National Geographic: Six Degrees Could Change the World (2008)

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National Geographic: Six Degrees Could Change the World (2008)

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We have signs of very great

changes occurring on the planet.

Everything happened so fast.

There's creeks drying up that

have never dried up in my lifetime.

We've got a forest here

that's already at the edge.

We're going

into uncharted territory.

Our planet

is at a crossroads.

Global warming isn't out of control,

but it soon could be.

The warning signs are all around us.

This is the challenge

of climate change.

What can we do about global warming?

What will happen

to the Earth if we don't?

The temperature is rising.

Each degree is critical.

Just one degree...

- One degree warmer...

- Two degrees...

- Threshold is about three degrees...

- Three to four degrees of warming...

You're starting

to look at four degrees...

Three degrees,

four degrees, five degrees...

Six degrees is almost unimaginable.

Imagine the 21st century,

if global warming accelerates.

Where does the next super-storm hit,

the next scorching heat wave,

the next catastrophe,

as the world warms degree by degree?

The debate has ended.

Scientists around the globe

agree we now live

in a world warmer by almost

one full degree Celsius.

Tracking the Earth's vital signs

is an armada.

Thousands of ships at sea.

Tens of thousands of stations on land.

Satellites monitoring from space.

Scientists feed the data into

the most advanced computer models

The predictions are alarming.

In four decades,

glaciers in the Himalayas,

the source of water

for millions, could be gone.

Within 50 years,

Greenland's melting ice sheet

could be unstoppable.

By the end of this century,

the Amazon rainforest,

home to half

the world's biodiversity,

could wither to an arid savannah.

A temperature rise between

is possible over the next century.

Each degree means

a radically different future.

Global warming doesn't just mean

the slow increase

in average temperatures.

It completely changes the way

the Earth's system operates,

which is why we can see droughts

in one place, floods in another,

or even a succession of drought

and flood in the same location.

National Geographic

author Mark Lynas

spent years compiling data

from climate models

to understand how each

degree of warming

could thr*aten the planet.

It's difficult

for people to visualize

the future impacts of global warming.

It's something I really

wanted to try and do,

to help people visualize the reality,

because it isn't actually intuitive

that the emissions

from your car exhaust

are going to be melting a glacier

in the Himalayas in 50 years' time.

While experts estimate

the average temperature

could rise up to six degrees Celsius,

or nearly 11 degrees Fahrenheit,

over the next 100 years,

the future isn't set in stone.

Even a small shift

in the Earth's temperature,

just six degrees,

can have extreme consequences.

Six degrees shift

from one day to the next

is the sort of thing that we expect

with normal weather fluctuations.

If it's six degrees hotter tomorrow,

I might just be wearing some shorts.

Six degrees in terms of a global

average change, six degrees colder,

is the difference between now

and the last ice age,

when the ice sheets themselves

advanced to just

the edge of Oxford,

and in places the ice cap

was more than a mile thick.

Just six degrees of cooling

transformed the Earth into an ice age.

Imagine it six degrees hotter.

The very earliest changes would

start high above the Earth.

The atmosphere

is our buffer zone

between the planet's surface

and outer space.

A small percentage

are the greenhouse gases,

a cocktail of water vapor,

carbon dioxide, methane,

nitrous oxide and ozone.

They are like a dome over the planet,

retaining just enough

of the sun's reflected energy

to maintain temperatures

that support life.

As the amounts of those gases increase,

they trap more heat

and can radically affect

the climate all over the planet.

For the last 250 years,

greenhouse emissions have soared

as we find more and more ways

to use more and more energy.

CO2 is the hidden price we pay.

Carbon dioxide rises

into the atmosphere

from the energy that powers

all our modern conveniences.

It's literally in the air we breathe.

There are now 383 carbon dioxide

molecules out of every million.

It seems minuscule,

but as the amount of CO2 rises,

so does the average temperature

all over the planet.

Doubling of CO2 is

a guarantee for global disaster.

The dangerous level

is about 450 parts per million,

and we're already up to 383.

Additional global warming

of one or two degrees Celsius

is a very big deal.

All we're doing is saying

what we think our best estimate is,

what will happen if we carry on

at the rate we're going.

So what you can do is to lay out

a number of possible pictures

of the future

and hope people will select

the right one.

If the world warms

by one degree,

the Arctic is ice-free

for half the year,

opening the legendary

northwest passage for ships.

Tens of thousands of homes

around the Bay of Bengal are flooding.

