-
Listen to me, please.
-
You're like me, a homo sapiens,
-
a wise human.
-
Life,
-
a miracle in the universe,
appeared around 4 billion years ago.
-
And we humans
only 200,000 years ago.
-
Yet we have succeeded in disrupting
the balance so essential to life.
-
Listen carefully to this
extraordinary story, which is yours,
-
and decide
what you want to do with it.
-
These are traces of our origins.
-
At the beginning, our planet
was no more than a chaos of fire,
-
a cloud
of agglutinated dust particles,
-
like so many similar clusters
in the universe.
-
Yet this is where
the miracle of life occurred.
-
Today, life, our life,
-
is just a link in a chain
of innumerable living beings
-
that have succeeded one another
on Earth over nearly 4 billion years.
-
And even today,
-
new volcanoes continue
to sculpt our landscapes.
-
They offer a glimpse of what
our Earth was like at its birth,
-
molten rock surging from the depths,
-
solidifying, cracking, blistering
or spreading in a thin crust,
-
before falling dormant for a time.
-
These wreathes of smoke
curling from the bowels of the Earth
-
bear witness
to the Earth's original atmosphere.
-
An atmosphere devoid of oxygen.
-
A dense atmosphere,
thick with water vapor,
-
full of carbon dioxide.
-
A furnace.
-
The Earth cooled.
-
The water vapor condensed
and fell in torrential downpours.
-
At the right distance from the sun,
not too far, not too near,
-
the Earth's perfect balance
enabled it to conserve water
-
in liquid form.
-
The water cut channels.
-
They are like the veins of a body,
the branches of a tree,
-
the vessels of the sap
that the water gave to the Earth.
-
The rivers tore minerals from rocks,
adding them to the oceans' freshwater.
-
And the oceans became heavy with salt.
-
Where do we come from?
-
Where did life
first spark into being?
-
A miracle of time,
-
primitive life forms still exist
in the globe's hot springs.
-
They give them their colors.
They're called archeobacteria.
-
They all feed off the Earth's heat.
-
All except the cyanobacteria,
-
or blue-green algae.
-
They alone have the capacity
to turn to the sun
-
to capture its energy.
-
They are a vital ancestor of all
yesterday's and today's plant species.
-
These tiny bacteria
and their billions of descendants
-
changed the destiny of our planet.
-
They transformed its atmosphere.
-
What happened to the carbon
that poisoned the atmosphere?
-
It's still here,
imprisoned in the Earth's crust.
-
Here, there once was a sea,
inhabited by micro-organisms.
-
They grew shells by tapping into
the atmosphere's carbon
-
now dissolved in the ocean.
-
These strata
are the accumulated shells
-
of those billions and billions
of micro-organisms.
-
Thanks to them, the carbon drained
from the atmosphere
-
and other life forms could develop.
-
It is life
that altered the atmosphere.
-
Plant life fed off the sun's energy,
-
which enabled it to break apart
the water molecule and take the oxygen.
-
And oxygen filled the air.
-
The Earth's water cycle
is a process of constant renewal.
-
Waterfalls, water vapor,
-
clouds, rain,
-
springs, rivers,
-
seas, oceans, glaciers...
-
The cycle is never broken.
-
There's always the same quantity
of water on Earth.
-
All the successive species on Earth
have drunk the same water.
-
The astonishing matter that is water.
-
One of the most unstable of all.
-
It takes a liquid form
as running water,
-
gaseous as vapor,
or solid as ice.
-
In Siberia, the frozen surfaces
of the lakes in winter
-
contain the trace of the forces
that water deploys when it freezes.
-
Lighter than water, the ice floats.
-
It forms a protective mantle
against the cold,
-
under which life can go on.
-
The engine of life is linkage.
-
Everything is linked.
-
Nothing is self-sufficient.
-
Water and air are inseparable,
-
united in life
and for our life on Earth.
-
Sharing is everything.
-
The green expanse through the clouds
is the source of oxygen in the air.
-
70% of this gas,
-
without which our lungs
cannot function,
-
comes from the algae that tint
the surface of the oceans.
-
Our Earth relies on a balance,
-
in which every being
has a role to play
-
and exists only through the existence
of another being.
-
A subtle, fragile harmony
that is easily shattered.
-
Thus, corals are born
from the marriage of algae and shells.
-
Coral reefs cover
less than 1% of the ocean floor,
-
but they provide a habitat for thousands
of species of fish, mollusks and algae.
-
The equilibrium of every ocean
depends on them.
-
The Earth counts time
in billions of years.
-
It took more than 4 billion years
for it to make trees.
-
In the chain of species,
trees are a pinnacle,
-
a perfect, living sculpture.
-
Trees defy gravity.
-
They are the only natural element
in perpetual movement toward the sky.
-
They grow unhurriedly toward the sun
that nourishes their foliage.
