TED Explores: A New Climate Vision | TED Countdown

39,365 views ・ 2023-12-11

TED


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00:08
Christiana Figueres: There's no doubt
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that we are facing exponential impacts of climate change.
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There is also, however, no doubt
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that that is being met with exponential progress
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of the technologies that can help to address climate change.
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So what we have here is, frankly, a race between two exponential curves.
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By 2030,
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we collectively will have chosen between door number one.
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And door number two.
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Julio Friedmann: The question I am most commonly asked
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about climate change is:
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"Should I be optimistic or pessimistic?"
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01:00
Cynthia Williams: Here's what we need to do to make sure
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that we're ready for an all-electric future.
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Anika Goss: Being financially secure and climate resilient
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should be the most important priority.
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Faustine Delasalle: It's really easy when you look at where we are today
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and where we ought to be by 2030,
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to feel like there's a huge gap that will never be filled.
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But we have good reasons to say that that gap is actually fixable.
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Nigel Topping: If you're not worried or anxious,
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you're probably not paying attention.
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But we should also not be defeatist.
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We shouldn’t say, “We’ve done nothing,
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we're failing."
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We've really started 20 years too late,
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but it takes a long time to get the flywheel of momentum going.
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Kingsmill Bond: The tide of change is coming.
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The costs keep falling.
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The political pressure keeps increasing.
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JF: We're going to build a thriving, exciting world.
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AG: We can do this.
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JF: Full of potential.
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AG: We have to do this.
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02:03
[TED Explores A New Climate Vision]
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Manoush Zamorodi: When it comes to climate change,
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are you an optimist or a pessimist?
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News about the climate can be overwhelming and emotional,
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to the point that many of us just feel numb.
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I’m Manoush Zomorodi, a longtime public media journalist
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and host of the TED Radio Hour.
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And today, we want to bring you something special:
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an hour of nuance, of real people
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and clarity about what is happening to our planet
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and what we're doing about it.
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Because we all know there's plenty of bad news when it comes to the climate crisis.
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But guess what?
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There's also some really good news.
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That's why we're here in Detroit at the TED Countdown Summit,
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where a cross-section of people who know the most
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and who are doing the most
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have gathered to share their ideas and plans with each other
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and with you.
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You're going to hear from some incredible speakers
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about their personal stories and tested solutions.
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But first, let's get a quick reminder on the basics:
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climate change in a minute or so.
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03:13
[Prologue: What is Climate Change?]
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David Biello: The air we breathe has changed.
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The mix of gases is shifting,
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with more and more greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide.
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And the shift is happening faster each year.
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In just a few hundred years,
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fossil fuels formed over eons have been burned as coal, oil and gas.
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The exhaust has transformed the entire atmosphere and ocean.
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It's like a pollution blanket.
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And the result we know as climate change.
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The planet has already warmed more than one degree Celsius
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and is on a path to heat up even more.
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That may not seem like a lot,
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but it's already caused major destruction across the globe.
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To give us some room to breathe,
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the world must reduce greenhouse gas pollution
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by more than seven percent each year,
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every year of this decade.
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There are a number of ways to do that.
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Let's start by looking at the greenhouse gases themselves.
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CO2 makes up nearly 75 percent of the pollution emitted each year.
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And then there's methane or natural gas, which makes up 17 percent.
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Finally, there's nitrous oxide, making up six percent of the problem.
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There are other greenhouse gases,
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but these three make up the bulk of the climate challenge.
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Where do they come from?
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There are several ways to break down the sources of greenhouse gas emissions.
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Here we’re using the public Climate Watch data.
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Start with energy.
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The majority of modern energy comes from burning fossil fuels,
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which makes the energy sector 76 percent of the climate challenge,
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including the fuels used for transportation,
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industrial processes and agricultural production.
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Farming and animal raising also have to change,
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as agriculture accounts for 12 percent of greenhouse gas pollution.
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The remaining 12 percent
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comes from a grab bag of human activities like industrial heating,
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clearing forests and more.
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This is the climate challenge we face:
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going from adding billions of metric tons of greenhouse gases
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to the air each year to adding zero.
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Will it be easy?
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No.
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Can we do it?
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Yes, if we choose to.
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MZ: OK, so that's the situation.
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Where do we go from here?
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Well, we've all heard of a tipping point,
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that moment when an idea or concept finally takes hold
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and then changes the world.
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Well, the UN's climate chief, Simon Stiell,
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believes we are almost at a tipping point for massive action on climate change.
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And to get you ready, he wants to take you back to the early '90s,
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when he was an executive at Nokia,
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and the world wasn't sending text messages yet.
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[Chapter 1: Exponential Change]
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Simon Stiell: I want you to imagine it’s 1992,
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and you're talking to a telecoms expert.
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She tells you that mobile phone text messaging
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is going to fundamentally change the way we communicate.
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You think, why on Earth am I going to go from this
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to tapping on a screen with my fingers and my thumbs?
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But then, after a slow start,
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text-based services exploded.
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Today, over 23 billion messages are sent every single day.
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This paved the way for the smartphone revolution.
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I know how much we struggle to comprehend
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and predict what exponential change means,
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because I was at Nokia in 1993
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when that technological revolution started.
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And now, as head of UN climate change,
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I'm here to tell you that what was true for mobile phones
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is also true for climate action today.
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We're here in Detroit, the heart of car manufacturing.
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Take a look at this graph.
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Electric vehicle sales
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are expected to increase to become 70 percent by 2030.
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Another example, solar energy.
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Between 2010 and 2020,
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we moved from 20 gigawatts of solar energy installed
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to 150 gigawatts.
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And by 2030, that number is expected to increase again,
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to 1,000 gigawatts per year.
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Change can come fast.
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FD: So exponential change means that change happens very slowly at first
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and then comes a tipping point.
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And suddenly things accelerate and accelerate and accelerate.
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NT: It's a mathematical term,
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but it means basically stuff happens very slowly
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and then it goes really fast.
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Tessa Kahn: Governments and experts have consistently underestimated the pace
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and scale at which we can deploy renewable energy
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and how quickly renewable energy
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and associated technologies become affordable.
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Ramez Naam: I predicted in 2011
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that we'd have solar as cheap as coal in some parts of the world by 2015
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and half the cost of coal by 2020,
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and everyone thought I was crazy,
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I've got to say, almost.
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And in fact, I was wrong.
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The actual decline in the cost of solar
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happened twice as fast as I thought it would.
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Solar prices today are a century ahead
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of where the world's leading energy experts thought they'd be in 2010.
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KB: It's now spreading from solar, so it's happening also in the wind sector,
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it's happening in the battery sector,
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it's happening in the electric vehicle sector.
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CF: I don't think that we do a good job at communicating the fact
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that we are progressing more than is commonly known.
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Nili Gilbert: The human brain is trained best
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at thinking about linear change.
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But when you think about an exponential curve,
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next to a line,
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at first the exponential curve is below the line,
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and so it's moving more slowly than you would think.
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And then it crosses the line
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and it's moving faster than you would think.
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Habiba Daggash: We call it cautious optimism.
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We're very hopeful
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about the trajectories that we've seen.
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But we shouldn't let up yet.
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KB: So we can make this change happen slow or we can make it happen fast.
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The key point to say is we have agency.
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MZ: This idea of exponential growth sounds awesome.
