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How empowering women and girls can help stop global warming

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    There are two powerful phenomena
    unfolding on earth:
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    the rise of global warming
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    and the rise of women and girls.
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    The link between them is often overlooked,
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    but gender equity is a key answer
    to our planetary challenge.
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    Let me explain.
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    For the last few years,
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    I have been working on an effort
    called "Project Drawdown."
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    Our team has scoured humanity's wisdom
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    for solutions to draw down
    heat-trapping, climate-changing emissions
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    in the atmosphere --
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    not "someday, maybe,
    if we're lucky" solutions,
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    the 80 best practices and technologies
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    already in hand:
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    clean, renewable energy,
    including solar and wind;
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    green buildings, both new and retrofitted;
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    efficient transportation
    from Brazil to China;
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    thriving ecosystems through
    protection and restoration;
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    reducing waste and reclaiming its value;
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    growing food in good ways
    that regenerates soil;
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    shifting diets to less meat, more plants;
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    and equity for women and girls.
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    Gender and climate
    are inextricably linked.
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    Drawing down emissions
    depends on rising up.
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    First, a bit of context.
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    We are in a situation of urgency,
    severity and scope
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    never before faced by humankind.
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    So far, our response isn't
    anywhere close to adequate.
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    But you already know that.
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    You know it in your gut,
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    in your bones.
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    We are each part
    of the planet's living systems,
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    knitted together with almost
    7.7 billion human beings
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    and 1.8 million known species.
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    We can feel the connections between us.
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    We can feel the brokenness
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    and the closing window to heal it.
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    This earth, our home,
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    is telling us that a better way of being
    must emerge, and fast.
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    In my experience, to have eyes wide open
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    is to hold a broken heart every day.
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    It's a grief that I rarely speak,
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    though my work calls
    on the power of voice.
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    I remind myself that the heart
    can simply break, or it can break open.
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    A broken-open heart is awake
    and alive and calls for action.
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    It is regenerative, like nature,
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    reclaiming ruined ground, growing anew.
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    Life moves inexorably toward more life,
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    toward healing,
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    toward wholeness.
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    That's a fundamental ecological truth.
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    And we, all of us,
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    we are life force.
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    On the face of it, the primary link
    between women, girls and a warming world
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    is not life but death.
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    Awareness is growing that climate impacts
    hit women and girls hardest,
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    given existing vulnerabilities.
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    There is greater risk of displacement,
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    higher odds of being injured
    or killed during a natural disaster.
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    Prolonged drought
    can precipitate early marriage
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    as families contend with scarcity.
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    Floods can force last-resort prostitution
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    as women struggle to make ends meet.
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    The list goes on and goes wide.
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    These dynamics are most acute
    under conditions of poverty,
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    from New Orleans to Nairobi.
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    Too often, the story ends here.
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    But not today.
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    Another empowering truth begs to be seen.
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    If we gain ground on gender equity,
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    we also gain ground
    on addressing global warming.
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    This connection comes to light
    in three key areas,
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    three areas where we can secure
    the rights of women and girls,
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    shore up resilience
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    and avert emissions at the same time.
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    Women are the primary
    farmers of the world.
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    They produce 60 to 80 percent
    of food in lower-income countries,
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    often operating on fewer than five acres.
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    That's what the term "smallholder" means.
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    Compared with men, women smallholders
    have less access to resources,
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    including land rights,
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    credit and capital, training,
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    tools and technology.
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    They farm as capably
    and efficiently as men,
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    but this well-documented disparity
    in resources and rights
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    means women produce less food
    on the same amount of land.
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    Close those gaps,
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    and farm yields rise by 20 to 30 percent.
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    That means 20 to 30 percent more food
    from the same garden or the same field.
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    The implications for hunger,
    for health, for household income --
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    they're obvious.
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    Let's follow the thread to climate.
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    We humans need land to grow food.
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    Unfortunately, forests are often
    cleared to supply it,
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    and that causes emissions
    from deforestation.
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    But if existing farms produce enough food,
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    forests are less likely to be lost.
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    So there's a ripple effect.
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    Support women smallholders,
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    realize higher yields,
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    avoid deforestation
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    and sustain the life-giving
    power of forests.
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    Project Drawdown estimates
    that addressing inequity in agriculture
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    could prevent two billion tons
    of emissions between now and 2050.
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    That's on par with the impact
    household recycling can have globally.
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    Addressing this inequity
    can also help women cope
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    with the challenges of growing food
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    as the climate changes.
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    There is life force in cultivation.
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    At last count,
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    130 million girls are still denied
    their basic right to attend school.
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    Gaps are greatest
    in secondary school classrooms.
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    Too many girls are missing
    a vital foundation for life.
