:21
and accelerated our efforts.
130
441110
2342
07:23
Among them, in 2018,
131
443476
2262
07:25
creating new marine national parks covering roughly 25 million acres
132
445762
5760
07:31
in the southern Atlantic Ocean.
133
451546
2055
07:33
No commercial fishing or extraction of any kind.
134
453625
3722
07:37
In 2019, we finalized the largest private land gift in history,
135
457919
5548
07:43
when our last million acres of conservation land in Chile
136
463491
3873
07:47
passed to the government.
137
467388
1745
07:49
A public-private partnership
138
469157
2682
07:51
that created five new national parks and expanded three others.
139
471863
4222
07:56
This ended up being an area larger than Switzerland.
140
476109
4262
08:00
All of our projects are the results of partnerships.
141
480395
3825
08:04
First and foremost with the governments of Chile and Argentina.
142
484244
4126
08:08
And this requires leadership
143
488768
2174
08:10
who understands the value of protecting the jewels of their countries,
144
490966
4135
08:15
not just for today, but long into the future.
145
495125
3087
08:19
Partnerships with like-minded conservation philanthropists as well
146
499548
4516
08:24
played a role in everything we've done.
147
504088
2833
08:26
Fifteen years ago,
148
506945
1492
08:28
we asked ourselves,
149
508461
1402
08:29
"Beyond protecting landscape,
150
509887
2420
08:32
what do we really have to do to create fully functioning ecosystems?"
151
512331
5627
08:38
And we began to ask ourselves, wherever we were working,
152
518268
3952
08:42
who's missing,
153
522244
1150
08:44
what species had disappeared
154
524133
2087
08:47
or whose numbers were low and fragile.
155
527441
3484
08:51
We also had to ask,
156
531235
1762
08:53
"How do we eliminate the very reason
157
533021
2366
08:55
that these species went extinct in the first place?"
158
535411
2952
08:58
What seems so obvious now
159
538387
2293
09:00
was a complete thunderbolt for us.
160
540704
4358
09:06
And it changed the nature of everything we do,
161
546387
5269
09:11
completely.
162
551680
1150
09:13
Unless all the members of the community are present and flourishing,
163
553220
4658
09:17
it's impossible for us to leave behind fully functioning ecosystems.
164
557902
4865
09:23
Since then, we've successfully reintroduced several native species
165
563204
4486
09:27
to the Iberá Wetlands:
166
567714
1873
09:29
giant anteaters,
167
569611
1754
09:31
pampas deer,
168
571389
1381
09:32
peccaries
169
572794
1269
09:34
and finally, one of the most difficult, the green-winged macaws,
170
574087
5966
09:40
who've gone missing for over 100 years in that ecosystem.
171
580077
4659
09:44
And today, they're back, flying free, dispensing seeds,
172
584760
4198
09:48
playing out their lives as they should be.
173
588982
3072
09:52
The capstone of these efforts in Iberá
174
592078
2535
09:54
is to return the apex carnivores to their rightful place.
175
594637
4083
09:58
Jaguars on the land, giant otters in the water.
176
598744
3467
10:02
Several years of trial and error produced young cubs
177
602235
4858
10:07
who will be released
178
607117
2532
10:09
for the first time in over half a century
179
609673
3103
10:12
into Iberá wetlands,
180
612800
1634
10:14
and now, the 1.7-million-acre Iberá Park will provide enough space
181
614458
5833
10:20
for recovering jaguar populations with low risk of conflict
182
620315
4468
10:24
with neighboring ranchers.
183
624807
2270
10:27
Our rewilding projects in Chile
184
627101
2579
10:29
are gaining ground on low numbers of several key species
185
629704
3552
10:33
in the Patagonia region.
186
633280
1564
10:34
The huemul deer that is truly nearly extinct,
187
634868
3738
10:38
the lesser rheas
188
638630
1430
10:40
and building the puma and fox populations back up.
189
640084
5317
10:45
You know, the power of the absent can't help us
190
645782
4436
10:51
if it just leads to nostalgia or despair.
191
651599
3325
10:57
To the contrary,
192
657025
1357
10:59
it's only useful if it motivates us
193
659485
2837
11:02
toward working to bring back what's gone missing.
194
662346
4313
11:07
Of course, the first step in rewilding
195
667349
2556
11:09
is to be able to imagine that it's possible in the first place.
196
669929
3618
11:13
That wildlife abundance recorded in journals
197
673571
4506
11:18
aren't just stories from some old dusty books.
198
678101
4008
11:23
Can you imagine that?
199
683529
1749
11:26
Do you believe the world could be more beautiful,
200
686994
5460
11:32
more equitable?
201
692478
1401
11:35
I do.
202
695375
1150
11:36
Because I've seen it.
203
696982
1400
11:38
Here's an example.
204
698800
1412
11:40
When we purchased one of the largest ranches
205
700236
2413
11:42
in Chile and Patagonia, in 2004,
206
702673
3250
11:45
it looked like this.