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It sounds amazing, but is it actually happening?
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Well, I'm headed into a workshop with industry and climate leaders
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to find out.
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The moderators of the workshop challenged us to hold two competing ideas
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in our minds at the same time.
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NT: What we're really going to explore today
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is two apparently opposing realities,
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and they're often two opposing narratives.
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The one which is true, right, is that in terms of the Paris goals,
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we're way off track.
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We're deep into the emergency.
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But what we're going to explore today is the other reality
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that we know what to do.
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Exponential change is happening, but it doesn't happen by magic.
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MZ: So what are we seeing in different industries?
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Well, let's start with one that's known to be really difficult
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to decarbonize: cement.
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Vicente Saiso Alva: I think everything converges into making climate
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a huge urgent matter for society.
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We started to feel the pressure from all different types of stakeholders,
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and in one year of running this program,
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we realized how fast we could move
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and how fast we were going in reducing CO2 emissions,
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which means now to go from 40 to close to 50 percent reduction by 2030.
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MZ: Encouraging, but to tackle that remaining 50 percent
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may require technologies that don't exist at scale yet.
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OK, what about shipping?
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Narin Phol: In Maersk, a few years back,
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we came out with a net-zero ambition by 2050,
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and in a few years later, based on the data that we have got,
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we've really seen a path that we can really accelerate that one.
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That's why the revised target of 2040 came in.
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MZ: The news in offshore wind was quite dramatic.
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Jennie Dodson: So my moment of mindset shift was in 2019.
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The government put out a request to bid for offshore wind permits.
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And that year the price that came in was two thirds less
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than just four years before.
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And really critically,
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it was the same price as the mainstream market.
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And that was transformative.
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Nobody expected that when they started.
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MZ: The conversation got pretty technical and a bit wonky.
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NP: So to drive exponential growth,
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you focus on a reinforcing loop to make sure it works
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and you slow down on the balancing loop.
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MZ: But the takeaway is that certain sectors,
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like EVs and renewables, are being upended,
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while others, like cement and heavy industry
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are further behind.
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But generally across every industry --
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JD: It’s amazing stuff.
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MZ: There's an understanding that they all need to work together.
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And the message?
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Big change can happen.
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It's going to be hard, but some of us are already doing it,
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so learn from us.
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[Chapter 2: The Electric Vehicle Revolution]
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OK, we are in an exponential mindset.
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And as you heard,
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one example of exponential growth
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might be sitting in your driveway right now.
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Electric vehicles are finally really happening,
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which means that people here in Detroit are rethinking the auto industry.
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They're rethinking their jobs, their identity.
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Take Cynthia Williams, head of sustainability at Ford.
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I sat down with her at Lucky Detroit, a local coffee and barber shop,
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where she told me that there are three things that need to happen
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for electric vehicles to go to the next level,
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from this tipping point to exponential growth.
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CW: The three things for me are change,
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collaboration and capacity.
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So the change piece of it is changing the way folks think about the vehicle,
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making sure that they understand we're bringing a better vehicle
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to the customers.
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MZ: So you don't have to make a sacrifice.
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CW: I think one of the things we need to do is actually
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get people in the cars
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and show them how fun it is.
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And it's no different, it's just powered by a battery.
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We are at a tipping point.
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We're at a point of acceleration of electric vehicles.
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Many are calling it the electric vehicle revolution.
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Now with that comes unprecedented change
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that will require us to build new capacity
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and collaborate in ways that we've never seen before.
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To make things happen faster, you have to think differently.
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You can't just collaborate with the same people
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because you get the same answer, right?
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You need to broaden your collaboration space.
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Go outside of your industry,
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understand what worked in Norway, for example,
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to get them to where they are.
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MZ: Where's the weak link, Cynthia?
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What's the thing that you're like, that if we don't push through that,
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we may not get to this full adoption?
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CW: The critical things that we hear from the consumers
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is they need infrastructure.
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That's what it's taking for us to work with governments
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to make sure that we bring more charging to everyone,
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whether it's rural, urban,
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wealthy, low-income, we all need chargers.
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And I'm not saying we need one on every corner,
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but we do need many, many more.
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When we start building out the charging infrastructure, we need lighting.
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We need, you know, security, shelter, we need restrooms.
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15:34
We need other amenities
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so that people know where to go, where to charge.
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Next comes capacity.
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We have to invest in new facilities and talent.
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Now, that's true for any industry transitioning to greener goals
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and strategies.
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And we're investing in talent,
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we're investing in education and training,
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and we're also listening to the communities
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where we live and operate.
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MZ: So a young Cynthia Williams, now,
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your counterpart who's studying engineering,
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will she be learning something very different
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if she wants to go and work in the automotive industry in Detroit?
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CW: There will be different options, right.
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16:17
And so, I'm a mechanical engineer by trade,
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16:20
but I think there will be opportunities for electrical engineering,
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software engineering.
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16:25
And there's even certificates that students can get
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instead of going through a four-year college.
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It's the proper training to get them right, to be dedicated,
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to build the vehicles that we need for the future.
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16:36
At the end of this year, globally,
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we’ll have the ability to produce 600,000 electric vehicles.
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And in 2026, we’ll have a global goal to produce two million electric vehicles.
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And it just goes up from there.
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MZ: What is this going to look like,
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this growth for me in the next couple of years, in five years, in 20 years?
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16:56
CW: Clean air.
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That's what I look at.
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If you think about when we were, during the pandemic,
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when everybody stopped driving and they were at home,
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17:06
clear skies and moving to zero tailpipe emission vehicles.
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And if you chose an electric vehicle,
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that's you participating
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and you contributing to a better world,
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to a better future.
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17:19
We have come a long way.
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It's so gratifying to see electric vehicles on the road,
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17:24
to move from aspiration to reality.
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To see plants dedicated to building electric vehicles.
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17:33
We have the technology,
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we have the leadership,
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we have the ingenuity to respond to the environmental crisis with courage.
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And I'll tell you, as a person who's dedicated my entire career
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to sustainability,
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the road ahead is paved with promise.
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17:54
(Applause)
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TED-Ed: If you were buying a car in 1899,
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18:02
you would have had three major options to choose from.
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18:05
You could buy a steam-powered car,
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18:07
typically relying on gas-powered boilers.
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18:10
These could drive as far as you wanted,
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18:12
provided you also wanted to lug around extra water to refuel
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18:16
and didn't mind waiting 30 minutes for your engine to heat up.
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18:20
Alternatively, you could buy a car powered by gasoline.
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18:24
However, the internal combustion engines in these models
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18:27
required dangerous hand cranking to start
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18:30
and emitted loud noises and foul smelling exhaust while driving.
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18:35
So your best bet was probably option number three:
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18:38
a battery-powered electric vehicle.
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18:41
These cars were quick to start, clean and quiet to run,
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18:45
and if you lived somewhere with access to electricity,
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18:48
easy to refuel overnight.
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18:50
If this seems like an easy choice, you're not alone.
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18:54
By the end of the 19th century,
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18:56
nearly 40 percent of American cars were electric.
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19:00
In cities with early electric systems,
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19:03
battery-powered cars were a popular and reliable alternative
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19:07
to their occasionally explosive competitors.
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19:10
But electric vehicles had one major problem.
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19:13
Batteries.
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19:17
MZ: Flash forward to the present
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19:19
and batteries are still on everyone's mind.
