Why you should be a climate activist Luisa Neubauer

I never planned to become
a climate activist.

But things have changed,

and now, standing here
as a climate activist,

I ask you all to become one, too.

Here’s why,

and most importantly, how.

Ten years ago, when I was 13 years old,

I first learned about
the greenhouse effect.

Back then, we spent
90 minutes on this issue,

and I remember finding it quite irritating

that something so fundamental

would be squeezed into
a single geography lesson.

Some of this irritation remained,
so when I graduated from high school,

I decided to study geography,

just to make sure I was on the right track
with this whole climate change thing.

And this is when everything changed.

This was the first time
I looked at the data,

at the science behind the climate crisis,

and I couldn’t believe what I was reading.

Like many of you,

I thought that the planet
wasn’t really in a good state.

I had no idea that we are rushing
into this self-made disaster

in such a rapid pace.

There was also the first time
I understood what difference it makes

when you consider the bigger picture.

Take the CO2 concentration
in the atmosphere, for instance,

the number one driver for global warming.

Yes, this looks bad.

This looks like we are on
a pretty bad track.

But it’s only once you don’t
just consider the last 60 years

but the last 10,000 years

that you understand
how terrifying this really is.

And this is just one aspect
of the crisis we’re seeing.

I’m not going to get into details here,
but let me tell you so much:

we are in a point of history

that the most destructive force
on the planet is humanity itself.

We are in a point of history

that no scientist could guarantee you
that you will survive this.

We are in a point of history

that humanity is creating an environment

that’s not safe for humans anymore.

Yeah, there I was,

first year of geography,

and felt pretty overwhelmed.

But …

there was good news.

The very same year
I first learned about all this,

leaders from across the globe
came together in Paris

to decide on the common target to limit
global warming to below two degrees.

Pictures went around the world,

and I was told that history
was made that day.

How relieving, right?

Except …

something didn’t quite
work out about this.

After this agreement was signed,

things didn’t really get better.

Actually, they got much worse.

Decision makers and industries,
leaders and politicians,

they went back to business as usual,

exploiting our livelihoods
like there is literally no tomorrow,

building coal power plants
again and again,

even though we know that needs to stop,

according to the Paris Agreement.

So while there are also
good developments, of course –

there are installations of wind and solar
energy all over the globe, yes –

but these positive changes
are slow – too slow, in fact.

So since the Paris Agreement was signed,

climate graphs keep racing to the top,

smashing records every year.

The five hottest years ever recorded

were the previous five years,

and at no time have global emissions
been higher than today.

So there I was,

seeing and understanding
the science on the one side,

but not seeing answers,
not seeing the action, on the other side.

At that point, I had enough.

I wanted to go to the UN
Climate Conference myself,

that very place that was created
to bring people together

to fix the climate –

except not really, apparently.

This was last year.

I traveled to the Climate Conference
and wanted to find out

what this is really like,
what this is about.

For political realists,
this might be no surprise,

but I found it hard to bear:

that fossil fuel industries
and political leaders

are doing everything, everything
to prevent real change from happening.

They are not keen to set targets
that are ambitious enough

to put us on a below-two-degree pathway.

After all, these are the only ones who
benefit from this climate crisis, right?

The fossil fuel industry
generates profits,

and political leaders, well,
they look at the next election,

at what makes them popular,

and I guess that’s not asking
the inconvenient questions.

There is no intention for them
to change the game.

There is no country in the world
where either companies or political powers

are sanctioned for wrecking the climate.

With all the strangeness
and the sadness about this conference,

there was one someone who was different,

someone who seemed to be quite worried,

and that was Greta Thunberg.

I decided right there
that everything else seemed hopeless

and didn’t seem to make sense,

so I joined her climate strike
right there at the conference.

It was my very first climate strike ever

and an incredibly strange setting,

just me and her sitting there
at this conference hall,

surrounded by this busyness
of the suit-wearing conference crowd

who had no idea what to do with us.

And yet, this felt more powerful

than anything I had expected
in a very long time.

And it was right there
that I felt it was maybe time

to start striking in Germany.

I was now certain that no one else
was going to fix this for us,

and if there was just the slightest chance
that this could make a difference,

it seemed almost foolish
not to give it a go.

So I –

(Applause)

So I traveled back to Berlin.

I found allies who had
the same idea at the same time,

and together we thought we’d give
this “Fridays For Future” thing a go.

Obviously, we had no idea
what we were getting into.

Before our first strike,
many of us, including me,

had never organized a public demonstration
or any kind of protest before.

