Possible futures from the intersection of nature, tech and society | Natsai Audrey Chieza

41,514 views ・ 2021-04-12

TED


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In 1998, my friends and I won a national art competition.
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The prize was a week in Disneyland Paris,
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with hundreds of other children from across the world,
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as delegates to UNESCO's International Children's Summit.
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Now this was no ordinary trip to Disneyland.
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Between running riot in the park and making friends,
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we workshopped the future of this planet.
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How could we overcome the problems of pollution
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and their threats to human and environmental health?
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How could we guarantee universal human rights
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of equality, justice and dignity?
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Towards the end of the summit,
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we created a 20-year time capsule,
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with each country planting a vision of the future they hoped for.
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But as I look around today,
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it's clear to me that those visions have not come true yet.
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We're confronted by the same crises,
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made infinitely worse through decades of geopolitical inaction.
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We now face global existential risks as a result of the climate emergency,
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with the world's least-resourced and most disenfranchised
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made more vulnerable despite having contributed least to the problem.
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That trip to Disneyland
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taught me that art and design had the power to imagine
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other possible futures.
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The question is: "How do we actually build them?"
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Today, I lead a design agency called Faber Futures,
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and my team and I design at the intersection of biology,
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technology and society.
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Through research and development collaborations,
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partnerships, and other strategies,
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we model a future in which both people and planet can thrive
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and where the role that biotechnology plays is shaped through plural visions.
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Our design work prototypes the future.
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We have developed toxin-free, water-efficient textile dye processes
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with a pigment-producing bacterium,
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pioneering new ways of thinking about circular design
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for the textile and fashion industries.
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You've probably already heard of data surveillance,
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but what if it was biological?
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Using open-source data on the human microbiome,
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we’ve created experiential artworks that engage with the ethics of DNA mining.
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How can we embed a culture of multidisciplinary codesign
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from within the industry of biotechnology?
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To find out, we designed the Ginkgo Creative Residency,
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which invites creative practitioners
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to spend several months developing their own projects
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from within the Ginkgo Bioworks foundry.
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We also generate and publish unique and expansive dialogues
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between people with different types of knowledges --
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Afrofuturists with astrobiologists,
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food researchers with Indigenous campaigners.
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The stories that they and others tell
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give us the tools we need to imagine other biological futures.
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Design deeply permeates all of our lives,
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and yet we tend to recognize things
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and not the complex systems that actually produce them.
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My team and I explore these systems,
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connecting fields like culture and technology,
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ecology and economics.
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We identify problems, and where value and values can be created.
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We like to think about a design brief as an instruction manual,
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mapping the context of the problem,
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and where we might find solutions.
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Getting there might involve establishing new networks,
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building new tools, and even infrastructure.
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How all of these pieces interact with one another
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can determine research and development, material specification,
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manufacturing and distribution.
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Who ultimately benefits, and at what environmental cost.
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So you can start to imagine the kinds of systems that might drive
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the design of your smartphone or even a rideshare service.
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But when it comes to the design of biology,
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things become a little bit more abstract.
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Organism engineers design microbes to do industrially useful things,
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like bioremediate toxic waste sites
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or replace petroleum-based textiles with renewable ones.
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To architect this level of biological precision and performance at scale,
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tools like DNA sequencing, automation and machine learning are essential.
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They allow the organism engineers to really zoom in on biology,
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asking scientific questions to solve deep technical challenges.
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Successful solutions designed at a molecular scale
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eventually interact with those at a planetary one.
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But if all of the research and development focuses on the technical question alone,
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then what do we risk by excluding the broader context?
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We've all spent over a year now living at an unprecedented intersection
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between biology, technology and society.
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We've witnessed, with the rapid development of the COVID-19 vaccine,
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that although techno-fixes offer us a critical remedy,
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they don't always provide a panaceum,
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and that’s because the real world is a complex social and economic one,
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where dominant systems determine the distribution of benefits.
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It will be another two years
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before hundreds of millions across the world
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receive their emergency vaccines,
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which, in a globalized world, risks undermining its efficacy
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on all our communities.
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Scientific endeavors have long been considered separate
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to real-world contexts,
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an idea that places profound limitations on the promises of biotechnology.
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By missing the full scope of design, we may think we’re solving problems
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and realize later that actually, not much has changed.
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And a similar logic is emerging
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in biotechnology for consumer goods and industry.
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So far, it offers innovations for commodities markets,
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drop-in replacements that change problematic ingredients,
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and yet sustain prevailing mindsets and dynamics of power.
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Again, technically sound solutions
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that unwittingly reinforce social and ecological inequities.
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Addressing these asymmetries
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requires us to take a more revolutionary approach,
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one that begins by asking "What kind of a world do we wish for?"
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So what if we could do both?
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What if we could design at the molecular scale,
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with the real world in mind?
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A more integrated approach to designing with biology
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requires us to ask more nuanced questions;
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not "What will people buy,"
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but "What if we put communities, rather than commodities, first."
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"Could distributed biotechnology
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enable people to find local solutions to local problems?"
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"Can we move beyond a biotechnology that creates monocultures
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to one which, like nature itself, embraces a multiplicity of adaptations?"
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"How do we equip the next generation with the tools,
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spaces and communities they need to broaden their skills,
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knowledge and ideas?"
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An incredible amount of work that begins to address these questions
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is already underway.
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The Open Bioeconomy Lab,
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which has nodes in the UK, Ghana and Cameroon,
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designs open-source research tools to expand geographies of innovation
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into resource-constrained contexts.
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Over thousands of years,
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we've domesticated plants to make them edible,
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creating nutrient-rich, diverse and delicious food cultures.
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MicroByre wants to do the same, but for microbes.
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The San Francisco based start-up assembles diverse microbial libraries
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for a more resilient biological toolkit.
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Imagine the expanded color palettes and different applications,
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from different types of pigment-producing bacteria.
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And from London's famed art school, Central Saint Martins,
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students from different disciplines
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are generating new sustainable design practices
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from biological medium.
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You'll find them at work in a wet lab,
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nested between historic fashion textiles and architecture departments,
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a radical reunification of the arts and sciences in education.
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Many examples of this type of systemic design work in biotechnology exist --
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piece them together, and you start to glimpse different visions
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of our biological futures.
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I don't know what happened
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to the time capsule we left behind in Paris,
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but I do remember wishing for a more just and meaningful world,
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where all of nature can thrive.
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In their own significant ways,
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technology and design have played their role in denying us this,
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but it's in our power to change that.
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Fundamentally,
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this means recognizing that the design of, with and from biology
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is designing systems and not stuff,
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and that with a truly ambitious design proposition,
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one that’s based on values that center flourishing,
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caretaking and equity.
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We have the opportunity to build truly transformative systems,
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systems that open up holistic measures of value and impact,
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and how we think about scaling innovation
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and doing business for the futures we now need.
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