A Bold Plan to Rewild the Earth — at Massive Scale | Kristine McDivitt Tompkins | TED

111,535 views

2024-09-30 ・ TED


New videos

A Bold Plan to Rewild the Earth — at Massive Scale | Kristine McDivitt Tompkins | TED

111,535 views ・ 2024-09-30

TED


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

00:04
I'm of the first generation in all of human history
0
4334
3754
00:08
to witness the decimation of wild nature
1
8129
3212
00:11
taking place in every corner of the planet.
2
11383
4212
00:16
This isn't a mystery, we know this.
3
16263
2502
00:19
At the end of the day, it's simple mathematics.
4
19182
3629
00:23
We humans expand our footprint,
5
23270
2877
00:26
habitat on land and sea shrink,
6
26147
3379
00:29
wildlife numbers fall,
7
29568
2544
00:32
temperatures rise
8
32112
1293
00:33
and human communities suffer.
9
33405
2711
00:36
And this is what keeps me up at night.
10
36116
2502
00:38
But I'm also busy.
11
38994
1418
00:41
Edward Abbey, the godfather of environmental activism, once said,
12
41037
4630
00:45
"Sentiment without action is the ruin of the soul."
13
45709
4921
00:51
And for me, the antidote to despair is to act.
14
51381
4838
00:57
And the most direct action at Tompkins Conservation
15
57220
3253
01:00
is to be part of the global movement of rewilding the Earth.
16
60473
4880
01:06
So what is rewilding anyway?
17
66563
2544
01:10
It means allowing ancient nature
18
70066
3504
01:13
the space and the freedom to heal itself.
19
73612
4295
01:17
And when that's not possible,
20
77907
1711
01:19
actively restoring territories
21
79659
2670
01:22
and bringing back species who have gone missing.
22
82370
3671
01:26
Rewilding is both simple and miraculous.
23
86750
4004
01:31
I know this because I have lived it.
24
91296
4254
01:36
Here's what I think can happen if we take on rewilding the continent
25
96718
5756
01:42
at a massive scale.
26
102474
2294
01:44
Because frankly,
27
104809
1585
01:46
we're kind of running out of time saving the natural world.
28
106394
3837
01:50
So if there was ever a moment for a Hail Mary pass in conservation,
29
110273
5255
01:55
I think this is it.
30
115570
1502
01:57
30 years ago, when my late husband, Doug Tompkins, and I
31
117572
3587
02:01
began working on land conservation projects,
32
121159
2878
02:04
we weren't really sure what we were going to do,
33
124037
2836
02:06
but we knew we would invest everything we had
34
126873
3378
02:10
in terms of our time and resources
35
130293
2753
02:13
to slow down the freight train of development
36
133088
3336
02:16
that we saw destroying the natural world.
37
136466
3170
02:20
As climbers, ski racers, wildlife people,
38
140178
4129
02:24
we had long begun to witness with our own eyes,
39
144307
4129
02:28
and it was time for us to react to those things
40
148478
2920
02:31
that were oh so clear to us.
41
151439
1835
02:34
For the two of us,
42
154317
1168
02:35
that meant making a 180-degree shift of our business lives.
43
155485
5088
02:40
Doug, as the cofounder of “The North Face” and then “Esprit”
44
160573
4839
02:45
And for me, it was retiring from Patagonia company after 25 years,
45
165453
4880
02:50
18 of those years as CEO.
46
170333
3212
02:53
We moved to a roadless area at the tip of South America,
47
173586
3796
02:57
at the foot of a very deep fjord in Chile.
48
177424
3420
03:00
We committed ourselves to saving as much wild habitat as we could,
49
180844
5088
03:05
at first by simply buying land,
50
185974
3628
03:09
ultimately acquiring over two million acres
51
189644
3253
03:12
of key habitat in Chile and Argentina.
52
192939
3295
03:17
Some of these tracks were still wild,
53
197068
3003
03:20
but some were deeply degraded
54
200071
1543
03:21
after a century of livestock overgrazing and deforestation
55
201656
5297
03:26
and other threats.
56
206995
1918
03:28
We formed teams on the ground and worked with communities
57
208913
3671
03:32
and local, regional, national governments.
58
212625
3712
03:36
And partnering with now 12 presidential administrations in the two countries,
59
216379
5089
03:41
we gave back everything that we put together
60
221468
2794
03:44
in terms of conservation lands
61
224304
2252
03:46
by donating them in the form of new national parks.
62
226556
3420
03:50
(Applause)
63
230977
2169
03:53
Yes.
64
233146
1168
03:54
(Applause)
65
234355
2795
