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My country will be underwater soon -- unless we work together

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    Chris Anderson: Perhaps we could start
    by just telling us about your country.
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    It's three dots there on the globe.
    Those dots are pretty huge.
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    I think each one is about
    the size of California.
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    Tell us about Kiribati.
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    Anote Tong: Well, let me first begin
    by saying how deeply grateful I am
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    for this opportunity to share my story
    with people who do care.
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    I think I've been sharing my story with
    a lot of people who don't care too much.
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    But Kiribati is comprised
    of three groups of islands:
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    the Gilbert Group on the west,
    we have the Phoenix Islands in the middle,
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    and the Line Islands in the east,
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    and quite frankly, Kiribati
    is perhaps the only country
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    that is actually
    in the four corners of the world,
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    because we are in the Northern Hemisphere,
    in the Southern Hemisphere,
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    but also in the east and the west
    of the International Dateline.
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    These islands are entirely
    made up of coral atolls,
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    and on average about
    two meters above sea level.
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    And so this is what we have,
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    usually, then, not more
    than two kilometers in width.
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    And so, in many occasions,
    I've been asked by people,
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    "You know, you're suffering,
    why don't you move back?"
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    They don't understand.
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    They have no concept
    of what it is that's involved.
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    With the rising sea, they say,
    "Well, you can move back."
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    And so this is what I tell them.
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    If we move back, and we will fall off
    on the other side of the ocean. Okay?
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    But these are the kinds of issues
    that people don't understand.
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    CA: So certainly this is
    just a picture of fragility there.
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    When was it that you yourself realized
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    that there might be
    impending peril for your country?
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    AT: Well, the story of climate change
    has been one that has been going on
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    for quite a number of decades,
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    and when I came into office in 2003,
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    I began talking about climate change
    at the United Nations General Assembly,
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    but not with so much passion,
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    because then there was still
    this controversy among the scientists
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    whether it was human-induced,
    whether it was real or it wasn't.
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    But I think that that debate
    was fairly much concluded in 2007
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    with the Fourth Assessment Report
    of the IPCC,
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    which made a categorical statement
    that it is real, it's human-induced,
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    and it's predicting some very,
    very serious scenarios
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    for countries like mine.
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    And so that's when I got very serious.
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    In the past, I talked about it.
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    We were worried.
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    But when the scenarios,
    the predictions came in 2007,
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    it became a real issue for us.
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    CA: Now, those predictions are that,
    I think, that by 2100,
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    sea levels are forecast to rise
    perhaps three feet.
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    There's scenarios where
    it's higher than that, for sure,
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    but what would you say to a skeptic
    who said, "What's three feet?
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    You're on average six feet
    above sea level.
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    What's the problem?"
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    AT: Well, I think it's got
    to be understood
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    that the marginal rise in sea level
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    would mean a loss of a lot of land,
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    because much of the land is low.
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    And quite apart from that,
    we are getting the swells at the moment.
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    So it's not about getting two feet.
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    I think what many people do not understand
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    is they think climate change is something
    that is happening in the future.
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    Well, we're at the very
    bottom end of the spectrum.
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    It's already with us.
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    We have communities who already
    have been dislocated.
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    They have had to move,
    and every parliament session,
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    I'm getting complaints
    from different communities
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    asking for assistance to build seawalls
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    to see what we can do
    about the freshwater lakes
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    because it's being destroyed,
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    and so in my trips
    to the different islands,
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    I'm seeing evidence of communities
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    which are now having to cope
    with the loss of food crops,
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    the contamination of the water lands,
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    and I see these communities
    perhaps leaving, having to relocate,
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    within five to 10 years.
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    CA: And then, I think the country
    suffered its first cyclone,
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    and this is connected, yes?
    What happened here?
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    AT: Well, we're on the equator,
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    and I'm sure many of you understand
    that when you're on the equator,
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    it's supposed to be the doldrums.
    We're not supposed to get the cyclones.
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    We create them, and then we send them
    either north or south.
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    (Laughter)
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    But they aren't supposed to come back.
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    But for the first time,
    at the beginning of this year,
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    the Cyclone Pam, which destroyed Vanuatu,
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    and in the process, the very
    edges of it actually touched
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    our two southernmost islands,
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    and all of Tuvalu was underwater
    when Hurricane Pam struck.
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    But for our two southernmost islands,
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    we had waves come over half the island,
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    and so this has never happened before.
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    It's a new experience.
