This country isnt just carbon neutral its carbon negative Tshering Tobgay

In case you are wondering,

no, I’m not wearing a dress,

and no, I’m not saying
what I’m wearing underneath.

(Laughter)

This is a gho.

This is my national dress.

This is how all men dress in Bhutan.

That is how our women dress.

Like our women,

we men get to wear pretty bright colors,

but unlike our women,

we get to show off our legs.

(Laughter)

Our national dress is unique,

but this is not the only thing
that’s unique about my country.

Our promise to remain
carbon neutral is also unique,

and this is what I’d like
to speak about today,

our promise to remain carbon neutral.

But before I proceed,
I should set you the context.

I should tell you our story.

Bhutan is a small country
in the Himalayas.

We’ve been called Shangri-La,

even the last Shangri-La.

But let me tell you right off the bat,
we are not Shangri-La.

My country is not one big monastery

populated with happy monks.

(Laughter)

The reality is that
there are barely 700,000 of us

sandwiched between two
of the most populated countries on earth,

China and India.

The reality is that we are a small,
underdeveloped country

doing our best to survive.

But we are doing OK. We are surviving.

In fact, we are thriving,

and the reason we are thriving
is because we’ve been blessed

with extraordinary kings.

Our enlightened monarchs
have worked tirelessly

to develop our country,

balancing economic growth carefully

with social development,
environmental sustainability

and cultural preservation,

all within the framework
of good governance.

We call this holistic approach
to development

“Gross National Happiness,” or GNH.

Back in the 1970s,

our fourth king famously
pronounced that for Bhutan,

Gross National Happiness is more important
than Gross National Product.

(Applause)

Ever since,

all development in Bhutan
is driven by GNH,

a pioneering vision
that aims to improve the happiness

and well-being of our people.

But that’s easier said than done,

especially when you are one
of the smallest economies in the world.

Our entire GDP is less
than two billion dollars.

I know that some of you here
are worth more –

(Laughter)

individually

than the entire economy of my country.

So our economy is small,

but here is where it gets interesting.

Education is completely free.

All citizens are guaranteed
free school education,

and those that work hard
are given free college education.

Healthcare is also completely free.

Medical consultation,
medical treatment, medicines:

they are all provided by the state.

We manage this

because we use our limited
resources very carefully,

and because we stay faithful
to the core mission of GNH,

which is development with values.

Our economy is small,
and we must strengthen it.

Economic growth is important,

but that economic growth must not come
from undermining our unique culture

or our pristine environment.

Today, our culture is flourishing.

We continue to celebrate
our art and architecture,

food and festivals,

monks and monasteries.

And yes, we celebrate
our national dress, too.

This is why I can wear my gho with pride.

Here’s a fun fact:

you’re looking
at the world’s biggest pocket.

(Laughter)

It starts here,

goes around the back,

and comes out from inside here.

In this pocket

we store all manner of personal goods

from phones and wallets

to iPads, office files and books.

(Laughter)

(Applause)

But sometimes –

sometimes even precious cargo.

So our culture is flourishing,

but so is our environment.

72 percent of my country
is under forest cover.

Our constitution demands
that a minimum of 60 percent

of Bhutan’s total land
shall remain under forest cover

for all time.

(Applause)

Our constitution,

this constitution,

imposes forest cover on us.

Incidentally, our king
used this constitution

to impose democracy on us.

You see, we the people
didn’t want democracy.

We didn’t ask for it, we didn’t demand it,

and we certainly didn’t fight for it.

Instead, our king imposed democracy on us

by insisting that he include it
in the constitution.

But he went further.

He included provisions in the constitution

that empower the people
to impeach their kings,

and included provisions in here
that require all our kings to retire

at the age of 65.

(Applause)

Fact is, we already have
a king in retirement:

our previous king, the Great Fourth,

retired 10 years ago

at the peak of his popularity.

He was all of 51 years at that time.

So as I was saying,

72 percent of our country
is under forest cover,

and all that forest is pristine.

That’s why we are one of the few remaining

global biodiversity hotspots in the world,

and that’s why we are
a carbon neutral country.

In a world that is threatened
with climate change,

we are a carbon neutral country.

Turns out, it’s a big deal.

Of the 200-odd countries
in the world today,

it looks like we are the only one

that’s carbon neutral.

Actually, that’s not quite accurate.

Bhutan is not carbon neutral.

Bhutan is carbon negative.

Our entire country generates
2.2 million tons of carbon dioxide,

but our forests, they sequester
more than three times that amount,

so we are a net carbon sink

for more than four million tons
of carbon dioxide each year.

But that’s not all.

