-
[Citizens of the world]
-
[We face a global crisis
of unprecedented scale]
-
[Please stand by for a message from ... ]
-
[The Secretary-General
of the United Nations]
-
[António Guterres]
-
The climate emergency
is the defining crisis of our time.
-
We are in a race against time,
and we are losing.
-
There is a growing tide of impatience,
especially among young people,
-
with global inaction.
-
We need more ambition from all:
-
governments, cities, businesses,
investors and people everywhere.
-
So I'm pleased you are
launching TED Countdown.
-
Your influence and ideas
can help accelerate momentum
-
for a carbon-neutral world by 2050.
-
That is the only way to avert
the worst impacts of global heating.
-
We have the tools, the science
and the resources.
-
Let us now get into this race
with political will and energy.
-
To do anything less will be a betrayal
of our entire human family
-
and generations to come.
-
Thank you.
-
Announcer: And now, please welcome
-
one of the architects
of the Paris Climate Agreement
-
Christiana Figueres
-
and the head of TED, Chris Anderson.
-
(Applause)
-
Chris Anderson: Welcome, welcome.
-
Something remarkable
is going to happen in the next hour.
-
The world's single
most alarming challenge,
-
which looks something like this ...
-
is about to go head-to-head
-
with some of the world's
most amazing minds
-
and courageous hearts,
-
which look something like you.
-
The extraordinary audience we have
here in New York and around the world.
-
Christiana, it's quite the crowd
we get to hang out with this morning.
-
Christiana Figueres:
It sure is, no kidding.
-
It's a good thing
that everyone is here together,
-
because actually, this initiative
that we're just about to launch
-
needs everyone to participate.
-
And here it is.
-
Countdown.
-
CA: Countdown is a global initiative
to cut greenhouse gas emissions.
-
It's seeking bold solutions
in five big areas,
-
imagining what could be achieved
-
if different groups broke out
of their silos and acted together.
-
Starting today, you can go to
countdown.ted.com
-
and sign up to join the Countdown.
-
Early in 2020,
-
we'll be sharing plans
on how you can connect
-
with others in your company,
your city or your school
-
to engage in this issue.
-
It's all leading up to global gatherings
-
on 10.10.2020.
-
Everyone in the world
is invited to participate.
-
CF: And so that's why,
-
although I've been part
of many initiatives along the years,
-
I'm really excited about this one.
-
Because Countdown
is an invitation to everyone, everyone,
-
to play their part in saving our planet
-
and creating an exciting future.
-
Politicians and citizens,
-
CEOs and their customers,
-
their employees, their investors,
-
old and young,
-
north and south.
-
CA: (Laughs) I see what you did there.
-
(Laughter)
-
But look, our goal is not to plunge in
-
with something new that is competitive
-
with the amazing initiatives
already out there.
-
No.
-
It's to identify the best solutions
that have already been worked on,
-
to cross-fertilize them, to amplify them
-
and then activate them
-
by bringing together
these different groups.
-
CF: And if that happens,
-
we believe there is a way out
of the climate crisis.
-
That's what we want to facilitate.
-
But now, Chris, question:
-
Why are you and TED
interested in participating
-
and actually activating
the climate agenda,
-
when I thought you were
all about spreading ideas?
-
CA: Well, indeed, that has been
our focused mission for the last 15 years,
-
Ideas Worth Spreading.
-
But last summer,
-
we concluded that the urgency
of some issues,
-
and especially climate,
-
demanded that we try to do more
than just spread ideas,
-
that we actually try to activate them.
-
Now, we're just a relatively
small nonprofit --
-
that would not amount to anything
if we fail to bring other people on board.
-
But the amazing thing
is that that has happened.
-
Everyone we've spoken to about this
has got excited about participating.
-
And one of the key moments, frankly,
was when you came on board, Christiana.
-
I mean, you were key
to the Paris Agreement.
-
And the world was stunned
at the consensus that emerged there.
-
What was the key to creating
that consensus?
-
CF: I would say it was to really challenge
and change people's assumption
-
about what is possible
if we set a shared intention
-
and then collectively
pursue it and achieve it.
-
So our mantra then, and continues to be:
-
"Impossible is not a fact,
-
it's an attitude."
-
In fact, only an attitude,
-
and that is something we can change.
-
CA: Well, that mantra, certainly,
we're going to have to hold onto
-
in the months ahead,
-
because the scientific consensus
is actually worsening.
-
For a quick report from the front lines,
-
here's the head
of the thousands of scientists
-
who make up the IPCC, Dr. Hoesung Lee.
-
(Video) Hoesung Lee: We recently released
three special reports
-
that show the damage and risks
of past and future climate change.
-
They also show that stabilizing climate
-
would imply a drastic reduction
in greenhouse gas emissions
-
in the near term.
-
Society will have to go
through unprecedented changes
-
to meet this goal.
-
Even limiting warming
to 1.5 degrees Celsius
-
will bring more extreme weather,
-
rising sea levels
-
and water shortages in some regions,
-
and threats to food security
and biodiversity.
-
Higher temperature will bring
more of these damages,
-
threatening lives and livelihoods
-
of millions of people
all around the world.
-
CA: We're lucky to have with us
another world-leading scientist,
-
Johan Rockström here.
-
He was responsible for creating
the Planetary Boundaries framework.
-
Johan, how serious is our situation?
-
(Video) Johan Rockström: Last week,
we released in "Nature"
-
the 10-year update of the risk
of crossing tipping points,
-
irreversible tipping points,
in the Earth system.
-
We know 15 such tipping points,
-
including the Greenland
and West Antarctic ice shelf,
-
and the permafrost
in the Siberian tundra, for example,
-
and we today have observational evidence,
-
I mean, empirical evidence,
-
that nine of the 15 have woken up
and are on the move.
-
We haven't crossed the tipping point yet,
-
the window is still open,
-
but they are warning us
that now is the time to truly move,
-
because the moment we cross them,
-
like, for example, approaching
a tipping point in the Amazon rain forest,
-
we would risk losing the battle,
-
because the planet will be taking over
its self-reinforced warming.
-
So that is why this initiative
is so incredibly important.
-
Let's go.
-
CA: Well said.
-
(Applause)
-
So, both are very clear there
that this agenda of cutting emissions
-
is absolutely crucial.
-
How has that been going?
-
CF: Not very well,
because despite what we know,
-
despite everything
that science has told us,
-
despite everything that we have done,
-
including adopting the Paris Agreement,
-
we've actually been increasing
greenhouse gases consistently
-
over the past few decades,
-
to the point where
we're now at 55 gigatons
-
of carbon dioxide equivalent
-
that we are collectively, as humanity,
emitting every year.
-
And as we have heard, we have one path,
-
there is one path
that we have to follow, and that is:
-
Start now to decrease emissions,
-
instead of going up, go down --
-
reverse the trend, bend the curve.