We had no money, no resources

and absolutely no idea
what climate striking really is.

So we started doing what we were good at:

we started texting,

texting en masse, night and day,
everyone we could reach,

organizing our first
climate strike via WhatsApp.

The night before our first strike,
I was so nervous I couldn’t sleep.

I didn’t know what to expect,
but I expected the worst.

Maybe it was because
we weren’t the only ones

who had been longing to have a voice
in a political environment

that had seemingly forgotten
how to include young people’s perspective

into decision-making, maybe.

But somehow this worked out.

And from one day to the other,

we were all over the place.

And I, from one day to the other,

became a climate activist.

Usually,

in these kind of TED Talks,

I would now say how it’s overly hopeful,

how we young people
are going to get this sorted,

how we’re going to save the future
and the planet and everything else,

how we young people
striking for the climate

are going to fix this.

Usually.

But this is not how this works.

This is not how this crisis works.

Here’s a twist:

today, three and a half years
after that Paris Agreement was signed,

when we look at the science,

we find it’s still possible
to keep global warming

to below two degrees –

technically.

And we also see it’s still possible
to hold other disastrous developments

we’re seeing, such as mass
extinction and soil degradation –

yes, technically.

It’s just incredibly, incredibly unlikely.

And in any case,

the world would have to see changes

which we have never experienced before.

We’d have to fully decarbonize
our economies by 2050

and transform the distribution of powers

that is currently allowing those fossil
fuel giants and political leaders

to stay on top of the game.

We are talking of nothing less
than the greatest transformation

since the Industrial Revolution.

We are talking, if you want
to put it that way,

we are talking of a climate revolution

in a minimum amount of time.

We wouldn’t have a single
further year to lose.

And in any case, for any
of that change to happen,

the world needs to stop relying on

one or two or three million school
strikers to sort this out.

Yes, we are great,
we are going to keep going,

and we are going to go to places
no one ever expected us, yes.

But we are not the limit;

we are the start.

This is not a job for a single generation.

This is a job for humanity.

And this is when all eyes are on you.

For this change to happen,

we will have to get
one million things sorted.

It’s an incredibly
complex thing, after all.

But …

there are some things that everyone
can get started with.

Bad news first: if you thought
I would tell you now to cycle more

or eat less meat, to fly less,
or to go secondhand shopping,

sorry, this is not that easy.

But here comes the good news:

you are more than consumers and shoppers,

even though the industry would like you
to keep yourselves limited to that.

No; me and you –
we are all political beings,

and we can all be part of this answer.

We can all be something
that many people call climate activists.

Yay?

(Laughter)

So what are the first steps?

Four first steps that are essential
to get everything else done,

four first steps that everyone
can get started with,

four first steps that decide
about everything that can happen after.

So what’s that?

Number one:

we need to drastically reframe
our understanding of a climate activist,

our understanding of who
can be the answer to this.

A climate activist isn’t that one person
that’s read every single study

and is now spending every afternoon
handing out leaflets about vegetarianism

in shopping malls.

No.

A climate activist can be everyone,

everyone who wants to join a movement
of those who intend to grow old

on a planet that prioritizes
protection of natural environments

and happiness and health for the many

over the destruction of the climate
and the wrecking of the planet

for the profits of the few.

And since the climate crisis is affecting
every single part of our social,

of our political and of our private life,

we need climate activists
everywhere on every corner,

not only in every room,

but also in every city and country
and state and continent.

Second:

I need you to get out of
that zone of convenience,

away from a business as usual
that has no tomorrow.

All of you here, you are
either a friend or a family member,

you are a worker, a colleague,
a student, a teacher

or, in many cases, a voter.

All of this comes along
with a responsibility

that this crisis requires you
to grow up to.

There’s the company that employs you

or that sponsors you.

Is it on track of meeting
the Paris Agreement?

Does your local parliamentarian know
that you care about this,

that you want this to be a priority
in every election?

Does your best friend know about this?

Do you read a newspaper
or write a newspaper? Great.

Then let them know you want them
to report on this in every issue,

and that you want them to challenge
decision makers in every single interview.

If you’re a singer, sing about this.
If you’re a teacher, teach about this.

And if you have a bank account,
tell your bank you’re going to leave

if they keep investing in fossil fuels.

And, of course, on Fridays,
you should all know what to do.

Thirdly:

leaving that zone of convenience
works best when you join forces.

One person asking for inconvenient change

is mostly inconvenient.