(Applause)

We export most
of the renewable electricity

we generate from our fast-flowing rivers.

So today, the clean energy that we export

offsets about six million tons
of carbon dioxide in our neighborhood.

By 2020, we’ll be exporting
enough electricity

to offset 17 million tons
of carbon dioxide.

And if we were to harness
even half our hydropower potential,

and that’s exactly what we are working at,

the clean, green energy that we export

would offset something like
50 million tons of carbon dioxide a year.

That is more CO2 than what the entire city
of New York generates in one year.

So inside our country,
we are a net carbon sink.

Outside, we are offsetting carbon.

And this is important stuff.

You see, the world is getting warmer,

and climate change is a reality.

Climate change is affecting my country.

Our glaciers are melting,

causing flash floods and landslides,

which in turn are causing disaster
and widespread destruction in our country.

I was at that lake recently.

It’s stunning.

That’s how it looked 10 years ago,

and that’s how it looked 20 years ago.

Just 20 years ago, that lake didn’t exist.

It was a solid glacier.

A few years ago, a similar lake

breached its dams

and wreaked havoc in the valleys below.

That destruction
was caused by one glacier lake.

We have 2,700 of them to contend with.

The point is this:

my country and my people have done nothing

to contribute to global warming,

but we are already bearing the brunt
of its consequences.

And for a small, poor country,
one that is landlocked and mountainous,

it is very difficult.

But we are not going to sit
on our hands doing nothing.

We will fight climate change.

That’s why we have promised
to remain carbon neutral.

We first made this promise in 2009

during COP 15 in Copenhagen,

but nobody noticed.

Governments were so busy
arguing with one another

and blaming each other
for causing climate change,

that when a small country
raised our hands and announced,

“We promise to remain
carbon neutral for all time,”

nobody heard us.

Nobody cared.

Last December in Paris,

at COP 21, we reiterated our promise

to remain carbon neutral
for all time to come.

This time, we were heard.

We were noticed, and everybody cared.

What was different in Paris
was that governments came round together

to accept the realities of climate change,

and were willing to come together
and act together and work together.

All countries, from the very small
to the very large,

committed to reduce
the greenhouse gas emissions.

The UN Framework Convention
on Climate Change

says that if these so-called
intended commitments are kept,

we’d be closer
to containing global warming

by two degrees Celsius.

By the way,

I’ve requested the TED organizers here

to turn up the heat in here
by two degrees,

so if some of you
are feeling warmer than usual,

you know who to blame.

It’s crucial that all of us
keep our commitments.

As far as Bhutan is concerned,

we will keep our promise
to remain carbon neutral.

Here are some of the ways we are doing it.

We are providing free electricity
to our rural farmers.

The idea is that, with free electricity,
they will no longer have to use firewood

to cook their food.

We are investing in sustainable transport

and subsidizing the purchase
of electric vehicles.

Similarly, we are subsidizing
the cost of LED lights,

and our entire government
is trying to go paperless.

We are cleaning up our entire country
through Clean Bhutan, a national program,

and we are planting trees
throughout our country

through Green Bhutan,

another national program.

But it is our protected areas

that are at the core
of our carbon neutral strategy.

Our protected areas are our carbon sink.

They are our lungs.

Today, more than half
our country is protected,

as national parks, nature reserves

and wildlife sanctuaries.

But the beauty is that we’ve connected
them all with one another

through a network of biological corridors.

Now, what this means

is that our animals are free
to roam throughout our country.

Take this tiger, for example.

It was spotted
at 250 meters above sea level

in the hot, subtropical jungles.

Two years later, that same tiger

was spotted near 4,000 meters

in our cold alpine mountains.

Isn’t that awesome?

(Applause)

We must keep it that way.

We must keep our parks awesome.

So every year, we set aside resources
to prevent poaching, hunting,

mining and pollution in our parks,

and resources to help communities
who live in those parks

manage their forests,

adapt to climate change,

and lead better lives while continuing
to live in harmony with Mother Nature.

But that is expensive.

Over the next few years,
our small economy won’t have the resources

to cover all the costs that are required
to protect our environment.

In fact, when we run the numbers,

it looks like it’ll take us
at least 15 years

before we can fully finance
all our conservation efforts.

But neither Bhutan,

nor the world

can afford to spend 15 years
going backwards.

This is why His Majesty the King

started Bhutan For Life.

Bhutan For Life gives us the time we need.

It gives us breathing room.

It is essentially a funding mechanism

to look after our parks,

to protect our parks,

until our government
can take over on our own fully.

The idea is to raise a transition fund

from individual donors,
corporations and institutions,

but the deal is closed only
after predetermined conditions are met

and all funds committed.

