1 00:00:00,813 --> 00:00:03,402 So imagine, you're in the supermarket, 2 00:00:03,402 --> 00:00:05,198 you're buying some groceries, 3 00:00:05,198 --> 00:00:06,654 and you get given the option 4 00:00:06,654 --> 00:00:10,258 for a plastic or a paper shopping bag. 5 00:00:10,258 --> 00:00:12,280 Which one do you choose if you want to do 6 00:00:12,280 --> 00:00:15,110 the right thing by the environment? 7 00:00:15,110 --> 00:00:16,837 Most people do pick the paper. 8 00:00:16,837 --> 00:00:18,235 Okay, let's think of why. 9 00:00:18,235 --> 00:00:19,806 It's brown to start with. 10 00:00:19,806 --> 00:00:21,358 Therefore, it must be good for the environment. 11 00:00:21,358 --> 00:00:23,675 It's biodegradable. It's reusable. 12 00:00:23,675 --> 00:00:25,748 In some cases, it's recyclable. 13 00:00:25,748 --> 00:00:28,559 So when people are looking at the plastic bag, 14 00:00:28,559 --> 00:00:31,349 it's likely they're thinking of something like this, 15 00:00:31,349 --> 00:00:33,611 which we all know is absolutely terrible 16 00:00:33,611 --> 00:00:36,078 and we should be avoiding at all expenses, 17 00:00:36,078 --> 00:00:38,380 these kinds of environmental damages. 18 00:00:38,380 --> 00:00:40,671 But people are often not thinking 19 00:00:40,671 --> 00:00:42,734 of something like this, 20 00:00:42,734 --> 00:00:45,159 which is the other end of the spectrum. 21 00:00:45,159 --> 00:00:47,956 When we produce materials, 22 00:00:47,956 --> 00:00:49,710 we need to extract them from the environment, 23 00:00:49,710 --> 00:00:53,706 and we need a whole bunch of environmental impacts. 24 00:00:53,706 --> 00:00:55,513 You see, what happens is, when we need 25 00:00:55,513 --> 00:00:57,489 to make complex choices, 26 00:00:57,489 --> 00:00:59,987 us humans like really simple solutions, 27 00:00:59,987 --> 00:01:02,634 and so we often ask for simple solutions. 28 00:01:02,634 --> 00:01:04,215 And I work in design. 29 00:01:04,215 --> 00:01:05,664 I advise designers 30 00:01:05,664 --> 00:01:07,775 and innovators around sustainability, 31 00:01:07,775 --> 00:01:09,623 and everyone always says to me, "Oh Leyla, 32 00:01:09,623 --> 00:01:11,575 I just want the eco-materials." 33 00:01:11,575 --> 00:01:13,535 And I say, "Well, that's very complex, 34 00:01:13,535 --> 00:01:15,488 and we'll have to spend four hours talking about 35 00:01:15,488 --> 00:01:17,495 what exactly an eco-material means, 36 00:01:17,495 --> 00:01:19,647 because everything at some point 37 00:01:19,647 --> 00:01:21,376 comes from nature, 38 00:01:21,376 --> 00:01:23,425 and it's how you use the material 39 00:01:23,425 --> 00:01:26,511 that dictates the environmental impact. 40 00:01:26,511 --> 00:01:28,146 So what happens is, we have to rely 41 00:01:28,146 --> 00:01:30,127 on some sort of intuitive framework 42 00:01:30,127 --> 00:01:31,795 when we make decisions. 43 00:01:31,795 --> 00:01:34,031 So I like to call that intuitive framework 44 00:01:34,031 --> 00:01:36,751 our environmental folklore. 45 00:01:36,751 --> 00:01:39,200 Okay, it's either the little voice at the back of your head, 46 00:01:39,200 --> 00:01:41,580 or it's that gut feeling you get 47 00:01:41,580 --> 00:01:43,360 when you've done the right thing, 48 00:01:43,360 --> 00:01:45,170 so when you've picked the paper bag 49 00:01:45,170 --> 00:01:47,899 or when you've bought a fuel-efficient car. 50 00:01:47,899 --> 00:01:50,858 And environmental folklore is a really important thing 51 00:01:50,858 --> 00:01:53,306 because we're trying to do the right thing. 52 00:01:53,306 --> 00:01:55,650 But how do we know if we're actually 53 00:01:55,650 --> 00:01:58,042 reducing the net environmental impacts 54 00:01:58,042 --> 00:02:01,314 that our actions as individuals and as professionals 55 00:02:01,314 --> 00:02:03,482 and as a society are actually having 56 00:02:03,482 --> 00:02:06,234 on the natural environment? 57 00:02:06,234 --> 00:02:08,154 So the thing about environmental folklore is 58 00:02:08,154 --> 00:02:09,916 it tends to be based on our experiences, 59 00:02:09,916 --> 00:02:11,924 the things we've heard from other people. 60 00:02:11,924 --> 00:02:14,456 It doesn't tend to be based on any scientific framework. 