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The other inconvenient truth | Jonathan Foley | TEDxTC

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    Tonight, I want to have a conversation
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    about this incredible global issue
    that's at the intersection
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    of land use, food, and environment,
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    something we can all relate to,
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    and what I've been calling
    "the other inconvenient truth".
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    But first, I want to take you
    on a little journey.
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    Let's first visit our planet,
    but at night and from space.
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    This is what our planet looks like
    from outer space
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    at night time, if you were going to
    take a satellite
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    and travel around the planet.
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    And the thing you would notice first,
    of course,
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    is how dominant the human presence
    on our planet is.
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    We see cities, we see oil fields,
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    you can even make out
    fishing fleets in the sea.
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    We are dominating much
    of our planet, and mostly
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    through the use of energy
    that we see here at night.
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    But let's go back
    and drop it a little deeper
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    and look during the daytime.
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    What we see during the day
    is our landscapes.
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    This is part of the Amazon Basin,
    a place called Rondonia
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    in the south center part of
    the Brazilian Amazon.
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    If you look really carefully
    in the upper right hand corner,
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    you're going to see a thin white line,
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    which is a road
    that was built in the 1970s.
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    If we come back to the same place in 2001
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    what we're going to find
    is that these roads
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    spurred off more roads
    and more roads after that,
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    at the end of which is a small clearing
    in the rainforest,
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    where there are going to be a few cows.
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    These cows are used for beef.
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    We're going to eat these cows,
    and these cows are eaten
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    basically in South America,
    in Brazil and Argentina.
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    They're not being shipped up here.
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    But this kind of fish bone pattern
    of deforestation
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    is something we notice
    a lot of around the tropics,
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    especially in this part of the world.
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    If we go a little bit further south
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    on our little tour of the world,
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    we can go to the Bolivian edge
    of the Amazon,
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    here also in 1975.
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    And if you look really carefully,
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    there's a thin white line
    through that kind of seam,
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    and there's a lone farmer out there
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    in the middle of the primeval jungle.
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    Let's come back again a few years later,
    here in 2003.
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    And we'll see that
    that landscape actually looks
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    a lot more like Iowa
    than it does like a rainforest.
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    In fact, what you're seeing here
    are soybean fields.
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    These soybeans are being shipped to Europe
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    and to China as animal feed,
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    especially after the Mad Cow Disease scare
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    about a decade ago,
    where we don't want to feed animals
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    animal protein anymore,
    because that can transmit disease.
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    Instead, we want to feed them
    more vegetable proteins,
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    so soybeans have really exploded,
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    showing how trade and globalization
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    are really responsible for the connections
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    to rainforest and the Amazon.
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    An incredibly strange,
    interconnected world
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    that we have today.
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    Well, again and again what we find
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    as we look around the world
    in our little tour of the world
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    is that landscape after landscape
    after landscape
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    have been cleared and altered
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    for growing food and other crops.
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    So, one of the questions we've been asking
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    is, how much of the world
    is used to grow food,
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    and where is it, exactly?
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    And how can we change that
    into the future,
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    and what does it mean?
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    Well, our team has been looking at this
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    on a global scale using satellite data
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    and ground based data
    kind of to track farming
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    at a global scale.
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    And this is what we've found,
    and it's startling.
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    This map shows the presence
    of agriculture on planet Earth.
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    The green areas are the areas we use
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    to grow crops like wheat,
    or soybeans, or corn,
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    or rice, or whatever.
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    That's 16 million square kilometers
    worth of land.
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    If you put it all together in one place,
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    it'd be the size of South America.
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    The second area in brown
    is the world's pastures
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    and rangelands where our animals live.
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    That area is about 30 million
    square kilometers,
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    or about an Africa's worth of land,
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    a huge amount of land.
    And it's the best land,
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    of course, is what you see.
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    What's left is like the middle
    of the Sahara Desert,
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    or Siberia, or the middle of a rainforest.
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    We're using a planet's worth
    of land already.
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    If we look at this carefully,
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    we find that about 40 percent
    of the Earth's land surface
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    is devoted to agriculture,
    and it's 60 times larger
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    than all the areas we complain about:
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    our suburban sprawl, and our cities
    where we mostly live.
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    Half of humanity lives in cities today,
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    but its 60 times larger area
    is used to grow food.