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    And I've just come back
    from my own constituency,
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    and I've seen these beautiful trees
    which have been there for decades,
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    they've been totally destroyed.
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    So this is what's happening, but when
    we talk about the rising sea level,
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    we think it's something
    that happens gradually.
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    It comes with the winds,
    it comes with the swells,
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    and so they can be magnified,
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    but what we are beginning to witness
    is the change in the weather pattern,
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    which is perhaps the more urgent challenge
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    that we will face sooner
    than perhaps the rising sea level.
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    CA: So the country is already
    seeing effects now.
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    As you look forward,
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    what are your options
    as a country, as a nation?
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    AT: Well, I've been telling
    this story every year.
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    I think I visit a number,
    I've been traveling the world
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    to try and get people to understand.
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    We have a plan. We think we have a plan,
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    and one occasion, I think
    I spoke in Geneva
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    and there was a gentleman
    who was interviewing me
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    on something like this,
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    and I said, "Yeah, we are looking
    at floating islands,"
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    and he thought it was funny,
    but somebody said,
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    "No, this is not funny.
    These people are looking for solutions."
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    And so I have been looking
    at floating islands.
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    The Japanese are interested
    in building floating islands.
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    But we have, as a country,
    we have made a commitment
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    that no matter what happens,
    we will try as much as possible
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    to stay and continue
    to exist as a nation.
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    What that will take,
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    it's going to be something
    quite significant,
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    very, very substantial.
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    Either we live on floating islands,
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    or we have to build up the islands
    to continue to stay out of the water
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    as the sea level rises
    and as the storms get more severe.
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    But even that, it's going to be
    very, very difficult
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    to get the kind of resourcing
    that we would need.
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    CA: And then the only recourse
    is some form of forced migration.
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    AT: Well, we are also looking at that,
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    because in the event
    that nothing comes forward
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    from the international community,
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    we are preparing, we don't want to be
    caught like what's happening in Europe.
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    Okay? We don't want to mass migrate
    at some point in time.
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    We want to be able to give the people
    the choice today,
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    those who choose and want
    to do that, to migrate.
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    We don't want something to happen
    that they are forced to migrate
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    without having been prepared to do so.
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    Of course, our culture is very different,
    our society is very different,
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    and once we migrate
    into a different environment,
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    and a different culture,
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    there's a whole lot of adjustments
    that are required.
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    CA: Well, there's forced migration
    in your country's past,
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    and I think just this week, just yesterday
    or the day before yesterday,
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    you visited these people.
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    What happened here?
    What's the story here?
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    AT: Yes, and I'm sorry,
    I think somebody was asking
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    why we were sneaking off
    to visit that place?
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    I had a very good reason because we have
    a community of Kiribati people
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    living in that part
    of the Solomon Islands,
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    but these were people who were relocated
    from the Phoenix Islands, in fact,
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    in the 1960s.
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    There was serious drought, and the people
    could not continue to live on the island,
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    and so they were moved to live here
    in the Solomon Islands,
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    and so yesterday it was very interesting
    to meet with these people.
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    They didn't know who I was.
    They had heard of me.
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    Some of them later recognized me,
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    but I think they were very happy.
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    Later they really wanted to have
    the opportunity to welcome me formally.
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    But I think what I saw yesterday
    was very interesting,
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    because here I see our people.
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    I spoke in our language,
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    and of course they spoke back,
    they replied,
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    but their accent, they are beginning
    not to be able to speak Kiribati properly.
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    I saw them. There was
    this lady with red teeth.
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    She was chewing betel nuts,
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    and it's not something we do in Kiribati.
    We don't chew betel nuts.
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    I met also a family who have married
    the local people here,
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    and so this is what is happening.
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    As you go into another community,
    there are bound to be changes.
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    There is bound to be
    a certain loss of identity,
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    and this is what we will be
    looking for in the future
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    if and when we do migrate.
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    CA: It must have been
    just an extraordinarily emotional day,
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    because of these questions about identity,
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    the joy of seeing you and perhaps
    an emphasized sense of what they had lost.
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    And it's very inspiring to hear you say
    you're going to fight to the end
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    to try to preserve the nation
    in a location.
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    AT: This is our wish.
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    Nobody wants ever to leave their home,
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    and so it's been a very
    difficult decision for me.
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    As a leader, you don't make plans
    to leave your island, your home,
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    and so I've been asked
    on a number of occasions,
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    "So how do you feel?"
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    And it doesn't feel good at all.
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    It's an emotional thing,
    and I've tried to live with it,
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    and I know that on occasions, I'm accused
    of not trying to solve the problem
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    because I can't solve the problem.