-
They have inherited
from these miniscule cyanobacteria
-
the power to capture light's energy.
-
They store it and feed off it,
-
turning it into wood and leaves,
-
which then decompose
into a mixture of water, mineral,
-
vegetable and living matter.
-
And so,
-
gradually,
-
soils are formed.
-
Soils teem with the incessant activity
of micro-organisms,
-
feeding, digging,
aerating and transforming.
-
They make the humus, the fertile layer
to which all life on land is linked.
-
What do we know about life on Earth?
-
How many species are we aware of?
A tenth of them?
-
A hundredth perhaps?
-
What do we know
about the bonds that link them?
-
The Earth is a miracle.
-
Life remains a mystery.
-
Families of animals form,
united by customs and rituals
-
that are handed down
through the generations.
-
Some adapt
to the nature of their pasture
-
and their pasture adapts to them.
-
And both gain.
-
The animal sates its hunger
and the tree can blossom again.
-
In the great adventure
of life on Earth,
-
every species has a role to play,
-
every species has its place.
-
None is futile or harmful.
-
They all balance out.
-
And that's where you,
-
homo sapiens, wise human,
-
enter the story.
-
You benefit from a fabulous
4-billion-year-old legacy
-
bequeathed by the Earth.
-
You are only 200,000 years old,
-
but you have changed
the face of the world.
-
Despite your vulnerability, you have
taken possession of every habitat
-
and conquered swathes of territory,
like no other species before you.
-
After 180,000 nomadic years,
-
and thanks to a more clement climate,
-
humans settled down.
-
They no longer depended
on hunting for survival.
-
They chose to live in wet environments
that abounded in fish,
-
game and wild plants.
-
There where land,
water and life combine.
-
Even today,
-
the majority of humankind
lives on the continents' coastlines
-
or the banks of rivers and lakes.
-
Across the planet,
one person in four
-
lives as humankind did
6,000 years ago,
-
their only energy that which nature
provides season after season.
-
It's the way of life
of 1.5 billion people,
-
more than the combined population
of all the wealthy nations.
-
But life expectancy is short
and hard labor takes its toll.
-
The uncertainties of nature
weigh on daily life.
-
Education is a rare privilege.
-
Children are a family's only asset
-
as long as every extra pair of hands
-
is a necessary contribution
to its subsistence.
-
Humanity's genius
-
is to have always had a sense
of its weakness.
-
The physical strength, with which
nature insufficiently endowed humans,
-
is found in animals that help them
to discover new territories.
-
But how can you conquer the world
on an empty stomach?
-
The invention of agriculture
turned our history on end.
-
It was less than 10,000 years ago.
-
Agriculture
was our first great revolution.
-
It resulted in the first surpluses
-
and gave birth to cities
and civilizations.
-
The memory of thousands of years
scrabbling for food faded.
-
Having made grain the yeast of life,
we multiplied the number of varieties
-
and learned to adapt them
to our soils and climates.
-
We are like every species on Earth.
-
Our principal daily concern
is to feed ourselves.
-
When the soil is less than generous
-
and water becomes scarce,
-
we are able
to deploy prodigious efforts to extract
-
from the land
enough to live on.
-
Humans shaped the land with the patience
and devotion the Earth demands
-
in an almost sacrificial ritual
performed over and over.
-
Agriculture is still
the world's most widespread occupation.
-
Half of humankind tills the soil,
-
over three-quarters of them by hand.
-
Agriculture is like a tradition handed
down from generation to generation
-
in sweat, graft and toil,
-
because for humanity
it is a prerequisite of survival.
-
But after relying on muscle-power
for so long, humankind found a way
-
to tap into the energy
buried deep in the Earth.
-
These flames are also from plants.
A pocket of sunlight.
-
Pure energy.
The energy of the sun,
-
captured over millions of years
by millions of plants
-
more than 100 million years ago.
-
It's coal. It's gas.
-
And, above all, it's oil.
-
And this pocket of sunlight freed
humans from their toil on the land.
-
With oil began the era of humans
-
who break free
of the shackles of time.
-
With oil, some of us
acquired unprecedented comforts.
-
And in 50 years, in a single lifetime,
-
the Earth has been
more radically changed
-
than by all previous generations
of humanity.
-
Faster and faster.
In the last 60 years,
-
the Earth's population
has almost tripled.
-
And over 2 billion people
have moved to the cities.
-
Faster and faster.
-
Shenzhen, in China,
-
with hundreds of skyscrapers
and millions of inhabitants,
-
was just a small fishing village
barely 40 years ago.
-
Faster and faster.
-
In Shanghai,
3,000 towers and skyscrapers
-
have been built in 20 years.
Hundreds more are under construction.
-
Today, over half of the world's
7 billion inhabitants
-
live in cities.
-
New York.
-
The world's first megalopolis
-
is the symbol of the exploitation
of the energy the Earth supplies
-
to human genius.