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19:21
So I visited Mujeeb Ijaz,
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19:23
the founder of the energy storage company One,
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2920
19:26
who also happens to be an electric vehicle history buff.
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19:30
Mujeeb Ijaz: So this is a 1922 Detroit Electric.
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19:34
MZ: OK, so 100-year-old vehicle.
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19:36
MI: That's right, electric vehicle.
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19:38
And then this was Walter Baker.
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19:40
He developed the Baker Electric.
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19:42
And he made the range run 201 miles on a single charge.
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19:46
He also felt strongly that you should be able to wear your top hat, you know,
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19:50
so he has a taller carriage.
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19:53
These had lead acid batteries to begin with.
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19:55
And then Thomas Edison introduced the nickel-iron battery.
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19:59
So this is the battery compartment, one of the battery compartments.
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20:02
And this is where you would charge.
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20:04
MZ: Right there?
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20:05
MI: And we're building on what these original pioneers did.
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20:09
And I think it's important to not think about us starting from scratch now.
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20:13
But go backwards,
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20:15
think about how they solved the problem,
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20:16
what disrupted their ability to advance this to the market,
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20:20
and then pick those problems up and make sure we don't get stuck again.
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20:23
MZ: So we've been here before,
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20:25
a moment when electric vehicles could have taken off but didn't.
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20:30
So what do we need to do differently this time?
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20:33
MI: Electric vehicles were able to deal with mobility in urban areas,
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20:37
but there were charging deserts
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20:39
where rural driving resulted in no way to get back
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20:43
because you couldn't find electric charging everywhere.
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20:46
And that was a problem.
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20:47
MZ: And that's what people are worried about right now.
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20:49
We're at the same thing.
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20:51
We're worried about range, we're worried about accessibility.
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20:54
All of the things are the same.
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20:55
But the key difference being that we now know
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20:57
that our planet can't keep going like this.
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21:01
MI: That's right.
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1209
21:02
Had the vision of the Model T assembly line
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3629
21:05
and mass manufacturing been applied to electric car,
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21:10
the electric car would have also dropped in price,
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2669
21:13
but range and charging deserts would have still been the obstruction.
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4671
21:17
MZ: OK.
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21:19
We didn't have the technology, but we do now.
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2544
21:22
MI: We do now.
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1292
21:24
MZ: In the US, there hasn’t been a mass move to electric vehicles ... yet.
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5088
21:29
Mujeeb's company is one of many who want to change that by building batteries
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3796
21:33
that give drivers longer range.
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2502
21:36
And these batteries aren't just for cars.
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2837
21:39
MI: So we produce battery packs for transportation,
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4380
21:43
but we've also started developing
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21:46
the same battery products into grid batteries.
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2711
21:49
So micro-grids are those technologies that combine solar and storage
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4963
21:54
and replace a coal plant or a natural gas plant
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3462
21:57
for generating electricity.
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1501
21:59
So buildings and industry
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2711
22:01
and transportation all working together.
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2586
22:04
And that's an exciting future, is all these industries working together,
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3420
22:08
that makes me more confident
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1377
22:09
that we're at the time in history where this transition will take place.
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3420
22:12
MZ: How many years till we get to that?
419
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1877
22:14
MI: I think it's within 10 years.
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1585
22:16
MZ: No way, 10 years?
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1335
22:17
MI: We're in a place where that transition is going to be much more visible,
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4421
22:22
and then we just need technologies to drive it up to the mass markets.
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3920
22:28
MZ: I am so excited.
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1418
22:29
Like, genuinely so excited.
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2002
22:32
Everyone everywhere driving electric sounds great,
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3629
22:36
but that also means that the power to charge all those vehicles
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3503
22:39
needs to be green.
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1835
22:41
And that brings us to the energy sector,
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2753
22:44
which is also changing at an incredible pace,
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3253
22:47
even though renewable energy has been years in the making.
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3629
22:53
[Chapter 3: Renewables]
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2878
22:58
TED-Ed: In the spring of 1954, the press excitedly gathered
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3921
23:02
around Bell Laboratories’ latest invention:
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3295
23:05
a silicon-based solar cell that could efficiently convert
435
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3629
23:09
the sun's energy into electrical current.
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2837
23:13
The creation was celebrated as the dawn of a new era,
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4379
23:17
as reporters touted
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1210
23:18
that civilization would soon run on the sun's limitless energy.
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4547
23:23
But the dream had a catch.
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1877
23:25
As this first commercially sold solar cell cost around 300 dollars per watt,
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6381
23:31
meaning at its current rate it would cost well over a million dollars
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4964
23:36
to buy a unit large enough to power a single home.
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4004
23:40
But today, in many countries,
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1794
23:42
solar is the cheapest form of energy to produce,
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3044
23:45
surpassing fossil fuel alternatives like coal and natural gas.
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4296
23:50
Millions of homes are equipped with rooftop solar,
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3045
23:53
with most units paying for themselves in their first seven to 12 years
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4254
23:57
and then generating further savings.
449
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2377
24:00
So how did solar become so affordable?
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3963
24:05
A turning point in solar's price history
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24:07
occurred on the floor of Germany's parliament,
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3128
24:10
where in 2000, Hermann Scheer introduced the Renewable Energy Sources Act.
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5464
24:16
This legislation laid out a vision for the country's energy future
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3504
24:19
in solar and wind.
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1918
24:21
It incentivized citizens to personally invest in rooftop solar panels
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4880
24:26
by guaranteeing payment to homeowners for the renewable energy they generated
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4337
24:31
and sold to the grid.
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1794
24:33
The pay rate for this electricity was highly subsidized,
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3003
24:36
at times reaching four times the market price.
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3211
24:39
Several other countries soon followed Germany's example,
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3504
24:43
implementing similar policies and incentives
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2711
24:46
to drive their country's solar use.
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2711
24:49
This created unprecedented demand for solar panels worldwide.
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4171
24:53
Manufacturers were able to scale up production
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2336
24:56
and innovate in ways that cut costs.
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2545
24:58
As a result, solar panel prices dropped while efficiency grew.
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4296
25:04
HD: We see the cost reduction in solar
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2128
25:07
and other renewable energy technologies has been so steep,
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3754
25:10
but a lot of it is because of the enabling regulatory and policy environments
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4171
25:15
created in places like the European Union and the US.
471
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2961
25:17
Akil Callender: We cannot divert catastrophic climate change
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3379
25:21
without addressing emissions
473
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2127
25:23
coming from our energy systems.
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2044
25:25
Currently, emissions from the energy system
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2085
25:27
account for around two thirds of global greenhouse gas emissions.
476
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3837
25:31
So the good news is, yes, we are seeing tremendous progress
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4254
25:35
across the globe in renewable energy.
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1793
25:37
It's rolling out faster than ever before.
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2169
25:39
Luisa Neubauer: The brilliant thing about energy supply in the world
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3212
25:43
is that we have alternatives.
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1418
25:44
So we don't need fossil fuels
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25:45
to provide safe and equitable access to energy systems.
483
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5797
25:51
Ramón Méndez Galain: Almost 90 percent of the total new installed capacity
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3670
25:55
all over the world is just renewable.
485
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1794
25:57
This is a tremendous change.
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2461
25:59
AC: There's more finance than ever before going into clean energy.
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3379
26:03
In many countries, it is the largest contributor to their electricity system
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4672
26:07
for the first time ever.