61 00:02:14,456 --> 00:02:16,123 And this is really hard, because we live 62 00:02:16,123 --> 00:02:18,143 in incredibly complex systems. 63 00:02:18,143 --> 00:02:19,863 We have the human systems 64 00:02:19,863 --> 00:02:21,629 of how we communicate and interrelate 65 00:02:21,629 --> 00:02:24,168 and have our whole constructed society, 66 00:02:24,168 --> 00:02:25,978 of the industrial systems, 67 00:02:25,978 --> 00:02:28,087 which is essentially the entire economy, 68 00:02:28,087 --> 00:02:29,890 and then all of that has to operate 69 00:02:29,890 --> 00:02:31,615 within the biggest system, 70 00:02:31,615 --> 00:02:33,507 and, I would argue, the most important, 71 00:02:33,507 --> 00:02:35,364 the ecosystem. 72 00:02:35,364 --> 00:02:37,103 And you see, the choices that we make 73 00:02:37,103 --> 00:02:38,735 as an individual, 74 00:02:38,735 --> 00:02:39,954 but the choices that we make 75 00:02:39,954 --> 00:02:42,128 in every single job that we have, 76 00:02:42,128 --> 00:02:44,672 no matter how high or low you are in the pecking order, 77 00:02:44,672 --> 00:02:47,784 has an impact on all of these systems. 78 00:02:47,784 --> 00:02:49,934 And the thing is that we have to find ways 79 00:02:49,934 --> 00:02:52,181 if we're actually going to address sustainability 80 00:02:52,181 --> 00:02:54,822 of interlocking those complex systems 81 00:02:54,822 --> 00:02:57,750 and making better choices that result 82 00:02:57,750 --> 00:03:00,873 in net environmental gains. 83 00:03:00,873 --> 00:03:02,536 What we need to do is we need to learn 84 00:03:02,536 --> 00:03:04,581 to do more with less. 85 00:03:04,581 --> 00:03:06,380 We have an increasing population, 86 00:03:06,380 --> 00:03:07,998 and everybody likes their mobile phones, 87 00:03:07,998 --> 00:03:10,096 especially in this situation here. 88 00:03:10,096 --> 00:03:12,646 So we need to find innovative ways of solving 89 00:03:12,646 --> 00:03:14,354 some of these problems that we face. 90 00:03:14,354 --> 00:03:15,703 And that's where this process called 91 00:03:15,703 --> 00:03:17,566 life cycle thinking comes in. 92 00:03:17,566 --> 00:03:20,030 So essentially, everything that is created 93 00:03:20,030 --> 00:03:22,888 goes through a series of life cycle stages, 94 00:03:22,888 --> 00:03:24,734 and we use this scientific process 95 00:03:24,734 --> 00:03:26,489 called life cycle assessment, 96 00:03:26,489 --> 00:03:28,891 or in America, you guys say life cycle analysis, 97 00:03:28,891 --> 00:03:32,269 in order to have a clearer picture of how 98 00:03:32,269 --> 00:03:36,244 everything that we do in the technical part of those systems 99 00:03:36,244 --> 00:03:38,287 affects the natural environment. 100 00:03:38,287 --> 00:03:40,119 So we go all the way back 101 00:03:40,119 --> 00:03:42,198 to the extraction of raw materials, 102 00:03:42,198 --> 00:03:44,017 and then we look at manufacturing, 103 00:03:44,017 --> 00:03:46,105 we look at packaging and transportation, 104 00:03:46,105 --> 00:03:47,678 use, and end of life, 105 00:03:47,678 --> 00:03:50,611 and at every single one of these stages, 106 00:03:50,611 --> 00:03:52,070 the things that we do 107 00:03:52,070 --> 00:03:54,030 have an interaction with the natural environment, 108 00:03:54,030 --> 00:03:56,434 and we can monitor how that interaction 109 00:03:56,434 --> 00:04:00,061 is actually affecting the systems and services 110 00:04:00,061 --> 00:04:02,125 that make life on earth possible. 111 00:04:02,125 --> 00:04:03,853 And through doing this, 112 00:04:03,853 --> 00:04:07,374 we've learned some absolutely fascinating things. 113 00:04:07,374 --> 00:04:09,718 And we've busted a bunch of myths. 114 00:04:09,718 --> 00:04:12,568 So to start with, 115 00:04:12,568 --> 00:04:14,441 there's a word that's used a lot. 116 00:04:14,441 --> 00:04:16,408 It's used a lot in marketing, 117 00:04:16,408 --> 00:04:18,392 and it's used a lot, I think, in our conversation 118 00:04:18,392 --> 00:04:20,234 when we're talking about sustainability, 119 00:04:20,234 --> 00:04:22,648 and that's the word biodegradability. 120 00:04:22,648 --> 00:04:27,905 Now biodegradability is a material property. 