Hurricanes begin hitting

the South Atlantic.

Severe droughts in the western U.S.

Cause shortages

in global grain and meat markets.

This could be our world

plus-one degree.

Warming of just one degree

could turn some of America's

most fertile ranchland

into desert... again.

much of the American west

was part of a vast desert

dominating the continent.

A minor shift in the Earth's orbit

caused the summer sun

to warm slightly,

just enough to radically

transform this entire region.

Only a very thin layer of topsoil

covers the desert sand that still lurks

just centimeters below the surface.

As we race toward a planet

warmer by one degree,

the global warming scorecard

lists both losers and winners.

While the western U.S.

is dry and thirsty,

England is enjoying

an agricultural makeover.

Fortunes will be made and lost,

if global weather patterns rearrange

where different crops can be grown.

The winters, which used

to be hard in this country,

are getting much milder

so in some sense, that's a good thing.

That's not counterbalanced

by the devastation

which is affecting

other parts of the world.

Right now, England

is in the right place at the right time

for one of the world's most fragile

and most valuable crops.

You can't have it too hot for grapes,

because you realize

in the Champagne region...

When David Middleton

first planted Champagne-style grapes,

neighbors thought he'd gone mad.

But as wine producing regions

in France are getting hotter,

the climate for growing grapes

is migrating across the English Channel.

The idea of a fine English wine

is no longer a joke.

Now there are more

than 400 vineyards in Britain.

The Earth's average temperature

has always fluctuated.

And a variable climate isn't unusual.

It's the pace of climate change

today that's unprecedented.

The planet has experienced

climate change before.

But it usually plays out over

thousands or millions of years.

Now global warming

is measured in decades,

even years.

It means scores of species

won't be able to keep up.

Warming at this speed could send

us into uncharted territory,

like nothing we've experienced

in the history of life on Earth.

Global warming started

with our insatiable appetite for energy.

Every switch we flip, every plug,

every button we push

to turn something on,

inevitably leads back

to a place like this.

Nearly 90 percent of the world's energy

starts as a fossil fuel:

Coal, oil, natural gas.

These three fuels combined

are the single largest source

of CO2 emissions pouring

into the atmosphere.

If the world warms by two degrees,

some changes to the biosphere

are no longer gradual.

Greenland's glaciers are disappearing.

So much ice has melted,

polar bears struggle to survive.

Insects migrate

in strange new directions.

As a temperate climate

moves north in the U.S.,

pine beetles k*ll off

the white bark forests,

a grizzly bear's key source

of food in the fall.

New forests take root

in Canada's melting tundra.

The Pacific islands

of Tuvalu are lost

beneath the rising tides

of global warming.

This could be our world

plus-two degrees.

At two degrees of warming,

the impacts in the marine ecosystem

are going to be much more severe.

The oceans are the planet's

largest "carbon sink,"

nature's primary mechanism

for absorbing CO2

out of the atmosphere.

But lately there are indications

these systems are breaking down.

Under normal conditions,

tiny sea creatures like forams

and coccolithophores

absorb carbon out of the water

and use it to build

their shells and skeletons.

But there is a tipping point,

when too much CO2 in the oceans

turns the water

increasingly acidic.

Acidification dissolves

the creatures' shells and skeletons

and prevents them from absorbing

more CO2 out of the water

to build new ones.

Some of these tiny animals

at the bottom of the food chain

measure only one millimeter.

But the fate of all sea creatures,

of all shapes and sizes,

larger and larger,

hangs in the balance.

Alter the ocean's chemistry,

and nature's primary mechanism

for controlling the climate

begins to break down.

You lose a coral reef,

you lose perhaps 500,000 species.

You lose those little coccolithophores,

these little algae,

and you start to lose things

that are very important

to life on this planet.

We're losing some of the most vital

elements of the way the world works.

And that's got us all concerned.

Scientists half a world away

share those concerns.

They're investigating global warming

at the climate's opposite extreme.

It took nature 150,000 years

to make the great Greenland ice sheet

that's now melting into the sea

faster than at any time in history.

As it disappears, rising oceans

will flood coastal cities

around the world.

Greenland's Jakobshavn Glacier

is the fastest moving ice field

on the planet,

more than 40 meters per day,

melting into the sea

twice as fast as a decade ago.

Rising temperatures

are transforming

one of the Earth's harshest climates,

disrupting the way people have lived

in Greenland for hundreds of years.