-
Reduce emissions, starting in 2020,
-
to the point where we will be at one half
the current level of emissions by 2030,
-
and then continue decreasing them,
until we are at net zero by 2050.
-
It's the only path that we can accept.
-
CA: How do you even begin to start
tackling a goal as daunting as that?
-
CF: Well, we could starting by breaking
-
the simple, yet daunting, challenge
-
into its constituent pieces,
-
five main areas.
-
CA: And so these five together
are actually all huge,
-
and if we can find compelling
solutions in each of them,
-
they would actually add up
to an action plan
-
that matches the scale of the problem.
-
Well, here are the five.
-
CF: Power.
-
How rapidly can we move
to 100 percent clean energy?
-
CA: The built environment.
-
How can we re-engineer
the stuff that surrounds us?
-
CF: Transport.
-
How do we transform the ways
we move -- ourselves and goods?
-
CA: Food.
-
How can we spark a worldwide shift
to healthier food systems?
-
CF: And certainly, nature.
-
How extensively can we re-green the earth?
-
Now, it's worth noting
that the answers to these questions
-
and the measures that we would undertake
-
don't just reduce net emissions --
-
they do that, certainly,
together, to zero --
-
but they also point the way to a future
-
that is much better
and genuinely exciting.
-
So, think about cool
new forms of transport,
-
clean air, healthier food,
beautiful forests
-
and oceans bursting with life.
-
So, you know, solving the climate crisis
-
isn't about sacrificing
and settling for a mediocre future,
-
it's about the exact opposite.
-
It's about co-creating
a much better future for all of us.
-
CA: So how do we tackle these questions?
-
(Laughter)
-
CA: Let's take this question here
and think about this.
-
How extensively can we re-green the earth?
-
I mean, there are obviously
many responses to this question,
-
many proposals.
-
It's fundamentally about,
-
"How do we increase the amount
of sustainable photosynthesis
-
on planet Earth."
-
Photosynthesis sequesters carbon.
-
There could be proposals
around giant kelp forests or seagrass,
-
or about forms of plants
that have deeper roots
-
and can sequester across the planet.
-
But suppose a major proposal that came out
was about reforestation.
-
A massive, global reforestation campaign.
-
I mean, a single organization,
no matter how big,
-
cannot take that on.
-
The key is for everyone to join forces,
-
for governments (with zoning),
-
businesses to invest,
-
investors to do that investing,
-
environmental groups
and philanthropists who support them,
-
and just a massive movement
among citizens everywhere,
-
transforming their lawns, their cities,
their neighborhoods,
-
going on trips together.
-
That is where, suddenly,
you can dream about something really big.
-
CF: So can we test that theory?
-
Because we are fortunate
to have with us today
-
someone who grew up inside
a tree-planting movement,
-
probably the most well-recognized
tree-planting movement.
-
And she is the daughter
of the Nobel Prize winner
-
Wangari Maathai,
-
and she heads up the Wangari Maathai
Foundation today.
-
So can we invite our very dear
friend Wanjira Mathai?
-
(Applause)
-
(Video) Wanjira Mathai:
Thank you very much,
-
Christiana and Chris, for doing this.
-
Trees have been, indeed, a part of my life
for as long as I can remember,
-
but we also know that for centuries,
-
trees and forests have cushioned us
against the harsh impacts
-
of climate variation
-
for very many years.
-
In my lifetime, my mother,
-
through the Green Belt Movement,
as you mentioned,
-
inspired the planting
of 50 million trees and counting
-
through the work of the Green
Belt Movement, one organization.
-
But the world now needs us
-
to plant 100 times more trees
than we did then.
-
And the only way to do that
is for all of us to come together --
-
cities, citizens, governments,
companies, environmental organizations --
-
and we must believe, therefore,
-
in the capacity for each of us
to be potent agents of change.
-
And that together, we are a force.
-
And I hope you will all join us.
-
(Applause)
-
CF: So together we are a force.
-
I think Wanjira really hits it
right there on the head,
-
because it's all about collaborating
-
across a pretty broad spectrum of people.
-
And happily, there are representatives
from all of those groups here today.
-
And we will be inviting you
toward further engagement.
-
But we wanted today to introduce you
to a couple of those people,
-
speaking from their own perspective.
-
So we would like to start
with the voice of a politician.
-
We are incredibly honored
to have with us today
-
the former prime minister of Bhutan,
-
and I will have you know that Bhutan
is the only country in the world
-
that actually absorbs more carbon
than what it emits.
-
Our good friend, Tshering Tobgay.
-
(Applause)
-
Tshering Tobgay: My country
is typical of the global south,
-
in that we have not caused
this climate-change crisis.
-
Indeed, we are blessed
-
with lush forests
and many bountiful rivers
-
that have enabled my country, Bhutan,
to remain carbon-negative.
-
And yet, climate change
threatens to destroy our forests.
-
And to turn those very rivers
-
into terrible dangers for our people,
-
as the Himalayan glaciers melt
and threaten both near-term flooding
-
and the longer-term loss
of our natural water reserves.
-
So, I'm proud to join
-
this Countdown initiative
-
and work with all of you
and with you, and with you,
-
(Laughter)
-
constructively, to find solutions
that are both powerful and just.
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause)
-
CA: Thank you.
-
(Applause)
-
CA: Business, of course,
has a crucial role to play,
-
and so do those who control the world's
vast pools of investment capital.
-
I was pleased to make
the acquaintance recently
-
of the chief investment officer
-
of Japan's 1.6-trillion-dollar
government pension fund.
-
It's actually the world's
largest pension fund.
-
He's willing and interested
to come with us on this journey
-
and to bring others with him.
-
So, somewhere is, I believe, Hiro.
-
Hiro Mizuno.
-
And you're live. Welcome, Hiro.
-
(Video) Hiro Mizuno: Great.
-
Thanks, Chris and Christiana,
and the staff of TED,
-
for making this possible.
-
As a person in charge
of the largest pension fund in the world
-
and responsible for securing pension
benefits for multiple generations,
-
it is a hugely important issue,
how to manage climate risk.
-
We recently analyzed our global portfolio,
-
how it's aligned with the Paris Agreement.
-
It was diagnosed,
-
our portfolio is on the path
for more than three degrees.
-
Far away from the Paris Agreement goals.
-
Our portfolio is not only sizable
-
but also one of the most
globally diversified portfolios.
-
So that means, the world is on that path.
-
I'm tired of hearing
the same comment repeatedly
-
from our portfolio companies
and, obviously, investment professionals:
-
"We are realistic."
-
Sorry, but being "realistic"
is no longer an option.
-
We are fully aware of our responsibility
as the world's largest asset owner
-
to inspire changes in the capital market.
-
We will be actively engaging
with all actors in the capital market
-
to move the needle.
-
I look forward to participating
in this crucial dialogue with you all.