121 00:04:27,905 --> 00:04:30,983 It is not a definition of environmental benefits. 122 00:04:30,983 --> 00:04:32,840 Allow me to explain. 123 00:04:32,840 --> 00:04:34,578 When something natural, 124 00:04:34,578 --> 00:04:36,400 something that's made from a cellulose fiber 125 00:04:36,400 --> 00:04:40,056 like a piece of bread, even, or any food waste, 126 00:04:40,056 --> 00:04:42,370 or even a piece of paper, 127 00:04:42,370 --> 00:04:44,276 when something natural ends up 128 00:04:44,276 --> 00:04:46,915 in the natural environment, it degrades normally. 129 00:04:46,915 --> 00:04:48,717 Its little carbon molecules that it stored up 130 00:04:48,717 --> 00:04:50,808 as it was growing are naturally released 131 00:04:50,808 --> 00:04:53,373 back into the atmosphere as carbon dioxide, 132 00:04:53,373 --> 00:04:55,377 but this is a net situation. 133 00:04:55,377 --> 00:04:56,819 Most natural things 134 00:04:56,819 --> 00:04:58,627 don't actually end up in nature. 135 00:04:58,627 --> 00:05:00,176 Most of the things, the waste that we produce, 136 00:05:00,176 --> 00:05:01,856 end up in landfill. 137 00:05:01,856 --> 00:05:04,193 Landfill is a different environment. 138 00:05:04,193 --> 00:05:06,729 In landfill, those same carbon molecules 139 00:05:06,729 --> 00:05:08,354 degrade in a different way, 140 00:05:08,354 --> 00:05:10,128 because a landfill is anaerobic. 141 00:05:10,128 --> 00:05:13,393 It's got no oxygen. It's tightly compacted and hot. 142 00:05:13,393 --> 00:05:15,694 Those same molecules, they become methane, 143 00:05:15,694 --> 00:05:18,565 and methane is a 25 times more potent 144 00:05:18,565 --> 00:05:21,726 greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide. 145 00:05:21,726 --> 00:05:24,111 So our old lettuces and products 146 00:05:24,111 --> 00:05:25,936 that we have thrown out that are made 147 00:05:25,936 --> 00:05:27,597 out of biodegradable materials, 148 00:05:27,597 --> 00:05:29,317 if they end up in landfill, 149 00:05:29,317 --> 00:05:31,282 contribute to climate change. 150 00:05:31,282 --> 00:05:32,581 You see, there are facilities now 151 00:05:32,581 --> 00:05:34,301 that can actually capture that methane 152 00:05:34,301 --> 00:05:35,908 and generate power, 153 00:05:35,908 --> 00:05:38,484 displacing the need for fossil fuel power, 154 00:05:38,484 --> 00:05:40,165 but we need to be smart about this. 155 00:05:40,165 --> 00:05:43,036 We need to identify how we can start to leverage 156 00:05:43,036 --> 00:05:45,525 these types of things that are already happening 157 00:05:45,525 --> 00:05:47,332 and start to design systems and services 158 00:05:47,332 --> 00:05:49,108 that alleviate these problems. 159 00:05:49,108 --> 00:05:52,123 Because right now, what people do is they turn around and they say, 160 00:05:52,123 --> 00:05:54,988 "Let's ban plastic bags. We'll give people paper 161 00:05:54,988 --> 00:05:56,946 because that is better for the environment." 162 00:05:56,946 --> 00:05:58,503 But if you're throwing it in the bin, 163 00:05:58,503 --> 00:05:59,857 and your local landfill facility 164 00:05:59,857 --> 00:06:01,956 is just a normal one, 165 00:06:01,956 --> 00:06:07,339 then we're having what's called a double negative. 166 00:06:07,339 --> 00:06:10,061 Okay, I'm also a product designer by trade. 167 00:06:10,061 --> 00:06:11,494 I then did social science. 168 00:06:11,494 --> 00:06:12,942 And so I'm absolutely fascinated 169 00:06:12,942 --> 00:06:14,879 by consumer goods and how the consumer goods 170 00:06:14,879 --> 00:06:17,217 that we have kind of become immune to 171 00:06:17,217 --> 00:06:18,702 that fill our lives 172 00:06:18,702 --> 00:06:20,356 have an impact on the natural environment. 173 00:06:20,356 --> 00:06:22,783 And these guys are, like, serial offenders, 174 00:06:22,783 --> 00:06:24,631 and I'm pretty sure everyone in this room 175 00:06:24,631 --> 00:06:26,323 has a refrigerator. 176 00:06:26,323 --> 00:06:28,074 Now America has this amazing ability 177 00:06:28,074 --> 00:06:29,917 to keep growing refrigerators. 