The manpower of millions of immigrants,
-
the energy of coal,
the unbridled power of oil.
-
America was the first
to harness the phenomenal,
-
revolutionary power of "black gold".
-
In the fields,
machines replaced men.
-
A liter of oil
generates as much energy
-
as 100 pairs of hands in 24 hours.
-
In the United States,
only 3 million farmers are left.
-
They produce enough grain
to feed 2 billion people.
-
But most of that grain
is not used to feed people.
-
Here, and in all other
industrialized nations,
-
it is transformed into livestock feed
or biofuels.
-
The pocket of sunshine's energy
chased away the specter of drought
-
that stalked farmland.
-
No spring escapes
the demands of agriculture,
-
which accounts for 70%
of humanity's water consumption.
-
In nature, everything is linked.
-
The expansion of cultivated land
and single-crop farming
-
encouraged
the development of parasites.
-
Pesticides, another gift
of the petrochemical revolution,
-
exterminated them.
-
Bad harvests and famine
became a distant memory.
-
The biggest headache now
-
was what to do with the surpluses
engendered by modern agriculture.
-
But toxic pesticides
seeped into the air,
-
soil, plants,
animals, rivers and oceans.
-
They penetrated the heart of cells
-
similar to the mother cell
shared by all forms of life.
-
Are they harmful to the humans
they released from hunger?
-
These farmers
in their yellow protective suits
-
probably have a good idea.
-
Then came fertilizers,
another petrochemical discovery.
-
They produced unprecedented results
on plots of land thus far ignored.
-
Crops adapted to soils and climates
-
gave way to the most productive
varieties and easiest to transport.
-
And so, in the last century,
-
three-quarters of the varieties
developed by farmers
-
over thousands of years
have been wiped out.
-
As far as the eye can see,
fertilizer below, plastic on top.
-
The greenhouses of Almeria, Spain,
are Europe's vegetable garden.
-
A city of uniformly sized vegetables
waits every day
-
for hundreds of trucks to take them
to the continent's supermarkets.
-
The more a country develops,
the more meat its inhabitants consume.
-
How can growing worldwide demand
be satisfied without recourse
-
to concentration camp-style
cattle farms?
-
Faster and faster.
-
Like the life cycle of livestock,
which may never see a meadow.
-
Manufacturing meat faster than
the animal has become a daily routine.
-
In these vast foodlots,
trampled by millions of cattle,
-
not a blade of grass grows.
-
A fleet of trucks from every corner
of the country brings tons of grain,
-
soy meal and protein-rich granules
-
that will become tons of meat.
-
The result is that
it takes 100 liters of water
-
to produce 1 kilogram of potatoes,
-
4,000 liters for 1 kilo of rice
-
and 13,000 liters for 1 kilo of beef.
-
Not to mention the oil guzzled
in the production process and transport.
-
Our agriculture
has become oil-powered.
-
It feeds
twice as many humans on Earth,
-
but has replaced diversity
with standardization.
-
It gives many of us comforts
we could only dream of,
-
but it makes our way of life
totally dependent on oil.
-
This is the new measure of time.
-
Our world's clock now beats
to the rhythm of indefatigable machines
-
tapping into the pocket of sunlight.
-
The whole planet is attentive
to these metronomes
-
of our hopes and illusions.
-
The same hopes and illusions
that proliferate along with our needs,
-
increasingly insatiable desires
and profligacy.
-
We know that the end of cheap oil
is imminent,
-
but we refuse to believe it.
-
For many of us,
-
the American dream is embodied
by a legendary name.
-
Los Angeles.
-
In this city
that stretches over 100 kilometers,
-
the number of cars is almost equal
to the number of inhabitants.
-
Here, energy puts on a fantastic show
every night.
-
The days seem no more
than a pale reflection of nights
-
that turn the city into a starry sky.
-
Faster and faster.
-
Distances are no longer
counted in miles, but in minutes.
-
The automobile shapes new suburbs,
where every home is a castle,
-
a safe distance
from the asphyxiated city centers,
-
and where neat rows of houses
huddle around dead-end streets.
-
The model of a lucky-few countries
-
has become a universal dream
preached by TVs all over the world.
-
Even here in Beijing,
-
it is cloned, copied and reproduced
in these formatted houses
-
that have wiped pagodas off the map.
-
The automobile has become the symbol
of comfort and progress.
-
If this model were followed
by every society,
-
the planet wouldn't have 900 million
vehicles, as it does today,
-
but 5 billion.
-
Faster and faster.
-
The more the world develops,
the greater its thirst for energy.
-
Everywhere, machines dig, bore
and rip from the Earth
-
the pieces of stars buried
in its depths since its creation...
-
Minerals.
-
As a privilege of power,
80% of this mineral wealth
-
is consumed
by 20% of the world's population.
-
Before the end of this century,
-
excessive mining will have exhausted
nearly all the planet's reserves.
-
Faster and faster.