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1168
26:09
KB: And also because China is the leading manufacturing nation in the world,
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3587
26:12
change is happening there much faster.
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1835
26:14
And those innovations are then spreading around the world.
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2752
26:17
Hongquiao Liu: China's coal demand might not have peaked,
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2711
26:19
and China will continue to consume quite a lot of coal in the next few years.
494
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3671
26:23
But the decarbonization is happening.
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2294
26:25
It's happening faster than anyone has expected,
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3170
26:29
and China is adding an astonishing amount of wind and solar
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4296
26:33
to its grid every year.
498
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1585
26:35
Eduarda Zoghbi: I think one of the biggest obstacles today
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2752
26:37
are natural resources,
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1168
26:39
in the sense that we're talking more and more about critical minerals
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4046
26:43
and the role that they have.
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1377
26:44
And batteries are demanding a lot of critical minerals
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2544
26:47
that are present in most of the developing countries.
504
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2627
26:49
So I think that even though costs are decreasing,
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2378
26:52
we have to be more and more creative when it comes to recycling the batteries.
506
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4170
26:56
We also have to think of how they're impacting local communities.
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3546
26:59
KB: So to give you the numbers, we extract, at the moment,
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2919
27:02
15,000 million tons of fossil fuels every year.
509
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3795
27:06
The International Energy Agency says that we will need about 43 million tons
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6423
27:13
of critical materials
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1585
27:14
in order to build out the clean energy economy.
512
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2545
27:17
So that’s 300 times less stuff that is required.
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4546
27:21
It's worth saying that the impact
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27:23
of extracting 300 times less stuff upon nature
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5464
27:29
is dramatically lower.
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1668
27:30
And I know that it's often argued
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27:32
that the renewable economy may be damaging for nature.
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3003
27:35
Again, this is a completely false statement.
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2711
27:38
It's in fact, our only chance of reducing the pressure upon our natural resources,
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5547
27:44
because there's far less of it.
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1501
27:47
MZ: Of course, transitioning to using clean energy, upending industries,
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4838
27:52
it has to happen across the world, not just here in the US.
523
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3379
27:55
And it can be hard to even imagine what life will be like.
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3628
27:59
But carbon scientist and futurist Julio Friedmann can help us.
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4171
28:06
Julio Friedmann: I think we need a compelling vision of the future
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3169
28:09
that gets people excited about the energy transition
527
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2503
28:12
and solving climate change.
528
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1335
28:13
Right now, it's like we're at a restaurant
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2043
28:15
and there's two options: burnt toast, unflavored oatmeal.
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2711
28:18
And people are not excited about either, right?
531
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2252
28:20
The burnt toast option for me is what I call the big switch.
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3003
28:23
Everything's the same, it's just clean,
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2044
28:25
but it costs a lot of money and it's super hard to do.
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2711
28:28
The other vision is kind of like, “Thou shalt not.”
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3294
28:31
That vision is a narrower sort of, “eat your peas,” hair shirt
536
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5923
28:37
kind of vision of the future.
537
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1794
28:39
And a lot of people don't want that either.
538
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2378
28:41
And there's nothing in the physics, chemistry or biology
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2669
28:44
that says we can't have a super interesting, exciting,
540
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2919
28:47
vibrant world.
541
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1293
28:48
And that is compelling in a way that we have not heard yet.
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4213
28:53
MZ: Help me out here, what does that even look like?
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2460
28:56
JF: So, for lack of a better word, like, I like the Marvel cinematic universe.
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3754
28:59
MZ: OK, I'll go with you.
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1418
29:01
JF: So a place like Wakanda, right?
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2378
29:03
It's got flying cars, it's got maglev trains,
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2837
29:06
and it's a totally fabulous place to live.
548
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2753
29:09
Like, they've got lots of food.
549
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1501
29:11
That is built on abundant, sustainable, cheap energy.
550
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2878
29:13
MZ: OK, so like, we're not Wakanda, we're not in the Marvel universe.
551
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4838
29:18
This is real life, sort of.
552
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2627
29:22
How do we make this possible?
553
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1459
29:24
JF: So what can you actually do here on Earth,
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2836
29:26
constrained by economics and engineering and all the rest of it, right?
555
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3504
29:30
And the answer is we can do an incredible amount.
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2586
29:33
Abundant, available where you want it, when you want it.
557
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3420
29:36
Everybody should have energy,
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29:37
including the three billion people who use less electricity
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3337
29:41
than my refrigerator uses.
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1835
29:43
Well, the good news is, every day, the Earth receives 163,000 terawatts
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5088
29:48
of energy from the sun.
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29:50
About half of that bounces back to space,
563
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2002
29:52
but about 80,000 terawatts arrive at the Earth
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2628
29:55
in a form we can use.
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1377
29:56
For reference, today, the world uses about 26 terawatts of energy,
566
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3462
30:00
and we got more than solar and wind.
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30:02
We have geothermal, we have hydro, we have nuclear.
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30:05
There’s other kinds of clean energies.
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1835
30:07
And some of the best resources are, in fact, in the Global South.
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30:11
These places are not simply future climate victims.
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3504
30:14
These places are latent energy superpowers.
572
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3629
30:18
My favorite example of this is Chile.
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2169
30:20
Almost eight years ago now their government said,
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2294
30:22
wait a second, we can make the cheapest green electricity on Earth.
575
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3170
30:26
We have hydropower, we have solar power,
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2294
30:28
we have wind power and the best resources anywhere in the world.
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3629
30:32
So let's start by making a lot of green electricity.
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3337
30:35
And then they said, because of that,
579
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1752
30:37
we can also make green hydrogen cheaper than anywhere else.
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2878
30:40
And then Japan was like, hello, we want your green hydrogen.
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4296
30:44
Can you ship it to us?
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1376
30:46
MZ: Is that possible?
583
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1126
30:47
JF: Totally.
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1168
30:48
And Japan is like, we will also give you money to pay for these projects.
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3462
30:52
We'll loan you money to pay for these projects.
586
1852180
2211
30:54
Could you please use Japanese technology?
587
1854391
1960
30:56
So they're using Japanese turbines, electrolyzers,
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2461
30:58
they're using Japanese ships to haul the ammonia around.
589
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2920
31:01
So Japan gets rich on this,
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2002
31:03
Chile gets rich on this.
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1460
31:05
MZ: Win-win.
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1168
31:06
JF: Totally win-win.
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1167
31:07
MZ: Win-win-win, planet, too.
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1418
31:09
JF: And that model, other countries are looking at that, going,
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2961
31:12
I want some of that.
596
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1168
31:13
And that's why I like this vision of abundance.
597
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2669
31:15
15 years ago, solar was the most expensive power.
598
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4838
31:20
Now it is the cheapest form of electricity, right?
599
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3003
31:23
Which is astonishing, it's totally amazing.
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2920
31:26
And a whole bunch of people are like, now we're done.
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2627
31:29
And I'm like, no, we can do that with everything.
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2919
31:32
We can do that with wind.
603
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1418
31:34
We can do that with nuclear, we can do that with geothermal.
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3003
31:37
But these projects take time, money and people.
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4755
31:42
We need to develop the human capital
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1751
31:44
as part of these investment projects for decades.
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2878
31:47
And innovation,
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31:49
we need much more energy in many places, much cheaper.
609
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2920
31:52
That's an innovation agenda.
