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This decade calls for Earthshots to repair our planet

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    Hello, everyone.
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    Growing up in my family
    gives you a certain sense of history.
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    I'm simply the latest in a line
    that can be traced back generations.
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    This oak tree is close to Windsor Castle,
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    which has been home to my family
    for over 900 years.
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    Thirty-nine monarchs have lived here
    and enjoyed these beautiful surroundings.
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    I've walked here many times myself,
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    and it always amazes me
    that some of the trees planted here,
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    living organisms, dependent
    on soil, rain and sunlight,
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    were here as they laid
    the first stones of Windsor Castle.
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    That makes some of the oaks here
    almost 1,000 years old.
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    These trees germinated during the reign
    of William the Conqueror in 1066,
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    from a simple acorn like this.
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    By the time that Henry VIII lived here,
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    they'd grown into mature,
    impressive giants.
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    And amazingly,
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    some of those very same trees
    still survive here today.
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    They're a bit gnarled and hollowed-out,
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    but they're still very much alive.
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    While these oaks have been growing,
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    around 35 billion people
    have lived their lives on our planet.
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    That's 35 billion lifetimes' worth
    of hope, love, fear and dreams.
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    In that time, humankind
    has invented air travel,
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    vaccines and computers.
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    We've explored every part of the globe,
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    sequenced the human genome
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    and even escaped Earth's atmosphere.
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    Our speed of innovation
    has been incredible,
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    but so, too, has
    the acceleration of our impact.
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    Over my grandmother's lifetime,
    the last 90 years or so,
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    our impacts accelerated so fast
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    that our climate, oceans, air,
    nature and all that depends on them
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    are in peril.
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    This oak has stood here for centuries,
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    but never has it faced a decade like this.
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    We start this new decade
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    knowing that it is the most
    consequential period in history.
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    The science is irrefutable.
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    If we do not act in this decade,
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    the damage that we have done
    will be irreversible.
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    And the effects felt
    not just by future generations
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    but by all of us alive today.
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    And what's more, this damage
    will not be felt equally by everyone.
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    It is the most vulnerable,
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    those with the fewest resources
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    and those who've done the least
    to cause climate change
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    who will be impacted the most.
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    These stark facts are terrifying.
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    How can we hope to fix
    such massive intractable problems?
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    It may seem overwhelming,
    but it is possible.
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    Humans have an extraordinary capacity
    to set goals and strive to achieve them.
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    I've long been inspired
    by President John F. Kennedy's
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    1961 mission to put a man
    on the moon within a decade.
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    He named it the Moonshot.
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    It seemed crazy.
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    We'd only just launched
    the first satellite.
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    Putting a man on the moon
    that quickly seemed impossible.
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    But this simple challenge
    encompassed so much.
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    He called it a goal
    to organize and measure
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    the best of our energies and skills.
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    In taking that giant leap for mankind,
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    the team behind the Moonshot
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    united millions of people
    around the world --
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    that this crazy ambition
    wasn't so crazy after all.
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    And along the way, it helped the invention
    of breathing equipment,
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    CAT scanners and solar panels.
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    But now, rather than a Moonshot
    for this decade,
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    we need Earthshots.
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    We must harness that same
    spirit of human ingenuity and purpose
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    and turn it with laser sharp
    focus and urgency
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    on the most pressing challenge
    we have ever faced,
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    repairing our planet.
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    The shared goals
    for our generation are clear.
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    Together, we must protect
    and restore nature,
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    clean our air, revive our oceans,
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    build a waste-free world
    and fix our climate.
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    And we must strive
    to do all of this in a decade.
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    If we achieve these goals,
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    by 2030 our lives won't be worse,
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    and we won't have to
    sacrifice everything we enjoy.
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    Instead, the way we live
    will be healthier,
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    cleaner, smarter and better for all of us.
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    The global response
    to the COVID-19 pandemic
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    and the funds flowing
    into the economic recovery
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    demonstrate how much can be achieved
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    when those in positions
    of power come together
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    and decide to act.
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    We built hospitals overnight,
    repurposed factories,
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    poured billions into the search
    for a vaccine and better treatments.
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    And we've been inspired by heroes emerging
    in every community across the world.
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    Young people no longer believe
    that change is too difficult.
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    They witnessed the world turn on its head.
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    They believe that the climate crisis
    and the threat to our biodiversity
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    deserves our full attention and ambition.
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    And they're right.
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    So now is the time for each
    one of us to show leadership.
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    Whether you're a farmer in the US,
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    a tech owner in China,
    a politician in Kenya,
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    a banker in Britain,
    a fisherman in the Maldives,
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    a community leader in Brazil
    or a student in India,
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    every single one of us has a role to play
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    in harnessing whatever
    opportunity we have.
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    I'm committed to using
    the unique position that I have
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    to help set those Earthshot goals
    and reward people
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    across every sector of society
    and in every part of the world
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    who do their bit to help achieve them.
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    Some people are motivated
    to act by a crisis,
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    but for many,
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    the incentive to act only comes
    when they believe that change is possible,
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    that it isn't a lost cause.
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    If people really believe
    that these challenges,
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    these Earthshots, are possible,
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    just imagine all the potential
    we will unleash.
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    I'm determined to both start
    and end this decade as an optimist.
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    Whilst our generation
    represents just a blip
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    in the lifetime of these magnificent oaks,
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    we have the power and potential
    to ensure that they and all life on earth
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    thrive for another
    thousand years and more.
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    But only if we now unleash
    the greatest talents of our generation
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    to repair our planet.
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    We have no choice but to succeed.
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    Thank you.
Title:
This decade calls for Earthshots to repair our planet
Speaker:
Prince William
Description:

"We start this new decade knowing that it is the most consequential period in history," says Prince William, The Duke of Cambridge. Inspired by President John F. Kennedy's "Moonshot," he calls on us all to rise to our greatest challenge ever: the "Earthshot." A set of ambitious objectives for the planet, the Earthshot goals seek to protect and restore nature, clean the air, revive oceans, build a waste-free world and fix the climate -- all in the next decade. To do it, we'll need people in all corners of the globe working together with urgency, creativity and the belief that it is possible to repair the Earth.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
07:13

English subtitles

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