-
Shipyards churn out oil tankers,
container ships and gas tankers
-
to cater for the demands
of globalized industrial production.
-
Most consumer goods travel
thousands of kilometers
-
from the country of production
to the country of consumption.
-
Since 1950, the volume of international
trade has increased 20 times over.
-
90% of trade goes by sea.
-
500 million containers
are transported every year.
-
Headed for the world's major hubs
of consumption,
-
such as Dubai.
-
Dubai is a sort of culmination
of the Western model,
-
a country where the impossible
becomes possible.
-
Building artificial islands in the sea,
for example.
-
Dubai has few natural resources,
-
but with oil money it can bring in
millions of tons of material
-
and workers from all over the planet.
-
Dubai has no farmland,
but it can import food.
-
Dubai has no water, but it can afford
to expend immense amounts of energy
-
to desalinate seawater and build
the world's highest skyscrapers.
-
Dubai has endless sun,
but no solar panels.
-
It is the totem to total modernity
that never fails to amaze the world.
-
Dubai is like the new beacon
for all the world's money.
-
Nothing seems further removed
from nature than Dubai,
-
although nothing depends on nature
more than Dubai.
-
Dubai is a sort of culmination
of the Western model.
-
We haven't understood that
we're depleting what nature provides.
-
Since 1950, fishing catches
have increased fivefold
-
from 18 to 100 million metric tons
a year.
-
Thousands of factory ships
are emptying the oceans.
-
Three-quarters of fishing grounds
are exhausted,
-
depleted or in danger of being so.
-
Most large fish have been fished
out of existence
-
since they have no time to reproduce.
-
We are destroying the cycle of a life
that was given to us.
-
At the current rate, all fish stocks
are threatened with exhaustion.
-
Fish is the staple diet
of one in five humans.
-
We have forgotten
that resources are scarce.
-
500 million humans
live in the world's desert lands,
-
more than the combined population
of Europe.
-
They know the value of water.
-
They know how to use it sparingly.
-
Here, they depend on wells
replenished by fossil water,
-
which accumulated underground
back when it rained on these deserts.
-
25,000 years ago.
-
Fossil water also enables crops
to be grown in the desert
-
to provide food for local populations.
-
The fields' circular shape derives
-
from the pipes that irrigate them
around a central pivot.
-
But there is a heavy price to pay.
-
Fossil water
is a non-renewable resource.
-
In Saudi Arabia,
-
the dream of industrial farming
in the desert has faded.
-
As if on a parchment map,
-
the light spots on this patchwork
show abandoned plots.
-
The irrigation equipment
is still there.
-
The energy to pump water also.
-
But the fossil water reserves
are severely depleted.
-
Israel turned the desert
into arable land.
-
Even though these hothouses
are now irrigated drop by drop,
-
water consumption continues
to increase along with exports.
-
The once mighty River Jordan
is now just a trickle.
-
Its water has flown to supermarkets
all over the world
-
in crates of fruit and vegetables.
-
The Jordan's fate is not unique.
-
Across the planet,
one major river in ten
-
no longer flows into the sea
for several months of the year.
-
Deprived of the Jordan's water,
-
the level of the Dead Sea goes down
by over one meter per year.
-
India risks being the country
that suffers most
-
from lack of water
in the coming century.
-
Massive irrigation
has fed the growing population
-
and in the last 50 years,
21 million wells have been dug.
-
In many parts of the country,
-
the drill has to sink every deeper
to hit water.
-
In western India,
30% of wells have been abandoned.
-
The underground aquifers
are drying out.
-
Vast reservoirs will catch monsoon rains
to replenish the aquifers.
-
In the dry season, local village women
dig them with their bare hands.
-
Thousands of kilometers away,
-
800 to 1,000 liters of water
are consumed
-
per person per day.
-
Las Vegas was built out of the desert.
-
Millions of people live there.
-
Thousands more arrive every month.
-
Its inhabitants are among the biggest
water consumers in the world.
-
Palm Springs is another desert city
with tropical vegetation
-
and lush golf courses.
-
How long can this mirage
continue to prosper?
-
The Earth cannot keep up.
-
The Colorado River,
which brings water to these cities,
-
is one of those rivers
that no longer reaches the sea.
-
Water levels in the catchment lakes
along its course are plummeting.
-
Water shortages could affect nearly
2 billion people before 2025.
-
The wetlands represent
6% of the surface of the planet.
-
Under their calm waters
lies a veritable factory,
-
where plants and micro-organisms
patiently filter the water
-
and digest all the pollution.
-
These marshes are indispensable
environments for the regeneration
-
and purification of water.
-
They are sponges
that regulate the flow of water.
-
They absorb it in the wet season
-
and release it in the dry season.
-
In our race to conquer more land,
-
we have reclaimed them
as pasture for livestock,
-
or as land for agriculture or building.
-
In the last century,
half the world's marshes were drained.