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause)
-
CF: I'm sure all of you know
that throughout the past 12 to 18 months,
-
what has really been new
and powerful and exciting
-
is the amazing voices
of so many young people,
-
millions of young people
who are out there on the streets,
-
with anger, with outrage, with despair,
-
and also, asking us to do our thing.
-
And they have been inspired
by Greta Thunberg
-
but by so many other
fantastic young people
-
in almost every country of the world.
-
And today, we are delighted to have
four young activists
-
come join us today.
-
(Applause)
-
(Cheers)
-
(Applause)
-
Alexandria Villaseñor: This Friday,
-
I'll have been
on climate strike for 52 weeks.
-
That's an entire year.
-
During that time,
-
I found that many people
don't know about climate change
-
or how serious the climate crisis is.
-
So I founded Earth Uprising International
-
to teach young people
about climate change,
-
because when they know
the science and the impacts,
-
they want to take action.
-
Being an activist
means making change happen.
-
Jamie Margolin:
I became a climate activist
-
because my life depends on it.
-
I'm applying to colleges right now,
-
trying to plan for my future.
-
There will be nothing to look forward to
-
if we don't take urgent action
to stop the climate crisis now.
-
I started the youth climate justice
movement called Zero Hour back in 2017,
-
because this is zero hour
to act on climate change.
-
We have no more time.
-
It became clear to me
-
that our leaders were not
going to take real action
-
unless the people stood up
and demanded it,
-
so that's exactly what we did.
-
Natalie Sweet: I became
a climate-justice activist
-
because if I don't fight
for the rights of the people today,
-
and for the people in the future,
-
who will?
-
Xiye Bastida: I became
a climate justice activist
-
when I realized that the climate crisis
impacts marginalized communities the most,
-
including my town in Mexico.
-
I strike with Fridays for Future
-
every Friday,
-
because our movement
is not about gaining momentum
-
but about igniting cultural change.
-
But the fact that thousands
of students strike for climate
-
means that we are already
implementing climate justice
-
into every aspect of our lives,
-
which is already redefining the world.
-
JM: Over the course of our lifetimes,
-
we've seen the Earth deteriorate
at a rapid speed
-
and groups of people
traumatized and displaced
-
by an ever-increasing number
of natural disasters.
-
In 2030, I'll be 28 years old.
-
AV: I'll be 24 years old.
-
XB: I will be 27.
-
NS: I'll be 26.
-
We want to be able to hand
the planet over to our children
-
and our children's children,
-
just like many of you
have been able to do.
-
AV: So unless everyone --
-
governments, companies, schools,
scientists and citizens --
-
make a united commitment
to reversing the damage that we've caused,
-
it will be too late.
-
XB: We are not only asking you
to take care of our future,
-
we are also asking you
to take care of our past.
-
Indigenous people have been taking care
of the Earth for thousands of years,
-
which is why indigenous
philosophy is crucial
-
when implementing climate action.
-
JM: This climate crisis can feel
like an impossible thing to fix.
-
But it's not.
-
And it can't be,
-
because failure is simply not an option.
-
Failure means losing everything we love
-
and everything that matters.
-
So many of us are already working
to save the future of our world,
-
but it can't just be
on the next generation to fix.
-
This is too much of a burden
to just put on young people's shoulders.
-
It is time for you to go all hands on deck
-
and do everything within your power
to save everything before it's too late.
-
Are you with us?
-
Audience: Yes.
-
(Applause and cheers)
-
(Applause)
-
CA: Thank you. Thank you, thank you.
-
And then, of course,
-
there's a crucial role to be played
by the world's storytellers,
-
and those with influence
on social media platforms.
-
Each of the following
has expressed excitement
-
to be part of this project.
-
They've lent us their names and support.
-
We have some of them here today.
-
Thank you so much for being here.
-
And let's hear from one of them, actually.
-
Jimmy Kimmel: Hi, I'm Jimmy Kimmel,
-
and I was asked to explain
why I'm passionate about climate change.
-
And the reason I'm passionate
about climate change
-
is the same reason people who are drowning
are passionate about lifeguards.
-
I care about this planet,
because I live on it.
-
I don't want to move to Mars,
-
Mars seems terrible.
-
I want my kids and their kids
to be able to live on Earth,
-
with air they can breathe
and water they can drink.
-
That's why I care about climate change.
-
And also, I have a crush
on Leonardo DiCaprio.
-
(Applause)
-
CF: So with all these
people coming together,
-
we have an opportunity to explore
a new space of possibility
-
for solutions based on working together,
-
challenging each other
-
and inspiring one another.
-
So in October next year,
-
we will be inviting
more or less 1,000 people
-
from different constituencies
to meet in Bergen, Norway
-
to align on specific answers
to our five big questions.
-
CA: It will certainly be an epic event.
-
But even more significant
than what happens in Norway
-
is what happens elsewhere in the world.
-
Because on the final day
of that conference,
-
we're planning a major activation
of our global TEDx community.
-
TEDx allows initiatives
to organize local events,
-
and there are now
4,000 such events annually.
-
Here's what they look like.
-
They take place in more than 200
different countries,
-
generate more than a billion views
annually on YouTube.
-
We're expecting to see events
in hundreds of cities.
-
We'll be connecting our TEDx organizers
-
with city mayors committed
to a clean future for their cities.
-
This is the key to this.
-
It's this connection between the powerful,
-
who usually own the conversation,
-
and millions of people around the world.
-
Because of the zeitgeist shift
that's happened in the last year or two,
-
suddenly, ignition can happen here,
-
because there's enough
critical groundswell.
-
If we can give people
visibility of each other,
-
connection to each other,
-
let's dream a little here,
-
and give each other permission to dream.
-
CF: So our goal here
is to build connections
-
with and among all of the other
organizations that are working on climate.
-
For example,
-
the Solutions Project
is a wonderful initiative
-
founded by Mark Ruffalo and Don Cheadle.
-
And let's hear from some of the leaders
that they have supported.
-
CA: Welcome, you're live.
-
(Laughter)
-
(Video) Wahleah Johns:
Hi, my name is Wahleah Johns,
-
I'm with Native Renewables,
-
and we are working to provide
solar power for tribes
-
throughout the world.
-
We have over 15,000
Native American families
-
that don't have access to electricity,
-
and we are working to provide solar
plus battery storage for these families
-
in the United States
-
that don't have access to electricity.
-
And they are located on my reservation,
-
the Navajo Nation.
-
Anna Lappé: Hi, everyone,
-
I am Anna Lappé with Real Food Media,
-
and we work to uplift the stories
of farmers and ranchers
-
as a key solution to the climate crisis.
-
The global food system right now
is a huge contributor to this crisis,
-
but it doesn't have to be.
-
Farmers and ranchers we really see
-
as on the front lines
of being part of solving the crisis.