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1751
31:54
For solar, that was the United States, Germany, China
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2670
31:57
and others acting together.
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1793
31:59
Well, if that's the recipe, we can do that again.
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2920
32:02
We're already doing it with electric vehicles and clean hydrogen production.
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3754
32:06
We can certainly do it by turning electricity into fuels.
615
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2961
32:09
MZ: It sounds like the climate discussion needs to be kind of like improv,
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3545
32:12
that it's a "yes and" sort of thing.
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2044
32:14
JF: I'm so glad you said that.
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1877
32:16
So many people don't understand my love of improv comedy.
619
1936598
2919
32:19
Yes, it is a “yes and” circumstance.
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3337
32:22
Because mostly it is about room for agreement.
621
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2836
32:25
Where do you find the point where everybody is like,
622
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2461
32:28
I can agree on that?
623
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1126
32:29
One of the things I love about the infrastructure bill,
624
1949402
2920
32:32
one of the things I love about the Inflation Reduction Act,
625
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2795
32:35
neither of them had the word climate in it.
626
1955158
2002
32:37
They were both massive climate bills, right?
627
1957202
2127
32:39
That was a way to get everybody on the same page.
628
1959329
3044
32:42
Nationwide, they basically tripled the clean energy research budget.
629
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4171
32:46
That's a good start.
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1168
32:47
But that made it all of one percent of GDP.
631
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4797
32:52
And for comparison, we spend twice that on pharmaceuticals.
632
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3837
32:56
So I think it's fair to say we should get going.
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2460
32:58
We should spend a lot more money.
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1794
33:00
We've done stuff like this before.
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1626
33:02
We've done World War II, we've done the Marshall Plan,
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2544
33:05
like, we’ve done the space shot,
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1543
33:06
like we actually know how to move really quickly as a nation.
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2878
33:09
We did this for COVID.
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1167
33:10
Collective action,
640
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1168
33:11
building together is what makes the difficult possible
641
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2711
33:14
and nourishes the soul through mission and purpose.
642
1994656
3628
33:18
We know what to do and we can act,
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3879
33:22
not out of anger or fear,
644
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1835
33:24
but out of generosity and common purpose,
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2836
33:27
bringing aspiration and humility together.
646
2007544
2502
33:30
We're going to build a thriving, vibrant,
647
2010088
3503
33:33
exciting world full of potential
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2669
33:36
that's going to be built on the back of infrastructure,
649
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2628
33:38
innovation and investment
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1668
33:40
that will harness the abundant, sustainable, cheap energy
651
2020682
3962
33:44
that is our planet's endowment.
652
2024686
2586
33:48
Thank you.
653
2028231
1168
33:49
(Applause)
654
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1877
33:53
[Chapter 4: A Just Transition]
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3295
33:56
FD: There is a high risk that when those exponential kick in,
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6340
34:02
we see businesses running after those opportunities.
657
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4379
34:07
But then the distribution of the benefits being very unequal.
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4338
34:11
EZ: Many people like discussing the importance
659
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2294
34:13
of the just energy transition.
660
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2044
34:16
And a lot of people don't understand what justice really means.
661
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3504
34:19
If we are to reach a revolution,
662
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2502
34:22
a renewable energy future has to be inclusive.
663
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2294
34:24
AC: We have this push
664
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1210
34:25
for what we're calling a just and equitable energy transition.
665
2065602
3628
34:29
We need to make sure that we are not exacerbating inequality,
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3045
34:32
but rather we are ensuring that that gap is closed
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3795
34:36
and that the groups that have been historically marginalized
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4171
34:40
are not once again being marginalized in a new way.
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3962
34:44
NT: Most of emissions come from wealthy, energy-guzzling citizens,
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4421
34:48
but a lot of the economic benefit
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2419
34:51
and human development benefit will come
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2753
34:53
not from decarbonizing high-carbon lives and lifestyles,
673
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4254
34:58
but from providing clean,
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2461
35:00
distributed energy and tools
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3128
35:03
and solutions to those who don't have access to any of them.
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2836
35:06
LN: When we speak of countries in need of economic development,
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4338
35:11
we mostly speak of countries that are hit by the climate crisis
678
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3003
35:14
the hardest right now.
679
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1168
35:15
It should be the biggest wish and job and task
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3420
35:18
for all those countries who have burned so much fossil fuel already
681
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4213
35:23
to support any other country in the so-called Global South,
682
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3420
35:26
to get an economy running without fossil fuels,
683
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3003
35:29
to not repeat all the mistakes that we have made.
684
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2378
35:32
HD: To ensure that the solar revolution that has been seen around the world
685
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4296
35:36
comes to places like Africa,
686
2136297
2086
35:38
we need to be really conscious that the history and the lived experience
687
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4505
35:42
when it comes to energy is very different for poor countries.
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3420
35:46
Rebekah Shirley: We love to remind Global South communities,
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2920
35:49
especially Africa,
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1209
35:50
about the vast renewable energy potential that they have, which is true.
691
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4088
35:54
But the finance flows to deliver on that potential remain very scarce.
692
2154691
5588
36:00
Africa, despite being 90 percent of those across the entire globe
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2160321
4546
36:04
that still do not have access to electricity
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2461
36:07
and being 17 percent of the global population,
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2711
36:10
we're actually two percent of international finance.
696
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2919
36:13
Money doesn't actually flow to these spaces naturally,
697
2173042
3837
36:16
and we need to do a lot of work to get global finance to these spaces.
698
2176921
4838
36:23
MZ: A world of abundant clean energy for everyone.
699
2183136
4296
36:27
That is the goal.
700
2187473
1418
36:29
But what about in the short term?
701
2189308
2253
36:31
Take Detroit.
702
2191561
1209
36:32
This once-wealthy city has been through some seriously hard times.
703
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3671
36:36
How is it rebuilding itself
704
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1501
36:37
so that everyone here can thrive
705
2197984
2252
36:40
while dealing with extreme heat, flooding,
706
2200236
2878
36:43
and other climate problems?
707
2203156
1960
36:45
Anika Goss is looking to Detroit's past to plan its future.
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4588
36:51
AG: I am a third-generation Detroiter.
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2794
36:55
My grandmother moved to Detroit in 1936
710
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4296
36:59
during the Great Migration
711
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1919
37:01
and brought all of her southern ways with her.
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3962
37:05
She owned a home
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1376
37:06
and knew that home ownership would create wealth
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3253
37:09
and opportunity for her growing family.
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4171
37:14
Up until the late 1950s,
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2461
37:16
Detroit was a haven for middle-class families
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3879
37:20
living in neighborhoods where there was green space
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4171
37:24
and community connectivity and opportunity.
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4004
37:28
My grandmother, she had this amazing garden,
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4296
37:33
and it was just abundant.
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2252
37:35
There were all kinds of flowers and food.
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4087
37:39
You know, she grew vegetables back there,
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3253
37:42
and it was just a magical place for a little girl.
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3337
37:46
MZ: I mean, what you're describing is a Detroit that, yes, has huge problems,
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4212
37:50
segregation.
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1293
37:51
But at the same time, a woman,
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3796
37:55
she can have a job,
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1167
37:56
she can own a house, she can raise her family,
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2294
37:59
she can have fresh fruits and vegetables.
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2795
38:01
AG: It was certainly a place where you could gain economic opportunity
731
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5172
38:07
faster than you can now.