-
We know neither their richness
nor their role.
-
All living matter is linked.
-
Water, air, soil, trees.
-
The world's magic
is right in front of our eyes.
-
Trees breathe groundwater
into the atmosphere as light mist.
-
They form a canopy that alleviates
the impact of heavy rains.
-
The forests provide the humidity
that is necessary for life.
-
They store carbon,
-
containing more
than all the Earth's atmosphere.
-
They are the cornerstone of the climatic
balance on which we all depend.
-
The primary forests provide a habitat
-
for three-quarters
of the planet's biodiversity,
-
that is to say,
of all life on Earth.
-
These forests provide the remedies
that cure us.
-
The substances secreted by these plants
can be recognized by our bodies.
-
Our cells talk the same language.
-
We are of the same family.
-
But in barely 40 years,
the world's largest rainforest,
-
the Amazon,
has been reduced by 20%.
-
The forest gives way to cattle ranches
or soybean farms.
-
95% of these soybeans are used
to feed livestock and poultry
-
in Europe and Asia.
-
And so, a forest is turned into meat.
-
Barely 20 years ago, Borneo,
the 4th largest island
-
in the world,
was covered by a vast primary forest.
-
At the current rate of deforestation,
-
it will have disappeared
within 10 years.
-
Living matter
bonds water, air, earth and the sun.
-
In Borneo, this bond has been broken
-
in what was one of the Earth's
greatest reservoirs of biodiversity.
-
This catastrophe was provoked
by the decision to produce palm oil,
-
one of the most productive and consumed
oils in the world, on Borneo.
-
Palm oil not only caters
to our growing demand for food,
-
but also cosmetics, detergents
and, increasingly, alternative fuels.
-
The forest's diversity was replaced
by a single species, the oil palm.
-
For local people,
it provides employment.
-
It's an agricultural industry.
-
Another example of massive deforestation
is the eucalyptus.
-
Eucalyptus is used to make paper pulp.
-
Plantations are growing
as demand for paper has increased
-
fivefold in 50 years.
-
One forest
does not replace another forest.
-
At the foot of these eucalyptus trees,
-
nothing grows because their leaves form
a toxic bed for most other plants.
-
They grow quickly,
but exhaust water reserves.
-
Soybeans, palm oil,
-
eucalyptus trees...
-
Deforestation destroys the essential
to produce the superfluous.
-
But elsewhere,
-
deforestation is a last resort
to survive.
-
Over 2 billion people,
-
almost one third
of the world's population,
-
still depend on charcoal.
-
In Haiti,
-
one of the world's poorest countries,
-
charcoal is one of the population's
main consumables.
-
Once the "pearl of the Caribbean",
-
Haiti can no longer feed
its population without foreign aid.
-
On the hills of Haiti,
only 2% of the forests are left.
-
Stripped bare,
-
nothing holds the soils back.
-
The rainwater washes them
down the hillsides as far as the sea.
-
What's left is increasingly
unsuitable for agriculture.
-
In some parts of Madagascar,
the erosion is spectacular.
-
Whole hillsides bear deep gashes
hundreds of meters wide.
-
Thin and fragile,
soil is made by living matter.
-
With erosion,
the fine layer of humus,
-
which took thousands of years to form,
disappears.
-
Here's one theory of the story
of the Rapanui,
-
the inhabitants of Easter Island,
-
that could perhaps
give us pause for thought.
-
Living on the most isolated island
in the world,
-
the Rapanui exploited their resources
until there was nothing left.
-
Their civilization did not survive.
-
On these lands stood
the highest palm trees in the world.
-
They have disappeared.
-
The Rapanui
chopped them all down for lumber.
-
They then faced
widespread soil erosion.
-
The Rapanui could no longer go fishing.
There were no trees to build canoes.
-
Yet the Rapanui formed one of the most
brilliant civilizations in the Pacific.
-
Innovative farmers, sculptors,
exceptional navigators,
-
they were caught in the vise of
overpopulation and dwindling resources.
-
They experienced social unrest,
revolts and famine.
-
Many did not survive the cataclysm.
-
The real mystery of Easter Island is not
how its strange statues got there,
-
we know now.
-
It is why the Rapanui
didn't react in time.
-
It's only one of a number of theories,
but it has particular relevance today.
-
Since 1950, the world's population
has almost tripled.
-
And since 1950,
-
we have more fundamentally
altered our island, the Earth,
-
than in all
of our 200,000-year history.
-
Nigeria is the biggest oil exporter
in Africa,
-
yet 70% of the population
lives under the poverty line.
-
The wealth is there, but the country's
inhabitants don't have access to it.
-
The same is true all over the globe.
-
Half the world's poor
live in resource-rich countries.
-
Our mode of development
has not fulfilled its promises.
-
In 50 years, the gap between rich
and poor has grown wider than ever.
