The most important thing you can do to fight climate change talk about it Katharine Hayhoe

Reviewer: Camille Martínez

It was my first year
as an atmospheric science professor

at Texas Tech University.

We had just moved to Lubbock, Texas,

which had recently been named
the second most conservative city

in the entire United States.

A colleague asked me to guest teach
his undergraduate geology class.

I said, “Sure.”

But when I showed up,
the lecture hall was cavernous and dark.

As I tracked the history
of the carbon cycle

through geologic time to present day,

most of the students were slumped over,
dozing or looking at their phones.

I ended my talk with a hopeful request
for any questions.

And one hand shot up right away.

I looked encouraging, he stood up,
and in a loud voice, he said,

“You’re a democrat, aren’t you?”

(Laughter)

“No,” I said, “I’m Canadian.”

(Laughter)

(Applause)

That was my baptism by fire

into what has now become a sad
fact of life here in the United States

and increasingly across Canada as well.

The fact that the number one predictor

of whether we agree
that climate is changing,

humans are responsible

and the impacts are increasingly
serious and even dangerous,

has nothing to do with how much we know
about science or even how smart we are

but simply where we fall
on the political spectrum.

Does the thermometer give us
a different answer

depending on if we’re liberal
or conservative?

Of course not.

But if that thermometer tells us
that the planet is warming,

that humans are responsible

and that to fix this thing,

we have to wean ourselves off
fossil fuels as soon as possible –

well, some people would rather
cut off their arm

than give the government
any further excuse

to disrupt their comfortable lives
and tell them what to do.

But saying, “Yes, it’s a real problem,
but I don’t want to fix it,”

that makes us the bad guy,
and nobody wants to be the bad guy.

So instead, we use arguments like,
“It’s just a natural cycle.”

“It’s the sun.”

Or my favorite,

“Those climate scientists
are just in it for the money.”

(Laughter)

I get that at least once a week.

But these are just
sciencey-sounding smoke screens,

that are designed to hide
the real reason for our objections,

which have nothing to do with the science

and everything to do
with our ideology and our identity.

So when we turn on the TV these days,

it seems like pundit X is saying,

“It’s cold outside.
Where is global warming now?”

And politician Y is saying,

“For every scientist
who says this thing is real,

I can find one who says it isn’t.”

So it’s no surprise that sometimes we feel
like everybody is saying these myths.

But when we look at the data –

and the Yale Program
on Climate [Change] Communication

has done public opinion polling across
the country now for a number of years –

the data shows that actually 70 percent
of people in the United States agree

that the climate is changing.

And 70 percent also agree
that it will harm plants and animals,

and it will harm future generations.

But then when we dig down a bit deeper,
the rubber starts to hit the road.

Only about 60 percent of people think it
will affect people in the United States.

Only 40 percent of people
think it will affect us personally.

And then when you ask people,
“Do you ever talk about this?”

two-thirds of people in the entire
United States say, “Never.”

And even worse, when you say,
“Do you hear the media talk about this?”

Over three-quarters of people say no.

So it’s a vicious cycle.

The planet warms.

Heat waves get stronger.

Heavy precipitation gets more frequent.

Hurricanes get more intense.

Scientists release yet another
doom-filled report.

Politicians push back even more strongly,

repeating the same
sciencey-sounding myths.

What can we do to break
this vicious cycle?

The number one thing we can do
is the exact thing that we’re not doing:

talk about it.

But you might say, “I’m not a scientist.

How am I supposed to talk
about radiative forcing

or cloud parametrization
in climate models?”

We don’t need to be talking
about more science;

we’ve been talking about the science
for over 150 years.

Did you know that it’s been
150 years or more since the 1850s,

when climate scientists first discovered

that digging up and burning
coal and gas and oil

is producing heat-trapping gases

that is wrapping an extra blanket
around the planet?

That’s how long we’ve known.