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    It's something that's got
    to be done collectively.
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    Climate change is a global phenomenon,
    and as I've often argued,
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    unfortunately, the countries,
    when we come to the United Nations,
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    I was in a meeting with
    the Pacific Island Forum countries
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    where Australia and New Zealand
    are also members,
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    and we had an argument.
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    There was a bit of a story in the news,
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    because they were arguing
    that to cut emissions,
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    it would be something
    that they're unable to do,
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    because it would affect the industries.
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    And so here I was saying,
    "Okay, I hear you,
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    I understand what you're saying,
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    but try also to understand
    what I'm saying,
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    because if you do not cut your emissions,
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    then our survival is on the line.
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    And so it's a matter for you
    to weigh this, these moral issues.
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    It's about industry as opposed to
    the survival of a people.
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    CA: You know, I ask you yesterday
    what made you angry,
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    and you said, "I don't get angry."
    But then you paused.
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    I think this made you angry.
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    AT: I'd refer you to my earlier
    statement at the United Nations.
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    I was very angry, very frustrated,
    and then depressed.
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    There was a sense of futility
    that we are fighting a fight
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    that we have no hope of winning.
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    I had to change my approach.
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    I had to become more reasonable,
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    because I thought people would listen
    to somebody who was rational,
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    but I remain radically rational,
    whatever that is.
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    (Laughter)
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    CA: Now, a core part
    of your nation's identity is fishing.
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    I think you said pretty much everyone
    is involved in fishing in some way.
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    AT: Well, we eat fish
    every day, every day,
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    and I think there is no doubt
    that our rate of consumption of fish
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    is perhaps the highest in the world.
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    We don't have a lot of livestock,
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    so it's fish that we depend on.
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    CA: So you're dependent on fish,
    both at the local level
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    and for the revenues
    that the country receives
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    from the global fishing business for tuna,
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    and yet despite that, a few years ago
    you took a very radical step.
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    Can you tell us about that?
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    I think something happened
    right here in the Phoenix Islands.
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    AT: Let me give some of the background
    of what fish means for us.
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    We have one of the largest
    tuna fisheries remaining in the world.
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    In the Pacific, I think we own
    something like 60 percent
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    of the remaining tuna fisheries,
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    and it remains relatively healthy
    for some species, but not all.
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    And Kiribati is one of of the three
    major tuna resource owners.
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    And at the moment, we have been getting
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    something like 80 to 90
    percent of our revenue
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    from access fees, license fees.
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    CA: Of your national revenue.
    AT: National revenue,
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    which drives everything that we do
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    in governments, hospitals,
    schools, and what have you.
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    But we decided to close this,
    and it was a very difficult decision.
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    Politically, locally, it was not easy,
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    but I was convinced
    that we had to do this
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    to ensure that the fishery
    remains sustainable.
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    There had been some indications
    that some of the species,
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    in particular the bigeye tuna,
    was under serious threat.
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    The yellowfin was also heavily fished.
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    Skipjack remains healthy.
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    And so we had to do something like that,
    and so that was the reason I did that.
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    Another reason I did that
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    was because I had been asking
    the international community
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    that in order to deal with climate change,
    in order to fight climate change,
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    there has got to be sacrifice,
    there has got to be commitment.
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    So in asking the international community
    to make a sacrifice,
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    I thought we ourselves
    need to make that sacrifice.
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    And so we made the sacrifice.
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    And that, forgoing commercial fishing
    in the Phoenix Islands protect area
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    would mean a loss of revenue.
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    We are still trying to assess
    what that loss would be,
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    because we actually closed it off
    at the beginning of this year,
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    and so we will see by the end of this year
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    what it means in terms
    of the lost revenue.
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    CA: so there's so many things
    playing into this.
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    On the one hand, it may prompt
    healthier fisheries.
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    I mean, how much are you able
    to move the price up
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    that you charge for the remaining areas?
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    AT: The negotiations
    have been very difficult,
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    but we have managed to raise
    the cost of a vessel day.
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    For any vessel to come in
    to fish for a day,
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    we have raised the fee from,
    it was $6,000 and $8,000,
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    now to $10,000, $12,000 per vessel day.
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    And so there's been
    that significant increase.
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    But at the same time,
    what's important to note is,
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    whereas in the past these fishing boats
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    might be fishing in a day
    and maybe catch 10 tons,
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    now they're catching maybe 100 tons
    because they've become so efficient.