Two, five, ten, one hundred people
asking for inconvenient change

are hard to ignore.

The more you are, the harder it gets
for people to justify

a system that has no future.

Power is not something
that you either have or don’t have.

Power is something you either take
or leave to others,

and it grows once you share it.

We young people on the streets,
we school strikers,

we are showing how this can work out.

One single school striker will always be
one single school striker –

well, Greta Thunberg.

Two, five, ten, one thousand people
striking school are a movement,

and that’s what we need everywhere.

No pressure.

(Laughter)

And number four, finally –

and this is probably the most
important aspect of all of this –

I need you to start taking
yourselves more seriously.

If there’s one thing I’ve learned

during seven months
of organizing climate action,

it’s that if you don’t go for something,

chances are high that no one else will.

The most powerful
institutions of this world

have no intention of changing the game
they’re profiting from most,

so there’s no point
in further relying on them.

That’s scary, I know.

That’s a huge responsibility, a huge
burden on everyone’s shoulders, yes.

But this also means,

if we want to,

we can have a say in this.

We can be part of that change.
We can be part of that answer.

And that’s quite beautiful, right?

So let’s give it a try,
let’s rock and roll,

let’s flood the world
with climate activists.

Let’s get out of the zones of convenience

and join forces and start
taking ourselves more seriously.

Imagine what this world would look like,

where children would grow up,

knowing their future was this one
great adventure to look forward to

and nothing to be scared of,

what this world would look like
when the next climate conference

is this great happening of people
who come together,

who had heard the voices of millions,

who would then roll up their sleeves,
ready to create real change.

You know,

I dream of this world

where geography classes
teach about the climate crisis

as this one greatest challenge

that was won by people like you and me,

who had started acting in time

because they understood
they had nothing to lose

and everything to win.

So why not give it a go?

No one else will save the future for us.

This is more than an invitation.
Spread the word.

Thank you.

(Applause)

我从来没有打算成为
一名气候活动家。

但是事情已经发生了变化

,现在,
作为一名气候活动家,

我要求你们所有人也成为其中的一员。

这就是为什么

,最重要的是,如何。

十年前,我 13 岁时,

第一次
了解到温室效应。

那时,我们
在这个问题上花了 90 分钟

,我记得我觉得非常恼火的

是,如此基本的东西

会被挤进
一堂地理课。

这种恼怒仍然存在,
所以当我高中毕业时,

我决定学习地理,

只是为了确保我在整个气候变化问题上走在正确的轨道
上。

这就是一切都改变的时候。

这是我第一次
查看数据,

看到气候危机背后的科学

,我简直不敢相信我在读什么。

像你们中的许多人一样,

我认为地球
的状态并不好。

没想到我们以如此快的速度
闯入这场白手起家的灾难

。 当你考虑更大的图景

时,我也第一次
明白它有什么不同

以大气中的二氧化碳浓度为例,

它是全球变暖的第一大驱动因素。

是的,这看起来很糟糕。

这看起来我们正处于
一个非常糟糕的轨道上。

但只有当你
不只考虑过去 60 年,

而是考虑过去 10,000 年时

,你才会明白
这真的是多么可怕。

这只是
我们所看到的危机的一个方面。

我不打算在这里详细介绍,
但让我告诉你这么多:

我们正处于一个历史阶段

,地球上最具破坏性的力量
就是人类本身。

我们正处于一个

没有科学家能
保证你能幸免于难的历史阶段。

我们正处于

人类正在创造一个

不再对人类安全的环境的历史阶段。

是的,我在那里

,地理的第一年

,感到非常不知所措。

但是……

有好消息。

就在
我第一次了解到这一切的同一年,

来自世界各地的领导人
齐聚巴黎

,决定将
全球变暖控制在两度以下的共同目标。

照片传遍了世界

,有人告诉我,
那一天创造了历史。

多么轻松,对吧?

