The case for stubborn optimism on climate Christiana Figueres

Transcriber: TED Translators Admin
Reviewer: Rhonda Jacobs

Any reality we are given
is not set in stone,

it can be changed.

I come from Costa Rica,

a country known for our deep
commitment to peace,

our high level of education

and our far-sighted stewardship of nature.

But it wasn’t always like that.

Way back in the ’40s,

my father, José Figueres Ferrer,

was a young farmer,
tilling the soil of these mountains,

and cultivating his vision
of a country grounded in social justice

and guided by the rule of law.

His vision was tested, when in 1948,

the government refused to accept
the result of democratic elections

and brought in the military.

My father could have been indifferent,

but he chose to do what was necessary
to restore democracy,

surviving the burning
of his home and his farm.

From here, he launched
a revolutionary army

of a few courageous men and women,

who against all odds,
defeated the government forces.

Then he disbanded his army,

outlawed the national army,

and redirected the military budget

to establish the basis
of the unique country Costa Rica is today.

From my father,
I learned stubborn optimism,

the mindset that is necessary
to transform the reality we’re given

into the reality we want.

Today, at the global level,

we face a rapidly accelerating
climate emergency,

daunting because we have
procrastinated way too long.

We now have one last chance
to truly change our course.

This is the decisive decade
in the history of humankind.

That may sound like
an exaggeration, but it’s not.

If we continue on the current path,

we condemn our children
and their descendants

to a world that is
increasingly uninhabitable,

with exponentially
growing levels of disease,

famine, and conflict,

and irreversible ecosystem failures.

Conversely, if we cut our current
greenhouse gas emissions in half

over the next 10 years,

we open the door to an exciting world

where cities are green, the air is clean,

energy and transport are efficient,

jobs in a fair economy are abundant,

and forests, soil and waters
are regenerated.

Our world will be safer and healthier,

more stable and more just
than what we have now.

This decade is a moment of choice
unlike any we have ever lived.

All of us alive right now
share that responsibility

and that opportunity.

There are many changes to make
over the next 10 years,

and each of us will take
different steps along the way.

But all of us start the transformation
in one place, our mindset.

Faced with today’s facts,

we can be indifferent,

do nothing

and hope the problem goes away.

We can despair and plunge into paralysis,

or we can become stubborn optimists

with a fierce conviction
that no matter how difficult,

we must and we can rise to the challenge.

Optimism is not about blindly ignoring
the realities that surround us,

that’s foolishness.

It’s also not a naive faith
that everything will take care of itself,

even if we do nothing.

That is irresponsibility.

The optimism I’m speaking of
is not the result of an achievement,

it is the necessary input
to meeting a challenge.

It is, in fact, the only way
to increase our chance of success.

Think of the impact of a positive mindset
on a personal goal you have set yourself.

Running a marathon,
learning a new language,

creating a new country, like my father,

or like me, reaching a global
agreement on climate change.

The Paris Agreement of 2015
is hailed as a historical breakthrough.

What we started in utter gloom

when I assumed leadership

of the international
climate change negotiations in 2010,

six months after
the failed Copenhagen meetings,

the world was in a very dark
place on climate change.

No one believed we would ever agree
on global decarbonization.

Not even I believed it was possible.

But then I realized,

a shared vision

and a globally agreed route
toward that vision was indispensable.

It took a deliberate change
of mindset, first in me,

and then in all other participants,

who gradually but courageously moved
from despair to determination,

from confrontation to collaboration,

until we collectively
delivered the global agreement.

But we have not moved fast enough.

Many now believe it is impossible

to cut global emissions
in half in this decade.

I say, we don’t have the right
to give up or let up.

Optimism means envisioning
our desired future

and then actively pulling it closer.

Optimism opens the field of possibility,

it drives your desire to contribute,
to make a difference,

it makes you jump
out of bed in the morning

because you feel challenged
and hopeful at the same time.

But it isn’t going to be easy.

We will stumble along the way.

Many other global urgencies
could temper our hope for rapid progress,

and our current geopolitical reality
could easily dampen our optimism.

That’s where stubbornness comes in.

Our optimism cannot
be a sunny day attitude.

It has to be gritty,
determined, relentless.

It is a choice we have to make
every single day.

Every barrier must be an indication
to try a different way.

In radical collaboration with each other,

we can do this.

For years, I had a recurring nightmare

in which I saw seven pairs
of children’s eyes,

the eyes of seven generations,

staring back at me, asking,

“What did you do?”

Now, we have millions
of children in the streets,

asking us adults the same question,

“What are you doing?”

And we have to respond.

Like our fathers and mothers before us,

we are the farmers of the future.

I invite each of you to ask yourself:

What is the future you want,

and what are you doing
to make that future a reality?

You will each have a different answer,

but you can all start
by joining the growing family

of stubborn optimists around the world.

Welcome to the family.

