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Inside the secret shipping industry

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    A couple of years ago,
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    Harvard Business School chose
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    the best business model of that year.
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    It chose Somali piracy.
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    Pretty much around the same time,
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    I discovered that there were 544 seafarers
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    being held hostage on ships,
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    often anchored just off the Somali coast
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    in plain sight.
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    And I learned these two facts, and I thought,
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    what's going on in shipping?
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    And I thought, would that happen
    in any other industry?
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    Would we see 544 airline pilots
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    held captive in their jumbo jets
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    on a runway for months, or a year?
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    Would we see 544 Greyhound bus drivers?
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    It wouldn't happen.
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    So I started to get intrigued.
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    And I discovered another fact,
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    which to me was more astonishing
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    almost for the fact that I hadn't known it before
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    at the age of 42, 43.
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    That is how fundamentally
    we still depend on shipping.
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    Because perhaps the general public
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    thinks of shipping as an old-fashioned industry,
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    something brought by sailboat
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    with Moby Dicks and Jack Sparrows.
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    But shipping isn't that.
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    Shipping is as crucial to us as it has ever been.
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    Shipping brings us 90 percent of world trade.
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    Shipping has quadrupled in size since 1970.
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    We are more dependent on it now than ever.
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    And yet, for such an enormous industry --
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    there are a 100,000 working vessels on the sea —
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    it's become pretty much invisible.
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    Now that sounds absurd in Singapore to say that,
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    because here shipping is so present
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    that you stuck a ship on top of a hotel.
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    (Laughter)
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    But elsewhere in the world,
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    if you ask the general public what they know
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    about shipping and how much
    trade is carried by sea,
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    you will get essentially a blank face.
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    You will ask someone on the street
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    if they've heard of Microsoft.
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    I should think they'll say yes,
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    because they'll know that they make software
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    that goes on computers,
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    and occasionally works.
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    But if you ask them if they've heard of Maersk,
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    I doubt you'd get the same response,
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    even though Maersk,
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    which is just one shipping company amongst many,
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    has revenues pretty much on a par with Microsoft.
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    [$60.2 billion]
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    Now why is this?
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    A few years ago,
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    the first sea lord of the British admiralty --
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    he is called the first sea lord,
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    although the chief of the army is not called a land lord —
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    he said that we, and he meant
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    in the industrialized nations in the West,
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    that we suffer from sea blindness.
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    We are blind to the sea
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    as a place of industry or of work.
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    It's just something we fly over,
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    a patch of blue on an airline map.
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    Nothing to see, move along.
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    So I wanted to open my own eyes
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    to my own sea blindness,
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    so I ran away to sea.
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    A couple of years ago, I took a passage
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    on the Maersk Kendal,
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    a mid-sized container ship
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    carrying nearly 7,000 boxes,
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    and I departed from Felixstowe,
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    on the south coast of England,
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    and I ended up right here in Singapore
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    five weeks later,
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    considerably less jet-lagged than I am right now.
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    And it was a revelation.
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    We traveled through five seas,
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    two oceans, nine ports,
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    and I learned a lot about shipping.
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    And one of the first things that surprised me
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    when I got on board Kendal
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    was, where are all the people?
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    I have friends in the Navy who tell me
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    they sail with 1,000 sailors at a time,
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    but on Kendal there were only 21 crew.
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    Now that's because shipping is very efficient.
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    Containerization has made it very efficient.
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    Ships have automation now.
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    They can operate with small crews.
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    But it also means that, in the words
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    of a port chaplain I once met,
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    the average seafarer you're going to find
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    on a container ship is either tired or exhausted,
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    because the pace of modern shipping
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    is quite punishing for what the shipping calls
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    its human element,
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    a strange phrase which they don't seem to realize
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    sounds a little bit inhuman.
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    So most seafarers now working on container ships
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    often have less than two hours in port at a time.
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    They don't have time to relax.
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    They're at sea for months at a time,
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    and even when they're on board,
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    they don't have access to what
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    a five-year-old would take for granted, the Internet.
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    And another thing that surprised me
    when I got on board Kendal
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    was who I was sitting next to --
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    Not the queen; I can't imagine why
    they put me underneath her portrait --
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    But around that dining table in the officer's saloon,
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    I was sitting next to a Burmese guy,
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    I was opposite a Romanian, a Moldavian, an Indian.
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    On the next table was a Chinese guy,
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    and in the crew room, it was entirely Filipinos.
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    So that was a normal working ship.
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    Now how is that possible?
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    Because the biggest dramatic change
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    in shipping over the last 60 years,
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    when most of the general public stopped noticing it,
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    was something called an open registry,