-
Today,
-
half the world's wealth is in the hands
of the richest 2% of the population.
-
Can such disparities be maintained?
-
They are the cause
of population movements
-
whose scale we have yet
to fully realize.
-
The city of Lagos
had a population of 700,000 in 1960.
-
That will rise to 16 million by 2025.
-
Lagos is one of the fastest growing
megalopolises in the world.
-
The new arrivals are mostly farmers
forced off the land
-
for economic or demographic reasons,
or because of diminishing resources.
-
This is a radically new type
of urban growth,
-
driven by the urge to survive
rather than to prosper.
-
Every week, over a million people swell
the populations of the world's cities.
-
1 human in 6 now lives in a precarious,
unhealthy, overpopulated environment
-
without access to daily necessities,
such as water, sanitation, electricity.
-
Hunger is spreading once more.
-
It affects nearly 1 billion people.
-
All over the planet, the poorest
scrabble to survive, while we continue
-
to dig for resources
that we can no longer live without.
-
We look farther and farther afield
-
in previously unspoilt territory
-
and in regions that are
increasingly difficult to exploit.
-
We're not changing our model.
-
Oil might run out?
-
We can still extract oil
from the tar sands of Canada.
-
The biggest trucks in the world
move thousands of tons of sand.
-
The process of heating
and separating bitumen from the sand
-
requires millions
of cubic meters of water.
-
Colossal amounts of energy are needed.
-
The pollution is catastrophic.
-
The most urgent priority, apparently,
-
is to pick every pocket of sunlight.
-
Our oil tankers
are getting bigger and bigger.
-
Our energy requirements
are constantly increasing.
-
We try to power growth
like a bottomless oven
-
that demands more and more fuel.
-
It's all about carbon.
-
In a few decades, the carbon
that made our atmosphere a furnace
-
and that nature captured over millions
of years, allowing life to develop,
-
will have largely been pumped back out.
-
The atmosphere is heating up.
-
It would have been inconceivable for
a boat to be here just a few years ago.
-
Transport, industry,
deforestation, agriculture...
-
Our activities release gigantic
quantities of carbon dioxide.
-
Without realizing it,
molecule by molecule,
-
we have upset
the Earth's climatic balance.
-
All eyes are on the poles,
-
where the effects of global warming
are most visible.
-
It's happening fast, very fast.
-
The north-west passage that connects
America, Europe and Asia via the pole,
-
is opening up.
-
The arctic ice cap is melting.
-
Under the effect of global warming,
-
the ice cap has lost
40% of its thickness in 40 years.
-
Its surface area in the summer
shrinks year by year.
-
It could disappear
in the summer months by 2030.
-
Some say 2015.
-
The sunbeams that the ice sheet
previously reflected back
-
now penetrate the dark water,
heating it up.
-
The warming process gathers pace.
-
This ice contains the records
of our planet.
-
The concentration of carbon dioxide
hasn't been so high
-
for several hundred thousand years.
-
Humanity has never lived
in an atmosphere like this.
-
Is excessive exploitation of resources
threatening the lives of every species?
-
Climate change
-
accentuates the threat.
-
By 2050,
a quarter of the Earth's species
-
could be threatened with extinction.
-
In these polar regions,
-
the balance of nature
has already been disrupted.
-
Around the North Pole,
-
the ice cap has lost 30%
of its surface area in 30 years.
-
But as Greenland
rapidly becomes warmer,
-
the freshwater of a whole continent
flows into the salt water of the oceans.
-
Greenland's ice contains 20%
of the freshwater of the whole planet.
-
If it melts,
sea levels will rise by nearly 7 meters.
-
But there is no industry here.
-
Greenland's ice sheet suffers
from greenhouse gases
-
emitted elsewhere on Earth.
-
Our ecosystem doesn't have borders.
-
Wherever we are,
-
our actions have repercussions
on the whole Earth.
-
Our planet's atmosphere
is an indivisible whole.
-
It is an asset we share.
-
In Greenland,
lakes are appearing on the landscape.
-
The ice cap is melting at a speed
even the most pessimistic scientists
-
did not envision 10 years ago.
-
More and more of these glacier-fed
rivers are merging together
-
and burrowing though the surface.
-
It was thought the water would freeze
in the depths of the ice.
-
On the contrary,
it flows under the ice,
-
carrying the ice sheet into the sea,
where it breaks into icebergs.
-
As the freshwater
of Greenland's ice sheet
-
seeps into the salt water of the oceans,
-
low-lying lands around the globe
are threatened.
-
Sea levels are rising.
-
Water expanding as it gets warmer
-
caused, in the 20th century alone,
-
a rise of 20 centimeters.
-
Everything becomes unstable.
-
Coral reefs are extremely sensitive
to the slightest change
-
in water temperature.
30% have disappeared.
-
They are an essential link
in the chain of species.
-
In the atmosphere, major wind streams
are changing direction.
-
Rain cycles are altered.