It’s been 50 years since scientists
first formally warned a US president

of the dangers of a changing climate,

and that president was Lyndon B. Johnson.

And what’s more,
the social science has taught us

that if people have built their identity
on rejecting a certain set of facts,

then arguing over those facts
is a personal attack.

It causes them to dig in deeper,

and it digs a trench,
rather than building a bridge.

So if we aren’t supposed to talk
about more science,

or if we don’t need to talk
about more science,

then what should we be talking about?

The most important thing to do is,

instead of starting up with your head,
with all the data and facts in our head,

to start from the heart,

to start by talking about
why it matters to us,

to begin with genuinely shared values.

Are we both parents?

Do we live in the same community?

Do we enjoy the same outdoor activities:
hiking, biking, fishing, even hunting?

Do we care about the economy
or national security?

For me, one of the most foundational ways
I found to connect with people

is through my faith.

As a Christian, I believe that God created
this incredible planet that we live on

and gave us responsibility
over every living thing on it.

And I furthermore believe
that we are to care for and love

the least fortunate among us,

those who are already suffering
the impacts of poverty,

hunger, disease and more.

If you don’t know what
the values are that someone has,

have a conversation, get to know them,
figure out what makes them tick.

And then once we have,

all we have to do is connect the dots
between the values they already have

and why they would care
about a changing climate.

I truly believe, after thousands
of conversations that I’ve had

over the past decade and more,

that just about every single
person in the world

already has the values they need
to care about a changing climate.

They just haven’t connected the dots.

And that’s what we can do
through our conversation with them.

The only reason why I care
about a changing climate

is because of who I already am.

I’m a mother, so I care
about the future of my child.

I live in West Texas,
where water is already scarce,

and climate change is impacting
the availability of that water.

I’m a Christian, I care
about a changing climate

because it is, as the military calls it,
a “threat multiplier.”

It takes those issues,

like poverty and hunger and disease
and lack of access to clean water

and even political crises
that lead to refugee crises –

it takes all of these issues
and it exacerbates them,

it makes them worse.

I’m not a Rotarian.

But when I gave my first talk
at a Rotary Club,

I walked in and they had this giant banner
that had the Four-Way Test on it.

Is it the truth?

Absolutely.

Is it fair?

Heck, no, that’s why I care
most about climate change,

because it is absolutely unfair.

Those who have contributed
the least to the problem

are bearing the brunt of the impacts.

It went on to ask:

Would it be beneficial to all,
would it build goodwill?

Well, to fix it certainly would.

So I took my talk, and I reorganized it
into the Four-Way Test,

and then I gave it to this group
of conservative businesspeople

in West Texas.

(Laughter)

And I will never forget at the end,

a local bank owner came up to me
with the most bemused look on his face.

And he said, “You know, I wasn’t sure
about this whole global warming thing,

but it passed the Four-Way Test.”

(Laughter)

(Applause)

These values, though –
they have to be genuine.

I was giving a talk at a Christian college
a number of years ago,

and after my talk, a fellow scientist
came up and he said,

“I need some help.

I’ve been really trying hard
to get my foot in the door

with our local churches,

but I can’t seem to get any traction.

I want to talk to them
about why climate change matters.”

So I said, “Well, the best thing to do

is to start with the denomination
that you’re part of,

because you share the most values
with those people.

What type of church do you attend?”

“Oh, I don’t attend any church,
I’m an atheist,” he said.

(Laughter)

I said, “Well, in that case,
starting with a faith community

is probably not the best idea.

Let’s talk about what you do enjoy doing,
what you are involved in.”

And we were able to identify
a community group

that he was part of,
that he could start with.

The bottom line is, we don’t have to be
a liberal tree hugger

to care about a changing climate.

All we have to be is a human
living on this planet.

Because no matter where we live,

climate change is already
affecting us today.

If we live along the coasts,

in many places, we’re already seeing
“sunny-day flooding.”

