Kim Stanley Robinson: Remembering climate change ... a message from the year 2071 | TED Countdown

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2021-08-30 ・ TED


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Kim Stanley Robinson: Remembering climate change ... a message from the year 2071 | TED Countdown

72,086 views ・ 2021-08-30

TED


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

00:16
The 2020s were a crux in human history.
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They began with the first pandemic,
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a slap to the face of everyone,
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as they had to acknowledge that they were a single civilization
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on a single biosphere,
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utterly dependent on science to keep them alive.
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Civilization is a fragile thing.
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And although people started the '20s hoping to ignore that profound truth,
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even after the first pandemic,
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the great heat waves of 2023 torched any such hope.
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Humans cannot survive combinations of high heat and high humidity
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that rise above an index temperature called "wet-bulb 35."
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And that year, the wet-bulb 36 events in India, in Southeast Asia
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and in the American Midwest
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killed so many more people than the first pandemic
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that it was made clear to everyone things simply had to change.
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The arrival of the second pandemic put an exclamation mark on all that.
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The question at that desperate point was: Could things change?
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Could humanity stop its destructive ways
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and restore balance to its relationship to its biosphere?
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Crucially, could it lower the global average temperature of the earth
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in time to avoid killing millions more people,
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more animals
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and indeed entire species?
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Looking back from our perspective 60 years later, this of course looks possible,
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because they did it.
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But it was by no means a sure thing.
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You have to imagine what it felt like at the time, when panic filled the air,
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and no one could be sure success was even physically possible.
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Many declared that humanity was doomed.
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This is why that decade gets called "the turbulent 20s"
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or "the terrifying 20s."
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Only much later did some historians begin to call it "the terrific 20s"
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or even "the roaring 20s,"
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although that's a historian's joke and as usual, a bad one.
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It was not at all like the roaring twenties of a century before.
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It was much stranger than that.
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In these critical years, lessons learned in the first pandemic got put to use.
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The scientific community had rallied to meet that crisis
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in an unprecedented way,
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unleashing a burst of cooperation and creativity never seen before.
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And now they did it again.
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Things that had once seemed impossible became the new normal,
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and the heat waves of 2023 spurred an all-hands-on-deck mentality,
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in which almost every solution ever proposed to help solve the climate crisis
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got accelerated to roll out and given a try.
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The diversity of this effort makes any study of the 20s
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a very multidisciplinary affair -- which I like -- involving all of science,
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technology, engineering and medicine,
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STEM yes, our great tool kit,
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but also, crucially:
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governance, law, justice, diplomacy, philosophy and the arts,
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and most of all, finance.
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Rapid changes in civilization software
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were what allowed for the rapid changes in its hardware.
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Crucially, the people of that time had to arrange to pay themselves
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to do the things necessary to heal the biosphere.
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Money had to go to good work rather than bad.
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This was the crux.
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With that change enacted,
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there was all manner of good work ready to be performed.
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It has to be understood that before the 20s,
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capital always went to the highest rate of return.
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That was the law of capital,
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often literally the law.
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Restoring damage done to the biosphere,
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taking carbon dioxide back out of the atmosphere --
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these did not yield the highest rate of return,
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so money went elsewhere,
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and thus the catastrophe struck home.
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Strange as it seems now, the funding of destruction might even have continued
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were it not for a basic change in the global political economy,
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a change oriented by science,
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organized under the Paris Agreement
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and then enacted by all the nations on earth.
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The mechanism for this transformation
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was called the Network for Greening the Financial System,
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an organization of 89 of the world's central banks.
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Under the direction and encouragement of their governments,
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these central banks shifted the world to what some now call the carbon standard.
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It also gets called "carbon quantitative easing" or "the carbon coin."
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The idea was this:
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that new fiat money should be created precisely in proportion
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to the amount of carbon dioxide taken out of the atmosphere
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and sequestered in plants, soil or the rocks under our feet.
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And that new money was to be given to anyone
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who drew carbon back out of the air
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or demonstrably and over the long term
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refrained from burning it in the first place.
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This monetary and fiscal policy
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reoriented a huge proportion of human work to decarbonizing projects,
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and there were a lot of them ready to go.
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Regenerative agriculture was one giant area,
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very important, as people still needed to eat while saving the world.
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Reforestation, where appropriate, was also a rapid method of carbon drawdown.
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So was direct air capture,
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which required an entirely new physical infrastructure,
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all paid for by carbon coins.
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Some captured carbon got rendered into replacements for concrete and steel,
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and that, too, earned carbon coins.