For as long as anyone can remember,

sled dogs have been

a symbol of wealth here

and a necessity for survival,

especially for hunting

across the winter sea ice.

When the winter ice started thinning,

dogs became an expense

most islanders couldn't afford.

In this town of 4,500 people,

there are 4,000 dogs,

with very little to do these days.

Many are starving.

Some are being put down.

Marit Holm is one of Greenland's

five veterinarians.

As she patrols the town of Ilulissat,

she sees the impact of climate change

in every sled dog

without a sled to pull.

So, what I do, I drive

around and look after the dogs.

The dogs are hungry,

so I have to be a little bit careful

not to get bitten.

And when the dogs are hungry,

they are a little bit more dangerous

to people and kids walking around.

It doesn't seem to be sick.

He's very skinny.

So I have to try to find out

who's the owner

and talk to him.

These animals were

once in peak physical condition.

They served a vital purpose

in their owners' lives.

That's a thing of the past,

and we don't see

any young people who take

some dogs and live

as a fisherman and a hunter.

Dogs have been

in Finn Sistall's family

as long as he can remember.

He finally gave up his team of 19

just in the last few years.

In the winter,

even though it was

an impossible thing to do

about 20 years ago,

most of the fishermen go out

with a boat today

instead of dogsleds.

When Finn was growing up,

this was their winter hunting ground,

solid ice for more than half the year.

Everything happened so fast.

It's so visible.

You don't have to be a scientist

to determine what's happening.

With each passing season,

Finn watches as traditions

locked in the ice melt away.

Something

interesting in this ice,

because you

can see small bubbles.

And these bubbles are older

than all living creatures in the world.

And you can listen to it.

[Popping]

Because the bubbles

are so compressed,

and when they get out,

it's like popping.

You can talk to the ice.

That's what an intrepid team

of scientists does once a year,

fly into Greenland's interior

to listen to the ice.

Swiss camp is a scientific

research installation

built directly into the glacier

to track climate change.

Dr. Konrad Steffens

has erected 23 full-service

weather stations

that take a complete range of climate

measurements every 15 seconds,

updating global warming

computer models

all over the world.

The ice sheet is very old.

It's over 150,000 years old.

If you start to remove it,

then you actually start a process

that is unknown to civilization.

We have never seen

Greenland disappearing.

Watch it, watch it, watch it.

In 1992,

was slipping into the sea

and disappearing.

Ten years later, that number

more than doubled

to 15.5 kilometers annually.

Steffens wouldn't understand

how warmer weather affects

the speed of glaciers,

until he came upon

one of the strangest

and most dangerous features

of this forbidding landscape.

Rivers of melted ice

are cascading straight down

into the glacier,

creating huge tunnels

called moulins.

The team lowers

a fiber-optic camera.

Their hypothesis:

That melt water

has cut all the way through

to the bedrock

a quarter of a mile below,

and is lubricating

the underside of the glacier,

propelling it faster

and faster into the sea.

Fifty meters.

Sixty meters.

For Steffens and his team,

it is a chilling moment.

This shaft, and many like it,

go all the way through the glacier,

revealing a whole new mechanism

for speeding

the ice sheet's disappearance.

It's melting so rapidly now,

oceans could rise

as much as a meter

over the next century.

The consequences

could be catastrophic.

The Greenland ice sheet

actually contains enough frozen water

to raise global sea levels

by about seven meters,

which is enough to flood

most of London, Bangkok,

New York, Shanghai, you name it.

Many scientists focus

on two degrees of warming

as the tipping point

that will fundamentally change

how we live on this planet.

This could be

where global warming

becomes a runaway train.

Warming accelerates

the loss of polar ice.

The loss of ice

accelerates warming.

More water from melting ice

absorbs more of the sun's heat,

melting the ice sheet

and heating the planet even faster.

The warmer it gets,

the faster it gets warmer.

That's when global warming

becomes a chain reaction

we can't easily predict.

If a rise of two degrees

doesn't push the planet

to the tipping point,

many scientists predict

three degrees will.

If the world warms by three degrees,

the Arctic is ice-free all summer.

The Amazon rainforest is drying out.

Snowcaps on the Alps

all but disappear.

El Nino's extreme weather

patterns become the status quo.

The Mediterranean and parts of Europe

wither in searing summer heat.

This could be our world

plus three degrees.

The summer of 2003

may have opened a window

onto life in a world

that's three degrees warmer.