So multiparty, single closing:

an idea we borrowed from Wall Street.

This means that individual donors
can commit without having to worry

that they’ll be left
supporting an underfunded plan.

It’s something like a Kickstarter project,

only with a 15-year time horizon

and millions of tons
of carbon dioxide at stake.

Once the deal is closed,

we use the transition fund
to protect our parks,

giving our government time
to increase our own funding gradually

until the end of the 15-year period.

After that, our government
guarantees full funding forever.

We are almost there.

We expect to close later this year.

Naturally, I’m pretty excited.

(Applause)

The World Wildlife Fund
is our principle partner in this journey,

and I want to give them a big shoutout

for the excellent work
they are doing in Bhutan

and across the world.

(Applause)

Whew, it is getting warm in here.

I thank you for listening to our story,

a story of how we are keeping
our promise to remain carbon neutral,

a story of how we are keeping
our country pristine,

for ourselves, our children,

for your children and for the world.

But we are not here
to tell stories, are we?

We are here to dream together.

So in closing, I’d like to share
one more dream that I have.

What if we could mobilize
our leadership and our resources,

our influence and our passion,

to replicate the Bhutan For Life idea
to other countries

so that they too

can conserve their
protected areas for all time.

After all, there are many other countries
who face the same issues that we face.

They too have natural resources

that can help win the world’s fight
for sustainability,

only they may not have the ability
to invest in them now.

So what if we set up Earth For Life,

a global fund, to kickstart
the Bhutan For Life throughout the world?

I invite you to help me,

to carry this dream beyond our borders

to all those who care
about our planet’s future.

After all, we’re here to dream together,

to work together,

to fight climate change together,
to protect our planet together.

Because the reality is

we are in it together.

Some of us might dress differently,

but we are in it together.

Thank you very much,

and kadrin chhe la. Thank you.

(Applause)

Thank you, thank you, thank you.

如果你想知道,

不,我没有穿裙子

,不,我没有说
我穿的是什么。

(笑声)

这是一个鬼。

这是我的国服。

这就是所有男人在不丹的穿着方式。

我们的女人就是这样穿的。

像我们的女人一样,

我们男人可以穿上鲜艳的颜色,

但与我们的女人不同的是,

我们可以炫耀我们的腿。

(笑声)

我们的民族服饰是独一无二的,

但这并不是
我国家唯一的独特之处。

我们保持
碳中和的承诺也是独一无二的

,这就是我
今天要谈的,

我们保持碳中和的承诺。

但在我继续之前,
我应该为您设置上下文。

我应该告诉你我们的故事。

不丹
是喜马拉雅山脉的一个小国。

我们被称为香格里拉,

甚至是最后的香格里拉。

但让我马上告诉你,
我们不是香格里拉。

我的国家不是一个

居住着快乐僧侣的大寺院。

(笑声

) 现实情况是
,我们中间只有 700,000 人,


在地球上人口最多的两个国家——

中国和印度之间。

现实情况是,我们是一个不发达的小
国,

正在尽最大努力生存。

但我们做得很好。 我们还活着。

事实上,我们正在兴旺发达,我们兴旺发达

的原因
是因为我们得到

了非凡的国王的祝福。

我们开明的
君主不知疲倦

地发展我们的国家,在良好治理的框架内

谨慎地平衡经济增长

与社会发展、
环境可持续性

和文化保护

我们将这种整体发展方法称为

“国民幸福总值”或 GNH。

早在 1970 年代,

我们的第四位国王
就曾说过,对于不丹来说,

国民幸福
总值比国民生产总值更重要。

(掌声)

从那时起,

不丹的所有发展
都是由国民幸福指数驱动的,

这是一个旨在改善

我们人民幸福和福祉的开创性愿景。

但这说起来容易做起来难,

尤其是当你是世界
上最小的经济体之一时。

我们的整个国内生产总值
不到 20 亿美元。

我知道你们中的一些

比我国家的整个经济更有价值——(笑声)。

所以我们的经济规模很小,

但这就是有趣的地方。

教育完全免费。

所有公民都得到
免费学校教育

,努力工作的
人得到免费大学教育。

医疗保健也是完全免费的。

看病、
看病、吃药:

都是国家提供的。

我们

之所以能做到这一点,是因为我们非常谨慎地使用我们有限的
资源,

并且因为我们
忠于 GNH 的核心使命,

即价值发展。

我们的经济很小
,我们必须加强它。

经济增长很重要,

但经济增长绝不能
来自破坏我们独特的文化

或原始环境。

今天,我们的文化正在蓬勃发展。

我们继续庆祝
我们的艺术和建筑、

美食和节日、

僧侣和修道院。

是的,我们也庆祝
我们的民族服饰。

这就是为什么我可以自豪地穿着我的 gho。

这是一个有趣的事实:

你看到
的是世界上最大的口袋。

(笑声

) 从这里开始,

绕到后面

,从这里出来。

在这个口袋里,

我们可以存放各种个人物品,

从手机和钱包

到 iPad、办公文件和书籍。

(笑声)

(掌声)

但有时——

有时甚至是珍贵的货物。

因此,我们的文化正在蓬勃发展,

但我们的环境也在蓬勃发展。

我国 72% 的国土
被森林覆盖。

我们的宪法要求

不丹总土地
的至少 60% 始终处于森林覆盖范围

内。

(掌声)

我们的宪法,

这个宪法,

强加给我们森林覆盖。

顺便说一句,我们的国王
利用这部宪法

将民主强加给我们。

你看,我们人民
不想要民主。

我们没有要求它,我们没有要求它

,我们当然没有为它而战。

相反,我们的国王坚持将民主纳入宪法,从而将民主强加给我们

但他走得更远。

他在宪法中加入

了赋予
人民弹劾国王的

条款,并在
其中加入了要求我们所有的国王

在65岁退休的条款。

(鼓掌)

事实上,我们已经有
一位国王退休了:

我们以前的国王 大四,

10年前

在人气巅峰时期退役。

那时他已经51岁了。

所以正如我所说,

我们国家 72% 的土地
都被森林覆盖

,所有的森林都是原始的。

这就是为什么我们是世界上为数不多的

全球生物多样性热点之一

,这就是为什么我们是
一个碳中和国家。

在一个受到气候变化威胁的世界中

我们是一个碳中和国家。

事实证明,这是一件大事。

在当今世界上 200 多个国家
中,

看起来我们是唯一一个

实现碳中和的国家。

实际上,这并不完全准确。

不丹不是碳中和的。

不丹是负碳的。

我们整个国家产生
220 万吨二氧化碳,

但我们的森林,它们吸收的
量是这个量的三倍多,

所以我们是

每年超过 400
万吨二氧化碳的净碳汇。

但这还不是全部。

(掌声)

我们从湍急的河流中产生的大部分可再生电力都用于出口。

所以今天,我们出口的清洁能源

抵消了我们附近约 600 万吨
的二氧化碳。

到 2020 年,我们将输出
足够的电力

来抵消 1700
万吨二氧化碳。

如果我们要利用
我们一半的水电潜力,

而这正是我们正在努力的方向,

那么我们出口的清洁、绿色能源每年

将抵消大约
5000 万吨二氧化碳。

这比整个
纽约市一年产生的二氧化碳还要多。

所以在我们国家内部,
我们是一个净碳汇。

在外部,我们正在抵消碳排放。

这是重要的东西。

你看,世界正在变暖

,气候变化是现实。

气候变化正在影响我的国家。

我们的冰川正在融化,

引发山洪暴发和山体滑坡

,进而在我国造成灾难
和广泛破坏。

我最近在那个湖边。

这是惊人的。

这是10

年前的样子,也是20年前的样子。

就在 20 年前,那个湖还不存在。

那是一个坚固的冰川。

几年前,一个类似的湖泊

破坏了它的水坝,

并在下面的山谷中造成了严重破坏。

这种破坏
是由一个冰川湖造成的。

我们有 2,700 个需要应对。

重点是:

我的国家和我的人民没有

为全球变暖做出任何贡献,

但我们已经首当其冲地承受
着它的后果。

而对于一个内陆多山的贫穷小国来说,

这是非常困难的。

但我们不会
坐以待毙。

我们将应对气候变化。

这就是我们
承诺保持碳中和的原因。

我们于 2009

年在哥本哈根举行的 COP 15 期间首次做出这一承诺,

但没有人注意到。

各国政府忙于互相
争吵,互相

指责造成气候变化,

以至于当一个小国
举手宣布

“我们承诺永远保持
碳中和”时,

没有人听到我们的声音。

没人在乎。

去年 12 月在巴黎

举行的第 21 届缔约方会议上,我们重申了我们在未来

始终保持碳
中和的承诺。

这一次,我们听到了。

我们被注意到了,每个人都关心。

巴黎的不同之
处在于,各国政府齐聚一堂

,接受气候变化的现实,

并愿意团结
起来,共同行动,共同努力。

所有国家,从非常小
到非常大,都

致力于
减少温室气体排放。

《联合国气候变化框架公约》

称,如果这些所谓的
预期承诺得以兑现,

我们将更接近
将全球变暖控制

在两摄氏度以内。

顺便说一句,

我已经要求这里的 TED 组织者把

这里的温度调高
两度,

所以如果你们
中的一些人感觉比平时更热,

你知道该怪谁。

至关重要的是,我们所有人都
信守承诺。 就不

丹而言,

我们将信守
保持碳中和的承诺。

以下是我们正在做的一些方法。

我们正在
为我们的农村农民提供免费电力。

这个想法是,有了免费的电力,
他们将不再需要用

柴火做饭。

我们正在投资于可持续交通

并补贴
购买电动汽车。

同样,我们正在补贴
LED 灯的成本

,我们整个政府
都在努力实现无纸化。

我们正在
通过国家计划“清洁不丹”清理

整个国家

,并通过

另一个国家计划“绿色不丹”在全国范围内植树。

但我们的保护区

是我们碳中和战略的核心。

我们的保护区是我们的碳汇。

它们是我们的肺。

今天,我们国家一半以上

的国家公园、自然保护区

和野生动物保护区受到保护。

但美妙之处在于,我们

通过生物走廊网络将它们相互连接起来。

现在,这

意味着我们的动物可以
在我们的国家自由漫游。

以这只老虎为例。

它被发现
在海拔 250 米

的炎热亚热带丛林中。

两年后,

在我们寒冷的高山山脉 4000 米附近发现了同一只老虎。

那不是很棒吗?

(掌声)

我们必须保持这种状态。

我们必须保持我们的公园很棒。

因此,每年我们都会拨出资源
来防止公园内的偷猎、狩猎、

采矿和污染,

并拨出资源帮助
居住在这些公园中的社区

管理他们的森林、

适应气候变化、过上

更好的生活,同时
继续和谐相处 与大自然母亲。

但这很昂贵。

在接下来的几年里,
我们的小型经济体将没有足够的资源

来支付保护环境所需的所有成本

事实上,当我们计算这些数字时,

看起来我们
至少需要 15 年

才能完全资助
我们所有的保护工作。

但无论是不丹,

还是世界,

都无法承受倒退15年的
代价。

这就是国王陛下

创立“不丹终生”的原因。

Bhutan For Life 为我们提供了所需的时间。

它给了我们喘息的空间。

它本质上是一个资金机制

来照顾我们的公园

,保护我们的公园,

直到我们的政府
可以完全接管我们自己。

这个想法是

从个人捐助者、
公司和机构那里

筹集过渡基金,但只有
在满足预定条件

并承诺所有资金后才能完成交易。

所以多方,单一关闭:

我们从华尔街借来的想法。

这意味着个人捐助者
可以做出承诺,而不必

担心他们会
支持资金不足的计划。

这有点像 Kickstarter 项目,

只有 15 年的时间范围

和数百万吨
的二氧化碳。

一旦交易完成,

我们将使用过渡基金
来保护我们的公园,

让我们的政府有时间
逐步增加我们自己的资金,

直到 15 年期结束。

在那之后,我们的政府
永远保证全额资助。

我们就快到了。

我们预计将在今年晚些时候关闭。

自然,我很兴奋。

(掌声

)世界自然基金会
是我们这次旅程的主要合作伙伴

,我想对他们在不丹和世界各地

所做的出色工作表示热烈的祝贺

(鼓掌)

唷,这里开始暖和了。

感谢您聆听我们的故事,这

是一个关于我们如何
信守保持碳中和的承诺

的故事,一个关于我们如何

为我们自己、我们的孩子

、您的孩子和世界保持国家原始状态的故事。

但我们不是来
这里讲故事的,不是吗?

我们在这里一起梦想。

所以最后,我想再分享
一个我的梦想。

如果我们能够调动
我们的领导力和资源

、影响力和热情,

将不丹生命的理念复制
到其他国家,

这样他们也

可以永远保护他们的
保护区。

毕竟,还有许多其他
国家面临着与我们相同的问题。

他们也有自然资源

,可以帮助赢得世界
可持续发展的斗争,

只是他们现在可能没有
能力投资。

那么,如果我们设立

一个全球基金
Earth For Life 来在全世界启动不丹的生命呢?

我邀请你帮助我,

把这个梦想带到我们的国界之外,

带给所有
关心我们星球未来的人。

毕竟,我们来这里是为了一起梦想,

一起努力,

一起应对气候变化,
一起保护我们的星球。

因为现实

是我们在一起。

我们中的一些人可能穿着不同,

但我们在一起。

非常感谢,

还有 kadrin chhe la。 谢谢你。

(鼓掌)

谢谢,谢谢,谢谢。