178 00:06:29,917 --> 00:06:31,865 In the last few years, they've grown one cubic foot 179 00:06:31,865 --> 00:06:33,713 on average, the standard size 180 00:06:33,713 --> 00:06:35,357 of a refrigerator, 181 00:06:35,357 --> 00:06:37,385 and the problem is, they're so big now, 182 00:06:37,385 --> 00:06:39,825 it's easier for us to buy more food 183 00:06:39,825 --> 00:06:41,970 that we can't eat or find. 184 00:06:41,970 --> 00:06:43,689 I mean, I have things at the back of my refrigerator 185 00:06:43,689 --> 00:06:45,915 that have been there for years, all right? 186 00:06:45,915 --> 00:06:48,412 And so what happens is, we waste more food. 187 00:06:48,412 --> 00:06:51,833 And as I was just explaining, food waste is a problem. 188 00:06:51,833 --> 00:06:55,149 In fact, here in the U.S., 40 percent 189 00:06:55,149 --> 00:06:57,097 of food purchased for the home is wasted. 190 00:06:57,097 --> 00:07:02,121 Half of the world's produced food is wasted. 191 00:07:02,121 --> 00:07:04,897 That's the latest U.N. stats. Up to half of the food. 192 00:07:04,897 --> 00:07:08,957 It's insane. It's 1.3 billion tons of food per annum. 193 00:07:08,957 --> 00:07:11,346 And I blame it on the refrigerator, 194 00:07:11,346 --> 00:07:12,905 well, especially in Western cultures, 195 00:07:12,905 --> 00:07:14,708 because it makes it easier. 196 00:07:14,708 --> 00:07:16,793 I mean, there's a lot of complex systems going on here. 197 00:07:16,793 --> 00:07:18,977 I don't want to make it so simplistic. 198 00:07:18,977 --> 00:07:21,865 But the refrigerator is a serious contributor to this, 199 00:07:21,865 --> 00:07:23,601 and one of the features of it 200 00:07:23,601 --> 00:07:26,347 is the crisper drawer. 201 00:07:26,347 --> 00:07:27,713 You all got crisper drawers? 202 00:07:27,713 --> 00:07:29,337 You know, the draw that you put your lettuces in? 203 00:07:29,337 --> 00:07:31,078 Lettuces have a habit of going soggy 204 00:07:31,078 --> 00:07:32,837 in the crisper drawer, don't they. 205 00:07:32,837 --> 00:07:34,401 Yeah? Soggy lettuces? 206 00:07:34,401 --> 00:07:36,371 In the U.K., this is such a problem 207 00:07:36,371 --> 00:07:38,100 that there was a government report a few years ago 208 00:07:38,100 --> 00:07:40,857 that actually said the second-biggest offender 209 00:07:40,857 --> 00:07:43,475 of wasted food in the U.K. is the soggy lettuce. 210 00:07:43,475 --> 00:07:45,985 It was called "the soggy lettuce report." 211 00:07:45,985 --> 00:07:47,905 Okay? So this is a problem, people. 212 00:07:47,905 --> 00:07:50,200 These poor little lettuces are getting thrown out 213 00:07:50,200 --> 00:07:51,920 left, right, and center, because the crisper drawers 214 00:07:51,920 --> 00:07:54,770 are not designed to actually keep things crisp. 215 00:07:54,770 --> 00:07:57,024 Okay. You need a tight environment. 216 00:07:57,024 --> 00:07:58,848 You need, like, an airless environment 217 00:07:58,848 --> 00:08:02,088 to prevent the degrading that would happen naturally. 218 00:08:02,088 --> 00:08:03,816 But the crisper drawers, they're just a drawer 219 00:08:03,816 --> 00:08:05,509 with, like, a slightly better seal. 220 00:08:05,509 --> 00:08:07,673 Anyway, I'm clearly obsessed. All right? 221 00:08:07,673 --> 00:08:08,984 Don't ever invite me over because I'll just 222 00:08:08,984 --> 00:08:10,794 start going through your refrigerator 223 00:08:10,794 --> 00:08:12,240 and looking at all sorts of things like that. 224 00:08:12,240 --> 00:08:13,896 But essentially, this is a big problem. 225 00:08:13,896 --> 00:08:16,578 Because when we lose something like the lettuce from the system, 226 00:08:16,578 --> 00:08:18,453 not only do we have that impact I just explained 227 00:08:18,453 --> 00:08:20,376 at the end of life, 228 00:08:20,376 --> 00:08:22,817 but we actually have had to grow that lettuce. 229 00:08:22,817 --> 00:08:26,078 The life cycle impact of that lettuce is astronomical. 230 00:08:26,078 --> 00:08:27,659 We've had to clear land. 231 00:08:27,659 --> 00:08:29,340 We've had to plant seeds, phosphorus, 232 00:08:29,340 --> 00:08:31,740 fertilizers, nutrients, water, sunlight. 233 00:08:31,740 --> 00:08:33,828 All of the embodied impacts in that lettuce 234 00:08:33,828 --> 00:08:35,540 get lost from the system, 235 00:08:35,540 --> 00:08:37,890 which makes it a far bigger environmental impact 236 00:08:37,890 --> 00:08:41,989 than the loss of the energy from the fridge. 