732
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2086
38:09
My grandmother's Detroit is not the Detroit that I live in today.
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4671
38:14
All of those sites where there was manufacturing
734
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3212
38:17
and industrial sites that led to our economic boom,
735
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5463
38:23
many stand vacant and abandoned.
736
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2586
38:25
These industrial sites have led
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3629
38:29
to dangerous contamination
738
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3879
38:33
to our land and our water and our air.
739
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4171
38:37
MZ: So, just lay it out for us.
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1793
38:39
For people who maybe don't see,
741
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2211
38:41
like, how is there a link between economic inequality and climate change?
742
2321440
5256
38:46
AG: You know, I'm so surprised that it feels like separate problems.
743
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4255
38:50
But I'm also really glad that people are asking.
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2544
38:53
Because if you're living around
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3337
38:57
and working in a community that is low-income,
746
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5089
39:02
where there are fewer jobs,
747
2342461
2253
39:04
the housing is deteriorated,
748
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2586
39:07
this is a neighborhood that's also more likely to be closer to a factory
749
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5881
39:13
that's emitting pollutants,
750
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1793
39:14
likely to have water that's contaminated,
751
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3712
39:18
probably has fewer parks and fewer intentional green spaces.
752
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5172
39:23
The people who are living in those communities
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3337
39:27
are at risk for climate impacts first.
754
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3378
39:30
So we have to do something in those neighborhoods right away.
755
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3962
39:36
MZ: So what can this healthier future look like?
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2962
39:39
Anika showed me some of the work she's done
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2043
39:41
in partnership with different neighborhoods in Detroit,
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2878
39:44
to make them both more enjoyable and more resilient.
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4796
39:49
First, she took me to the Circle Forest.
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2419
39:51
It's an oasis right in the middle of the city.
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3128
39:55
AG: This is six lots that were vacant,
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2837
39:58
and we all worked together with this community to build a forest.
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4004
40:02
MZ: Beautiful and a great example
764
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1877
40:04
of how nonprofits can work with communities
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2252
40:06
to transform them into sustainable, welcoming places.
766
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3837
40:10
AG: We might have a good idea about gardens and tree planting,
767
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3462
40:14
but this is where people live.
768
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1794
40:16
And so you ask first.
769
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1961
40:18
This is a new effort,
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1710
40:19
of this idea of a resilient neighborhood or calling it that.
771
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3962
40:23
So these are large tracts of vacancy
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3587
40:27
that can be used to provide environmental sustainability,
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5631
40:33
community resilience and beauty.
774
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3462
40:37
Watch for the poison ivy.
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1460
40:39
It's not pretend.
776
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1502
40:40
(Laughter)
777
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1711
40:44
MZ: Next we met up with Katrina Watkins,
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2335
40:46
the founder and CEO of the Bailey Park Neighborhood Development Corporation,
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4797
40:51
a group revitalizing this historic area by turning vacant lots into parks
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5172
40:56
that can stand up to extreme weather.
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2336
40:59
Katrina Watkins: My family has been in this neighborhood since 1946.
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3253
41:03
I grew up hearing the stories from my dad,
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2419
41:05
him telling me about how people thought it was a ghetto, but it wasn't.
784
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5965
41:11
Those were families, and people worked and had businesses,
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3838
41:15
and people looked out for each other.
786
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2253
41:18
And it was those type of stories that made me say,
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2794
41:20
wow, we just really need to bring that back.
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4045
41:24
MZ: So then briefly fill us in about how things changed.
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3504
41:28
KW: Things deteriorated in this neighborhood.
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2127
41:30
The homes got torn down,
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1669
41:32
left just a lot of vacant lots, a lot of overgrowth.
792
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3753
41:36
It wasn't safe.
793
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1501
41:37
I would see my little nieces and nephews.
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2252
41:39
They would just be on their little skateboards,
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2586
41:42
you know, not paying attention,
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1919
41:44
the stop sign is covered.
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1626
41:46
And me and my dad was like, we just have to do something.
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2711
41:48
So we started out as Bailey Park Project,
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2086
41:50
focusing on the park and green infrastructure and trees and flowers.
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4130
41:55
And then over the course of the years,
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2127
41:57
we started doing more community development.
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2517261
2211
41:59
MZ: I wonder, like, how do you describe it to people
803
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2461
42:01
when you explain what's happening,
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1794
42:03
what you're trying to do for your neighborhood,
805
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2211
42:06
the changes that you're making and how it relates to climate change?
806
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3253
42:09
KW: One really great example,
807
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1835
42:11
when people come to the park, like right now,
808
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2669
42:13
this is like, literally a heat island
809
2533861
3253
42:17
because our trees haven't grown.
810
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1710
42:18
So it is very hot.
811
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1627
42:20
So sometimes it's so hot that the kids don't come out
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2836
42:23
and play until the evening.
813
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1835
42:25
That education of knowing the benefit of trees
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2753
42:28
and cooling down an environment,
815
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2836
42:30
how it makes the air cleaner.
816
2550920
1668
42:32
There's a lot of people that suffer from asthma.
817
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2711
42:35
So trees can make a difference.
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1501
42:36
And if you go to places like Grosse Pointe,
819
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2169
42:39
you will see this beautiful tree canopy down.
820
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2794
42:41
Like their homes are probably 20 degrees cooler
821
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2962
42:44
you know, than our homes,
822
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1585
42:46
AG: Having a lot of green space
823
2566477
1960
42:48
actually contributes to the climate resiliency
824
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5047
42:53
for this neighborhood.
825
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1418
42:54
So all of this grass actually can manage stormwater better.
826
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5046
43:00
The idea of leading new development in this neighborhood
827
2580032
5047
43:05
with green,
828
2585079
2002
43:07
what it says to me
829
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1334
43:08
is that the residents are really envisioning
830
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3837
43:12
the neighborhood that they want to live in.
831
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2544
43:14
And that I just -- I'm really excited about that.
832
2594922
2961
43:18
MZ: Turning great loss and upheaval into even greater opportunities.
833
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4630
43:23
These Detroiters are creating a blueprint for an urban future
834
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4088
43:27
that every city can learn from.
835
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2002
43:32
[Chapter 5: Agriculture]
836
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3671
43:38
TED-Ed: About 10,000 years ago, humans began to farm.
837
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4045
43:43
This agricultural revolution was a turning point in our history
838
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4380
43:47
that enabled people to settle, build and create.
839
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3879
43:51
In short, agriculture enabled the existence of civilization.
840
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5589
43:57
Today, approximately 40 percent of our planet is farmland.
841
2637339
5089
44:02
Spread all over the world,
842
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1835
44:04
these agricultural lands are the pieces to a global puzzle
843
2644346
3796
44:08
we are all facing.
844
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1668
44:09
In the future,
845
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1209
44:11
how can we feed every member of a growing population a healthy diet?
846
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5923
44:17
Meeting this goal will require
847
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1668
44:19
nothing short of a second agricultural revolution.
848
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4087
44:23
The first agricultural revolution
849
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2002
44:25
was characterized by expansion and exploitation,
850
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3962
44:29
feeding people at the expense of forests,
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2878
44:32
wildlife and water,
852
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1961
44:34
and destabilizing the climate in the process.
853
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3336
44:38
That's not an option the next time around.