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Habitat restoration also helped, usually.
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Once people were getting paid to take care of the earth's land and animals,
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carbon drawdown then joined the effort to stop the mass extinction event
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that we had been slipping into.
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Of course, clean energy is fundamental to powering all of this good work,
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and installing thousands of gigawatts of clean energy production
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was a mammoth task.
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Millions of people spent their careers
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in this great infrastructural transformation.
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Indeed, there was so much work to be done in the 20s
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that governments funding it were able to create full employment.
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"Create full employment," which of course means an end to poverty.
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That there wouldn't be enough work for people,
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that there was a contradiction between people's health
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and the biosphere's health --
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these were confusions so ingrained in the era before the 20s,
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they're now hard to understand.
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But hindsight is 20/20, if you'll excuse me saying so.
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And as for keeping fossil fuels in the ground,
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this, too, had to be compensated,
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as many nations were literally banking on these resources,
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the burning of which would ironically have destroyed them.
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When petrostates like Venezuela, Saudi Arabia, Canada and Russia
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declared they were going to keep it in the ground,
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they were paid in carbon coins,
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on a timetable matched to how quickly
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they would have extracted and sold these fuels.
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At the level of cities,
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infrastructure changes got paid for as they reduced carbon burn.
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Mass transit projects, electric car recharging stations,
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infill construction, city agriculture, clean power generation --
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all these actions earned carbon coins at the city level.
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And individuals could earn the coins as well,
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by efforts such as no-till agriculture or green ranching,
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peat bog creation, kelp farming
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and also swapping out dirty machines for clean ones.
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All such decarbonizing efforts now made money rather than cost money.
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Well, of course, there were many problems created by this shift in value.
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Certifying carbon drawdown became a huge industry in itself,
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and anything that gets measured gets gamed.
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So this was not a simple matter.
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But it got done.
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And then ...
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the heat waves of 2027 made it seem
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as if all their good work had come too late,
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the people could no longer stop a slide into catastrophe.
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Things could have fallen apart that year,
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and there was enough turmoil to make it seem like that was what was happening.
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The countries that cast dust into the atmosphere the next summer
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to deflect sunlight into space and cool things off for a while --
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these countries were excoriated by many,
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but thanked by many more.
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The sense of emergency grew strong,
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and political instability spread like wildfire.
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The creation of a dozen new countries by way of divorces, velvet or otherwise,
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was hard to reconcile with the climate emergency work.
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And for some years, history seemed to fall into chaos.
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Often seems that way.
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The global temperatures cooled for a few years after that,
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and political temperatures cooled as well.
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Indigenous people took an active role in managing the lands
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that they knew the best,
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bringing back much-needed values of long-term care.
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Women's empowerment continued to expand
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by way of the continuous and undeniable work of women.
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And when the world's population then began to level off,
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pressures of all kinds were reduced accordingly.
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The project also of leaving a big percentage of the earth's surface
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to our cousin species
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gained momentum, with large reserves of wildland connected by habitat corridors
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to make migrations possible again.
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And the mass extinction event that had looked inevitable
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began to shift into a global project of mutual care.
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Although the sunlight deflection of 2028
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remains by far the most famous act of geofinessing,
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it's important to recall the effort in Antarctica and Greenland
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to pump meltwater out from under the great glaciers
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that were then sliding faster and faster into the sea.
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Sea level rise could have been a catastrophe for everybody,
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not just near the coastlines, but everybody.
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But removing that meltwater beneath the glaciers
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caused their ice to bottom out on rock again,
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slowed the ice back to its historical norms.
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Sea level rise is still a concern, of course,
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but in this matter, as in so many,
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carbon drawdown is a huge help.
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It's the clear signal indicating that we have taken up our responsibility
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for keeping the biosphere in balance,
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that the parts per million of CO2 in the atmosphere
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is now under our control
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and a matter of international treaty negotiation.
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This is really the great accomplishment of our time.
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It means we can put sea level, along with everything else,
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onto a shared path towards long-term stability.
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It's another way in which we can say we now live on the carbon standard.
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We take that for granted now.
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But 60 years ago, it was a challenge no generation had had to beat.
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That they did it is something we should be grateful for,
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and indeed, the more historians like me look at the 20s,
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the more amazing they become.
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Those people really stepped up.
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Thank you.
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