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    So, this is an amazing kind of result,
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    and it really shocked us
    when we looked at that.
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    So we're using an enormous amount
    of land for agriculture,
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    but also we're using a lot of water.
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    This is a photograph flying into Arizona,
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    and when you look at it you're like,
    what are they growing here?
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    It turns out, they're growing lettuce
    in the middle of the desert
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    using water sprayed on top.
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    Now, the irony is it's probably sold
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    on our supermarket shelves
    in the Twin Cities.
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    But what's really interesting is
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    this water's got to come from some place,
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    and it comes from here,
    the Colorado River in North America.
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    Well, the Colorado on
    a typical day in the 1950s -
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    this is just, not a flood, not a drought,
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    kind of an average day -
    looks something like this.
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    But if we come back today
    during a normal condition
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    to the exact same location,
    this is what's left.
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    The difference is mainly
    irrigating the desert for food,
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    or maybe golf courses in Scottsdale.
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    You take your pick.
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    Well, this is a lot of water.
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    And again, we're mining water
    and using it to grow food.
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    And today, if you travel down
    further down the Colorado,
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    it dries up completely and no longer
    flows into the ocean.
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    We've literally consumed an entire river
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    in North America for irrigation.
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    Well, that's not even the worst
    example in the world.
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    This probably is, the Aral Sea.
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    Now, a lot of you will remember this
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    from your geography classes.
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    This is in the former Soviet Union
    between Kazakhstan
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    and Uzbekistan, one of the great
    inland seas of the world.
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    But there's kind of a paradox here,
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    because it looks like
    it's surrounded by desert.
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    Why is this sea here?
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    The reason it's here is because
    on the right hand side
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    you see two little rivers
    kind of coming down
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    through the sand,
    feeding this basin with water.
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    Those rivers are draining snow melt
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    from mountains far to the east,
    where snow melts,
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    travels down the river,
    through the desert,
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    and forms the great Aral Sea.
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    Well, in the 1950s, the Soviets decided
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    to divert that water
    to irrigate the desert
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    to grow cotton, believe it or not,
    in Kazakhstan,
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    to sell cotton
    to the international markets
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    to bring foreign currency
    into the Soviet Union.
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    They really needed the money.
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    Well, you can imagine what happens:
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    [if] you turn off the water supply
    to the Aral Sea, what's going to happen?
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    Here it is in 1973,
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    1986,
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    1999,
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    2004,
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    and about 11 months ago.
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    It's pretty extraordinary.
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    Now, a lot of us in the audience here
    live in the Midwest.
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    Imagine that was Lake Superior.
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    Imagine that was Lake Huron.
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    It's an extraordinary change.
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    This is not only a change in water
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    and where the shoreline is,
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    it's a change in the fundamentals
    of the environment of this region.
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    Let's start with this.
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    The Soviet Union didn't really
    have a Sierra Club,
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    let's put it that way.
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    So what you find at the bottom
    of the Aral Sea ain't pretty.
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    There's a lot of toxic waste,
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    a lot of things were dumped there,
    they're now becoming airborne.
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    One of those small islands
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    that was remote and impossible to get to
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    was a site of Soviet biological
    weapons testing.
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    You can walk there today.
    Weather patterns have changed:
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    19 of the unique 20 fish species
    found only in the Aral Sea
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    are now wiped off the face of the Earth.
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    This is an environmental disaster
    writ large.
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    But let's bring it home.
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    This is a picture that Al Gore
    gave me a few years ago
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    that he took when he was
    in the Soviet Union
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    a long, long time ago showing
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    the fishing fleets of the Aral Sea.
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    You see the canal they dug?
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    They're so desperate to try
    to kind of float the boats
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    into the remaining pools of water
    that they finally had to give up,
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    because the piers and moorings
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    simply couldn't keep up
    with the retreating shoreline.
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    I don't know about you, but I'm terrified
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    that future archeologists
    will dig this up
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    and write stories about our time
    in history and wonder,
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    what were you thinking?
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    Well, that's the future
    we have to look forward to.
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    We already use about 50 percent
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    of the Earth's fresh water
    that's sustainable,
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    and agriculture alone
    is 70 percent of that.
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    So we use a lot of water,
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    a lot of land for agriculture -
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    we also use a lot of the atmosphere
    for agriculture.