03:57
So far, we’ve initiated 15 new national parks,
66
237150
3295
04:00
protecting over 15 million acres.
67
240487
2919
04:03
We came to know, without a doubt,
68
243406
3253
04:06
that landscapes can recover,
69
246659
2253
04:08
even those forests, grasslands, wetlands hardest hit.
70
248953
5047
04:14
But the more we worked saving and restoring lands and seascapes,
71
254793
5088
04:19
the more we came to realize
72
259881
2085
04:22
that you can't have healthy ecosystems
73
262008
3086
04:25
if keystone species are missing.
74
265094
2586
04:28
As Lois Crisler said,
75
268598
2085
04:30
“Landscape without wildlife is just scenery.”
76
270683
4213
04:34
And we never saw ourselves as being in the scenery business.
77
274896
4963
04:40
Protecting large-scale territories is essential.
78
280860
4004
04:45
You can't paint a masterpiece unless you have the canvas.
79
285281
4338
04:50
But once the territory is secured long-term,
80
290620
3128
04:53
we had to commit ourselves to go beyond land conservation
81
293748
4505
04:58
and set our goals to leaving behind fully functioning ecosystems.
82
298253
5380
05:04
Figuring out what species are missing
83
304467
2211
05:06
or whose numbers are low and fragile,
84
306719
2711
05:09
and commit to bringing them back.
85
309472
1877
05:12
And that's exactly what we're doing.
86
312767
2544
05:15
Today, Patagonia grasslands,
87
315311
2002
05:17
temperate rainforests are safe and whole,
88
317355
2544
05:19
and nearly two million acres of wetlands have been protected.
89
319941
4963
05:25
A total of 24 native species, which were nearly extinct,
90
325405
5255
05:30
are again roaming free and reproducing in their rightful territories,
91
330660
4963
05:35
from apex predators that influence entire ecosystems
92
335665
4880
05:40
to seed bearers, herbivores,
93
340587
2961
05:43
smaller predators,
94
343590
1626
05:45
each playing out their essential role in the theater that we call life.
95
345216
6215
05:52
In Chile, the population of the nearly extinct huemul deer
96
352015
4129
05:56
is no longer losing ground.
97
356185
2503
05:58
And after a century of livestock grazing in the Patagonia grasslands,
98
358730
4838
06:03
which celebrated the killing of predators such as cougars and foxes,
99
363568
4796
06:08
they are back and they are thriving.
100
368406
2461
06:11
But all of this experience has shown us that this is still not enough.
101
371701
5714
06:18
The speed and power of the climate crisis and the extinction crisis
102
378291
5088
06:23
demand, I think, that we change our tactics again,
103
383421
4713
06:28
and this time it's got to be on a massive scale.
104
388134
4505
06:33
Yes, the parks offer refuge from the forces of industrialization,
105
393139
3921
06:37
and we know ecosystems can be restored.
106
397060
3378
06:40
And very importantly, we know that when people reconnect with nature,
107
400480
5005
06:45
it inspires them to protect it.
108
405526
2586
06:48
But at the same time, if you think about it, parks,
109
408488
3587
06:52
even the massive wild parks, are islands.
110
412075
3962
06:56
They're not connected.
111
416412
1919
06:58
And this is a huge problem
112
418373
1793
07:00
because in order to survive and become resilient,
113
420166
3712
07:03
ecosystems need to be connected.
114
423878
2711
07:06
Sometimes extensions of territories and sometimes as stepping stones.
115
426881
6340
07:13
One way or the other,
116
433221
1501
07:14
flora and fauna have to be able to expand over territories
117
434722
4380
07:19
as they once did.
118
439143
1794
07:21
So how is this done?
119
441437
1627
07:24
It requires expanding strategies into the next 20 years.
120
444899
5339
07:30
We have to reconnect the wild fabric of South America,
121
450989
3920
07:34
both from Chile and Argentina.
122
454951
2502
07:37
Our 30 years of conservation work is radiating up and out now,
123
457829
5255
07:43
reconnecting habitat and species back into one full continent.
124
463126
5422
07:50
Luckily, and not surprisingly,
125
470466
2169
07:52
Mother Nature has already built the literal road map
126
472677
4004
07:56
to make this possible.
127
476681
2127
07:58
In Chile, this means going up the entire spine of the Andes
128
478808
4379
08:03
with endangered species
129
483187
1669
08:04
and down the currents to Antarctica,
130
484897
2753
08:07