除了……

这件事不太
顺利。

这份协议签订后,

情况并没有真正好转。

事实上,他们变得更糟了。 根据《巴黎协定》

,决策者和行业、
领导人和政界人士,

他们照常营业,像没有明天一样

利用我们的生计
,一次又一次地

建造燃煤电厂

,尽管我们知道需要停止

因此,虽然也有
良好的发展,当然——

全球都有风能和太阳能装置
,是的——

但这些积极的变化
是缓慢的——事实上太慢了。

因此,自《巴黎协定》签署以来,

气候图表不断攀升,

每年都在打破记录。

有记录以来最热的五年

是前五年

,全球排放量
从未高于今天。

所以我在那里,一方面

看到和
理解科学,

但另一方面看不到答案,
看不到行动。

那个时候,我受够了。

我想亲自去参加联合国
气候大会,

那个地方正是
为了将人们聚集在一起

来解决气候问题而设立的——

显然不是真的。

这是去年。

我参加了气候大会
,想

了解这到底是什么样的,
这是关于什么的。

对于政治现实主义者来说,
这可能不足为奇,

但我发现很难忍受

:化石燃料行业
和政治领导人

正在
竭尽全力阻止真正的变化发生。

他们并不热衷于设定
雄心勃勃的目标,

让我们走上低于两度的道路。

毕竟,只有这些人才
能从这场气候危机中受益,对吧?

化石燃料行业
产生利润,

而政治领导人,嗯,
他们关注下一次选举,

看看是什么让他们受欢迎

,我想这不是
问不方便的问题。

他们无意
改变游戏规则。

世界上没有哪个国家的
公司或政治权力

因破坏气候而受到制裁。

带着
这次会议的所有陌生和悲伤,

有一个人与众不同,

一个似乎很担心的人

,那就是 Greta Thunberg。

我在那里
决定,其他一切似乎都没有希望,

而且似乎没有意义,

所以我在会议上就加入了她的气候
罢工。

这是我有史以来的第一次气候罢工

,环境非常奇怪,

只有我和她
坐在这个会议厅里,

周围都是
穿着西装的会议人群

,他们不知道该怎么办。

然而,这感觉

比我
在很长一段时间内所期望的任何东西都要强大。

就在那里
,我觉得也许是时候

在德国开始罢工了。

我现在确定没有其他
人会为我们解决这个问题

,如果这有一点点
可能会有所作为,

不试一试似乎几乎是愚蠢
的。

所以我——

(掌声)

所以我回到了柏林。

我找到
了同时有相同想法的盟友

,我们一起认为我们应该试试
这个“未来的星期五”。

显然,我们不
知道我们要进入什么。

在我们第一次罢工之前,我们中的
许多人,包括我在内,

以前从未组织过公开示威
或任何形式的抗议。

我们没有钱,没有资源

,也完全不
知道气候变化到底是什么。

所以我们开始做我们擅长的事情:

我们开始发短信,日夜发短信,

我们可以联系到的每个人,通过 WhatsApp

组织我们的第一次
气候罢工。

在我们第一次罢工的前一天晚上,
我紧张得无法入睡。

我不知道会发生什么,
但我预料到了最坏的情况。

也许是因为
我们并不是唯一

渴望

在似乎忘记
如何将年轻人的观点

纳入决策制定的政治环境中发表意见的人,也许。

但不知何故,这成功了。

从一天到另一天,

我们到处都是。

而我,从一天到另一天,

成为了一名气候活动家。

通常,

在这类 TED 演讲中,

我现在会说它是多么充满希望,

我们
年轻人将如何解决这个问题,

我们将如何拯救未来
、地球和其他一切,

我们年轻人如何
罢工 因为

气候会解决这个问题。

通常。

但这不是它的工作原理。

这不是这场危机的运作方式。

这是一个转折点:

今天,
在《巴黎协定》签署三年半之后,

当我们审视科学时,

我们发现仍然有
可能将全球变暖控制

在两度以下——从

技术上讲。

我们还看到,我们看到的
其他灾难性发展仍然有可能发生

,例如大规模
灭绝和土壤退化——

是的,从技术上讲。

这简直难以置信,难以置信的不可能。

无论如何

,世界将不得不看到

我们以前从未经历过的变化。

我们必须在
2050 年之前使我们的经济完全脱碳,

并改变

目前允许那些化石
燃料巨头和政治

领导人保持领先地位的权力分配。

我们谈论的
不亚于工业革命以来最大的转变

我们正在谈论,如果你
想这样说,

我们正在谈论

在最短的时间内发生气候革命。

我们不会
再失去一年了。

无论如何,要让
这种变化发生

,世界需要停止依赖

一两三百万学校
罢工者来解决这个问题。

是的,我们很棒,
我们将继续前进

,我们将去到
没有人预料到我们的地方,是的。

但我们不是极限;

我们是开始。

这不是一代人的工作。

这是人类的工作。

这就是所有的目光都集中在你身上的时候。

为了发生这种变化,

我们必须对
一百万件事情进行分类。 毕竟,

这是一件非常
复杂的事情。

但是……

有些事情每个人都
可以开始。

首先是坏消息:如果你认为
我现在会告诉你多骑自行车,

少吃肉,少坐飞机,
或者去二手店购物,

对不起,这没那么容易。

但好消息来了:

你不仅仅是消费者和购物者,

尽管这个行业希望你
把自己限制在这一点上。

不; 我和你——
我们都是政治人物

,我们都可以成为这个答案的一部分。

我们都可以成为
许多人所说的气候活动家。

耶?