抄写员:TED Translators Admin
Reviewer:Rhonda Jacobs

我们得到的任何现实
都不是一成不变的,

它可以改变。

我来自哥斯达黎加,

这个国家以我们
对和平的坚定承诺

、高水平的教育

和对自然的远见管理而闻名。

但并不总是这样。

早在 40 年代,

我的父亲何塞·菲格雷斯·费雷尔 (José Figueres Ferrer)

还是一位年轻的农民,他
在这些山上耕作,

并培养了他
对一个以社会正义为基础

并以法治为指导的国家的愿景。

他的眼光受到考验,1948 年

,政府拒绝接受
民主选举的结果

并引入军队。

我父亲本可以无动于衷,

但他选择做必要的事情
来恢复民主,


他的家和农场被烧毁后幸存下来。

从这里,他发动

了一支由几名勇敢的男女组成的革命军队,

他们不顾一切地
击败了政府军。

然后他解散了他的军队,

取缔了国民军,

并重新调整了军事预算


为今天哥斯达黎加这个独特的国家奠定了基础。

从我父亲那里,
我学会了顽固的乐观主义,

这种心态
对于将我们

给予的现实转变为我们想要的现实是必要的。

今天,在全球层面,

我们面临着迅速加速的
气候紧急情况,

令人生畏,因为我们
拖延得太久了。

我们现在有最后一次
机会真正改变我们的路线。


是人类历史上决定性的十年。

这听起来可能
有些夸张,但事实并非如此。

如果我们继续目前的道路,

我们将让我们的孩子
和他们的后代

进入一个
越来越不适合居住的世界,

疾病、

饥荒和冲突呈指数级增长,

以及不可逆转的生态系统崩溃。

相反,如果我们在未来 10 年内将目前的
温室气体排放量减少一半

我们就会打开通往一个令人兴奋的世界的大门,在这个世界

里,城市是绿色的,空气是清洁的,

能源和交通是高效的,

公平经济中的就业机会丰富,

森林、土壤和水
得到再生。

我们的世界将比我们现在拥有的更安全、更健康、

更稳定、更公正

这十年是一个选择的时刻,
不同于我们曾经生活过的任何时刻。

我们所有人现在都在
分享这个责任

和那个机会。

在接下来的 10 年里

,我们要做出许多改变,我们每个人都会在此过程中采取
不同的步骤。

但我们所有人都
在一个地方开始转变,我们的心态。

面对今天的事实,

我们可以无动于衷,

什么也不做

,希望问题消失。

我们可以绝望并陷入瘫痪,

或者我们可以成为顽固

的乐观主义者,
坚信无论多么困难,

我们都必须并且可以迎接挑战。

乐观不是盲目地忽视
我们周围的现实,

那是愚蠢的。 即使我们什么都不做

,一切都会自行解决,这也不是一种天真的信念

那是不负责任。

我所说的乐观
不是成就的结果,

而是迎接挑战的必要投入

事实上,这是
增加我们成功机会的唯一方法。

想想积极的心态
对你自己设定的个人目标的影响。

跑马拉松,
学习一门新语言,

创建一个像我父亲或我一样的新国家,

就气候变化达成全球协议。

2015年的《巴黎协定》
被誉为历史性突破。 2010 年,在哥本哈根会议失败六个月后,我担任国际气候变化谈判的领导者时,

我们一开始就陷入了彻底的悲观之中

当时世界
在气候变化问题上处于非常黑暗的境地。

没有人相信我们会
就全球脱碳达成一致。

甚至我都不相信这是可能的。

但后来我意识到

,共同的愿景和实现这一愿景

的全球商定路线
是必不可少的。

这需要刻意
改变心态,首先是我,

然后是所有其他参与者,

他们逐渐但勇敢地
从绝望转向决心,

从对抗转向合作,

直到我们共同
达成全球协议。

但我们的行动还不够快。

许多人现在认为,

在这十年中将全球排放量减少一半是不可能的。

我说,我们没有
权利放弃或放弃。

乐观意味着设想
我们想要的未来

,然后积极地把它拉近。

乐观打开了可能性的领域,

它驱使你做出贡献、
做出改变的愿望,

它让你
早上起床,

因为你同时感到挑战
和充满希望。

但这并不容易。

我们会一路跌跌撞撞。

许多其他全球紧迫性
可能会削弱我们对快速进展的希望,

而我们当前的地缘政治现实
很容易抑制我们的乐观情绪。

这就是固执的来源。

我们的乐观不可能
是晴天的态度。

它必须是坚韧的、
坚定的、无情的。

这是我们每天都必须做出的选择

每个障碍都必须表明
尝试不同的方式。

通过彼此激进的合作,

我们可以做到这一点。

多年来,我经常

做噩梦,我看到七
双孩子

的眼睛,七代人的眼睛,

盯着我,问:

“你做了什么?”

现在,我们有数以百万计
的孩子在街上,

问我们成年人同样的问题,

“你在做什么?”

我们必须做出回应。

就像我们之前的父母一样,

我们是未来的农民。

我邀请你们每个人问问自己:

你想要的未来是

什么,你正在做些什么
来让这个未来成为现实?

你们每个人都会有不同的答案,

但你们都可以
从加入世界各地日益壮大

的顽固乐观主义者大家庭开始。

欢迎来到这个家庭。