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How to fight desertification and reverse climate change

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    The most massive
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    tsunami perfect storm
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    is bearing down upon us.
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    This perfect storm
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    is mounting a grim reality, increasingly grim reality,
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    and we are facing that reality
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    with the full belief
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    that we can solve our problems with technology,
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    and that's very understandable.
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    Now, this perfect storm that we are facing
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    is the result of our rising population,
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    rising towards 10 billion people,
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    land that is turning to desert,
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    and, of course, climate change.
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    Now there's no question about it at all:
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    we will only solve the problem
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    of replacing fossil fuels with technology.
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    But fossil fuels, carbon -- coal and gas --
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    are by no means the only thing
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    that is causing climate change.
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    Desertification
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    is a fancy word for land that is turning to desert,
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    and this happens only when
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    we create too much bare ground.
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    There's no other cause.
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    And I intend to focus
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    on most of the world's land that is turning to desert.
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    But I have for you a very simple message
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    that offers more hope than you can imagine.
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    We have environments
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    where humidity is guaranteed throughout the year.
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    On those, it is almost impossible
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    to create vast areas of bare ground.
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    No matter what you do, nature covers it up so quickly.
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    And we have environments
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    where we have months of humidity
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    followed by months of dryness,
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    and that is where desertification is occurring.
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    Fortunately, with space technology now,
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    we can look at it from space,
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    and when we do, you can see the proportions fairly well.
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    Generally, what you see in green
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    is not desertifying,
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    and what you see in brown is,
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    and these are by far the greatest areas of the Earth.
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    About two thirds, I would guess, of the world is desertifying.
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    I took this picture in the Tihamah Desert
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    while 25 millimeters -- that's an inch of rain -- was falling.
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    Think of it in terms of drums of water,
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    each containing 200 liters.
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    Over 1,000 drums of water fell on every hectare
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    of that land that day.
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    The next day, the land looked like this.
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    Where had that water gone?
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    Some of it ran off as flooding,
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    but most of the water that soaked into the soil
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    simply evaporated out again,
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    exactly as it does in your garden
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    if you leave the soil uncovered.
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    Now, because the fate of water and carbon
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    are tied to soil organic matter,
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    when we damage soils, you give off carbon.
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    Carbon goes back to the atmosphere.
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    Now you're told over and over, repeatedly,
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    that desertification is only occurring
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    in arid and semi-arid areas of the world,
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    and that tall grasslands like this one
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    in high rainfall are of no consequence.
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    But if you do not look at grasslands but look down into them,
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    you find that most of the soil in that grassland
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    that you've just seen is bare and covered with a crust of algae,
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    leading to increased runoff and evaporation.
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    That is the cancer of desertification
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    that we do not recognize till its terminal form.
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    Now we know that desertification is caused by livestock,
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    mostly cattle, sheep and goats,
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    overgrazing the plants,
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    leaving the soil bare and giving off methane.
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    Almost everybody knows this,
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    from nobel laureates to golf caddies,
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    or was taught it, as I was.
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    Now, the environments like you see here,
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    dusty environments in Africa where I grew up,
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    and I loved wildlife,
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    and so I grew up hating livestock
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    because of the damage they were doing.
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    And then my university education as an ecologist
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    reinforced my beliefs.
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    Well, I have news for you.
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    We were once just as certain
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    that the world was flat.
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    We were wrong then, and we are wrong again.
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    And I want to invite you now
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    to come along on my journey of reeducation and discovery.
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    When I was a young man,
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    a young biologist in Africa,
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    I was involved in setting aside marvelous areas
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    as future national parks.
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    Now no sooner — this was in the 1950s —
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    and no sooner did we remove the hunting,
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    drum-beating people to protect the animals,
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    than the land began to deteriorate,
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    as you see in this park that we formed.
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    Now, no livestock were involved,
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    but suspecting that we had too many elephants now,
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    I did the research and I proved we had too many,
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    and I recommended that we would have to reduce their numbers
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    and bring them down to a level that the land could sustain.
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    Now, that was a terrible decision for me to have to make,
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    and it was political dynamite, frankly.