If we live in western North America,

we’re seeing much greater area
being burned by wildfires.

If we live in many coastal locations,

from the Gulf of Mexico
to the South Pacific,

we are seeing stronger hurricanes,
typhoons and cyclones,

powered by a warming ocean.

If we live in Texas
or if we live in Syria,

we’re seeing climate change
supersize our droughts,

making them more frequent and more severe.

Wherever we live, we’re already
being affected by a changing climate.

So you might say, “OK, that’s good.
We can talk impacts.

We can scare the pants off people,
because this thing is serious.”

And it is, believe me.
I’m a scientist, I know.

(Laughter)

But fear is not
what is going to motivate us

for the long-term, sustained change
that we need to fix this thing.

Fear is designed to help us
run away from the bear.

Or just run faster
than the person beside us.

(Laughter)

What we need to fix this thing
is rational hope.

Yes, we absolutely do need
to recognize what’s at stake.

Of course we do.

But we need a vision of a better future –

a future with abundant energy,

with a stable economy,

with resources available to all,

where our lives are not worse
but better than they are today.

There are solutions.

And that’s why the second important
thing that we have to talk about

is solutions – practical, viable,
accessible, attractive solutions.

Like what?

Well, there’s no
silver bullet, as they say,

but there’s plenty of silver buckshot.

(Laughter)

There’s simple solutions
that save us money

and reduce our carbon footprint
at the same time.

Yes, light bulbs.

I love my plug-in car.

I’d like some solar shingles.

But imagine if every home
came with a switch beside the front door,

that when you left the house, you could
turn off everything except your fridge.

And maybe the DVR.

(Laughter)

Lifestyle choices: eating local,
eating lower down the food chain

and reducing food waste,
which at the global scale,

is one of the most important things
that we can do to fix this problem.

I’m a climate scientist,

so the irony of traveling around
to talk to people about a changing climate

is not lost on me.

(Laughter)

The biggest part of my personal
carbon footprint is my travel.

And that’s why I carefully
collect my invitations.

I usually don’t go anywhere
unless I have a critical mass

of invitations in one place –

anywhere from three to four

to sometimes even as many as
10 or 15 talks in a given place –

so I can minimize the impact
of my carbon footprint

as much as possible.

And I’ve transitioned nearly
three-quarters of the talks I give

to video.

Often, people will say,
“Well, we’ve never done that before.”

But I say, “Well, let’s give it a try,
I think it could work.”

Most of all, though,

we need to talk about what’s already
happening today around the world

and what could happen in the future.

Now, I live in Texas,

and Texas has the highest carbon emissions
of any state in the United States.

You might say, “Well,
what can you talk about in Texas?”

The answer is: a lot.

Did you know that in Texas
there’s over 25,000 jobs

in the wind energy industry?

We are almost up to 20 percent
of our electricity

from clean, renewable sources,
most of that wind,

though solar is growing quickly.

The largest army base
in the United States, Fort Hood,

is, of course, in Texas.

And they’ve been powered
by wind and solar energy now,

because it’s saving taxpayers
over 150 million dollars.

Yes.

(Applause)

What about those who don’t have
the resources that we have?

In sub-Saharan Africa,
there are hundreds of millions of people

who don’t have access to any type
of energy except kerosine,

and it’s very expensive.

Around the entire world,

the fastest-growing type
of new energy today is solar.

And they have plenty of solar.

So social impact investors,
nonprofits, even corporations

are going in and using innovative
new microfinancing schemes,

like, pay-as-you-go solar,

so that people can buy
the power they need in increments,

sometimes even on their cell phone.

One company, Azuri, has distributed
tens of thousands of units

across 11 countries,
from Rwanda to Uganda.

They estimate that they’ve powered
over 30 million hours of electricity

and over 10 million hours
of cell phone charging.

What about the giant growing
economies of China and India?

Well, climate impacts might seem
a little further down the road,

but air quality impacts
are right here today.