237 00:08:41,989 --> 00:08:45,100 So we need to design things like this far better 238 00:08:45,100 --> 00:08:48,281 if we're going to start addressing serious environmental problems. 239 00:08:48,281 --> 00:08:50,148 We could start with the crisper drawer and the size. 240 00:08:50,148 --> 00:08:51,931 For those of you in the room who do design fridges, 241 00:08:51,931 --> 00:08:53,547 that would be great. 242 00:08:53,547 --> 00:08:56,066 Okay, so the problem is, so imagine if we 243 00:08:56,066 --> 00:08:59,203 actually started to reconsider how we design things. 244 00:08:59,203 --> 00:09:02,748 So I look at the refrigerator as a sign of modernity, 245 00:09:02,748 --> 00:09:04,723 but we actually haven't really changed the design 246 00:09:04,723 --> 00:09:07,517 of them that much since the 1950s. 247 00:09:07,517 --> 00:09:10,450 A little bit, but essentially they're still big boxes, 248 00:09:10,450 --> 00:09:12,602 cold boxes that we store stuff in. 249 00:09:12,602 --> 00:09:14,407 So imagine if we actually really started 250 00:09:14,407 --> 00:09:17,137 to identify these problems and use that 251 00:09:17,137 --> 00:09:21,181 as the foundation for finding innovative and elegant 252 00:09:21,181 --> 00:09:24,058 design solutions that will solve those problems. 253 00:09:24,058 --> 00:09:26,698 This is design-led system change, 254 00:09:26,698 --> 00:09:30,454 design dictating the way in which the system 255 00:09:30,454 --> 00:09:33,234 can be far more sustainable. 256 00:09:33,234 --> 00:09:35,282 Forty percent food waste is a major problem. 257 00:09:35,282 --> 00:09:39,378 Imagine if we designed fridges that halved that. 258 00:09:39,378 --> 00:09:41,560 Another item that I find fascinating 259 00:09:41,560 --> 00:09:42,828 is the electric tea kettle, 260 00:09:42,828 --> 00:09:44,730 which I found out that you guys don't really, 261 00:09:44,730 --> 00:09:47,610 you don't do tea kettles in this country, really, do you. 262 00:09:47,610 --> 00:09:49,652 But that's really big in the U.K. 263 00:09:49,652 --> 00:09:51,579 Ninety-seven percent of households 264 00:09:51,579 --> 00:09:54,618 in the United Kingdom own an electric tea kettle. 265 00:09:54,618 --> 00:09:56,363 So they're very popular. 266 00:09:56,363 --> 00:09:58,779 And, I mean, if I were to work with a design firm 267 00:09:58,779 --> 00:10:01,353 or a designer, and they were designing one of these, 268 00:10:01,353 --> 00:10:02,931 and they wanted to do it eco, 269 00:10:02,931 --> 00:10:04,803 they'd usually ask me two things. 270 00:10:04,803 --> 00:10:07,770 They'd say, "Leyla, how do I make it technically efficient?" 271 00:10:07,770 --> 00:10:11,075 Because obviously energy's a problem with this product. 272 00:10:11,075 --> 00:10:14,080 Or, "How do I make it green materials? 273 00:10:14,080 --> 00:10:16,603 How do I make the materials green 274 00:10:16,603 --> 00:10:18,702 in the manufacturing?" 275 00:10:18,702 --> 00:10:20,596 Would you ask me those questions? 276 00:10:20,596 --> 00:10:23,021 They seem logical, right? Yeah. 277 00:10:23,021 --> 00:10:26,017 Well I'd say, "You're looking at the wrong problems." 278 00:10:26,017 --> 00:10:28,022 Because the problem is with use. 279 00:10:28,022 --> 00:10:30,818 It's with how people use the product. 280 00:10:30,818 --> 00:10:32,653 Sixty-five percent of Brits 281 00:10:32,653 --> 00:10:34,781 admit to over-filling their kettle 282 00:10:34,781 --> 00:10:37,583 when they only need one cup of tea. 283 00:10:37,583 --> 00:10:40,387 All of this extra water that's being boiled 284 00:10:40,387 --> 00:10:44,309 requires energy, and it's been calculated 285 00:10:44,309 --> 00:10:46,980 that in one day of extra energy use 286 00:10:46,980 --> 00:10:48,829 from boiling kettles 287 00:10:48,829 --> 00:10:51,533 is enough to light all of the streetlights 288 00:10:51,533 --> 00:10:54,633 in England for a night. 289 00:10:54,633 --> 00:10:56,029 But this is the thing, right? 290 00:10:56,029 --> 00:10:58,068 This is what I call a product person failure. 291 00:10:58,068 --> 00:11:00,734 But we've got a product system failure going on with these little guys, 292 00:11:00,734 --> 00:11:02,182 and they're so ubiquitous, you know, 293 00:11:02,182 --> 00:11:03,774 you don't even notice they're there. 