-
So we try to share the stories
of the millions of farmers
-
from Andhra Pradesh, India
to the highlands of Oaxaca
-
that are using regenerative agriculture
to build healthy, carbon-rich soil,
-
grow good food
-
and foster the kind of resilient
communities that we need.
-
Rahwa Ghirmatzion: Hello
from PUSH Buffalo -- my name is Rahwa --
-
where everyday residents
are visioning, planning and designing
-
an equitable, holistic
and sacred neighborhood,
-
like where I'm phoning in from, School 77,
-
a renovated vacant school building
-
that has the first 100 percent
affordable community solar array
-
in New York state
-
installed by local residents.
-
It's also serving 30 affordable
senior apartments
-
and a mix of intergenerational spaces
-
that serves as a community hub,
-
where we're practicing
new economy strategies
-
towards a livable planet.
-
CF: Thank you.
-
CA: Bravo.
-
(Applause)
-
CA: It's so great.
-
(Applause)
-
CF: So you see, this is about everyone.
-
It's about cities,
-
it's about grassroots organizations,
-
but it's also, of course, about business.
-
And so we're inviting all companies --
-
underlined "all" --
-
to join this initiative,
-
to engage with your employees
on how you can best protect the planet
-
and your future, at the same time.
-
So early next year,
we'll be sharing a toolkit
-
that can guide companies
-
toward moving quickly
towards science-based targets,
-
which gets them then to net zero emissions
-
by 2050 at the latest.
-
CA: So think about this,
-
because as an individual,
-
many individuals
feel powerless on this issue.
-
But if you were to team up
with others in your company,
-
you might be amazed at how much
power you actually have.
-
Almost all emissions come from
a company somewhere on the planet.
-
And the thing is, many CEOs today
-
are actually eager
to help solve the problem.
-
We just heard this morning
from Anand Mahindra,
-
who heads India's biggest business group,
-
that he is personally
committed on this issue
-
and wants to be part
of this journey with us --
-
he's a supporter of Countdown.
-
CEOs will be able to move much faster
-
if there's a group of employees there
to brainstorm with, to support them,
-
to keep that sort of sense
of urgency on the topic.
-
Our website will help you connect
with others in your company
-
and give you guidance
on smart questions to ask,
-
initiatives to suggest,
-
because if companies can be persuaded
to do the right thing,
-
suddenly, this problem
seems to become solvable.
-
CF: So all of these efforts are building
toward one fantastic day:
-
Saturday, October 10, 2020 --
-
that is, "10.10.2020." --
easy to remember --
-
when this fantastic gathering
will take place around the world.
-
And we hope to have, by then,
-
thrilling news of the report
of the very specific solutions
-
that nations, cities, companies, citizens
-
are actually already
collaborating on by then.
-
It's a day when every
citizen of the planet
-
is invited to participate.
-
Your one ticket of entrance
is you are a citizen of the planet.
-
CA: Key to the success of the event
is for this to happen at scale.
-
We want to make it easy
for anyone and everyone
-
to find out about the initiative
and to play an active part in it.
-
But how do you do that?
-
You know, the world's a noisy place.
-
I mean, the TED platform
can help a bit, maybe,
-
but there's a much bigger
content platform out there.
-
It's called YouTube.
-
And we're delighted to be working
with them on this endeavor.
-
We'll be inviting
many of their top creators
-
to be part of Countdown.
-
Collectively, they could reach
an audience in the many millions.
-
In fact, let's meet one of them,
-
Dr. Joe Hanson of "Hot Mess,"
-
a new web series about the impact
of climate change on all of us.
-
(Video) My name's Joe Hanson,
-
and I am a YouTube educator.
-
And you can count me in.
-
I work with tomorrow's scientists,
inventors and leaders,
-
and they deserve to know the truth
of what the science says,
-
so that they can help us invent
a better future for everyone.
-
CA: Imagine that multiplied
by many others --
-
it's very, very exciting, honestly.
-
CF: And of course, when it comes
to spreading the word,
-
every one of you in this room
can actually play your part.
-
So if you have any way of reaching anyone
-
who is concerned
about building a better future --
-
and that should be
every single one of us --
-
please, invite them to join Countdown.
-
CA: There's one more card up our sleeve.
-
We're excited to unveil
a global media campaign.
-
This is a campaign with a difference.
-
Just as TEDx exploded
-
by being allowed to grow
as a grassroots phenomenon,
-
this campaign is designed
to be co-opted everywhere on the planet.
-
If you happen to own a billboard company,
-
or a TV station, or a radio station,
-
or a website,
-
or a social media account,
-
we invite all of you to take the images
you're about to see
-
and to just spread them far and wide.
-
Our website will make this easy.
-
We actually plan to translate them
into many languages,
-
courtesy of our volunteer army
of more than 20,000 translators worldwide.
-
Some of them are with us here.
-
If you're a TED translator,
would you wave, please?
-
CF: There we go.
-
(Applause)
-
CA: Your work carries powerful ideas
to every corner of the earth.
-
We're so proud of you, so grateful to you.
-
So this campaign's designed
to grab attention
-
and to communicate, yes, urgency
-
but also a little smidgen of hope.
-
We think it might be that combination
is what is needed to really drive action.
-
We'd love you to let us know
what you think of these.
-
CF: Right now.
-
[Choose your future.]
-
(Applause)
-
[Turn fear into action
Join the countdown]
-
(Applause)
-
[Action inspires action]
-
[Join the countdown.
The Earth will thank you.]
-
(Applause)
-
[10.10.2020
Climate's Day of Destiny. You're invited.]
-
CF: Remember the date.
-
[Mass destruction. No biggie.
(If we prevent it.)]
-
(Applause)
-
[Giant asteroid heading our way
The common enemy that can unite us.]
-
(Applause)
-
[We love natural disasters
anyway -- said no one ever.]
-
[So why are we causing them?]
-
(Applause)
-
[Relax, there's nothing
you can do about the climate]
-
[Unless you work for a company.
Or live in a city.]
-
[Or own a phone. Or a brain.]
-
[Cause of death: Apathy.
But there's an antidote.]
-
(Applause)
-
[Stop f*cking everything up]
-
[Inaction on climate is obscene.
We can fix this.]
-
CA: Too much?
-
CF: No, not too much, yay, go for it.
-
(Applause)
-
[Have you gotten any action lately?]
-
[Here's your chance.
Help turn the tide on climate.]
-
(Laughter)
-
CA: I didn't like this one,
but my team, you know --
-
CF: Apparently, there are many
who do like it.
-
(Laughter)
-
[We give up. Sincerely, TED.]
-
[Spreading ideas isn't enough.
It's time to act. Join us?]
-
CA: This is, unfortunately,
truer than you know.
-
[Some things matter more
than partisan politics]
-
[Come fight the enemy that can unite us.]
-
(Applause)
-
[Stop burnout]
-
[Your company can help save the earth.]