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    or a flag of convenience.
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    Ships can now fly the flag of any nation
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    that provides a flag registry.
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    You can get a flag from the landlocked nation
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    of Bolivia, or Mongolia,
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    or North Korea, though that's not very popular.
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    (Laughter)
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    So we have these very multinational,
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    global, mobile crews on ships.
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    And that was a surprise to me.
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    And when we got to pirate waters,
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    down the Bab-el-Mandeb strait
    and into the Indian Ocean,
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    the ship changed.
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    And that was also shocking, because suddenly,
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    I realized, as the captain said to me,
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    that I had been crazy to choose to go
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    through pirate waters on a container ship.
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    We were no longer allowed on deck.
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    There were double pirate watches.
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    And at that time, there were those
    544 seafarers being held hostage,
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    and some of them were held hostage for years
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    because of the nature of shipping
    and the flag of convenience.
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    Not all of them, but some of them were,
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    because for the minority
    of unscrupulous ship owners,
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    it can be easy to hide behind
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    the anonymity offered by some flags of convenience.
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    What else does our sea blindness mask?
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    Well, if you go out to sea on a ship
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    or on a cruise ship, and look up to the funnel,
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    you'll see very black smoke.
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    And that's because shipping
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    has very tight margins,
    and they want cheap fuel,
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    so they use something called bunker fuel,
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    which was described to me
    by someone in the tanker industry
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    as the dregs of the refinery,
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    or just one step up from asphalt.
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    And shipping is the greenest method of transport.
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    In terms of carbon emissions per ton per mile,
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    it emits about a thousandth of aviation
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    and about a tenth of trucking.
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    But it's not benign, because there's so much of it.
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    So shipping emissions are
    about three to four percent,
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    almost the same as aviation's.
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    And if you put shipping emissions
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    on a list of the countries' carbon emissions,
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    it would come in about sixth,
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    somewhere near Germany.
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    It was calculated in 2009 that the 15 largest ships
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    pollute in terms of particles and soot
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    and noxious gases
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    as much as all the cars in the world.
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    And the good news is that
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    people are now talking about sustainable shipping.
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    There are interesting initiatives going on.
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    But why has it taken so long?
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    When are we going to start talking and thinking
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    about shipping miles as well as air miles?
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    I also traveled to Cape Cod to look
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    at the plight of the North Atlantic right whale,
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    because this to me was one
    of the most surprising things
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    about my time at sea,
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    and what it made me think about.
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    We know about man's impact on the ocean
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    in terms of fishing and overfishing,
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    but we don't really know much about
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    what's happening underneath the water.
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    And in fact, shipping has a role to play here,
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    because shipping noise has contributed
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    to damaging the acoustic
    habitats of ocean creatures.
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    Light doesn't penetrate beneath
    the surface of the water,
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    so ocean creatures like whales and dolphins
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    and even 800 species of fish
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    communicate by sound.
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    And a North Atlantic right whale
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    can transmit across hundreds of miles.
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    A humpback can transmit a sound
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    across a whole ocean.
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    But a supertanker can also be heard
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    coming across a whole ocean,
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    and because the noise that
    propellers make underwater
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    is sometimes at the same frequency that whales use,
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    then it can damage their acoustic habitat,
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    and they need this for breeding,
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    for finding feeding grounds,
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    for finding mates.
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    And the acoustic habitat of the
    North Atlantic right whale
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    has been reduced by up to 90 percent.
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    But there are no laws governing
    acoustic pollution yet.
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    And when I arrived in Singapore,
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    and I apologize for this, but I
    didn't want to get off my ship.
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    I'd really loved being on board Kendal.
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    I'd been well treated by the crew,
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    I'd had a garrulous and entertaining captain,
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    and I would happily have signed up
    for another five weeks,
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    something that the captain also said
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    I was crazy to think about.
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    But I wasn't there for nine months at a time
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    like the Filipino seafarers,
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    who, when I asked them to describe their job to me,
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    called it "dollar for homesickness."
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    They had good salaries,
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    but theirs is still an isolating and difficult life
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    in a dangerous and often difficult element.
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    But when I get to this part, I'm in two minds,
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    because I want to salute those seafarers
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    who bring us 90 percent of everything
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    and get very little thanks or recognition for it.
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    I want to salute the 100,000 ships
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    that are at sea
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    that are doing that work, coming in and out
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    every day, bringing us what we need.
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    But I also want to see shipping,
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    and us, the general public,
    who know so little about it,
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    to have a bit more scrutiny,
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    to be a bit more transparent,
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    to have 90 percent transparency.
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    Because I think we could all benefit
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    from doing something very simple,
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    which is learning to see the sea.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Inside the secret shipping industry
Speaker:
Rose George
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
11:23

English subtitles

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