854
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44:41
Agriculture depends on a stable climate
855
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44:44
with predictable seasons and weather patterns.
856
2684678
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44:47
This means we can't keep expanding our agricultural lands,
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44:51
because doing so will undermine the environmental conditions
858
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3295
44:55
that make agriculture possible in the first place.
859
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44:58
Instead, the next agricultural revolution
860
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45:01
will have to increase the output of our existing farmland for the long term
861
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45:06
while protecting biodiversity, conserving water,
862
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3754
45:10
and reducing pollution and greenhouse gas emissions.
863
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3587
45:14
So what will the future farms look like?
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2877
45:18
In Bangladesh, Cambodia and Nepal,
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2877
45:21
new approaches to rice production
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45:23
may dramatically decrease greenhouse gas emissions in the future.
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45:27
Rice is a staple food for three billion people
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45:31
and the main source of livelihood for millions of households.
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45:35
More than 90 percent of rice is grown in flooded paddies,
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4337
45:39
which use a lot of water
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2086
45:41
and release 11 percent of annual methane emissions,
872
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3712
45:45
which accounts for one to two percent
873
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2127
45:47
of total annual greenhouse gas emissions globally.
874
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3837
45:51
By experimenting with new strains of rice, irrigating less
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4338
45:56
and adopting less labor-intensive ways of planting seeds,
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46:00
farmers in these countries have already increased their incomes
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3920
46:04
and crop yields
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1168
46:05
while cutting down on greenhouse gas emissions.
879
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3295
46:11
MZ: Related technologies are also taking root in the US.
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3754
46:15
Father and daughter farmers, Jim and Jessica Whitaker,
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2669
46:17
have come up with their own strategies to reduce methane
882
2777938
3003
46:20
that are working on their farm in Arkansas.
883
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3170
46:24
But convincing everyone else to change is their next big challenge.
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4963
46:29
So let's go back to how you got to be
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2628
46:31
such a big supplier of rice in this country.
886
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2795
46:34
You tell a story about how you were 22 and you were like,
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3712
46:38
I'm going to start my own farm, but --
888
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3044
46:42
not that easy.
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1126
46:43
Jim Whitaker: No, it's not.
890
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1460
46:45
Let me tell you something about renting a farm when you're 22 years old.
891
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3628
46:49
No one rents you a farm unless no one else wants to rent it.
892
2809511
4964
46:54
(Laughter)
893
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3129
46:57
It was a big piece of land, it was cash rent,
894
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2544
47:00
I mean, the stakes were set.
895
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2503
47:03
We were doomed to fail.
896
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2044
47:05
And we weren't focused on environmental sustainability back then.
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3169
47:08
We were focused on economic sustainability.
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2586
47:11
How do we make higher yield?
899
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1376
47:12
How do we use less fertilizer?
900
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2211
47:15
How do we get to the next year and feed our family?
901
2835079
2836
47:18
It happens that economic and environmental sustainability
902
2838832
3295
47:22
go hand in hand along with social sustainability.
903
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2961
47:25
As we used less fertilizer, used less water,
904
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3254
47:28
our yield started going up.
905
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1794
47:30
MZ: Can you spell out for me what the problem is with rice
906
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2919
47:33
when it comes to the environment?
907
2853180
1919
47:35
JW: Soil is full of microbes.
908
2855140
2044
47:37
And what they're doing in the soil on a basic level
909
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2461
47:39
is they're down there chewing away,
910
2859728
1835
47:41
eating up the biomass that's left over from the crop before.
911
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3670
47:45
And out of that comes methane,
912
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3128
47:48
the same way it happens in cattle operations or whatever.
913
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4087
47:52
MZ: But you decided to do it a different way.
914
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2461
47:55
JW: We do it a little bit differently.
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1876
47:56
Arkansas is a very water-rich state,
916
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2169
47:59
but we have a dry season,
917
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1877
48:01
right in the middle of summer is a dry season.
918
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2210
48:03
So when we dry the soil,
919
2883335
1377
48:04
that anaerobic microbial that's living in that soup,
920
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3628
48:08
that mushy soil, either dies or goes dormant.
921
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4254
48:12
So we break his life cycle.
922
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2711
48:15
MZ: Oh!
923
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1168
48:16
JW: And then it stops emitting methane.
924
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2628
48:19
But it doesn't hurt the rice.
925
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1418
48:20
That actually helps rice, when you use less water.
926
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2503
48:23
We have less runoff, less erosion, less nutrients leaving our field.
927
2903188
3671
48:26
Nothing leaves our field unless we want it to.
928
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2586
48:29
Jessica Whitaker Allen: We started tracking this.
929
2909486
2294
48:31
We saw that our water use was down and we thought,
930
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2336
48:34
OK, well, we need to add to that, let's add more data points to that.
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3295
48:37
Let's add our fertilizer, let's add our fuel usage.
932
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3671
48:41
And so we really started recording all this stuff by hand
933
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4380
48:45
in just an Excel spreadsheet.
934
2925586
1960
48:47
We didn't know what we were doing.
935
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1793
48:49
MZ: But you knew you were on to something.
936
2929423
2002
48:51
JWA: Yes, so we started recording everything.
937
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2210
48:53
MZ: Do you remember if there was a moment when the two of you thought, like,
938
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4046
48:57
what we're doing, it shouldn't be special to us.
939
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3295
49:01
Why aren't more people --
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1335
49:02
JW: To collect the data, have the equipment
941
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2919
49:05
and the cloud-based technology
942
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1668
49:07
and the stuff in the field to record it,
943
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3003
49:10
it’s just massively time-consuming, and consumers don’t pay for it.
944
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5297
49:15
JWA: Well and people like us, why would you want to do it?
945
2955949
3170
49:19
I mean, take a walk through your supermarket.
946
2959119
3504
49:22
Everything’s sustainable, everything’s greenwashed.
947
2962664
2795
49:25
You can put whatever you want to on a package,
948
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2168
49:27
there's no rules, there's no standards.
949
2967669
2086
49:29
So we're trying to make that standard.
950
2969755
2544
49:32
We live and work in southeast Arkansas.
951
2972341
2419
49:34
Our town has 4,000 residents and one stoplight.
952
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3211
49:38
The nearest airport, Starbucks shopping mall, Whole Foods,
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3629
49:42
is two hours away in any direction.
954
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2336
49:45
Without places like this and farmers like us,
955
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3587
49:49
you'd be hungry, naked and sober.
956
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2252
49:51
(Laughter)
957
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3169
49:55
I'm a farmer, but not in the way you might think.
958
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2419
49:57
I don’t drive the tractors, and I don’t plant the rice.
959
2997449
3003
50:00
But I know how to take what my dad has learned and what he is doing
960
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3170
50:03
and share that with others.
961
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1293
50:04
We are going to work with farmers in southeast Arkansas
962
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3795
50:08
to educate them about the benefits
963
3008752
2211
50:11
of growing sustainable rice.
964
3011004
1752
50:12
JW: Let me tell you why that's important.
965
3012756
1960
50:14
There are 400 million acres of rice grown globally.
966
3014758
2419
50:17
And our methods, if used, can reduce greenhouse gas by 50 percent,
967
3017219
3378
50:20
reduce water use by 50 percent,
968
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2169
50:22
increase yields to feed a hungry world.
969
3022808
2294
50:25
(Applause)
970
3025853
2252
50:28
MZ: We hear a lot about how weather has gotten more extreme, flooding, heat.