-
[Give the planet more
than you take from it]
-
[Join the countdown.]
-
[Despair, meet hope]
-
[We can avoid climate catastrophe
if we take urgent action now.]
-
CA: That's it.
-
(Applause and cheers)
-
CF: To bring this full circle,
-
we would like to bring
someone very special in.
-
(Video) Hi, I'm Claire O'Neill.
-
I am the COP president-designate
for next year's Conference of the Parties,
-
the annual UN climate change talks,
which will be in the UK,
-
and we're looking forward
to welcoming you there.
-
But right now, I'm in Spain, in Madrid,
-
at COP25, this annual event
-
where we send negotiators and activists
from all over the world
-
to see what we can do
to reduce CO2 emissions.
-
But the problem is this:
emissions are going up, not down.
-
And what I'm feeling is that 2020
is the year of action,
-
the year where we have to stop talking
-
and we have to start acting.
-
And not just here,
in these conference centers,
-
but everybody.
-
And so the value of the TED process,
-
the value of what we're all doing together
-
is that we're spreading out
the conversations
-
and the solutions from inside this space
-
out to everybody.
-
And I'm really looking forward
to working with the TED group
-
over the next year.
-
2020, for me, will be the most
important year for climate action,
-
and we're all going
to deliver this together.
-
(Applause)
-
CF: OK, friends, so we're nearly there
-
but just a few more very special snippets.
-
First, a word from one
of the many great minds
-
who will be accompanying us
on this journey.
-
A message from the great author,
historian and futurist
-
Yuval Harari.
-
Yuval Harari: Climate change
is about inequality.
-
Inequality between the rich,
who are mainly responsible for it,
-
and the poor, who will suffer the most.
-
Inequality between us, Homo sapiens,
-
who control this planet,
-
and the other animals,
who are our helpless victims.
-
Inequality between the scientists,
-
who painstakingly search for the truth,
-
and the professional deceivers,
-
who spread falsehoods
at the click of a button.
-
Climate change is about making a choice.
-
What kind of planet do we want to inhabit,
-
and what kind of humans do we want to be?
-
A choice between greed and compassion,
-
between carelessness and responsibility,
-
between closing our eyes to the truth
-
and opening our hearts to the world.
-
Climate change is a crisis,
-
but for humans, a crisis is always
also an opportunity.
-
If we make the right choices
in the coming years,
-
we cannot only save the ecosystem,
-
but we can also create a more just world
-
and make ourselves better people.
-
(Applause)
-
CF: So isn't that a powerful framing
of what we have ahead of us,
-
and honestly, I think it is tragic
-
that the power of transformation
that we have ahead of us
-
is so severely diminished by those
who would want to politicize the issue
-
and separate it into partisan politics.
-
It cannot be a partisan issue,
-
it cannot be a politicized issue.
-
Happily, there are some
who are working against that.
-
Today, we have one of those people,
-
a fantastically courageous
climate scientist,
-
who is a committed Christian,
-
and who has been working on this issue
-
with conservatives and with the religious
and spiritual communities for years,
-
with incredible courage.
-
Katharine Hayhoe.
-
(Applause)
-
Katherine Hayhoe: When someone
says climate change, we often think,
-
"Oh, that's just an environmental issue.
-
People who are tree huggers
or scientists care about it,
-
or maybe people who are on the left
hand-side of the political spectrum."
-
But the reality is,
whether we know it or not,
-
we already care about climate change,
no matter who we are.
-
Why?
-
Because climate change affects
everything we already care about today.
-
It affects our health,
-
it affects the food we eat,
-
the water we drink,
the air that we breathe.
-
Climate change affects the economy
and national security.
-
I care about a changing climate
because it is, as the military calls it,
-
a threat multiplier.
-
It takes issues like poverty and hunger,
-
disease, lack of access to clean water,
-
even political instability,
-
and exacerbates or amplifies them.
-
That's why, to care
about a changing climate,
-
we don't have to be
a certain type of person.
-
A thermometer isn't blue or red,
-
liberal or conservative --
-
it gives us the same number
no matter how we vote.
-
And we are all affected
by the impacts of a changing climate.
-
So to care about a changing climate,
-
all we have to be is one thing:
-
a human, living on planet Earth.
-
And we're all that.
-
(Applause)
-
CF: And finally,
-
the man who brought this issue
so powerfully to everyone's attention
-
years ago
-
and has continued tirelessly
to work on that issue ever since.
-
The one and very only, Al Gore.
-
(Applause)
-
(Video) Al Gore: Thank you.
-
(Applause)
-
Thank you so much, Christiana,
-
and thank you for
your outstanding leadership,
-
and thank you, Chris Anderson
and the entire TED community,
-
YouTube and all of the others
who are joining
-
in this fantastic initiative.
-
I have just three messages.
-
Number one, this crisis
is incredibly urgent.
-
Just yesterday, the scientists
gave us the report
-
that emissions are still going up.
-
Every single day,
-
we're putting 150 million tons
of man-made global warming pollution
-
into the thin shell of atmosphere
surrounding our planet.
-
The accumulated amount now
traps as much extra energy every day
-
as would be released by 500,000
first-generation atomic bombs
-
exploding every single day.
-
And the consequences
are increasingly clear --
-
all that mother nature is telling us,
-
the fires, and the sea-level rise,
-
and the floods, and the mud slides,
-
and the loss of living species.
-
But the second message that I have
is the hope is very real.
-
We actually do have
the solutions available to us.
-
It is unfortunately true at this moment,
-
that the crisis is getting worse faster
than we are mobilizing these solutions.
-
But renewable energy and electric vehicles
-
and batteries
and regenerative agriculture,
-
circular manufacturing,
-
and all of these other solutions
are gaining momentum.
-
The late economist Rudi Dornbusch,
-
in articulating what's known
as Dornbusch's law, said,
-
"Things take longer to happen
than you think they will.
-
But then, they happen much faster
than you thought they could."
-
We can pick up the pace.
-
We are gaining momentum
-
and soon, we will be gaining
on the crisis.
-
But it is essential that everyone join --
-
of every political persuasion,
-
every ideological persuasion,
-
every nationality,
-
every division has to be obliterated,
so that we, humanity,
-
can join together.
-
And in closing, I would just say
that for anyone who doubts
-
that we as human beings
-
have the ability to rise to this occasion,
-
when everything is on the line,
-
just remember that political will
is itself a renewable resource.
-
(Laughter)
-
(Applause)
-
CA: Thank you so much.
-
Thank you so much, Al,
for your leadership on this issue
-
for so many years.
-
None of this would be possible
-
without an extraordinary
and fast-growing list of partners.
-
I'd like to acknowledge them.
-
(Applause)
-
If you're watching this,
-
you believe your organization
should be part of this,
-
you can help in some way,
-
join us, email me, chris@ted.com.
-
This is going to take everyone.