-
The geography of climates is modified.
-
The inhabitants of low-lying islands,
-
here in the Maldives, for example,
are on the front line.
-
They are increasingly concerned.
-
Some are already looking for new,
more hospitable lands.
-
If sea levels continue to rise
faster and faster,
-
what will major cities like Tokyo,
the world's most populous city, do?
-
Every year, scientists' predictions
become more alarming.
-
70% of the world's population
lives on coastal plains.
-
11 of the 15 biggest cities
-
stand on a coastline or river estuary.
-
As the seas rise,
salt will invade the water table,
-
depriving inhabitants
of drinking water.
-
Migratory phenomena are inevitable.
-
The only uncertainty
concerns their scale.
-
In Africa,
Mount Kilimanjaro is unrecognizable.
-
80% of its glaciers have disappeared.
-
In summer,
the rivers no longer flow.
-
Local peoples are affected
by the lack of water.
-
Even on the world's highest peaks,
in the heart of the Himalayas,
-
eternal snows and glaciers
are receding.
-
Yet these glaciers play
an essential role in the water cycle.
-
They trap the water
from the monsoons as ice
-
and release it in the summer
when the snows melt.
-
The Himalayan glaciers are the source
of all the great Asian rivers,
-
the Indus, Ganges,
Mekong, Yangtze Kiang...
-
2 billion people depend on them
for drinking water
-
and to irrigate their crops,
as in Bangladesh.
-
On the delta
of the Ganges and Brahmaputra,
-
Bangladesh is directly affected
by phenomena occurring in the Himalayas
-
and at sea level.
-
This is one of the most populous
and poorest countries in the world.
-
It is already hit by global warming.
-
The combined impact of increasingly
dramatic floods and hurricanes
-
could make
a third of its land mass disappear.
-
When populations are subjected
to these devastating phenomena,
-
they eventually move away.
-
Wealthy countries will not be spared.
-
Droughts are occurring
all over the planet.
-
In Australia,
half of farmland is already affected.
-
We are in the process of compromising
the climatic balance
-
that has allowed us to develop
over 12,000 years.
-
More and more wildfires
encroach on major cities.
-
In turn,
they exacerbate global warming.
-
As the trees burn,
they release carbon dioxide.
-
The system that controls our climate
has been severely disrupted.
-
The elements on which it relies
have been disrupted.
-
The clock of climate change is ticking
in these magnificent landscapes.
-
Here in Siberia,
and elsewhere across the globe,
-
it is so cold
that the ground is constantly frozen.
-
It's known as permafrost.
-
Under its surface
lies a climatic time-bomb.
-
Methane,
-
a greenhouse gas 20 times
more powerful than carbon dioxide.
-
If the permafrost melts,
-
the methane releases would cause
the greenhouse effect
-
to race out of control
with consequences no one can predict.
-
We would literally
be in unknown territory.
-
Humanity has no more than 10 years
to reverse the trend
-
and avoid
crossing into this territory...
-
Life on Earth
as we have never known it.
-
We have created phenomena
we cannot control.
-
Since our origins,
-
water, air and forms of life
are intimately linked.
-
But recently
we have broken those links.
-
Let's face the facts.
-
We must believe what we know.
-
All we have just seen is a reflection
of human behavior.
-
We have shaped the Earth in our image.
-
We have very little time to change.
-
How can this century carry the burden
of 9 billion human beings
-
if we refuse to be called to account
-
for everything we alone have done?
-
20% of the world's population
consumes 80% of its resources
-
The world spends
12 times more on military expenditures
-
than on aid to developing countries
-
5,000 people a day die
because of dirty drinking water
-
1 billion people
have no access to safe drinking water
-
Nearly 1 billion people are going hungry
-
Over 50% of grain
traded around the world
-
is used for animal feed or biofuels
-
40% of arable land
has suffered long-term damage
-
Every year,
13 million hectares of forest disappear
-
1 mammal in 4, 1 bird in 8, 1 amphibian
in 3 are threatened with extinction
-
Species are dying out at a rhythm
1,000 times faster than the natural rate
-
Three quarters of fishing grounds
are exhausted,
-
depleted or in dangerous decline
-
The average temperature
of the last 15 years
-
has been the highest ever recorded
-
The ice cap is 40% thinner
than 40 years ago
-
There may be at least 200 million
climate refugees by 2050
-
The cost of our actions is high.
-
Others pay the price
without having been actively involved.
-
I have seen refugee camps
-
as big as cities,
sprawling in the desert.
-
How many men,
women and children
-
will be left by the wayside tomorrow?
-
Must we always build walls
to break the chain of human solidarity,
-
separate peoples
-
and protect the happiness of some
from others' misery?
-
It's too late to be a pessimist.
-
I know that a single human
can knock down every wall.
-
It's too late to be a pessimist.
-
Worldwide,
4 children out of 5 attend school.