And they know that clean energy
is essential to powering their future.

So China is investing hundreds
of billions of dollars in clean energy.

They’re flooding coal mines,

and they’re putting floating
solar panels on the surface.

They also have a panda-shaped solar farm.

(Applause)

(Laughter)

Yes, they’re still burning coal.

But they’ve shut down
all the coal plants around Beijing.

And in India, they’re looking to replace

a quarter of a billion
incandescent light bulbs with LEDs,

which will save them
seven billion dollars in energy costs.

They’re investing in green jobs,

and they’re looking to decarbonize
their entire vehicle fleet.

India may be the first country
to industrialize

without relying primarily on fossil fuels.

The world is changing.

But it just isn’t changing fast enough.

Too often, we picture this problem

as a giant boulder
sitting at the bottom of a hill,

with only a few hands on it,
trying to roll it up the hill.

But in reality, that boulder
is already at the top of the hill.

And it’s got hundreds of millions
of hands, maybe even billions on it,

pushing it down.

It just isn’t going fast enough.

So how do we speed up that giant boulder
so we can fix climate change in time?

You guessed it.

The number one way is by talking about it.

The bottom line is this:

climate change is affecting you and me
right here, right now,

in the places where we live.

But by working together, we can fix it.

Sure, it’s a daunting problem.

Nobody knows that more
than us climate scientists.

But we can’t give in to despair.

We have to go out and actively look
for the hope that we need,

that will inspire us to act.

And that hope begins
with a conversation today.

Thank you.

(Applause)

审稿人:Camille Martínez

这是我在德克萨斯理工大学
担任大气科学教授的第一年

我们刚搬到德克萨斯州的拉伯克

,最近被
评为全美第二个最保守的城市

一位同事请我客座教授
他的本科地质课。

我说:“当然。”

但是当我出现的时候
,报告厅是洞穴式的,黑暗的。

当我

从地质时期到今天追踪碳循环的历史时,

大多数学生都瘫倒在地,
打瞌睡或看着他们的手机。

我带着对任何问题的充满希望的请求结束了我的演讲

一只手立刻举了起来。

我看起来很鼓励,他站起来
,大声说:

“你是民主主义者,不是吗?”

(笑声)

“不,”我说,“我是加拿大人。”

(笑声)

(掌声)

那是我接受了火的洗礼,

现在这已成为
美国

和加拿大越来越多的悲惨生活事实。

事实上,

我们是否
同意气候正在变化、

人类有责任

以及影响越来越
严重甚至危险的第一预测因素

与我们
对科学的了解程度甚至我们的聪明程度无关,

而只是我们在哪里
落在政治光谱上。 根据我们是自由派还是保守派

,温度计会给
我们不同的答案

吗?

当然不是。

但是,如果那个温度计告诉
我们地球正在变暖

,人类有责任

并且要解决这个问题,

我们必须尽快让自己摆脱
化石燃料——

好吧,有些人宁愿
砍掉他们的手臂也

不愿放弃 政府有
任何进一步的借口

来扰乱他们的舒适生活
并告诉他们该怎么做。

但是说,“是的,这是一个真正的问题,
但我不想解决它”

,这使我们成为坏人
,没有人愿意成为坏人。

因此,我们使用诸如
“这只是一个自然循环”之类的论点。

“是太阳。”

或者我最喜欢的,

“那些气候科学家
只是为了钱。”

(笑声)

我每周至少得到一次。

但这些只是
听起来很科学的烟幕

,旨在隐藏
我们反对的真正原因,

这与科学无关,

与我们的意识形态和身份有关。

因此,当我们这些天打开电视时,

专家 X 似乎在说,

“外面很冷。
现在全球变暖在哪里?”