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    Usually when we think
    about the atmosphere,
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    we think about climate change
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    and greenhouse gases,
    and mostly around energy.
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    But it turns out, agriculture is one
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    of the biggest emitters
    of greenhouse gases, too.
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    If you look at carbon dioxide
    from burning tropical rainforest,
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    or methane coming from cows and rice,
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    or nitrous oxide
    from too many fertilizers,
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    it turns out agriculture is 30 percent
    of the greenhouse gases
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    going into the atmosphere
    from human activity!
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    That's more than all our transportation,
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    it's more than all our electricity,
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    it's more than all other manufacturing,
    in fact.
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    It's the single largest emitter
    of greenhouse gases
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    of any human activity in the world,
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    and yet we don't talk about it very much.
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    So, we have this incredible presence today
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    of agriculture dominating our planet,
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    whether it's 40 percent
    of our land's surface,
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    70 percent of the water we use,
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    30 percent of our greenhouse
    gas emissions.
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    We've doubled the flows
    of nitrogen and phosphorus
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    around the world simply
    by using fertilizers,
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    causing huge problems of water quality
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    from rivers, lakes, and even oceans.
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    And it's also the single
    biggest driver of biodiversity loss.
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    So without a doubt, agriculture
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    is the single most powerful force
    unleashed on this planet
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    since the end of the Ice Age, no question.
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    And it rivals climate change
    in importance,
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    and they're both happening
    at the same time.
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    But what's really important
    here to remember
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    is that it's not all bad.
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    It's not that agriculture's a bad thing.
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    In fact, we completely depend on it.
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    It's not optional, it's not a luxury.
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    It's an absolute necessity.
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    We have to provide food and feed, and yes,
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    fiber, and even biofuels
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    to something like seven billion
    people in the world today.
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    And if anything, we're going to have
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    the demands on agriculture
    increase into the future.
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    It's not going to go away:
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    it's going to get a lot bigger,
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    mainly because of growing population.
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    We're seven billion people today
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    heading towards at least nine,
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    probably nine and a half
    before we're done.
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    More importantly, changing diets
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    as the world becomes wealthier
    as well as more populous -
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    we're seeing increases in
    dietary consumption of meat,
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    which take a lot more resources
    than a vegetarian diet does.
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    So more people eating
    more stuff and richer stuff,
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    and of course, having an energy
    crisis at the same time
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    where we have to replace
    oil with other energy sources
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    that will ultimately have to include
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    some kinds of biofuels
    and bioenergy sources.
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    So, you put these together,
    it's really hard to see
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    how we're going to get
    to the rest of the century
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    without at least doubling global
    agricultural production.
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    Well, how are we going to do this?
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    How are we going to double
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    global agro production around the world?
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    Well, we could try to farm more land:
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    this is an analysis we've done
    where on the left
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    is where the crops are today.
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    On the right is where they could be,
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    based on soils and climate,
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    assuming climate change
    doesn't disrupt too much of this,
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    which is not a good assumption.
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    We could farm more land,
    but the problem is,
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    the remaining lands
    are in sensitive areas:
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    they have a lot of biodiversity,
    a lot of carbon,
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    things we want to protect.
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    So we could grow more food
    by expanding farmland,
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    but we'd better not,
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    because it's ecologically a very,
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    very dangerous thing to do.
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    Instead, we maybe want to freeze
    the footprint of agriculture
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    and farm the lands we have better.
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    This is work that we're doing
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    to try to highlight places in the world
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    where we could improve yields
    without harming the environment.
  • 11:47 - 11:50
    The green areas here
    show where corn yields
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    - just showing corn as an example -
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    are already really high,
    probably the maximum
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    you could find on Earth today
    for that climate and soil.
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    But the brown areas and yellow areas
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    are places where we're only getting
    maybe 20 or 30 percent
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    of the yield you should be able to get.
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    You see a lot of this in Africa,
    even Latin America,
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    but interestingly, Eastern Europe,
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    where Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc
    countries used to be,
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    is still a mess, agriculturally.
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    Now, this would require
    nutrients and water.
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    It's going to either be organic,
    or conventional,
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    or some mix of the two to deliver that.
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    Plants need water and nutrients.
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    But we can do this,
    and there are opportunities
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    to make this work.
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    But we have to do it
    in a way that is sensitive
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    to meeting the food
    security needs of the future
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    and the environmental
    security needs of the future.