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    So our government formed a team of experts
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    to evaluate my research.
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    They did. They agreed with me,
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    and over the following years,
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    we shot 40,000 elephants to try to stop the damage.
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    And it got worse, not better.
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    Loving elephants as I do,
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    that was the saddest and greatest blunder of my life,
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    and I will carry that to my grave.
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    One good thing did come out of it.
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    It made me absolutely determined
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    to devote my life to finding solutions.
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    When I came to the United States, I got a shock,
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    to find national parks like this one
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    desertifying as badly as anything in Africa.
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    And there'd been no livestock on this land
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    for over 70 years.
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    And I found that American scientists
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    had no explanation for this
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    except that it is arid and natural.
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    So I then began looking
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    at all the research plots I could
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    over the whole of the Western United States
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    where cattle had been removed
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    to prove that it would stop desertification,
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    but I found the opposite,
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    as we see on this research station,
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    where this grassland that was green in 1961,
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    by 2002 had changed to that situation.
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    And the authors of the position paper on climate change
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    from which I obtained these pictures
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    attribute this change to "unknown processes."
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    Clearly, we have never understood
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    what is causing desertification,
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    which has destroyed many civilizations
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    and now threatens us globally.
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    We have never understood it.
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    Take one square meter of soil
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    and make it bare like this is down here,
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    and I promise you, you will find it much colder at dawn
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    and much hotter at midday
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    than that same piece of ground if it's just covered with litter,
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    plant litter.
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    You have changed the microclimate.
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    Now, by the time you are doing that
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    and increasing greatly the percentage of bare ground
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    on more than half the world's land,
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    you are changing macroclimate.
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    But we have just simply not understood
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    why was it beginning to happen 10,000 years ago?
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    Why has it accelerated lately?
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    We had no understanding of that.
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    What we had failed to understand
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    was that these seasonal humidity environments of the world,
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    the soil and the vegetation
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    developed with very large numbers of grazing animals,
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    and that these grazing animals
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    developed with ferocious pack-hunting predators.
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    Now, the main defense against pack-hunting predators
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    is to get into herds,
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    and the larger the herd, the safer the individuals.
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    Now, large herds dung and urinate all over their own food,
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    and they have to keep moving,
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    and it was that movement
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    that prevented the overgrazing of plants,
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    while the periodic trampling
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    ensured good cover of the soil,
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    as we see where a herd has passed.
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    This picture is a typical seasonal grassland.
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    It has just come through four months of rain,
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    and it's now going into eight months of dry season.
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    And watch the change as it goes into this long dry season.
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    Now, all of that grass you see aboveground
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    has to decay biologically
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    before the next growing season, and if it doesn't,
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    the grassland and the soil begin to die.
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    Now, if it does not decay biologically,
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    it shifts to oxidation, which is a very slow process,
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    and this smothers and kills grasses,
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    leading to a shift to woody vegetation
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    and bare soil, releasing carbon.
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    To prevent that, we have traditionally used fire.
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    But fire also leaves the soil bare, releasing carbon,
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    and worse than that,
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    burning one hectare of grassland
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    gives off more, and more damaging, pollutants
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    than 6,000 cars.
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    And we are burning in Africa, every single year,
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    more than one billion hectares of grasslands,
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    and almost nobody is talking about it.
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    We justify the burning, as scientists,
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    because it does remove the dead material
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    and it allows the plants to grow.
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    Now, looking at this grassland of ours that has gone dry,
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    what could we do to keep that healthy?
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    And bear in mind, I'm talking of most of the world's land now.
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    Okay? We cannot reduce animal numbers to rest it more
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    without causing desertification and climate change.
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    We cannot burn it without causing
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    desertification and climate change.
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    What are we going to do?
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    There is only one option,
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    I'll repeat to you, only one option
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    left to climatologists and scientists,
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    and that is to do the unthinkable,
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    and to use livestock,
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    bunched and moving,
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    as a proxy for former herds and predators,
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    and mimic nature.
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    There is no other alternative left to mankind.
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    So let's do that.
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    So on this bit of grassland, we'll do it, but just in the foreground.