-
Never has learning been given
to so many human beings.
-
Everyone, from richest to poorest,
can make a contribution.
-
Lesotho,
one of the world's poorest countries,
-
is proportionally the one that invests
most in its people's education.
-
Qatar, one of the richest states,
has opened up to the best universities.
-
Culture, education,
research and innovation
-
are inexhaustible resources.
-
In the face of misery and suffering,
-
millions of NGOs prove that solidarity
-
between peoples is stronger
than the selfishness of nations.
-
In Bangladesh,
a man thought the unthinkable
-
and founded a bank
that lends only to the poor.
-
In 30 years, it has changed
the lives of 150 million people.
-
Antarctica is a continent
with immense natural resources
-
that no country can claim for itself,
-
a natural reserve
devoted to peace and science.
-
A treaty signed by 49 states
-
has made it a treasure
shared by all humanity.
-
It's too late to be a pessimist.
-
Governments have acted to protect
nearly 2% of territorial waters.
-
It's not much but it's 2 times more
than 10 years ago.
-
The first natural parks were created
just over a century ago.
-
They cover over 13% of the continents.
-
They create spaces
where human activity
-
is in step with the preservation
of species, soils and landscapes.
-
This harmony between humans and nature
can become the rule,
-
no longer the exception.
-
In the US, New York has realized
what nature does for us.
-
These forests and lakes
supply all the city's drinking water.
-
In South Korea,
the forests had been devastated by war.
-
Thanks to
a national reforestation program,
-
they once more cover
65% of the country.
-
More than 75% of paper is recycled.
-
Costa Rica has made a choice between
military spending and land conservation.
-
The country no longer has an army.
-
It prefers to devote its resources
to education, ecotourism
-
and the protection
of its primary forest.
-
Gabon is one of the world's
leading producers of wood.
-
It enforces selective logging.
Not more than 1 tree every hectare.
-
Its forests are one of the country's
most important resources,
-
but they have time to regenerate.
-
Programs exist that guarantee
sustainable forest management.
-
They must become mandatory.
-
For consumers and producers,
justice is an opportunity to be seized.
-
When trade is fair,
when both buyer and seller benefit,
-
everybody can prosper
and earn a decent living.
-
How can there be justice and equity
-
between people
whose only tools are their hands
-
and those who harvest their crops
with a machine and state subsidies?
-
Let's be responsible consumers.
-
Think about what we buy!
-
It's too late to be a pessimist.
-
I have seen agriculture
on a human scale.
-
It can feed the whole planet
-
if meat production doesn't take
the food out of people's mouths.
-
I have seen fishermen
who take care what they catch
-
and care for the riches of the ocean.
-
I have seen houses
producing their own energy.
-
5,000 people live in the world's
-
first ever eco-friendly district
in Freiburg, Germany.
-
Other cities partner the project.
-
Mumbai is the thousandth to join them.
-
The governments of New Zealand, Iceland,
Austria, Sweden and other nations
-
have made the development
of renewable energy sources
-
a top priority.
-
80% of the energy we consume
comes from fossil energy sources.
-
Every week,
-
two new coal-fired generating plants
are built in China alone.
-
But I have also seen, in Denmark,
a prototype of a coal-fired plant
-
that releases carbon into the soil
rather than the air.
-
A solution for the future?
Nobody knows yet.
-
I have seen, in Iceland,
-
an electricity plant
powered by the Earth's heat.
-
Geothermal power.
-
I have seen a sea snake
-
lying on the swell
to absorb the energy of the waves
-
and produce electricity.
-
I have seen wind farms
off Denmark's coast
-
that produce 20%
of the country's electricity.
-
The USA, China, India, Germany
and Spain are the biggest investors
-
in renewable energy.
-
They have already created
over 2.5 million jobs.
-
Where on earth
doesn't the wind blow?
-
I have seen desert expanses
baking in the sun.
-
Everything on Earth is linked,
-
and the Earth is linked to the sun,
its original energy source.
-
Can humans not imitate plants
and capture its energy?
-
In one hour, the sun gives the Earth
the same amount of energy
-
as that consumed
by all humanity in one year.
-
As long as the Earth exists,
the sun's energy will be inexhaustible.
-
All we have to do
-
is stop drilling the Earth
and start looking to the sky.
-
All we have to do
is learn to cultivate the sun.
-
All these experiments
are only examples,
-
but they testify to a new awareness.
-
They lay down markers
for a new human adventure
-
based on moderation,
intelligence and sharing.
-
It's time to come together.
-
What's important
-
is not what's gone,
-
but what remains.
-
We still have
half the world's forests,
-
thousands of rivers, lakes and glaciers,
and thousands of thriving species.
-
We know that the solutions
are there today.
-
We all have the power to change.
-
So what are we waiting for?
-
It's up to us to write
what happens next
-
Together
-
get involved and join us on
www.goodplanet.org
-
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-
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