following marine wildlife systems beyond --
131
487692
3587
08:11
and this is the point -- human-made borders.
132
491320
3170
08:15
As an example of this in Argentina,
133
495158
2836
08:18
rivers are natural wildlife bridges.
134
498036
3128
08:21
So if we protect the rivers and the land around them,
135
501205
2878
08:24
we create these continental-scale corridors.
136
504125
4588
08:29
Think of them as wild highways.
137
509505
2336
08:32
In our kind of work,
138
512633
1585
08:34
there's a saying about the role of top predators
139
514260
2711
08:37
that I think helps make this clearer.
140
517013
2627
08:39
In our case,
141
519682
1627
08:41
if jaguars can expand their territory from north to south,
142
521309
4838
08:46
east to west,
143
526189
1251
08:47
then everybody else, animals, insects, flora, fauna,
144
527440
4713
08:52
can "walk under their legs."
145
532195
2878
08:55
And that's our goal.
146
535573
1627
08:58
So from Ibera National Park in Argentina,
147
538242
4088
09:02
we build connections across the borders in Brazil, Paraguay,
148
542330
4296
09:06
Uruguay, Bolivia,
149
546667
2294
09:09
and create biodiversity throughout the La Plata River basin,
150
549003
4588
09:13
the Yungas cloud forest,
151
553633
1460
09:15
the Chaco forest,
152
555134
1669
09:16
the Atlantic forest.
153
556844
2086
09:19
There's no question that this is a very audacious next and new step.
154
559263
6131
09:26
I'm 73,
155
566312
1293
09:27
and for the first time in my business and conservation life,
156
567647
3879
09:31
I know I'm not going to see the end of this new story.
157
571526
3753
09:35
But that's OK with me.
158
575571
1710
09:37
In fact, a very wise and good friend of ours, Wes Jackson,
159
577949
3628
09:41
said to us years ago,
160
581619
2336
09:43
"If your life's work can be accomplished in your lifetime,
161
583996
4672
09:48
you're not thinking big enough."
162
588668
1918
09:50
(Laughter)
163
590628
1668
09:52
(Applause)
164
592296
5047
09:59
Today, the original teams we built have become independent organizations
165
599053
6715
10:05
known as Fundación Rewilding Chile
166
605810
3128
10:08
and Fundación Rewilding Argentina.
167
608980
3211
10:12
And they are continuing this work long into the future.
168
612608
4171
10:18
Sometimes people ask me what Doug would have wanted
169
618156
2794
10:20
and what I would hope our legacy becomes.
170
620950
2836
10:24
And I always say the same thing.
171
624287
2127
10:27
As proud as we are of what we've been able to accomplish thus far,
172
627623
4296
10:31
none of us spends much time looking backwards.
173
631919
3420
10:35
Rather, we see all the work that we've done
174
635840
3462
10:39
as a foundation to build third, fourth generations of team leaders
175
639343
4713
10:44
who share a common vision with us.
176
644098
2961
10:47
And that is, we refuse to accept a future without wildness,
177
647435
6214
10:53
without abundance
178
653649
2419
10:56
and dignified human communities.
179
656068
2503
11:00
So what started as a personal journey has become a journey of many.
180
660281
4421
11:06
From several dedicated individuals to whole teams,
181
666037
3461
11:09
generations of teams and communities
182
669498
2878
11:12
who are joining the movement toward regenerative economies,
183
672418
4963
11:17
followed by their offspring and their descendants.
184
677381
4088
11:23
And finally,
185
683054
2085
11:25
this journey is about bringing back large-scale territories,
186
685139
4588
11:29
keeping them safe
187
689769
2127
11:31
and finding the species who were long gone missing:
188
691938
4004
11:35
the jaguars, the huemul deer, the Andean condors,
189
695983
3003
11:39
giant anteaters, pumas,
190
699028
1460
11:40
Pampas deer, the bare-faced curacao,
191
700529
2461
11:43
the Darwin’s rheas, maned wolf,
192
703032
2002
11:45
marsh deer, macaws, ocelots,
193
705076
1710
11:46
red footed-tortoises, giant river otters.
194
706827
2920
11:52
May they thrive long into the future.
195
712166
3796
11:57
They are the legacy long after our story is told.
196
717046
3754
12:02
And remember,
197
722301
2211
12:04
the first step in saving nature
198
724553
3003
12:07
is the rewilding of our own minds.
199
727556
3921
12:11
Thank you very much.
200
731519
1251
12:12
(Applause)
201
732812
5422
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