(笑声)

那么第一步是什么?

完成其他所有事情必不可少的

四个第一步,每个人都
可以开始的

四个第一步,决定
之后可能发生的一切的四个第一步。

那是什么?

第一:

我们需要彻底重新构建
我们对气候活动家

的理解,我们对谁
可以解决这个问题的理解。

气候活动家不是
那种阅读每一项研究的人

,现在每天下午都在购物中心
分发有关素食主义的传单

不。气候活动家可以是每个人,

每个人都想加入
那些打算在这个星球上变老的人的运动,该运动

优先考虑
保护自然环境

以及许多人的幸福和健康,而

不是破坏气候
和破坏

为少数人谋取利益的星球。

而且由于气候危机正在影响
我们社会

、政治和私人生活的每一个部分,

我们需要气候活动家
无处不在,

不仅在每个房间,

而且在每个城市、国家
、州和大陆。

第二:

我需要你离开
那个方便的区域,

远离
没有明天的一切照旧。

在座的所有人,你
要么是朋友,要么是家人,

你是工人、同事
、学生、老师,

或者在许多情况下是选民。

所有这一切都伴随

着这场危机需要
你长大的责任。

有公司雇用你

或赞助你。

是否有望
实现《巴黎协定》?

您当地的议员是否
知道您关心这一点

,您希望这成为每次选举的优先事项

你最好的朋友知道这件事吗?

你读报纸
还是写报纸? 伟大的。

然后让他们知道您希望他们
在每个问题上都报告这一点,

并且您希望他们
在每次采访中挑战决策者。

如果你是歌手,就唱这首歌。
如果你是老师,就教这个。

如果您有银行账户,请
告诉您的银行,

如果他们继续投资化石燃料,您将离开。

当然,在星期五,
你们都应该知道该做什么。

第三:

当你们联合起来时,离开那个方便的区域效果最好。

一个人要求不方便的

改变大多是不方便的。

两个、五个、十个、一百个
要求不方便找零的

人很难被忽视。

你越多
,人们就越难为

一个没有未来的系统辩护。

权力
不是你拥有或没有的东西。

权力是你要么拿走,
要么留给他人的东西,

一旦你分享它,它就会增长。

我们街头的年轻人,
我们学校的罢工者,

我们正在展示如何解决这个问题。

一个单一的学校前锋将永远是
一个单一的学校前锋 -

嗯,Greta Thunberg。

二、五、十、一千人
上学是一场运动

,这就是我们到处需要的。

无压力。

(笑声

) 最后第四点

——这可能
是所有这一切中最重要的方面——

我需要你们开始
更加认真地对待自己。

如果我


组织气候行动的七个月中学到了一件事,

那就是如果你不去做某事,

那么其他人都不会去做的可能性很高。

这个世界上最强大的

机构无意改变
他们从中获利最多的游戏,

因此
进一步依赖它们毫无意义。

这很可怕,我知道。

这是一个巨大的责任,是
每个人肩上的巨大负担,是的。

但这也意味着,

如果我们愿意,

我们可以在这方面有发言权。

我们可以成为这种变化的一部分。
我们可以成为那个答案的一部分。

这很漂亮,对吧?

所以让我们试一试,
让我们摇滚,


气候活动家涌入世界。

让我们走出便利区

,团结起来,开始
更加认真地对待自己。

想象一下这个世界会是什么样子,

孩子们会在哪里长大,

知道他们的未来是一次值得
期待的伟大冒险

,没有什么好害怕的,

当下一次气候会议

是人们的伟大事件时,这个世界会是什么样子
谁走到一起,

谁听到了数百万人的声音,

谁会卷起袖子,
准备创造真正的改变。

你知道,

我梦想着这个世界

,地理课
教授气候危机

,这是一个最大的挑战

,像你我这样的人赢得了胜利,

他们开始及时采取行动,

因为他们知道
他们没有什么可失去的

,一切都可以赢得。

那么为什么不试一试呢?

没有人会为我们拯救未来。

这不仅仅是一个邀请。
传播这个词。

谢谢你。

(掌声)