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    Education means better health
    for women and their children,
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    better financial security,
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    greater agency at home and in society,
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    more capacity to navigate
    a climate-changing world.
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    Education can mean options,
    adaptability, strength.
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    It can also mean lower emissions.
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    For a variety of reasons,
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    when we have more years of education,
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    we typically choose to marry later
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    and to have fewer children.
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    So our families end up being smaller.
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    What happens at the individual level
    adds up across the world and over time.
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    One by one by one,
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    the right to go to school impacts
    how many human beings live on this planet
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    and impacts its living systems.
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    That's not why girls should be educated.
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    It's one meaningful outcome.
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    Education is one side of a coin.
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    The other is family planning:
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    access to high-quality,
    voluntary reproductive health care.
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    To have children by choice
    rather than chance
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    is a matter of autonomy and dignity.
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    Yet in the US,
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    45 percent of pregnancies are unintended.
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    Two hundred and fourteen million women
    in lower-income countries
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    say they want to decide whether
    and when to become pregnant
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    but aren't using contraception.
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    Listening to women's needs,
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    addressing those needs,
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    advancing equity and well-being:
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    those must be the aims
    of family planning, period.
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    Curbing the growth of our human population
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    is a side effect, though a potent one.
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    It could dramatically reduce demand
    for food, transportation, electricity,
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    buildings, goods and all the rest,
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    thereby reducing emissions.
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    Close the gaps on access
    to education and family planning,
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    and by mid-century, we may find
    one billion fewer people inhabiting earth
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    than we would if we do nothing more.
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    According to Project Drawdown,
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    one billion fewer people
    could mean we avoid
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    nearly 120 billion tons of emissions.
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    At that level of impact,
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    gender equity is a top solution
    to restore a climate fit for life.
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    At that level of impact,
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    gender equity is on par with wind turbines
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    and solar panels and forests.
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    There is life force in learning
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    and life force in choice.
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    Now, let me be clear:
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    this does not mean women and girls
    are responsible for fixing everything.
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    (Laughter)
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    Though we probably will.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    Equity for women in agriculture,
    education and family planning:
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    these are solutions within a system
    of drawdown solutions.
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    Together, they comprise
    a blueprint of possibility.
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    And let me be even clearer about this:
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    population cannot be seen in isolation
    from production or consumption.
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    Some segments of the human family
    cause exponentially greater harm,
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    while others suffer outsized injustice.
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    The most affluent --
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    we are the most accountable.
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    We have the most to do.
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    The gender-climate connection
    extends beyond negative impacts
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    and beyond powerful solutions.
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    Women are vital voices
    and agents for change on this planet,
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    and yet we're too often missing
    or even barred from the proverbial table.
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    We're too often ignored
    or silenced when we speak.
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    We are too often passed over
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    when plans are laid or investments made.
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    According to one analysis,
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    just 0.2 percent of philanthropic funds
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    go specifically towards women
    and the environment,
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    merely 110 million dollars globally,
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    the sum spent by one man
    on a single Basquiat painting last year.
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    These dynamics are not only unjust,
    they are setting us up for failure.
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    To rapidly, radically reshape society,
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    we need every solution and every solver,
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    every mind,
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    every bit of heart,
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    every set of hands.
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    We often crave a simple call to action,
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    but this challenge demands
    more than a fact sheet
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    and more than a checklist.
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    We need to function
    more like an ecosystem,
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    finding strength in our diversity.
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    You know what your superpowers are.
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    You're an educator, farmer, healer,
    creator, campaigner, wisdom-keeper.
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    How might you link arms where you are
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    to move solutions forward?
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    There is one role I want to ask
    that all of you play:
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    the role of messenger.
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    This is a time of great awakening.
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    We need to break the silence
    around the condition of our planet;
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    move beyond manufactured debates
    about climate science;
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    share solutions;
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    speak truth with a broken-open heart;
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    teach that to address climate change,
    we must make gender equity a reality.
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    And in the face of
    a seemingly impossible challenge,
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    women and girls are
    a fierce source of possibility.
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    It is a magnificent thing to be alive
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    in a moment that matters so much.
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    This earth,
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    our home,
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    is calling for us to be bold,
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    reminding us we are all
    in this together --
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    women, men,
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    people of all gender identities,
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    all beings.
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    We are life force,
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    one earth,
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    one chance.
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    Let's seize it.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
How empowering women and girls can help stop global warming
Speaker:
Katharine Wilkinson
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
13:48

English subtitles

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