All across Europe,

an unrelenting heat wave

developed into a natural disaster.

Paris tends to empty in the summer.

Many elderly stay behind.

Nobody could have anticipated

the danger they'd be in.

[Siren]

Emergency room

doctors were the first to realize

something was terribly wrong.

Doctor Patrick Pelloux

quickly realizes

the heat wave is turning

into a catastrophe.

[Speaking French]

[Translated] You had

such a heat wave,

comparable to a flame-thrower

igniting an entire area.

The number of people who d*ed

on the night of August 10

is between 2,500 and 3,000.

The city's

distinctive metal roofs

were designed for an earlier era:

To protect against winter chill.

Now rising temperatures have

turned them against the Parisians.

The death toll

would top 30,000 across Europe.

In France alone, over 14,000

d*ed in just a few weeks.

During the heat wave of 2003,

another little-noticed phenomenon

among Europe's trees

and plants was unfolding,

a kind of vegetation backlash.

Photosynthesis

was breaking down.

Under normal conditions,

plants and trees

are a first-line of defense

against greenhouse gases,

absorbing CO2,

then converting it into oxygen

and releasing it

back into the atmosphere.

But in the extreme heat that summer,

some plants retained oxygen,

releasing CO2

into the atmosphere instead.

What happens to the biosphere

if one of the planet's

most important mechanisms

for converting CO2 into oxygen

stops working on a regular basis?

Possible answers are emerging

here at England's Hadley Centre,

one of the world's foremost facilities

for forecasting where

our climate could be headed.

Trying to peer decades into the future

keeps climate modelers

at their desks overtime.

Tea and coffee?

One of their

toughest challenges

is calculating the effect

of plus-three-degree warming

on the Amazon rainforest,

where 20 percent

of the world's oxygen is produced.

We wanted to know

how climate change in the future

would affect tropical rainforests

and in particular the Amazon

because it is such an iconic region,

important both environmentally,

ecologically and economically.

The climate model

produces an ominous prediction:

Three degrees of warming

could trigger

a catastrophic feedback loop,

accelerating global warming even more,

possibly reducing one

of the wettest places on Earth

into a patchwork of arid savannah.

It takes someone coming

from the outside saying,

"What do you know what that means?

You're talking about

the death of the Amazon."

Summer 2005.

The Amazon River.

Extreme heat teams with the driest

conditions anyone can remember.

Few can recall a time

on the mightiest river in the world,

when its tributaries ran dry, not low,

dirt dry.

In 2005, we saw

a situation in the Amazon

which was just incredible.

It was completely off the scale.

The Brazilian army actually

had to fly by helicopter

huge quantities of water up

the dried-up Amazon tributaries

in order to stop people dying of thirst

in villages which are normally

on the edge of this enormous river.

First drought, then fire.

In the aftermath of summer 2005,

over 2500 square kilometers

of the rainforest burn.

Trees help generate 50 percent

of the water for rainfall in the Amazon.

As more forest is lost,

the very source of the Amazon's

rainfall diminishes.

For every tree that we lose,

we're making one more incremental step

towards a scenario of drought

and fire in the region.

Ecologist Daniel Nepstad

has been studying the Amazon

for over 25 years

and sees global warming

and deforestation

pushing the region

toward a tipping point.

We think that maybe

as early as 20 years from now,

we're gonna see what we call

positive feedbacks kick in,

these vicious cycles of drought

leading to fire,

leading to more drought.

And that's much sooner, of course,

than the climate models

are giving us.

In the extreme conditions

of a world warmer by three degrees,

losing much of the Amazon

could cause the re-release

of hundreds of millions of tons

of stored carbon,

perhaps intensifying

global warming another degree.

If we get

to 30 years from now,

and the Amazon is brushland,

I think I would look back

and say

we had a chance to save one

of the world's great treasures.

A place that's intimidating in

its vastness and its complexity.

And it's so grand in scale that

it really is reaching its influence

around the entire planet.

Everyone in the world

in some way is tied

to this ecosystem.

And I think, in looking back,

I'd say we had a chance

and we blew it.

Humanity had a chance.

In a world warmer by three degrees,

climate change could be manifest

in the most violent weather

humans have ever experienced.

As the oceans

get hotter and hotter,

a new global climate pattern emerges

mirroring the violent weather

anomaly we call El Nino.

But in a three-degree world,

those extreme conditions

could become the status quo.