-
OK, before the Q and A,
-
I just want to ask you a question
personally, Christiana.
-
Like, what do you really think?
-
(Laughter)
-
No, you've been in so many of these.
-
Does this initiative have a chance?
-
CF: Well, first of all,
-
we are at the point
where everything plays.
-
Everything plays.
-
And I'm really excited about this,
-
because it has been very painful to me
to see how over the past 12 to 18 months
-
because of the tragically
insufficient response
-
that we have had to climate change,
-
how that zeitgeist has been changing
from where we were in Paris,
-
which was pretty positive and optimistic,
-
to, now, despair, helplessness, anger.
-
That's what is out there,
roaming on the streets.
-
And I don't blame them,
and I have the same feelings.
-
But the point is,
-
we have to be able to transform that
into making the difference.
-
And I think this is what this initiative
is actually potentially ready to do,
-
which is to give every single person
who feels helpless --
-
give them a tool to do something.
-
Some will contribute small efforts,
-
some will contribute large efforts --
-
depends on what your influence area is.
-
And to those who feel angry
and despairing,
-
well, give them also an opportunity
to channel that energy --
-
which is very powerful energy --
-
into solutions.
-
And finally, what is very
exciting about this
-
is the scale, Chris, right?
-
I mean, just look at those partners
that are going to be there.
-
We have attempted many, many things
to bring to scale.
-
But this, I think, is the most promising
initiative that I have seen,
-
to be able to bring people to scale,
-
to bring efforts and solutions to scale.
-
And speed.
-
Because if there's one thing
that we cannot, cannot fail on,
-
is addressing climate change,
-
but not only that,
-
to do so in a timely way.
-
CA: Thank you, that is eloquent.
-
And thank you.
-
That's it.
-
(Applause)
-
OK, we have many members
of the world's leading media here.
-
We're going to have a Q and A,
-
they should probably have
priority on questions.
-
If it all goes deathly silent,
someone else can ask a question.
-
If you're a member of the media here,
-
please feel free to put your hand up --
we'll throw a mic to you,
-
and we'll do the best we can.
-
Rachel Crane: Hi, Rachel Crane from CNN.
-
My question for you
is about more specific action
-
that will come out of Countdown.
-
We heard a lot today
-
about how this is mobilizing
the globe on this issue,
-
breaking people out of their silos,
companies out of their silos,
-
but I'm curious to know,
paint a picture for us,
-
of what the action
that will come out of this initiative
-
could potentially look like.
-
I'm sure it's all in early phases,
-
we won't hold you specifically to this.
-
CA: There's an intense process
going on between now and October,
-
where we're trying to engage
-
all of the world's best
thinking on climate
-
around those five big areas.
-
What we're hoping to have there
is multiple proposals in there
-
that collectively take a huge bite
out of those issues.
-
Some of them, there may be
one big one that dominates.
-
You know, so transport, for example.
-
Could we accelerate the end
-
of the internal
combustion engine, somehow?
-
What would that take?
-
That would be a classic problem
made for this approach,
-
because what governments decide right now
-
depends on what they see
happening elsewhere.
-
Would the decisions
of auto executives be shifted
-
if they saw millions of people
on social media saying,
-
"I will never buy a combustion engine"?
-
Would they be shifted by the market signal
of a few hundred mayors, saying,
-
"We are creating
a carbon-zero zone in our city,
-
and we're going to expand it,
-
and we're doing that soon"?
-
Would they be shifted by a visionary
auto CEO taking the risk
-
and coming forward and saying,
-
"You know when we said
we were going to continue this till 2050?
-
No. We can see the writing on the wall,
-
we want to be on
the right side of history,
-
we're doing this in 2030."
-
We think there might be a pathway to that.
-
So on some of these issues,
-
it's going to depend on a massive amount
of discussion, bringing people together,
-
showing -- this is what
you're so masterful at --
-
is showing that other people
don't have the attitudes
-
that you think they have.
-
They're actually shifting,
you better shift.
-
And so it's mutually raising
everyone's ambition level.
-
And that is a cycle that happens,
-
and we've already seen it happening.
-
And so, on each of these issues,
that's what we're looking for.
-
The biggest, boldest things.
-
Dream bigger than we normally do,
-
because there are more people at the table
than there normally are,
-
i.e. millions of citizens engaged in this.
-
That's the process,
and while that is happening,
-
there'll be multiple other engagements
in companies and cities around the world.
-
We hope that it all comes together
in a thrilling manner in October
-
and we have something to celebrate.
-
Dominique Drakeford:
My name is Dominique Drakeford
-
with MelaninASS, or social media
as a form of media.
-
In understanding and hearing
the correlation
-
between the accumulation
of carbon in the atmosphere
-
and the cumulative exploitation
-
and extractivism economy,
-
which creates sacrifice zones
for black and indigenous communities,
-
how do we plan to,
-
or how do you guys plan to mitigate
those systems of oppression
-
as part of your strategies
within those five various components
-
so that we can really
begin to reduce emissions?
-
CF: If the transformation
in our economy and our society
-
does not include inequality closing
and social justice issues,
-
then we're doing nothing.
-
Because all of those things
will come back to bite us.
-
So we have to put our arms
around the entire package.
-
That is not easy,
but it is entirely possible.
-
And that's one of the things
that I am so excited about climate change,
-
because it is at the front
of this transformation,
-
but it will bring many of the other issues
-
that have been relegated to nonattention.
-
It will bring those issues
to the fore as well.
-
So the transformation
has to be an integrative transformation.
-
Ellen Maloney: Hi, Chris, Hi, Christina,
-
my question is, are individual efforts,
-
like ditching plastic straws
or going vegan,
-
making a difference
-
or are they just tokenistic
drops in the ocean?
-
CF: Good question.
-
CA: It's a good question.
-
CF: They are totally important.
-
Absolutely important.
-
Because it's not just
about the one straw that I use.
-
It's about me not using that straw,
-
going to a restaurant
and telling the waitress,
-
"Excuse me, I don't want
a plastic straw, because --"
-
and giving her a little lesson,
-
then she goes up to the manager,
the manager comes to the table and says,
-
"Excuse me, could you explain that to me?"
-
Then you go through the lesson.
-
And sooner than you think,
-
you have that restaurant,
plus the other ones.
-
Actually, information is contagious.
-
And wanting to do the right thing
is also contagious.
-
So don't look at it as just
simply, you know, "What is a straw?
-
Am I using this straw
or am I not using plastic bags,
-
I have my plant-based bags
to go shopping," etc, etc.
-
All of that counts.
-
It counts for you, first of all,
-
because it is a personal reminder
of who you are and what you stand for,
-
but it is also a very important tool
-
to educate everyone around you.
-
CA: Right, and I think
the core of our initiative is,
-
all that stuff matters -- what you eat,
-
how you transport yourself,
it matters a lot.
