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My solar-powered adventure

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    Well, I learned a lot of things about ballooning,
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    especially at the end of these balloon flights
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    around the world I did with Brian Jones.
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    When I took this picture,
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    the window was frozen because of the moisture of the night.
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    And on the other side there was a rising sun.
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    So, you see that on the other side of ice
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    you have the unknown,
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    you have the non-obvious,
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    you have the non-seen,
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    for the people who don't dare
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    to go through the ice.
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    There are so many people
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    who prefer to suffer in the ice they know
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    instead of taking the risk of going through the ice
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    to see what there is on the other side.
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    And I think that's one of the main problems of our society.
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    We learn, maybe not the famous TED audience,
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    but so many other people learn,
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    that the unknown, the doubts,
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    the question marks are dangerous.
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    And we have to resist to the changes.
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    We have to keep everything under control.
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    Well, the unknown is part of life.
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    And in that sense, ballooning is a beautiful metaphor.
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    Because in the balloon, like in life,
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    we go very well in unforeseen directions.
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    We want to go in a direction,
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    but the winds push us in another direction, like in life.
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    And as long as we fight horizontally,
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    against life, against the winds,
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    against what's happening to us,
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    life is a nightmare.
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    How do we steer a balloon?
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    By understanding that the atmosphere
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    is made out of several different layers of wind
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    which all have different direction.
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    So, then, we understand that if we want to change our trajectory,
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    in life, or in the balloon,
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    we have to change altitude.
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    Changing altitude, in life,
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    that means raising to another psychological, philosophical,
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    spiritual level.
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    But how do we do that?
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    In ballooning, or in life,
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    how do we change altitude?
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    How do we go from the metaphor
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    to something more practical that we can really
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    use every day?
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    Well, in a balloon it's easy, we have ballast.
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    And when we drop the ballast overboard we climb.
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    Sand, water, all the equipment we don't need anymore.
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    And I think in life it should be exactly like this.
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    You know, when people speak about pioneering spirit,
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    very often they believe that pioneers
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    are the ones who have new ideas.
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    It's not true.
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    The pioneers are not the ones who have new ideas,
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    because new ideas are so easy to have.
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    We just close our eyes for a minute we all come back
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    with a lot of new ideas.
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    No, the pioneer is the one who
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    allows himself to throw overboard a lot of ballast.
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    Habits, certainties,
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    convictions, exclamation marks,
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    paradigms, dogmas.
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    And when we are able to do that,
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    what happens?
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    Life is not anymore
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    just one line going in one direction
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    in one dimension. No.
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    Life is going to be made out of all the possible lines
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    that go in all the possible directions
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    in three dimensions.
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    And pioneering spirit will be each time we allow ourselves
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    to explore this vertical axis.
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    Of course not just like the atmosphere in the balloon,
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    but in life itself.
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    Explore this vertical axis, that means
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    explore all the different ways to do,
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    all the different ways to behave, all the different ways to think,
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    before we find the one that goes in the direction we wish.
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    This is very practical.
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    This can be in politics.
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    This can be in spirituality.
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    This can be in environment,
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    in finance, in education of children.
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    I deeply believe
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    that life is a much greater adventure
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    if we manage to do politics
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    without the trench between the left and the right wing.
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    Because we will throw away these political dogmas.
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    I deeply believe that we can make much more protection of the environment
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    if we get rid -- if we throw overboard
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    this fundamentalism that some of the greens have showed in the past.
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    And that we can aim for much higher spirituality
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    if we get rid of the religious dogmas.
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    Throwing overboard, as ballast, to change our direction.
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    Well, these basically are things I believed in such a long time.
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    But actually I had to go around the world in a balloon
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    to be invited to talk about it.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    It's clear that it's not easy to know which ballast to drop
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    and which altitude to take. Sometime we need
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    friends, family members or a psychiatrist.
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    Well, in balloons we need weather men,
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    the one who calculate the direction of each layer of wind,
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    at which altitude, in order to help the balloonist.
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    But sometimes it's very paradoxical.
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    When Brian Jones and I were flying around the world,
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    the weather man asked us, one day, to fly
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    quite low, and very slow.
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    And when we calculated we thought we're never going to make it
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    around the world at that speed.
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    So, we disobeyed. We flew much higher, and double the speed.
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    And I was so proud to have found that jetstream
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    that I called the weather man,
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    and I told him, "Hey, guy, don't you think we're good pilots up there?
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    We fly twice the speed you predicted."
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    And he told me, "Don't do that. Go down immediately
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    in order to slow down."
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    And I started to argue. I said, "I'm not going to do that.
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    We don't have enough gas to fly so slow."
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    And he told me, "Yes, but with the low pressure you have on your left
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    if you fly too fast, in a couple of hours
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    you will turn left and end up at the North Pole.
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    (Laughter)
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    And then he asked me --
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    and this is something I will never forget in my life --
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    he just asked me, "You're the good pilot up there.
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    What do you really want? You want to go very fast
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    in the wrong direction, or slowly in the good direction?
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    And this is why you need weathermen.
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    This is why you need people with long-term vision.