207
705947
1311
11:47
For a century, this land had been overgrazed by livestock,
208
707282
3824
11:51
like most grasslands around the world.
209
711130
2659
11:53
Soil erosion was rampant,
210
713813
2392
11:56
hundreds of miles of fencing
211
716229
2834
11:59
kept wildlife and its flow corralled.
212
719087
5547
12:04
And that was with the little wildlife that was left.
213
724658
3002
12:07
The local mountain lions and foxes had been persecuted for decades,
214
727684
4396
12:12
leaving their numbers very low.
215
732104
2080
12:14
Today, those lands are the 763,000-acre Patagonian National Park,
216
734208
5447
12:19
and it looks like this.
217
739679
1610
12:21
And Arcelio, the former gaucho,
218
741313
2279
12:23
whose job was to first find and kill mountain lions in the years past,
219
743616
6223
12:29
today is the head tracker for the park's wildlife team,
220
749863
5000
12:34
and his story captures the imagination of people around the world.
221
754887
4945
12:40
What is possible.
222
760350
1150
12:42
I share these thoughts and images with you not for self-congratulations,
223
762096
6062
12:48
but to make a simple point
224
768182
2149
12:50
and propose an urgent challenge.
225
770355
2133
12:53
If the question is survival,
226
773109
2159
12:55
survival of life's diversity and human dignity
227
775292
4484
12:59
and healthy human communities,
228
779800
3452
13:03
then the answer must include rewilding the Earth.
229
783276
3061
13:07
As much and as quickly as possible.
230
787903
2862
13:12
Everyone has a role to play in this,
231
792038
3317
13:16
but especially those of us with privilege,
232
796125
4094
13:20
with political power,
233
800243
3517
13:23
wealth,
234
803784
1150
13:26
where, let's face it, for better, for worse,
235
806442
4357
13:30
that's where the chess game of our future is played out.
236
810823
3524
13:35
And this gets to the core of the question.
237
815664
2391
13:38
Are we prepared to do what it takes to change the end of this story?
238
818910
3915
13:43
The changes the world has made in the past few months
239
823600
2977
13:46
to stop the spread of COVID-19
240
826601
2548
13:49
are so promising to me,
241
829173
1872
13:51
because it shows we can join forces under desperate circumstances.
242
831069
5119
13:56
What we're going through now could be a precursor
243
836506
5309
14:01
to the broader potential damage as a result of the climate crisis.
244
841839
5635
14:08
But without warning,
245
848561
1675
14:10
globally, we're learning to work together in ways we could never have imagined.
246
850260
5222
14:15
Having watched young people from around the world
247
855506
2857
14:18
rising up and going out into the streets
248
858387
2698
14:21
to remind us of our culpability and chastising us for our inaction
249
861109
5408
14:26
are the ones who really inspire me.
250
866541
2492
14:29
I know, you've heard all of this before.
251
869057
2881
14:31
But if there was ever a moment to awaken to the reality
252
871962
4028
14:36
that everything is connected to everything else,
253
876014
4476
14:40
it's right now.
254
880514
1150
14:41
Every human life is affected by the actions
255
881998
3365
14:45
of every other human life around the globe.
256
885387
3119
14:48
And the fate of humanity is tied to the health of the planet.
257
888530
4864
14:55
We have a common destiny.
258
895072
1833
14:56
We can flourish
259
896929
1762
14:58
or we can suffer ...
260
898715
1384
15:01
But we're going to be doing it together.
261
901580
2417
15:04
So here's the truth.
262
904490
1619
15:06
We're so far past the point when individual action is an elective.
263
906133
4862
15:11
In my opinion, it's a moral imperative
264
911530
3658
15:15
that every single one of us
265
915212
2460
15:17
steps up to reimagine our place in the circle of life.
266
917696
4302
15:22
Not in the center, but as part of the whole.
267
922022
3476
15:25
We need to remember
268
925522
1777
15:27
that what we do reflects who we choose to be.
269
927323
3067
15:30
Let's create a civilization
270
930895
2381
15:33
that honors the intrinsic value of all life.
271
933300
3785
15:37
No matter who you are,
272
937909
2032
15:39
no matter what you have to work with,
273
939965
2928
15:42
get out of bed every single morning,
274
942917
3206
15:46
and do something that has nothing to do with yourself,
275
946147
3973
15:50
but rather having everything to do with those things you love.
276
950144
5451
15:56
With those things you know to be true.
277
956366
2924
15:59
Be someone who imagines human progress
278
959314
3708
16:03
to be something that moves us toward wholeness.
279
963046
3229
16:06
Toward health.
280
966608
1150
16:08
Toward human dignity.
281
968473
1635
16:11
And always,
282
971013
2103
16:13
and forever,
283
973140
2032
16:15
wild beauty.
284
975196
1325
16:18
Thank you.
285
978365
1150
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