-
But there is another piece of power
that individuals have
-
that they don't think about
as much, perhaps,
-
and that we think that they should,
we invite them to,
-
which is what they can do as an employee,
-
and what they can do
as a member of a city.
-
There's a coming together here,
-
where by getting organized,
by connecting with others,
-
we think there is a direct route
to changing decisions
-
that will have an even bigger
impact on the problem.
-
So it's yes, all of that,
but more as well.
-
(Laughter)
-
CF: There is an online [question],
from a classroom of children.
-
CA: From a classroom of children?
-
CF: "What can students do?"
-
Yay, I love that question,
totally love that question.
-
So first of all,
-
Fridays, 11 o'clock, go strike.
-
I mean, honestly, right?
-
(Applause)
-
Let's go, let's go.
-
And that pressure has to be maintained.
-
I'm totally delighted
that there's some people here
-
who have been here doing it for 52 weeks.
-
The problem with this is, folks,
-
this is not a sprint, it's a marathon.
-
So you better get ready
for many more 52 weeks, right?
-
And get more people involved,
-
because this is not easy.
-
If it were easy, we would have done it.
-
This is going to be a long-term effort.
-
But fantastic to be out there
in the streets,
-
you are getting so much
more attention from the media,
-
from us stupid adults
who have not done our job --
-
it is fantastic.
-
So, you know, get your voices out there.
-
Also, in school,
-
you can definitely go and improve --
-
the question that you just asked to TED,
-
that's the question every student
should be asking their school:
-
"Where's my energy coming from?"
-
Let's get with it, right?
-
Students in colleges --
-
how is it possible that we still have
colleges and universities
-
that are not 100 percent clean energy
-
and that haven't shifted
their capital and their endowment
-
over to low carbon?
-
I mean, it's just incredible.
-
(Applause)
-
And finally, the most important thing
that young people can do
-
is ask your parents,
-
"What the hell are you doing
about my future?"
-
Because here is an amazing thing.
-
I have spoken in --
I was thinking how many --
-
I've spoken to at least three if not four
CEOs from the oil and gas industry.
-
I've spoken to three or four
major investors,
-
heads of their investment firms,
-
who come up to me, usually in private,
-
and say, "Christiana, the reason
why I'm changing what I do in my business
-
is because my daughter, or my son,
-
asks me at night, 'What the hell
are you doing about my future?' "
-
That is a very powerful question,
-
and only young people
can ask that question.
-
Use that tool --
-
ask your parents what are they
doing about your future.
-
Sorry about the h-word.
-
(Applause)
-
Jo Confino: Hi,
I'm Jo Confino, the HuffPost.
-
Christiana, a question for you,
-
which is one of the things
that didn't come out so much
-
and this is about the spiritual traditions
-
and the role they play,
-
because what we're seeing
-
is that, actually,
old wisdom is coming out
-
in terms of interdependence
-
and nothing is separate
from anything else.
-
What is the spiritual tradition
we can bring to this
-
that will make, also, a difference?
-
CF: What I think is very powerful
about understanding,
-
whether you happen to be
a spiritual person
-
that pursues meditation and mindfulness
-
or whether you're a religious
person or not,
-
what I think is very powerful
-
about the spiritual understanding
of the human presence on this earth,
-
is to understand that we are not separate.
-
It's not like,
"Over there is planet Earth,
-
and then humans are over here."
-
And we are totally interconnected
with all other species,
-
and with all other living beings,
-
and doing the responsible thing by them
-
does the responsible thing by us.
-
And vice versa.
-
And so that interconnectedness
-
is one that comes
from the spiritual traditions,
-
but you don't have to be religious
or spiritual to understand that.
-
You know, the fact is,
-
every single drop of water
that we drink comes from nature.
-
Every single morsel of food that we eat
-
comes from nature.
-
And we've got to heal that connection.
-
CA: We would welcome engagement.
-
(Applause)
-
Kaley Roshitsh: Hi, Kaley Roshitsh
from Women's Wear Daily.
-
Obviously, the fashion industry
is responsible for a lot
-
of the carbon output,
-
so I wondered what is your perspective
on conscious consumption?
-
CA: The key goal here is to align,
at the same time,
-
to change opinion on what companies do,
-
what employees do, what consumers do.
-
It's the shifts all happening
at the same time that can make change.
-
Right now, someone else
is always the problem.
-
"Our investors wouldn't allow
us to do that."
-
"There is no market for this better,
more sustainable product."
-
And so, all the pieces
need to happen at the same time.
-
That's our hope.
-
And so the lead on this is not us,
-
it's employees and CEOs
and leadership teams
-
working in that industry.
-
Get together, make something happen.
-
And ride the tide of the zeitgeist shift
that is happening --
-
it's going to work out
from the business point of view as well.
-
CF: Can I jump on that as well?
-
Because for years, for centuries,
-
we have been on
an extract-and-consume mentality.
-
They way we go about our life
-
and the way that businesses are created
-
is extract, use, discard,
extract, use, discard.
-
That's a simplification, but honestly,
it's about as simple as that.
-
And to understand that that linear
extraction to discard
-
can no longer be the case,
that it needs to be circular now,
-
we have to go into a circular economy
-
that uses every single resource
that we extract --
-
because we will continue to extract --
-
that uses it not once,
but two, three, four, five, 10 times,
-
around and around in circles.
-
That's a circular economy.
-
And we have to get to that point,
-
because frankly, we're running out
of resources to continue to extract.
-
Jodi Xu Klein: Hi, my name
is Jodi Xu Klein,
-
I'm with the South China Morning Post,
a Hong Kong publication here in the US.
-
So, we've been reporting on trade war
for more than a year,
-
and we're actually living in a world
-
where countries are decoupling
from each other.
-
How do you overcome that trend
and bring everyone together?
-
CA: We don't know,
-
these are really challenging issues.
-
What we do know is that we have to bring
everyone to the table
-
and have the discussion.
-
There are so many people in China,
-
including, on many occasions,
-
the Chinese government has made bold steps
-
to tackle this issue.
-
There's a lot that the West can learn
from what's happening in China.
-
CF: I would say,
-
in a world in which we're seeing
a wave of nationalism and populism,
-
the way we go at this
is actually to expand
-
the breadth of engagement,
-
so not to let the responsibility
of engaging on climate
-
be in national government hands only.
-
Yes, they have an important role,
-
but we can bring it down as well
-
to a different level of engagement
which is every single human being.
-
And once we understand
that we're all human beings
-
and that we all have a common future,
-
there's no such thing
as all of us being in a boat
-
and only the one closest to the hole
in the boat are going to sink.
-
No.
-
Either we all sink
or we all float together.
-
Justine Calma: My name is Justine Calma,
I'm with The Verge,
-
thanks so much for this.
-
My question is about TED and YouTube's
own carbon footprint.