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    We'll impact it very heavily with cattle to mimic nature,
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    and we've done so, and look at that.
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    All of that grass is now covering the soil
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    as dung, urine and litter or mulch,
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    as every one of the gardeners amongst you would understand,
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    and that soil is ready to absorb and hold the rain,
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    to store carbon, and to break down methane.
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    And we did that,
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    without using fire to damage the soil,
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    and the plants are free to grow.
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    When I first realized
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    that we had no option as scientists
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    but to use much-vilified livestock
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    to address climate change and desertification,
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    I was faced with a real dilemma.
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    How were we to do it?
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    We'd had 10,000 years of extremely knowledgeable pastoralists
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    bunching and moving their animals,
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    but they had created the great manmade deserts of the world.
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    Then we'd had 100 years of modern rain science,
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    and that had accelerated desertification,
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    as we first discovered in Africa
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    and then confirmed in the United States,
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    and as you see in this picture
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    of land managed by the federal government.
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    Clearly more was needed
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    than bunching and moving the animals,
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    and humans, over thousands of years,
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    had never been able to deal with nature's complexity.
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    But we biologists and ecologists
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    had never tackled anything as complex as this.
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    So rather than reinvent the wheel,
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    I began studying other professions to see if anybody had.
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    And I found there were planning techniques
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    that I could take and adapt to our biological need,
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    and from those I developed what we call
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    holistic management and planned grazing,
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    a planning process,
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    and that does address all of nature's complexity
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    and our social, environmental, economic complexity.
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    Today, we have young women like this one
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    teaching villages in Africa
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    how to put their animals together into larger herds,
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    plan their grazing to mimic nature,
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    and where we have them hold their animals overnight --
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    we run them in a predator-friendly manner,
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    because we have a lot of lands, and so on --
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    and where they do this and hold them overnight
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    to prepare the crop fields,
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    we are getting very great increases in crop yield as well.
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    Let's look at some results.
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    This is land close to land that we manage in Zimbabwe.
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    It has just come through four months of very good rains
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    it got that year, and it's going into the long dry season.
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    But as you can see, all of that rain, almost of all it,
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    has evaporated from the soil surface.
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    Their river is dry despite the rain just having ended,
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    and we have 150,000 people
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    on almost permanent food aid.
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    Now let's go to our land nearby on the same day,
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    with the same rainfall, and look at that.
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    Our river is flowing and healthy and clean.
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    It's fine.
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    The production of grass, shrubs, trees, wildlife,
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    everything is now more productive,
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    and we have virtually no fear of dry years.
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    And we did that by increasing the cattle and goats
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    400 percent,
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    planning the grazing to mimic nature
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    and integrate them with all the elephants, buffalo,
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    giraffe and other animals that we have.
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    But before we began, our land looked like that.
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    This site was bare and eroding for over 30 years
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    regardless of what rain we got.
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    Okay? Watch the marked tree and see the change
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    as we use livestock to mimic nature.
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    This was another site
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    where it had been bare and eroding,
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    and at the base of the marked small tree,
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    we had lost over 30 centimeters of soil. Okay?
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    And again, watch the change
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    just using livestock to mimic nature.
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    And there are fallen trees in there now,
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    because the better land is now attracting elephants, etc.
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    This land in Mexico was in terrible condition,
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    and I've had to mark the hill
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    because the change is so profound.
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    (Applause)
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    I began helping a family in the Karoo Desert in the 1970s
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    turn the desert that you see on the right there
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    back to grassland,
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    and thankfully, now their grandchildren are on the land
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    with hope for the future.
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    And look at the amazing change in this one,
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    where that gully has completely healed
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    using nothing but livestock mimicking nature,
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    and once more, we have the third generation of that family
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    on that land with their flag still flying.
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    The vast grasslands of Patagonia
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    are turning to desert as you see here.
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    The man in the middle is an Argentinian researcher,
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    and he has documented the steady decline of that land
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    over the years as they kept reducing sheep numbers.
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    They put 25,000 sheep in one flock,
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    really mimicking nature now with planned grazing,
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    and they have documented a 50-percent increase
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    in the production of the land in the first year.