政治家 Y 说:

“对于每一个
说这件事是真的的科学家,

我都能找到一个说这不是真的。”

因此,有时我们
觉得每个人都在说这些神话也就不足为奇了。

但是,当我们查看数据时

——耶鲁大学
气候[变化]传播项目

已经
在全国范围内进行了多年的民意调查

——数据显示,实际上美国有 70%
的人同意

: 气候正在发生变化。

70% 的人还
同意它会伤害植物和动物

,也会伤害后代。

但是当我们深入挖掘时
,橡胶开始上路。

只有大约 60% 的人认为它
会影响美国人。

只有 40% 的人
认为它会影响我们个人。

然后当你问人们,
“你有谈论过这个吗?”

整个美国三分之二的人
说“从不”。

更糟糕的是,当你说,
“你听到媒体谈论这个了吗?”

超过四分之三的人说不。

所以这是一个恶性循环。

地球变暖。

热浪变得更强。

强降水变得更加频繁。

飓风变得更加强烈。

科学家们发布了另
一份充满厄运的报告。

政客们更加强烈地反击,

重复同样的
科学神话。

我们能做些什么来打破
这个恶性循环?

我们
能做的第一件事就是我们没有做的事情:

谈论它。

但你可能会说,“我不是科学家。

我应该如何
谈论气候模型中的辐射强迫

或云参数
化?”

我们不需要
谈论更多的科学; 150 多年来,

我们一直在谈论科学

您是否知道
自 1850 年代以来已经 150 年或更长时间,

当时气候科学家首次

发现挖掘和燃烧
煤炭、天然气和石油

会产生吸热气体

,这些气体在地球周围包裹了一层额外的毯子

这就是我们知道的时间。

自从科学家
首次正式警告美国总统

气候变化的危险以来,已经过去了 50 年,

而那位总统就是林登·约翰逊 (Lyndon B. Johnson)。

更重要的是
,社会科学告诉我们

,如果人们的身份建立
在拒绝某些事实的基础上,

那么为这些事实争论
就是人身攻击。

它使他们挖得更深

,挖一条沟,
而不是建一座桥。

所以如果我们不应该
谈论更多的科学,

或者如果我们不需要
谈论更多的科学,

那么我们应该谈论什么?

最重要的事情是,

不要从你的头脑开始,从
我们头脑中的所有数据和事实

开始,而是从内心开始

,从谈论
为什么对我们很重要

开始,从真正共享的价值观开始。

我们都是父母吗?

我们住在同一个社区吗?

我们是否喜欢同样的户外活动:
远足、骑自行车、钓鱼,甚至打猎?

我们关心经济
还是国家安全?

对我来说,我发现与人联系的最基本方式之一

就是通过我的信仰。

作为一名基督徒,我相信上帝创造
了我们赖以生存的这个令人难以置信的星球,

并赋予我们对
其中所有生物的责任。

而且我还相信
,我们要关心和爱护

我们当中最不幸的人,

那些已经
遭受贫困、

饥饿、疾病等影响的人。

如果您不
知道某人的价值观是什么,请

进行对话,了解他们,
弄清楚是什么让他们打勾。

然后一旦我们拥有了

,我们所要做的就是将
他们已经拥有的价值观

与他们为什么
关心气候变化之间的点点滴滴联系起来。

我真的相信,在

过去十年多的时间里进行了数千次对话之后,世界

上几乎每个
人都

已经具备
了关心气候变化所需的价值观。

他们只是没有把这些点联系起来。

这就是我们可以
通过与他们的对话来做到的。

我关心气候变化的唯一原因

是因为我已经是谁。

我是一个母亲,所以我
关心我孩子的未来。

我住在德克萨斯州西部,
那里的水已经很稀缺

,气候变化正在
影响水的供应。

我是一名基督徒,我
关心气候变化

,因为正如军方所说,它
是“威胁倍增器”。

它需要这些问题,

例如贫困、饥饿和疾病,
以及无法获得清洁水

,甚至
导致难民危机的政治危机——

它需要所有这些问题
,它会加剧它们

,让它们变得更糟。

我不是扶轮社员。

但是当我
在扶轮社第一次演讲时,

我走进去,他们有一面巨大的横幅
,上面有四项测试。

这是事实吗?