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    And so we've got to respond likewise.
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    We've got to be very, very careful
    because the technology has so improved.
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    There was a time when the Brazilian fleet
    moved from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
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    They couldn't. They started experimenting
    if they could, per se.
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    But now they've got ways of doing it,
    and they've become so efficient.
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    CA: Can you give us just a sense
    of what it's like in those negotiations,
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    because you're up against companies
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    that have hundreds of millions
    of dollars at stake, essentially.
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    How do you hold the line?
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    Is there any advice you can give
    to other leaders who are dealing
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    with the same companies about how
    to get the most for your country,
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    get the most for the fish?
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    What advice would you give?
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    AT: Well, I think we focus
    too often on licensing
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    in order to get the rate of return,
    because what we are getting
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    from license fees is about 10 percent
    of the landed value of the catch
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    on the side of the wharf,
    not in the retail shops.
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    And we only get about 10 percent.
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    What we have been trying
    to do over the years
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    is actually to increase
    our participation in the industry,
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    in the harvesting, in the processing,
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    and eventually hopefully the marketing.
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    They're not easy to penetrate,
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    but we are working towards that,
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    and yes, the answer would be to enhance.
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    In order to increase our rate of return,
    we have to become more involved.
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    And so we've started doing that,
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    and we have to restructure the industry.
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    We've got to tell these people
    that the world has changed.
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    Now we want to produce the fish ourselves.
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    CA: And meanwhile,
    for your local fishermen,
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    they are still able to fish,
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    but what is business like for them?
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    Is it getting harder?
    Are the waters depleted?
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    Or is that being run
    on a sustainable basis?
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    AT: For the artisanal fishery,
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    we do not participate
    in the commercial fishing activity
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    except only to supply the domestic market.
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    The tuna fishery is really entirely
    for the foreign market,
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    mostly here in the US, Europe, Japan.
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    So I am a fisherman, very much,
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    and I used to be able to catch yellowfin.
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    Now it's very, very rare
    to be able to catch yellowfin
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    because they are being lifted
    out of the water by the hundreds of tons
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    by these sailors.
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    CA: So here's a couple
    of beautiful girls from your country.
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    I mean, as you think about their future,
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    what message would you have for them
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    and what message would you have
    for the world?
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    AT: Well, I've been telling the world
    that we really have to do something
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    about what is happening to the climate,
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    because for us, it's about
    the future of these children.
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    I have 12 grandchildren, at least.
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    I think I have 12. My wife knows.
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    (Laughter)
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    And I think I have eight children.
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    It's about their future.
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    Every day I see my grandchildren,
    about the same age as these young girls,
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    and I do wonder,
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    and I get angry sometimes, yes I do.
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    I wonder what is to become of them.
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    And so it's about them
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    that we should be telling everybody,
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    that it's not about
    their own national interest,
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    because climate change,
    regrettably, unfortunately,
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    is viewed by many countries
    as a national problem. It's not.
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    And this is the argument we got into
    recently with our partners,
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    the Australians and New Zealanders,
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    because they said we can't cut any more.
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    This is what one of the leaders,
    the Australian leader, said,
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    that we've done our part,
    we are cutting back.
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    I said, what about the rest?
    Why don't you keep it?
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    If you could keep
    the rest of your emissions
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    within your boundaries, within
    your borders, we'd have no question.
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    You can go ahead as much as you like.
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    But unfortunately,
    you're sending it our way,
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    and it's affecting the future
    of our children,
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    and so surely I think that is the heart
    of the problem of climate change today.
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    We will be meeting in Paris
    at the end of this year,
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    but until we can think of this
    as a global phenomenon,
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    because we create it,
    individually, as nations,
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    but it affects everybody else,
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    and yet, we refuse to do
    anything about it,
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    and we deal with it as a national problem,
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    which it is not. It is a global issue,
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    and it's got to be dealt with
    collectively.
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    CA: People are incredibly bad
    at responding to graphs
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    and numbers, and we shut our minds to it.
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    Somehow, to people, we're slightly better
    at resonding to that sometimes.
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    And it seems like it's very possible
    that your nation, despite,
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    well actually because of
    the intense problems you face,
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    you may yet be the warning light
    to the world that shines most visibly,
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    most powerful.
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    I just want to thank you, I'm sure,
    on behalf of all of us, actually,
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    for your extraordinary leadership
    and for being here.
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    Mr. President, thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
My country will be underwater soon -- unless we work together
Speaker:
Anote Tong
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
21:15

English subtitles

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