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    We have to figure out
    how to make this tradeoff
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    between growing food and having
    healthy environment work better.
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    Right now, it's kind of
    all or nothing proposition.
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    We can grow food in the background
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    - that's a soybean field -
    and in this flower diagram
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    it shows we grow a lot of food,
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    but we don't have a lot of clean water,
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    we're not storing a lot of carbon,
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    we don't have a lot of biodiversity.
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    In the foreground, we have this prairie
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    that's wonderful
    from the environmental side,
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    but you can't eat anything.
    What's there to eat?
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    We need to figure out
    how to bring both of those
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    together into a new kind of agriculture
  • 13:06 - 13:08
    that brings them all together.
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    Now, when I talk about this,
    people often tell me,
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    well, isn't - blank - the answer,
    or organic food,
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    local food, GMOs, new trade subsidies,
    new farmvilles?
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    And yes, we have a lot of good ideas here,
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    but not any one of these
    is a silver bullet.
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    In fact, what I think they are
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    is more like silver buckshot.
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    And I love silver buckshot:
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    you put it together,
    and you've got something really powerful.
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    But we need to put them together.
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    So what we have to do, I think,
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    is invent a new kind of agriculture
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    that blends the best ideas
    of commercial agriculture
  • 13:41 - 13:42
    in the Green Revolution
  • 13:42 - 13:45
    with the best ideas
    of organic farming and local food,
  • 13:45 - 13:49
    and the best ideas
    of environmental conservation.
  • 13:49 - 13:51
    Not to have them fighting each other,
  • 13:51 - 13:53
    but to have them collaborating together
  • 13:53 - 13:55
    to form a new kind of agriculture,
  • 13:55 - 13:57
    something I call terraculture,
  • 13:57 - 13:59
    or farming for a whole planet.
  • 13:59 - 14:01
    Now, having this kind of conversation
  • 14:01 - 14:02
    has been really hard.
  • 14:02 - 14:05
    We've been trying very hard
    to bring these key points to people
  • 14:05 - 14:08
    to reduce the controversy
    and increase the collaboration.
  • 14:08 - 14:10
    I'm going to show you a short video
  • 14:10 - 14:12
    that does kind of show
    our efforts right now
  • 14:12 - 14:15
    to bring these sides together
    into a single conversation.
  • 14:15 - 14:17
    So let me show you that.
  • 14:18 - 14:21
    (Music)
    [Environment.]
  • 14:21 - 14:24
    [Institute on the environment –
    University of Minnesota]
  • 14:24 - 14:25
    [Driven to discover]
  • 14:25 - 14:28
    [The world population is growing]
  • 14:28 - 14:30
    [by 75 million people each year.]
  • 14:30 - 14:33
    [That's almost the size of Germany.]
  • 14:33 - 14:35
    [Today, we're nearing 7 billion people.]
  • 14:35 - 14:38
    [At this rate, we'll reach
    9 billion people by 2040.]
  • 14:38 - 14:40
    [And we all need food.]
  • 14:40 - 14:41
    [But how?]
  • 14:41 - 14:44
    [How do we feed a growing world
    without destroying the planet?]
  • 14:44 - 14:47
    [We already know climate change
    is a big problem.]
  • 14:47 - 14:49
    [But it's not the only problem.]
  • 14:49 - 14:52
    [We need to face
    “the other inconvenient truth.”:]
  • 14:52 - 14:54
    [a global crisis in agriculture.]
  • 14:54 - 14:58
    [Population growth, meat consumption,
    dairy consumption, energy costs]
  • 14:58 - 15:01
    [bioenergy production
    = stress on natural resources.]
  • 15:01 - 15:04
    [More than 40% of Earth's land
    has been cleared for agriculture.]
  • 15:04 - 15:07
    [Global croplands cover
    16 million square kilometers.]
  • 15:07 - 15:09
    [That's almost the size of South America.]
  • 15:09 - 15:12
    [Global pastures cover
    30 million square kms.]
  • 15:12 - 15:13
    [That's the size of Africa.]
  • 15:13 - 15:16
    [Agriculture uses 60 times more land]
  • 15:16 - 15:18
    [than urban and suburban areas combined.]
  • 15:18 - 15:22
    [Irrigation is the biggest
    use of water on the planet.]