971
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5756
50:33
What's it been like in Arkansas?
972
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1585
50:35
JW: So in 2016, we had a 500-year flood.
973
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4755
50:41
We were ...
974
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1126
50:49
We get a picture of our place flooded.
975
3049209
4004
50:53
14 inches of rain.
976
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1418
50:54
That was a 500-year flood.
977
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1752
50:58
Hurt a lot of people.
978
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1544
50:59
And then we had a 1,000-year flood.
979
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2503
51:02
And we lost so many acres.
980
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2586
51:04
And you know, when houses get flooded in rural communities,
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3253
51:08
they don't come back.
982
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1585
51:09
I mean, when you have whole neighborhoods get flooded,
983
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3170
51:12
they don't rebuild them, they don't come back.
984
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2168
51:15
JWA: I feel like almost every day I'm getting a notification
985
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2878
51:17
from the weather Channel of an excessive heat warning
986
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2503
51:20
or thunderstorm warning or hail threat.
987
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2586
51:23
You know, you don't really know what you're going to expect.
988
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3546
51:26
MZ: When you think about what it will be like,
989
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3462
51:30
I don’t know, five years, 10 years,
990
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1918
51:32
for someone to go into the supermarket and think, oh, right,
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3086
51:35
I need to get rice off my grocery list.
992
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3170
51:38
What ideally would you like to see on the shelf there?
993
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3587
51:42
JW: So I think it’s going to change,
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3170
51:45
because I like to study what companies want.
995
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3962
51:49
I mean, if you figure out what they want, then you know what to give them.
996
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3670
51:53
And when you read their sustainability goals,
997
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3337
51:56
they're all saying they're going to be net zero.
998
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2544
51:59
The only way they can be net zero is they bring the farmer into the loop.
999
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3712
52:03
So if we're able to do this,
1000
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1752
52:05
in five years, everybody's doing these practices,
1001
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3461
52:08
the US rice industry
1002
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2086
52:10
will be the most sustainable industry in the world.
1003
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3212
52:15
MZ: Can you do it?
1004
3135629
1335
52:17
JW: Oh, yeah.
1005
3137005
1377
52:18
It's about to happen.
1006
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1502
52:21
MZ: You've just heard a lot of ideas,
1007
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2336
52:23
a lot of stories and a lot of big plans.
1008
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3546
52:27
So we want to wrap things up
1009
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1752
52:29
by asking our experts:
1010
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1877
52:31
What if we actually achieved our climate goals?
1011
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3378
52:34
What would that future even look like?
1012
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2252
52:37
They, of course, had a lot of thoughts.
1013
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2378
52:39
We'll let you pick your favorites.
1014
3159736
1710
52:41
Thanks for watching.
1015
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1252
52:44
NT: If we are successful in addressing the climate crisis,
1016
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3462
52:47
we massively reduce the vulnerability and improve the economic
1017
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4046
52:51
and the creative prospects of billions of people around the world
1018
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4296
52:55
who currently are basically excluded
1019
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2461
52:58
from all of the opportunities which we have,
1020
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2294
53:00
which come from having abundant material and energy all around us.
1021
3180757
3963
53:05
That's the real prize.
1022
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1168
53:06
FD: A world where we have had that exponential
1023
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3545
53:10
would be a world in which we have clean, cheap energy for all.
1024
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6381
53:16
KB: At the end of this decade,
1025
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1502
53:18
the International Energy Agency believes that we will have enough capacity
1026
3198025
3503
53:21
to be producing 10 billion,
1027
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1668
53:23
10 billion batteries a year.
1028
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2294
53:25
It's enough for every person on the planet to have their own battery.
1029
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4046
53:29
AC: I'm constantly surrounded by young people just like me
1030
3209703
4046
53:33
who are really, really, really passionate about the world that we live in.
1031
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4462
53:38
For obvious reasons.
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1168
53:39
It's the world that we will inherit.
1033
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1752
53:41
EZ: Women are very important for the energy transition.
1034
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2586
53:43
So if we're talking about a world where we have, you know,
1035
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2711
53:46
where we tackle climate change, all I want to see is, you know,
1036
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3629
53:50
women in power.
1037
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1376
53:51
I want to see more solutions being driven by young people.
1038
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3879
53:55
And I want our politicians to be truly and meaningfully engaged in making change.
1039
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5172
54:00
NG: We always tend to underestimate the pace of ultimate adoption and change.
1040
3240609
5714
54:06
Today, there are more than 150 pathways,
1041
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3837
54:10
scientific pathways that we could take to limit global warming.
1042
3250202
4045
54:14
Al Gore: If we get to true net zero,
1043
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2753
54:17
astonishingly, global temperatures will stop going up
1044
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4796
54:21
with a lag time of as little as three to five years.
1045
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2753
54:24
Colin Averill: We've been able to accelerate tree growth
1046
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2669
54:27
and carbon capture and tree stems by 30 to 70 percent.
1047
3267344
3211
54:30
Dan Jørgensen: Offshore wind has the potential
1048
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2753
54:33
to cover the current electricity demand of the entire world
1049
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3587
54:36
not once, not twice,
1050
3276978
3337
54:40
18 times.
1051
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1293
54:41
NG: We need to decarbonize the old economy that we have
1052
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3795
54:45
and invest to create the new economy that we need
1053
3285487
3920
54:49
Paul Hawken: Regenerative farming is fairly simple in concept.
1054
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4296
54:53
It means creating the conditions for more life.
1055
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3504
54:57
Josephine Phillips: We need to buy less stuff,
1056
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2545
54:59
and we need to look after what we buy.
1057
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2419
55:02
Valuing the things that we own is a climate solution.
1058
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4380
55:06
Vishaan Chakrabarti: We can all live in this transit-rich, carbon-negative,
1059
3306675
3628
55:10
affordable way
1060
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1502
55:11
and leave the vast majority of the planet for nature,
1061
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3962
55:15
for agriculture, for clean oceans.
1062
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2043
55:17
We can do this.
1063
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1210
55:19
Susan Ruffo: The ocean is a powerful source of solutions
1064
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2670
55:21
that we've overlooked for far too long.
1065
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2127
55:24
Al Roker: You have to be engaged.
1066
3324025
1752
55:25
Let your elected officials know that this is important to you.
1067
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5297
55:31
You have to vote,
1068
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1168
55:32
you have to go out there
1069
3332325
2002
55:34
and support politicians who are going to support our planet.
1070
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5380
55:39
Peggy Shepard: We can create a legacy of environmental quality
1071
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3879
55:43
and climate resilience for all.
1072
3343712
1960
55:45
Fehinti Balogun: You are not powerless
1073
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2085
55:47
that the "oh, there's nothing we can do, just keep going" is symptom,
1074
3347841
5422
55:53
not cure.
1075
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1418
55:55
But you are needed.
1076
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1419
55:56
Avinash Persaud: The power of what we can do
1077
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2586
55:59
when it matters to us is unlimited.
1078
3359519
3128
56:02
CF: It's not that we're simply going to avoid
1079
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3629
56:06
the worst impacts of climate change.
1080
3366318
1960
56:08
It’s that we’re going to improve the quality of life for humans,
1081
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5505
56:13
both in the urban and in the rural sector,
1082
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3212
56:17
and for non-humans.
1083
3377078
1710
About this website

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