-
Streaming video eats up
a huge amount of energy,
-
and I'm curious what TED and YouTube
-
might be doing to reduce
their own greenhouse gas emissions
-
connected to that.
-
CA: I can't speak for YouTube, obviously.
-
I will say that, to quote
a line from George Monbiot,
-
all of us are hypocrites in this movement.
-
If you've ever bought something
-
or you're wearing clothes
or you're eating food,
-
you're a hypocrite,
you're creating emissions.
-
It's part of life.
-
And I think perfection is --
-
There's a risk that perfection,
-
that an overpursuit and focus on that
-
and the judging that comes with it
can slow everyone down.
-
We want this to be a coalition
of the willing who accept
-
that they're not perfect
but are willing to act.
-
Now, this whole process
has sparked a huge conversation in TED
-
about how we act more responsibly,
-
and that will continue.
-
We're certainly not going to stop
streaming videos.
-
At some point you have to do math,
-
it's like that -- give to the planet
more than you take from it,
-
I think is the golden rule
that I personally really believe in.
-
And so if an idea, powered
by a little bit of electricity,
-
can ignite in someone's brain,
-
I would bet on the idea
over saving the electricity.
-
But there's no perfection in this.
-
And we definitely have a lot
that we need to improve on.
-
Let's go here and then back.
-
Lane Florsheim: Hi, I'm Lane Florsheim
form the Wall Street Journal Magazine
-
and Chris, I really liked
what you were saying
-
about the fashion industry
and what they can do to change
-
and how it requires employees
and CEOs to meet together
-
because who understands an industry
better than the people in it
-
and their processes and infrastructure,
-
but I'm wondering, what about companies
with huge footprints,
-
and two that come to mind first
are Amazon and Zara,
-
where, by all accounts,
-
the workers, the employees there
don't have very much power
-
and the CEOs don't have
very much incentive to change right now.
-
What would you say
about those kinds of companies?
-
CA: So this is going to be such
an important conversation going forward,
-
because we're in the ironic position
-
where the people who can do
the most to solve this problem
-
are the people who are currently
the worst offenders.
-
So what do we do?
-
Do we make them part
of the conversation or not?
-
I say we make them
part of the conversation,
-
so long as we see serious engagement.
-
So take Amazon.
-
Jeff Bezos has actually listened
to what many of his employees have said --
-
they've been very vigorous,
the employee base there,
-
about carbon footprint --
-
has listened, has engaged
with you and with others.
-
And they have announced,
I think it's correct to say announced --
-
CF: Yes, they have.
-
CA: ... an acceleration
of their own commitment
-
to go to, basically, a net zero track
by 2040, if I have it right.
-
It's the companies with the thousands,
the tens of thousands of trucks,
-
and the packaging and all the rest of it.
-
That is how this problem will get solved.
-
So I say we invite these CEOs
to be part of this,
-
and urge them to take it seriously
-
and to go fast and maybe even faster
than they're completely comfortable doing.
-
But that's, I think, what we have to do.
-
Not to defame, denounce,
-
before we've at least had
a serious conversation about,
-
"It's time,
-
your employees want to do this,
-
your customers want to do this,
-
your investors increasingly
want to do this, let's do this."
-
That's our hope.
-
CF: And the wonderful thing
about companies the size of Amazon,
-
or Walmart when they did it,
-
is that they have a huge
trickle-up effect.
-
Because when Jeff Bezos came out and said,
-
"I'm going to make Amazon
climate-neutral by 2040 --"
-
Paris Agreement says 2050,
-
of course he wants to do
everything better than that,
-
so 2040 is for Amazon.
-
Well good, we're going to keep them to it.
-
Now, the amazing thing about that
-
is that in order for Amazon
to be climate-neutral by 2040,
-
they have to work
with all their supply chain going up.
-
They have to work
with all of those companies
-
that deliver services and goods to them
-
for them to also be climate neutral ASAP.
-
Because otherwise, they can't meet
their own commitment.
-
So large companies are actually
very, very key and instrumental to this,
-
because it's not just
about their footprint,
-
it's about the embedded footprint
that they inherit in their supply chain.
-
And the transformation of that
is really huge.
-
CA: Last question.
-
Jackie Padilla: My name is Jackie
with NowThis News,
-
and every day, I work
with young climate activists
-
like the ones we've heard today,
-
but when we do stories on them,
-
you know, including Greta Thunberg,
-
I see fierce criticism that they face
-
and largely, it's because
of a generational gap.
-
I don't know if you're familiar
with the phrase "OK Boomer,"
-
but it seems like there's a lot
of guilt or accountability
-
that some are looking for,
-
and on the other end,
we're looking at a lack of education
-
or just ignorance on the issue.
-
So what is your advice to young people
to respond to that criticism,
-
to foster constructive conversations?
-
CF: We should probably ask them.
-
XB: Hi, thank you for your question.
-
CA: Come here.
-
(Applause)
-
XB: It is true that we
increasingly face criticism,
-
and it's not only when we speak to people,
with climate deniers,
-
or things like that,
-
but also on social media.
-
It is as much a tool to spread information
-
and organize our strikes
-
and get the information out there,
-
but it's also a tool for people
who want to undermine us,
-
to personally attack us.
-
And the way in which we stay resilient
-
is when we build community
with each other,
-
when we organize,
-
we mimic the world we want to see.
-
There is no hierarchy in our organizing,
-
we are all working towards
the same goal constructively,
-
choosing our passions towards
making the strike the best it can be.
-
We got 300,000 people
striking in New York,
-
we put together a whole concert,
-
people called it
"Climchella," it was great.
-
(Laughter)
-
But the point is
that it's not going to stop us.
-
The criticism is not going to stop us.
-
And even though we know that we are kids,
-
and we are not here to tell you
all the solutions
-
that already are out there.
-
We are going to do it,
-
because every kid who cares
about the climate crisis
-
is going to grow up to study
through environmental lens
-
and to change the world through that.
-
So we are here to tell you,
-
personally, climate activists that I know
don't use "OK Boomer,"
-
because we strive
for intergenerational cooperation.
-
And I think that blaming
and dividing each other
-
is not going to get us anywhere,
-
which is why we don't use it,
-
and I don't think it should be used,
-
and I actually want to thank everybody
who is doing something,
-
because action inspires action.
-
And you inspire us,
-
and we're glad
that we inspire you as well.
-
(Cheers and applause)
-
(Applause)
-
CA: Wow.
-
(Applause)
-
CF: There you have it.
-
(Applause and cheers)
-
(Applause)
-
CA: There is no better note
on which to end this.
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause)
Eriko Tsukamoto
Typo spotted:
8:29.16
CF: Well, we could starting by breaking
8:29.16
CF: Well, we could start by breaking
Eriko Tsukamoto
Typo correction - Thanks in advance.
55:10.37
They way we go about our life
↓
55:10.37
The way we go about our life