  • 15:22 - 15:26
    [We use 2,800 cube kilometers
    of water on crops every year.]
  • 15:26 - 15:30
    [That's enough to fill 7,305
    Empire State Buildings every day.]
  • 15:30 - 15:33
    [Today, many large rivers
    have reduced flows.]
  • 15:33 - 15:34
    [Some dry up altogether.]
  • 15:34 - 15:38
    [Look at the Aral Sea,
    now turned to desert.]
  • 15:38 - 15:42
    [Or the Colorado river,
    which no longer flows to the ocean.]
  • 15:42 - 15:44
    [Fertilizers have more than doubled]
  • 15:44 - 15:46
    [the phosphorus and nitrogen
    in the environment.]
  • 15:46 - 15:47
    [The consequence?]
  • 15:47 - 15:49
    [Widespread water pollution]
  • 15:49 - 15:52
    [and massive degradation
    of lakes and rivers.]
  • 15:52 - 15:55
    [Surprisingly, agriculture is the biggest
    contributor to climate change:]
  • 15:55 - 15:58
    [it generates 30%
    of greenhouse gas emissions.]
  • 15:58 - 16:01
    [That's more than the emission
    from all electricity and industry.]
  • 16:01 - 16:04
    [Or from all the world's planes,
    trains and automobiles.]
  • 16:04 - 16:07
    [Most agricultural emissions
    come from tropical deforestation,]
  • 16:07 - 16:09
    [methane from animals and rice fields]
  • 16:09 - 16:11
    [and nitrous oxide from over-fertilizing.]
  • 16:11 - 16:14
    [There is nothing we do that transforms
    the world more than agriculture.]
  • 16:14 - 16:17
    [And there's nothing we do that is more
    crucial to our survival.]
  • 16:17 - 16:18
    [Here's the dilemma...]
  • 16:18 - 16:22
    [as the world grows
    by several billion more people,]
  • 16:22 - 16:27
    [we'll need to double, maybe even triple,
    global food production.]
  • 16:27 - 16:28
    [So where do we go from here?]
  • 16:28 - 16:31
    [We need a bigger conversation,
    an international dialogue.]
  • 16:31 - 16:33
    [We need to invest in real solutions:]
  • 16:33 - 16:35
    [incentives for farmers -
    precision agriculture -]
  • 16:35 - 16:37
    [new crop varieties - drip irrigation]
  • 16:37 - 16:40
    [gray water recycling
    - better tillage practices- smarter diets]
  • 16:40 - 16:43
    [We need everyone at the table:]
  • 16:43 - 16:45
    [advocates of commercial agriculture,]
  • 16:45 - 16:47
    [environmental conservation,]
  • 16:47 - 16:48
    [and organic farming...]
  • 16:48 - 16:50
    [must work together.]
  • 16:50 - 16:52
    [There is no single solution:]
  • 16:52 - 16:53
    [we need collaboration,]
  • 16:53 - 16:54
    [imagination,]
  • 16:54 - 16:55
    [determination.]
  • 16:55 - 16:57
    [Because failure is not an option.]
  • 16:59 - 17:02
    [How do we feed the world
    without destroying it?]
  • 17:02 - 17:04
    Jonathan Foley:
    And so, we face
  • 17:04 - 17:06
    one of the greatest grand challenges
  • 17:06 - 17:07
    in all of human history today:
  • 17:07 - 17:10
    the need to feed nine billion people
  • 17:10 - 17:14
    and do so sustainably
    and equitably and justly.
  • 17:14 - 17:16
    At the same time, protecting our planet
  • 17:16 - 17:18
    for this and future generations.
  • 17:18 - 17:20
    This is going to be one
    of the hardest things
  • 17:20 - 17:22
    we ever have done in human history,
  • 17:22 - 17:25
    and we absolutely have to get it right.
  • 17:25 - 17:30
    And we have to get it right
    on our first and only try.
  • 17:30 - 17:32
    So, thanks very much.
  • 17:32 - 17:35
    (Applause)
Title:
The other inconvenient truth | Jonathan Foley | TEDxTC
Description:

We typically think of climate change as the biggest environmental issue we face today. But maybe it's not? In this presentation, Jonathan Foley shows how agriculture and land use are maybe a bigger culprit in the global environment, and could grow even larger as we look to feed over 9 billion people in the future.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
17:43
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