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    And this is precisely what fails
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    in the political visions we have now,
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    in the political governments.
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    We are burning, as you heard,
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    so much energy,
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    not understanding that such an unsustainable
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    way of life cannot last for long.
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    So, we went down actually.
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    We slowed down. And we went through moments of fears
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    because we had no idea how the little amount of gas
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    we had in the balloon
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    could allow us to travel 45,000 kilometers.
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    But we were expected to have doubts; we're expected to have fears.
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    And actually this is where the adventure really started.
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    When we were flying over the Sahara and India
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    it was nice holidays.
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    We could land anytime and fly back home with an airplane.
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    In the middle of the Pacific,
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    when you don't have the good winds, you cannot land,
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    you cannot go back.
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    That's a crisis.
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    That's the moment when you have to wake up
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    from the automatic way of thinking.
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    That's the moment when you have to motivate
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    your inner potential,
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    your creativity.
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    That's when you throw out all the ballast,
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    all the certainties,
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    in order to adapt to the new situation.
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    And actually, we changed completely our flight plan.
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    We changed completely our strategy.
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    And after 20 days we landed successfully in Egypt.
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    But if I show you this picture
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    it's not to tell you how happy we were.
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    It's to show you how much gas was left
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    in the last bottles.
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    We took off with 3.7 tons of liquid propane.
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    We landed with 40 kilos.
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    When I saw that, I made a promise to myself.
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    I made a promise that the next time I would fly around the world,
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    it would be with no fuel,
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    independent from fossil energies,
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    in order to be safe,
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    not to be threatened by the fuel gauge.
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    I had no idea how it was possible.
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    I just thought it's a dream and I want to do it.
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    And when the capsule of my balloon was introduced
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    officially in the Air and Space Museum in Washington,
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    together with the airplane of Charles Lindbergh,
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    with Apollo 11, with the Wright Brothers' Flyer,
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    with Chuck Yeager's 61,
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    I had really a thought then.
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    I thought, well, the 20th century, that was brilliant.
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    It allowed to do all those things there.
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    But it will not be possible in the future any more.
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    It takes too much energy. It will cost too much.
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    It will be prohibited
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    because we'll have to save our natural resources
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    in a few decades from now.
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    So how can we perpetuate
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    this pioneering spirit
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    with something that will be independent from fossil energy?
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    And this is when the project Solar Impulse
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    really started to
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    turn in my head.
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    And I think it's a nice metaphor also
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    for the 21st century.
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    Pioneering spirit should continue, but on another level.
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    Not to conquer the planet or space,
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    not anymore, it has been done,
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    but rather to improve the quality of life.
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    How can we go through the ice of certainty
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    in order to make the most incredible a possible thing?
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    What is today completely impossible --
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    get rid of our dependency on fossil energy.
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    If you tell to people, we want to be independent
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    from fossil energy in our world,
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    people will laugh at you, except here,
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    where crazy people are invited to speak.
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    (Laughter)
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    So, the idea is that if we fly around the world
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    in a solar powered airplane,
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    using absolutely no fuel,
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    nobody ever could say in the future
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    that it's impossible to do it
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    for cars, for heating systems,
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    for computers, and so on and so on.
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    Well, solar power airplanes are not new.
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    They have flown in the past, but without
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    saving capabilities, without batteries.
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    Which means that they have more proven
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    the limits of renewable energies
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    than the potential of it.
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    If we want to show the potential,
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    we have to fly day and night.
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    That means to load the batteries during the flight,
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    in order to spend the night on the batteries,
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    and fly the next day again.
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    It has been made, already, on remote controlled
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    little airplane models, without pilots.
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    But it stays an anecdote
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    because the public couldn't identify to it.
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    I think you need a pilot in the plane
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    that can talk to the universities,
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    that can talk to students,
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    talk to politicians during the flight,
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    and really make it a human adventure.
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    For that, unfortunately,
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    four meters wingspan is not enough.
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    You need 64 meter wingspan.
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    64 meter wingspan to carry one pilot, the batteries,
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    flies slowly enough with the aerodynamic efficiency.
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    Why that? Because fuel is not easy to replace.
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    That's for sure.
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    And with 200 square meters of solar power on our plane,
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    we can produce the same energy
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    than 200 little lightbulbs.
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    That means a Christmas tree, a big Christmas tree.
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    So the question is, how can you carry a pilot around the world
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    with an airplane that uses
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    the same amount of energy as a big Christmas tree?
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    People will tell you it's impossible,
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    and that's exactly why we try to do it.
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    We launched the project with my colleague Andre Borschberg
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    six years ago.
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    We have now 70 people in the team working on it.
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    We have gone through the stages of simulation, design,
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    computing, preparing the construction
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    of the first prototype.
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    That has been achieved after two years of work.
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    Cockpit, propeller, engine.
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    Just the fuselage here, it's so light.
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    It's not designed by an artist, but it could be.
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    50 kilos for the entire fuselage.
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    Couple of kilos more for the wing spars.
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    This is the complete structure of the airplane.
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    And one month ago we have unveiled it.
