Amina J. Mohammed A new perspective on the journey to netzero TED Countdown

As a girl, I walked along
the shores of Lake Chad,

one of the largest lakes in Africa.

It went on forever,

touching four countries: Chad, Niger,

Cameroon and my own country, Nigeria.

It seemed like an ocean to me at the time,

with 30 million people
relying on its bounty.

Sadly, today, as you fly over Lake Chad,

you won’t see much.

It’s a fraction of its original size.

Ninety percent of this
fresh water basin has dried up,

and with it, millions
and millions of livelihoods,

farmers, fisherfolk and our market women.

Climate change takes yet another victim.

Now, add another extreme weather event

the Harmattan.

What was once a short three-month
season of dust and wind,

one farmer told me the dust storms
are coming earlier and bigger every year.

A single storm can wipe out
an entire year’s crop overnight.

The human and ecological cost?

More jobs lost.

Hunger.

Families displaced.

A perfect storm for crushing poverty.

And even more, sadly, violence.

And so it may be a challenge
to grow food today

in the Lake Chad basin,

but it has also become a fertile ground
for extremists to take root,

wreaking havoc on peace.

Sadly, touch down anywhere in the world,

and you’ll hear more tragic stories
of climate devastation.

Droughts.

Floods, wildfires.

Lives and livelihoods in jeopardy,

tipping towards catastrophe.

And yet, despite it all,

I still have hope in our human family.

And you might ask why.

It’s our capacity for human endeavor
to survive against all odds.

One that created the extraordinary promise
of the UN Paris Agreement

and its power to drive the 17
Sustainable Development Goals

for people and for planet.

We know that the promise of Paris aims
to limit global heating to 1.5 degrees

to ensure that we survive
as a human family.

To get there, we know exactly
what we must do.

We must decarbonise
the global economy by 2050

by way of halving
the emissions in this decade.

We must make coal history,

with coal phased out
in rich countries by 2030

and in other countries by 2040.

The G20 produces 80 percent
of all greenhouse gas pollution,

and so they too must,

these 20 global leaders,

take responsibility and lead.

We must stop spending trillions
subsidizing fossil fuels,

clogging the lungs of our people

and destroying forests and oceans.

And we must provide
the resources that are needed

for a just green and blue transition.

We know that these are all
essential ingredients

to fulfill the Paris Agreement.

Now, try to re-imagine with me

what this journey to net-zero
emissions could look like

through another lens.

One that puts our focus on investing
in people to reach their potentials

while protecting our home, planet Earth.

Decarbonization, a powerful vehicle
for climate action

but also for delivering on the 17
Sustainable Development Goals.

Let me give you an example
of what this looks like.

The Great Green Wall,

an idea born in Africa over a decade ago
at the edge of the Sahara.

It aims to stop desertification

and restore 100 million hectares
of degraded lands

from Senegal in the West
to Djibouti in the Horn of Africa.

It’s an ambitious plan
to plant 100 million trees,

improve water harvesting
and the use of land.

Clearly, the climate benefits
will be enormous,

but it’s about much more
than keeping dust in the desert.

It’s about creating
a green economic corridor

for more than half a billion people.

Men, women, children.

One that builds local value chains,

strengthens economies and fosters
a young, fast-growing workforce.

And as an economic opportunity grows,

hope for the future becomes a reality
in millions of lives.

And the space for terrorism,
extremism, recedes.

The Great Green Wall inspires me
because it is a journey

of the human potential.

Potential to amplify the deep knowledge
of indigenous people

who survive and thrive
in harmony with nature.

Potential to harness technology,

to connect and to bridge
the renewable energy divide,

especially for women and for girls.

The potential to transform food systems

in ways which make people
and planet healthier.

So what’s holding us back?

What will it take for this potential
to become a shared, lived reality?

It would be easy for me to say money.

So let me say it.

Money, more money.

(Laughter)

It’s a big part of the solution.

We need to make good now on the handshake

that we had at Paris
of 100 billion dollars.

And that was promised annually.

Rich countries,

let me say here and now,

we are looking at you
for the unfinished business.

You must step up,
and you must do it urgently.

The other ingredient we need
is solidarity.

Sometimes that seems to be
in fairly short supply.

But we do know it exists.

After all, it’s solidarity
that forged the Paris Agreement.

It’s solidarity that got us
the Montreal Protocol.

And there you see that the ozone layer
is saved and our world is healing.

But we need to rekindle that spirit
and we need to do that now.

It’s not too late,

but the window of opportunity is closing.

Which brings me back to you.

You’re the reason that I have hope.

Time and time again,

we’ve seen that when people
raise their voices,

that chorus becomes too urgent

and too loud for leaders to ignore.

That chorus for bold
climate action is growing,

but it’s in fits and starts.

Climate change doesn’t pause,
and neither must we.

Now, last I checked,
every single person in this room

and all those watching online,

teachers, presidents,
shareholders, chief executives,

scientists, employees, mums and dads,

everyone on Earth
is a citizen on this planet.

So now’s the time to stand up.

With the courage of your convictions,

raise your voices yet again

and demand our leaders to take action

on the promise of a 1.5 degree world.

Friends, it’s time to make
some serious noise

to transform our world.

Right now, there’s another young girl,

maybe it’s Kolu, maybe it’s Aisha,
maybe it’s Fatima,

walking on the shores of Lake Chad.

She’s looking out and wondering
what her future may hold.

Will it be an ocean of opportunity?

It could be.

Or will it be a wasteland of dust
as far as the eyes can see?

She’s asking that question of all leaders
who hold her future in their hands,

and she’s also asking it
of all of us here today

and around the world.

The time for real action has come.

The choice is ours.

Individually, collectively.

What will you do?

Thank you.

(Applause)