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    We now have in the violent Horn of Africa
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    pastoralists planning their grazing to mimic nature
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    and openly saying it is the only hope they have
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    of saving their families and saving their culture.
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    Ninety-five percent of that land
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    can only feed people from animals.
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    I remind you that I am talking about
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    most of the world's land here that controls our fate,
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    including the most violent region of the world,
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    where only animals can feed people
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    from about 95 percent of the land.
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    What we are doing globally is causing climate change
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    as much as, I believe, fossil fuels,
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    and maybe more than fossil fuels.
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    But worse than that, it is causing hunger, poverty,
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    violence, social breakdown and war,
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    and as I am talking to you,
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    millions of men, women and children
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    are suffering and dying.
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    And if this continues,
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    we are unlikely to be able to stop the climate changing,
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    even after we have eliminated the use of fossil fuels.
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    I believe I've shown you how we can work with nature
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    at very low cost
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    to reverse all this.
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    We are already doing so
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    on about 15 million hectares
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    on five continents,
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    and people who understand
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    far more about carbon than I do
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    calculate that, for illustrative purposes,
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    if we do what I am showing you here,
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    we can take enough carbon out of the atmosphere
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    and safely store it in the grassland soils
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    for thousands of years,
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    and if we just do that on about half the world's grasslands
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    that I've shown you,
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    we can take us back to pre-industrial levels,
  • 20:00 - 20:02
    while feeding people.
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    I can think of almost nothing
  • 20:04 - 20:08
    that offers more hope for our planet,
  • 20:08 - 20:10
    for your children,
  • 20:10 - 20:13
    and their children, and all of humanity.
  • 20:13 - 20:16
    Thank you.
  • 20:16 - 20:24
    (Applause)
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    Thank you. (Applause)
  • 20:38 - 20:39
    Thank you, Chris.
  • 20:39 - 20:43
    Chris Anderson: Thank you. I have,
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    and I'm sure everyone here has,
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    A) a hundred questions, B) wants to hug you.
  • 20:48 - 20:50
    I'm just going to ask you one quick question.
  • 20:50 - 20:54
    When you first start this and you bring in a flock of animals,
  • 20:54 - 20:57
    it's desert. What do they eat? How does that part work?
  • 20:57 - 20:58
    How do you start?
  • 20:58 - 21:00
    Allan Savory: Well, we have done this for a long time,
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    and the only time we have ever had to provide any feed
  • 21:03 - 21:05
    is during mine reclamation,
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    where it's 100 percent bare.
  • 21:08 - 21:12
    But many years ago, we took the worst land in Zimbabwe,
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    where I offered a £5 note
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    in a hundred-mile drive
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    if somebody could find one grass
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    in a hundred-mile drive,
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    and on that, we trebled the stocking rate,
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    the number of animals, in the first year with no feeding,
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    just by the movement, mimicking nature,
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    and using a sigmoid curve, that principle.
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    It's a little bit technical to explain here, but just that.
  • 21:38 - 21:41
    CA: Well, I would love to -- I mean, this such an interesting and important idea.
  • 21:41 - 21:43
    The best people on our blog are going to come and talk to you
  • 21:43 - 21:46
    and try and -- I want to get more on this
  • 21:46 - 21:49
    that we could share along with the talk.AS: Wonderful.
  • 21:49 - 21:52
    CA: That is an astonishing talk, truly an astonishing talk,
  • 21:52 - 21:55
    and I think you heard that we all are cheering you on your way.
  • 21:55 - 21:58
    Thank you so much.AS: Well, thank you. Thank you. Thank you, Chris.
  • 21:58 - 21:59
    (Applause)
Title:
How to fight desertification and reverse climate change
Speaker:
Allan Savory
Description:

“Desertification is a fancy word for land that is turning to desert,” begins Allan Savory in this quietly powerful talk. And terrifyingly, it's happening to about two-thirds of the world’s grasslands, accelerating climate change and causing traditional grazing societies to descend into social chaos. Savory has devoted his life to stopping it. He now believes -- and his work so far shows -- that a surprising factor can protect grasslands and even reclaim degraded land that was once desert.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
22:19

English subtitles

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