绝对地。

公平吗?

哎呀,不,这就是我
最关心气候变化的

原因,因为这绝对不公平。

那些
对这个问题贡献最少

的人首当其冲。

它接着问:

它对所有人都
有益吗?它会建立善意吗?

好吧,修复它肯定会。

所以我接受了我的演讲,我把它重新组织
成四项测试,

然后我把它交给

了西德克萨斯的这群保守的商人。

(笑声)

最后,我永远不会忘记,

一位当地银行老板
带着最困惑的表情走到我面前。

他说,“你知道,我
不确定这整个全球变暖的事情,

但它通过了四项测试。”

(笑声)

(掌声)

不过,这些价值观——
它们必须是真实的。 几年前,

我在一所基督教学院

发表演讲,演讲结束后,一位科学家同事
走过来,他说:

“我需要一些帮助。

我一直在
努力让自己的脚

在 “我们当地的教会,

但我似乎没有任何吸引力。

我想和他们
谈谈为什么气候变化很重要。”

所以我说,“嗯,最好的办法

是从你所属的教派开始,

因为你与那些人分享最多的价值观

你参加什么类型的教堂?”

“哦,我不参加任何教堂,
我是无神论者,”他说。

(笑声)

我说,“好吧,在那种情况下,
从信仰团体开始

可能不是最好的主意。

让我们谈谈你喜欢做
什么,你参与了什么。”

我们能够确定他所在
的社区团体

,他可以从该团体开始。

底线是,我们不必成为
一个自由的树木拥抱者

来关心气候变化。

我们所要做的只是一个
生活在这个星球上的人。

因为无论我们住在哪里,

气候变化今天已经在
影响着我们。

如果我们住在沿海地区,

在许多地方,我们已经看到了
“晴天洪水”。

如果我们生活在北美西部,

我们会看到更大的地区
被野火烧毁。

如果我们生活在

从墨西哥湾
到南太平洋的许多沿海地区,

我们会看到由变暖的海洋驱动的更强烈的飓风
、台风和旋风

如果我们住在得克萨斯州
或叙利亚,

我们会看到气候变化
加剧了我们的干旱,

使干旱更加频繁和严重。

无论我们住在哪里,我们都已经
受到气候变化的影响。

所以你可能会说,“好吧,那很好。
我们可以谈论影响。

我们可以吓跑人们,
因为这件事很严重。”

是的,相信我。
我是科学家,我知道。

(笑声)

但恐惧并不是
激励我们

进行长期、持续变革的动力
,我们需要解决这个问题。

恐惧旨在帮助我们
逃离熊。

或者只是
跑得比我们旁边的人快。

(笑声)

我们需要解决这个问题的
是理性的希望。

是的,我们绝对
需要认识到什么是利害攸关的。

我们当然知道。

但我们需要一个更美好未来的愿景——

一个能源充沛

、经济稳定、

人人享有资源的未来

,我们的生活不会
比今天更糟,而是更好。

有解决方案。

这就是为什么我们要讨论的第二个重要
问题

是解决方案——实用、可行、
可访问、有吸引力的解决方案。

像什么?

好吧
,正如他们所说,没有银弹,

但有很多银弹。

(笑声)

有一些简单的解决
方案可以同时为我们节省资金

并减少我们的碳足迹

是的,灯泡。

我喜欢我的插电式汽车。

我想要一些太阳能带状疱疹。

但是想象一下,如果每个家庭
的前门旁边都有一个开关,

那么当你离开房子时,你可以
关掉除冰箱以外的所有东西。

也许还有 DVR。

(笑声)

生活方式的选择:就地
取食,在食物链的下游吃

,减少食物浪费
,在全球范围内,这

是我们可以解决这个问题的最重要的事情之一。

我是一名气候科学家,

所以我并没有忘记四处旅行
与人们谈论气候变化的讽刺意味

(笑声)