294 00:11:03,774 --> 00:11:05,995 And this guy over here, though, he does. 295 00:11:05,995 --> 00:11:07,210 He's named Simon. 296 00:11:07,210 --> 00:11:10,363 Simon works for the national electricity company in the U.K. 297 00:11:10,363 --> 00:11:12,305 He has a very important job of monitoring 298 00:11:12,305 --> 00:11:14,438 all of the electricity coming into the system 299 00:11:14,438 --> 00:11:16,126 to make sure there is enough 300 00:11:16,126 --> 00:11:18,162 that it powers everybody's homes. 301 00:11:18,162 --> 00:11:20,266 He's also watching television. 302 00:11:20,266 --> 00:11:22,224 The reason is is because there's a unique 303 00:11:22,224 --> 00:11:24,078 phenomenon that happens in the U.K. 304 00:11:24,078 --> 00:11:27,897 the moment that very popular TV shows end. 305 00:11:27,897 --> 00:11:30,333 The minute the ad break comes on, 306 00:11:30,333 --> 00:11:32,140 this man has to rush 307 00:11:32,140 --> 00:11:35,226 to buy nuclear power from France, 308 00:11:35,226 --> 00:11:37,684 because everybody turns their kettles on 309 00:11:37,684 --> 00:11:40,180 at the same time. 310 00:11:40,180 --> 00:11:42,380 (Laughter) 311 00:11:42,380 --> 00:11:48,457 1.5 million kettles, seriously problematic. 312 00:11:48,457 --> 00:11:52,149 So imagine if you designed kettles, 313 00:11:52,149 --> 00:11:54,890 you actually found a way to solve these system failures, 314 00:11:54,890 --> 00:11:57,447 because this is a huge amount of pressure 315 00:11:57,447 --> 00:11:58,792 on the system, 316 00:11:58,792 --> 00:12:02,092 just because the product hasn't thought about the problem 317 00:12:02,092 --> 00:12:03,968 that it's going to have when it exists in the world. 318 00:12:03,968 --> 00:12:06,805 Now, I looked at a number of kettles available on the market, 319 00:12:06,805 --> 00:12:08,781 and found the minimum fill lines, 320 00:12:08,781 --> 00:12:10,501 so the little piece of information that tells you 321 00:12:10,501 --> 00:12:12,165 how much you need to put in there, 322 00:12:12,165 --> 00:12:14,562 was between two and a five-and-a-half cups of water 323 00:12:14,562 --> 00:12:18,349 just to make one cup of tea. 324 00:12:18,349 --> 00:12:20,310 So this kettle here is an example of one where 325 00:12:20,310 --> 00:12:22,169 it actually has two boiling chambers, 326 00:12:22,169 --> 00:12:23,325 or, sorry, two reservoirs. 327 00:12:23,325 --> 00:12:25,540 One's a boiling chamber, and one's the water holder. 328 00:12:25,540 --> 00:12:27,589 The user actually has to push that button 329 00:12:27,589 --> 00:12:29,357 to get their hot water boiled, 330 00:12:29,357 --> 00:12:31,097 which means, because we're all lazy, 331 00:12:31,097 --> 00:12:33,072 you only fill exactly what you need. 332 00:12:33,072 --> 00:12:35,165 And this is what I call behavior-changing products: 333 00:12:35,165 --> 00:12:37,277 products, systems, or services 334 00:12:37,277 --> 00:12:41,413 that intervene and solve these problems up front. 335 00:12:41,413 --> 00:12:43,786 Now, this is a technology arena, 336 00:12:43,786 --> 00:12:45,771 so obviously these things are quite popular, 337 00:12:45,771 --> 00:12:47,600 but I think if we're going to keep 338 00:12:47,600 --> 00:12:50,479 designing, buying, and using and throwing out 339 00:12:50,479 --> 00:12:52,315 these kinds of products at the rate we currently do, 340 00:12:52,315 --> 00:12:54,179 which is astronomically high, 341 00:12:54,179 --> 00:12:56,396 there are seven billion people, right, 342 00:12:56,396 --> 00:12:57,976 who live in the world right now. 343 00:12:57,976 --> 00:13:00,147 There are six billion mobile phone subscriptions 344 00:13:00,147 --> 00:13:03,952 as of last year. 345 00:13:03,952 --> 00:13:07,092 Every single year, 1.5 billion mobile phones 346 00:13:07,092 --> 00:13:08,604 roll off production lines, 347 00:13:08,604 --> 00:13:10,675 and some companies report their production rate 348 00:13:10,675 --> 00:13:13,549 as being greater than the human birthrate. 349 00:13:13,549 --> 00:13:15,939 152 million phones were thrown out in the U.S. last year. 350 00:13:15,939 --> 00:13:17,809 Only 11 percent were recycled. 