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    You cannot imagine how it is for a team
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    who has been working six years on it
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    to show that it's not only a dream and a vision,
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    it's a real airplane.
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    A real airplane that we could finally present.
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    And what's the goal now?
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    The goal is to take off,
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    end of this year for the first test,
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    but mainly next year, spring or summer,
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    take off, on our own power,
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    without additional help, without being towed,
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    climb to 9,000 meters altitude.
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    The same time we load the batteries,
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    we run the engines, and when we get at the maximum height,
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    we arrive at the beginning of the night.
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    And there, there will be just one goal, just one:
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    reach the next sunrise before the batteries are empty.
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    (Laughter)
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    And this is exactly the symbol of our world.
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    If our airplane is too heavy,
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    if the pilot wastes energy,
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    we'll never make it through the night.
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    And in our world, if we keep on spoiling,
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    wasting our energy resources,
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    if we keep on building things that consume so much energy
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    that most of the companies now go bankrupt,
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    it's clear that we'll never give the planet to the next generation
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    without a major problem.
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    So, you see that this airplane is more a symbol.
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    I don't think it will transport 200 people
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    in the next years.
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    But when Lindbergh crossed the Atlantic,
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    the payload was also just sufficient
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    for one person and some fuel.
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    And 20 years later there were 200 people
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    in every airplane crossing the Atlantic.
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    So, we have to start,
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    and show the example.
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    A little bit like on this picture here.
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    This is a painting from Magritte,
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    in the museum in Holland that I love so much.
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    It's a pipe, and it's written, "This is not a pipe."
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    This is not an airplane.
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    This is a symbol of what we can achieve
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    when we believe in the impossible,
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    when we have a team,
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    when we have pioneering spirit,
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    and especially when we understand
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    that all the certainties we have
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    should be thrown overboard.
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    What pleases me very much
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    is that in the beginning I thought that we would have to fly
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    around the world with no fuel
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    in order to have our message been understood.
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    And more and more, we're invited around the world with Andre
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    to talk about that project, to talk about the symbol of it,
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    invited by politicians, invited in energy forums,
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    in order to show that it's not anymore
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    completely stupid
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    to think about getting rid of the dependency
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    on fossil energies.
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    So, through speeches like this one today,
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    through interviews, through meetings,
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    our goal is to get as many people possible on the team.
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    The success will not come
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    if we "just," quote, unquote,
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    fly around the world in a solar-powered airplane.
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    No, the success will come
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    if enough people are motivated
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    to do exactly the same in their daily life,
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    save energy, go to renewables.
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    And this is possible. You know, with the technologies we have today,
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    we can save between 30 and 50 percent
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    of the energy of a country in Europe,
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    and we can solve half of the rest with renewables.
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    It leaves 25 or 30 percent for
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    oil, gas, coal, nuclear, or whatever.
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    This is acceptable.
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    This is why all the people who believe
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    in this type of spirit
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    are welcome to be on that team.
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    You can just go on SolarImpulse.com, subscribe
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    to just be informed of what we're doing.
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    But much more, to get advices,
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    to give your comments, to spread the word
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    that if it's possible in the air,
  • 16:11 - 16:14
    of course it's possible in the ground.
  • 16:14 - 16:18
    And each time we have some ice in the future,
  • 16:18 - 16:21
    we have to know that life will be great,
  • 16:21 - 16:24
    and the success will be brilliant
  • 16:24 - 16:27
    if we dare to overcome our fear of the ice,
  • 16:27 - 16:29
    to go through the obstacle,
  • 16:29 - 16:33
    to go through the problem, in order to see what there is on the other side.
  • 16:33 - 16:37
    So, you see, this is what we're doing on our side.
  • 16:37 - 16:40
    Everyone has his goal, has his dreams,
  • 16:40 - 16:43
    has his visions.
  • 16:43 - 16:45
    The question I leave you with now
  • 16:45 - 16:47
    is which is the ballast
  • 16:47 - 16:51
    you would like to throw overboard?
  • 16:51 - 16:53
    Which will be the altitude at which
  • 16:53 - 16:56
    you would like to fly in your life,
  • 16:56 - 16:59
    to get to the success that you wish to have,
  • 16:59 - 17:03
    to get to the point that really belongs to you,
  • 17:03 - 17:05
    with the potential you have,
  • 17:05 - 17:08
    and the one you can really fulfill?
  • 17:08 - 17:11
    Because the most renewable energy we have
  • 17:11 - 17:14
    is our own potential, and our own passion.
  • 17:14 - 17:16
    So, let's go for it, and I wish you an excellent adventure
  • 17:16 - 17:18
    in the wings of the future. Thank you.
  • 17:18 - 17:26
    (Applause)
Title:
My solar-powered adventure
Speaker:
Bertrand Piccard
Description:

For the dawn of a new decade, adventurer Bertrand Piccard offers us a challenge: Find motivation in what seems impossible. He shares his own plans to do what many say can't be done -- to fly around the world, nonstop, in a solar-powered aircraft.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
17:26
TED edited English subtitles for My solar-powered adventure
TED added a translation

English subtitles

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