我个人碳足迹的最大部分
是我的旅行。

这就是我仔细
收集邀请函的原因。

我通常不会去任何地方,
除非我

在一个地方收到大量邀请——

从三到四次

到有时甚至多达
10 或 15 场演讲在一个给定的地方——

这样我就可以最大限度地减少
我的碳的影响

尽可能多的足迹。

我已经将近
四分之三的演讲转换

为视频。

通常,人们会说,
“好吧,我们以前从未这样做过。”

但我说,“好吧,让我们试一试,
我认为它可以工作。”

不过,最重要的是,

我们需要讨论
当今世界各地已经发生的事情

以及未来可能发生的事情。

现在,我住在德克萨斯州

,德克萨斯州的碳排放
量是美国所有州中最高的。

你可能会说,“好吧,
你能在德克萨斯谈论什么?”

答案是:很多。

您知道在德克萨斯州
有超过 25,000

个风能行业的工作岗位吗?

我们几乎高达 20%
的电力

来自清洁的可再生能源,
其中大部分来自风能,

尽管太阳能正在迅速增长。

美国最大的
军事基地胡

德堡当然是在德克萨斯州。

他们
现在已经使用风能和太阳能,

因为它为纳税人节省
了超过 1.5 亿美元。

是的。

(鼓掌)

那些没有
我们资源的人呢?

在撒哈拉以南非洲
,数以亿计的

人无法获得
除煤油以外的任何能源,

而且价格非常昂贵。

在全球范围内,

当今增长最快
的新能源类型是太阳能。

他们有充足的太阳能。

因此,具有社会影响力的投资者、
非营利组织,甚至公司

都在参与并使用创新的
新小额融资计划

,例如现收现付太阳能,

这样人们就可以
逐步购买他们需要的电力,

有时甚至可以通过手机购买。

一家名为 Azuri 的公司已经


从卢旺达到乌干达的 11 个国家/地区分发了数万台设备。

他们估计他们已经提供
了超过 3000 万小时的电力

和超过 1000 万小时
的手机充电。 中国和印度

这两个巨大的增长
经济体呢?

好吧,气候影响可能看起来
有点远,

但空气质量影响
今天就在这里。

他们知道清洁
能源对于为他们的未来提供动力至关重要。

所以中国
在清洁能源上投入了数千亿美元。

他们正在淹没煤矿

,他们正在将漂浮的
太阳能电池板放在地表上。

他们还有一个熊猫形状的太阳能农场。

(掌声)

(笑声)

是的,他们还在烧煤。

但他们已经关闭了
北京周边的所有燃煤电厂。

在印度,他们希望用 LED 替换

10 亿个
白炽灯泡中的四分之一,

这将为他们节省
70 亿美元的能源成本。

他们正在投资绿色工作,

并且正在寻求使
整个车队脱碳。

印度可能是第一个

不主要依赖化石燃料的情况下实现工业化的国家。

世界正在发生变化。

但它只是变化不够快。

很多时候,我们把这个问题

想象成
坐在山脚下的一块巨石

,只有几只手在上面,
试图把它滚上山。

但实际上,那块
巨石已经在山顶了。

它有数亿只
手,甚至可能有数十亿只手,

把它往下推。

它只是不够快。

那么我们如何加速那块巨石,
以便及时解决气候变化问题呢?

你猜对了。

第一种方法是谈论它。

底线是:

气候变化正在影响你和
我,就在此时此刻,

在我们生活的地方。

但是通过共同努力,我们可以解决它。

当然,这是一个令人生畏的问题。

没有人
比我们气候科学家更了解这一点。

但我们不能屈服于绝望。

我们必须走出去,积极
寻找我们需要的希望,

这将激励我们采取行动。

这种希望
始于今天的对话。

谢谢你。

(掌声)