351 00:13:17,809 --> 00:13:21,227 I'm from Australia. We have a population of 22 million. Don't laugh. 352 00:13:21,227 --> 00:13:24,116 And it's been reported that 22 million phones 353 00:13:24,116 --> 00:13:27,020 are in people's drawers. 354 00:13:27,020 --> 00:13:30,782 We need to find ways of solving the problems around this, 355 00:13:30,782 --> 00:13:33,495 because these things are so complicated. 356 00:13:33,495 --> 00:13:36,524 They have so much locked up inside them. 357 00:13:36,524 --> 00:13:40,764 Gold: did you know that it's actually cheaper now 358 00:13:40,764 --> 00:13:44,211 to get gold out of a ton of old mobile phones 359 00:13:44,211 --> 00:13:47,532 than it is out of a ton of gold ore? 360 00:13:47,532 --> 00:13:49,860 There's a number of highly complex and valuable 361 00:13:49,860 --> 00:13:51,477 materials embodied inside these things, 362 00:13:51,477 --> 00:13:54,015 so we need to find ways of encouraging disassembly, 363 00:13:54,015 --> 00:13:56,252 because this is otherwise what happens. 364 00:13:56,252 --> 00:13:57,988 This is a community in Ghana, 365 00:13:57,988 --> 00:14:00,020 and e-waste is reported, or electronic waste 366 00:14:00,020 --> 00:14:01,869 is reported by the U.N. 367 00:14:01,869 --> 00:14:05,030 as being up to 50 million tons trafficked. 368 00:14:05,030 --> 00:14:06,537 This is how they get the gold 369 00:14:06,537 --> 00:14:07,995 and the other valuable materials out. 370 00:14:07,995 --> 00:14:09,809 They burn the electronic waste 371 00:14:09,809 --> 00:14:11,948 in open spaces. 372 00:14:11,948 --> 00:14:14,944 These are communities, and this is happening all over the world. 373 00:14:14,944 --> 00:14:17,491 And because we don't see the ramifications 374 00:14:17,491 --> 00:14:19,459 of the choices that we make as designers, 375 00:14:19,459 --> 00:14:21,945 as businesspeople, as consumers, 376 00:14:21,945 --> 00:14:23,619 then these kinds of externalities happen, 377 00:14:23,619 --> 00:14:25,860 and these are people's lives. 378 00:14:25,860 --> 00:14:30,060 So we need to find smarter, more systems-based, 379 00:14:30,060 --> 00:14:33,469 innovative solutions to these problems, 380 00:14:33,469 --> 00:14:37,153 if we're going to start to live sustainably within this world. 381 00:14:37,153 --> 00:14:40,818 So imagine if, when you bought your mobile phone, 382 00:14:40,818 --> 00:14:42,710 your new one because you replaced your old one 383 00:14:42,710 --> 00:14:44,883 — after 15 to 18 months is the average time 384 00:14:44,883 --> 00:14:46,987 that people replace their phones, by the way — 385 00:14:46,987 --> 00:14:49,419 so if we're going to keep this kind of expedient 386 00:14:49,419 --> 00:14:52,075 mobile phone replacing, then we should 387 00:14:52,075 --> 00:14:54,259 be looking at closing the loop on the systems. 388 00:14:54,259 --> 00:14:56,094 The people who produce these phones, 389 00:14:56,094 --> 00:14:57,907 and some of which I'm sure are in the room right now, 390 00:14:57,907 --> 00:15:00,847 could potentially look at what we call closed-loop systems, 391 00:15:00,847 --> 00:15:02,507 or product system services, 392 00:15:02,507 --> 00:15:04,739 so identifying that there is a market demand 393 00:15:04,739 --> 00:15:06,571 and that market demand's not going to go anywhere, 394 00:15:06,571 --> 00:15:09,531 so you design the product to solve the problem. 395 00:15:09,531 --> 00:15:11,716 Design for disassembly, design for light-weighting. 396 00:15:11,716 --> 00:15:14,005 We heard some of those kinds of strategies 397 00:15:14,005 --> 00:15:17,028 being used in the Tesla Motors car today. 398 00:15:17,028 --> 00:15:19,147 These kinds of approaches are not hard, 399 00:15:19,147 --> 00:15:20,973 but understanding the system 400 00:15:20,973 --> 00:15:24,075 and then looking for viable, market-driven 401 00:15:24,075 --> 00:15:26,595 consumer demand alternatives 402 00:15:26,595 --> 00:15:28,808 is how we can start radically altering 403 00:15:28,808 --> 00:15:30,969 the sustainability agenda, 404 00:15:30,969 --> 00:15:32,901 because I hate to break it to you all: 405 00:15:32,901 --> 00:15:35,627 consumption is the biggest problem. 