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The carbon cycle - Nathaniel Manning

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    Carbon dioxide, or CO2, is the main greenhouse gas in climate change.
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    So how does CO2 get into our atmosphere?
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    Well, carbon is part of a cycle. It starts with the sun,
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    which heats the Earth's surface with more energy
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    in one hour than the whole world uses in a year.
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    Plants, which are kind of like biological chefs,
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    take that sunlight, and then suck in some CO2 from the air,
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    mix them together, and BAM!
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    They create a stored form of energy, in the form of carbohydrates
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    such as glucose and sucrose.
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    The process is called photosynthesis.
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    When animals like us eat those plants
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    our stomachs convert that food back into energy for our own growth.
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    Greenhouse gases are a byproduct of this process,
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    and are released through waste.
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    If those plants die, they decompose, and tiny microorganisms break down those carbohydrates
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    and again, release greenhouse gases as a byproduct.
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    As you see, energy originates from the sun. It is then transferred as it moves through the food chain.
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    But sometimes, carbon based organisms like plants or animals get stuck in the earth.
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    When this happens, they're compressed under tons of pressure,
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    and turned into carbon-based fossil fuels
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    like oil, coal or natural gas.
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    Since the Industrial Revolution, humans have been pulling those fossil fuels out of the ground
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    and burning them, activating the stored energy
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    to make electricity and power engines.
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    But the thing is it also releases millions of years worth of stored CO2 back into the air.
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    In addition, humans breathe in oxygen and breathe out CO2.
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    But plants do the opposite.
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    Trees suck up huge amounts of CO2, which balances the cycle.
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    Thus, deforestation reduces the plants that store CO2.
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    We're attacking the cycle from both sides.
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    Think of it like a computer. A computer can operate a few programs at a time, right?
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    Normally, when you've finished with a document, you save, and you close it,
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    so as not to overwork the computer.
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    Then, imagine you stopped closing your documents.
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    So they were all open at once.
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    Your computer wouldn't be able to process it all.
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    It would start to slow down, and then to freeze, and eventually it would crash.
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    Which might be where our environment is heading if we keep overloading the carbon cycle.
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    So is there any way to rebalance the ecosystem?
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    What about technology? Technology is defined as a technique to solve a problem.
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    And so, sustainable technologies are those whose output is equal to their input.
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    They do not create negative externalities,
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    such as CO2, in the present or the future.
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    They sort of cancel themselves out to solve the problem.
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    To achieve this, we need to invent sustainable technologies.
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    If we put all the ideas and technologies ever created into one circle,
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    then invention is the pushing of the boundaries of that circle.
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    And the area outside of the circle is infinite,
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    meaning the potential for invention is limitless.
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    Think about some of the incredible clean technologies we have today. [Wind; Electric & Solar Cars; Biogas]
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    [Biofuels; Photosynthetic Algae; Compost] All those ideas have one thing in common.
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    They all came from people. People innovate.
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    People create. It's the limitless potential of creative people
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    to build unimagined technologies that is going to stop climate change
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    and rebalance the ecosystem. And that is something to be hopeful about.
Title:
The carbon cycle - Nathaniel Manning
Description:

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/the-carbon-cycle-nathaniel-manning

What exactly is the carbon cycle? Nathaniel Manning provides a basic look into the cyclical relationship of carbon, humans and the environment.

Lesson by Nathaniel Manning, animation by Jill Johnston.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
03:55
Jenny Zurawell edited English subtitles for The carbon cycle - Nathaniel Manning
Bedirhan Cinar approved English subtitles for The carbon cycle - Nathaniel Manning
Bedirhan Cinar accepted English subtitles for The carbon cycle - Nathaniel Manning
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