406 00:15:35,627 --> 00:15:40,859 But design is one of the best solutions. 407 00:15:40,859 --> 00:15:43,180 These kinds of products are everywhere. 408 00:15:43,180 --> 00:15:45,571 By identifying alternative ways of doing things, 409 00:15:45,571 --> 00:15:47,166 we can actually start to innovate, 410 00:15:47,166 --> 00:15:48,744 and I say actually start to innovate. 411 00:15:48,744 --> 00:15:50,768 I'm sure everyone in this room is very innovative. 412 00:15:50,768 --> 00:15:53,491 But in the regards to using sustainability 413 00:15:53,491 --> 00:15:55,963 as a parameter, as a criteria 414 00:15:55,963 --> 00:16:00,318 for fueling systems-based solutions, 415 00:16:00,318 --> 00:16:03,361 because as I've just demonstrated with these simple products, 416 00:16:03,361 --> 00:16:06,814 they're participating in these major problems. 417 00:16:06,814 --> 00:16:08,923 So we need to look across the entire life 418 00:16:08,923 --> 00:16:10,760 of the things that we do. 419 00:16:10,760 --> 00:16:12,306 If you just had paper or plastic, 420 00:16:12,306 --> 00:16:14,854 obviously reusable is far more beneficial, 421 00:16:14,854 --> 00:16:18,556 then the paper is worse, 422 00:16:18,556 --> 00:16:20,403 and the paper is worse because it weighs 423 00:16:20,403 --> 00:16:22,475 four to 10 times more than the plastic, 424 00:16:22,475 --> 00:16:25,015 and when we actually compare, from a life cycle perspective, 425 00:16:25,015 --> 00:16:27,532 a kilo of plastic and a kilo of paper, 426 00:16:27,532 --> 00:16:29,363 the paper is far better, 427 00:16:29,363 --> 00:16:31,718 but the functionality of a plastic or a paper bag 428 00:16:31,718 --> 00:16:33,151 to carry your groceries home 429 00:16:33,151 --> 00:16:35,633 is not done with a kilo of each material. 430 00:16:35,633 --> 00:16:37,441 It's done with a very small amount of plastic 431 00:16:37,441 --> 00:16:39,505 and quite a lot more paper. 432 00:16:39,505 --> 00:16:42,060 Because functionality defines environmental impact, 433 00:16:42,060 --> 00:16:44,786 and I said earlier that the designers always ask me for the eco-materials. 434 00:16:44,786 --> 00:16:46,995 I say, you know, there's only a few materials 435 00:16:46,995 --> 00:16:48,217 that you should completely avoid. 436 00:16:48,217 --> 00:16:49,977 The rest of them, it's all about application, 437 00:16:49,977 --> 00:16:52,289 and at the end of the day, everything we design and produce in the economy 438 00:16:52,289 --> 00:16:55,305 or buy as consumers is done so for function. 439 00:16:55,305 --> 00:16:57,468 We want something, therefore we buy it. 440 00:16:57,468 --> 00:16:59,596 So breaking things back down and delivering 441 00:16:59,596 --> 00:17:04,361 smartly, elegantly, sophisticated solutions 442 00:17:04,361 --> 00:17:07,129 that take into consideration the entire system 443 00:17:07,129 --> 00:17:09,931 and the entire life of the thing, everything, 444 00:17:09,931 --> 00:17:12,905 all the way back to the extraction through to the end of life, 445 00:17:12,905 --> 00:17:16,154 we can start to actually find really innovative solutions. 446 00:17:16,154 --> 00:17:18,208 And I'll just leave you with one very quick thing 447 00:17:18,208 --> 00:17:21,129 that a designer said to me recently who I work with, 448 00:17:21,129 --> 00:17:22,236 a senior designer, I said, 449 00:17:22,236 --> 00:17:24,064 "How come you're not doing sustainability? 450 00:17:24,064 --> 00:17:25,271 You know, I know you know this." 451 00:17:25,271 --> 00:17:28,405 And he said, "Well, recently I pitched a sustainability project to a client, 452 00:17:28,405 --> 00:17:31,023 and turned and he said to me, 453 00:17:31,023 --> 00:17:33,127 'I know it's going to cost less, 454 00:17:33,127 --> 00:17:34,622 I know it's going to sell more, 455 00:17:34,622 --> 00:17:39,588 but we're not pioneers, because pioneers have arrows in their backs.'" 456 00:17:39,588 --> 00:17:41,358 I think we've got a roomful of pioneers, 457 00:17:41,358 --> 00:17:42,935 and I hope there are far more pioneers out there, 458 00:17:42,935 --> 00:17:44,244 because we need to solve these problems. 459 00:17:44,244 --> 00:17:47,220 Thank you. 460 00:17:47,220 --> 00:17:50,021 (Applause)