Normally the trade winds

drive warm ocean currents

toward the western Pacific,

leaving cold, nutrient-rich waters

along the coast of South America.

El Nino turns that system

upside down.

The first signs are wild

fluctuations in air pressure.

The trade winds weaken

and completely change direction.

Warm water spreads east

across the Pacific.

Torrential rains and flooding

strike coastal South America.

Indonesian rainforests

and Australian farmland

experience extreme drought conditions.

And many climate models include

another troubling forecast:

Continued warming could turbo-charge

a new generation of super-storms.

In a world which

is three degrees warmer,

there's going to be a lot more

energy in the world's oceans

to drive hurricanes.

And hurricanes derive their rocket fuel

from the warming of the ocean.

scientists are still

investigating a connection

between global warming

and hurricane strength.

The summer of 2005 would bring

dramatic new evidence.

In late August,

a hurricane hunter aircraft

is dispatched over the Gulf of Mexico.

A colossal storm is building

and tracking straight

for the city of New Orleans.

Anyone left there has only

one word in mind: Katrina.

By Sunday, August 28th,

Katrina's winds reach

Thermal imagery along the storm track

reveals Katrina's clout.

Orange and red indicate

the sea temperature has risen

to 82 degrees Fahrenheit,

a full degree higher than normal.

Dropping pressure within the eye wall

is the fourth lowest ever recorded

for an Atlantic storm.

It revs Katrina even more.

When Hurricane Katrina makes

landfall in New Orleans,

it unleashes a terrible fury.

Within six hours, the storm

is on its way out of the city.

But the destruction of

New Orleans only gets worse,

transforming the natural disaster

into a national tragedy.

Jazz trumpeter Irvin Mayfield

grew up in New Orleans.

The storm surge and a breach

at the London Avenue canal

sent eight feet of water

into Mayfield's neighborhood.

His father stays

to protect the family home.

His body won't be found for weeks.

When someone

has lost their high school,

their junior high school,

elementary school,

their pictures, their video tapes,

their clothes, their friend's house,

their friend's mother's house,

barber shop,

the place they had their first kiss,

when you lose all that,

and some people lost loved ones.

When you have all

of that come together, it's...

You can't imagine the type of tragedy,

a city-wide catastrophe,

not even rivaled

by September 11th.

It's impossible to directly link

Katrina to global warming.

The process that forms

hurricanes is too complex.

But if the planet warms

by three degrees,

we could be in for a new generation

of super-storm.

If the Earth reaches

plus-three degrees,

over the next 40 or 50 years,

the planet's basic life-support systems

could begin to break down.

But beyond three degrees,

the science of global warming

becomes more and more speculative

and more and more frightening.

If the world warms by four degrees,

oceans rise, overtaking

heavily populated deltas,

home to a billion people.

Bangladesh, washed away.

Egypt, inundated.

Venice, submerged.

Glaciers disappear, shutting off

the flow of fresh water

to billions more.

Northern Canada becomes

one of the planet's most

bountiful agricultural zones,

while a beach in Scandinavia

could be the next St. Tropez.

The entire west Antarctic

ice sheet could collapse,

sending sea levels rising even further.

This could be our world

plus four degrees.

At four degrees, we really

do begin to see a planet

which is completely unrecognizable

from the one we know today.

We would see the possible drying up

of some of the most important

rivers in the world,

and this will endanger the survival

of tens and even hundreds

of millions of people.

if the planet

is ever four degrees warmer,

one of its great rivers

will be self-destructing,

at both ends,

from a high mountain glacier

to the Indian Ocean.

Locals call it "Mother Ganges,"

the holiest river in India,

perhaps in all the world.

Millions of devout pilgrims

gather each year

in a mass ritual to celebrate

the river's birthday,

when it is said,

the Goddess Ganga came to Earth

to save her people from drought.

Himalayan rivers

are the wellspring of life

for over a billion people

in China, Nepal and India.

Unless we begin to slow global warming,

in fewer than four decades,

the Ganges could be a river

fighting for its very life.

The battle will be fought here

in the vast crystalline ice fields

of the Himalayan glaciers,

the planet's largest store

of fresh water

outside of the polar ice caps.

Himalayan glaciers are receding,

the fastest of any in the world.

Few have ventured here,

to the headwaters of the Ganges,

as often as one man.

Swami Sundaranand,

an 80-year-old holy man known

as the "swami who clicks,"

has been photographing

the glaciers above the Ganges

for 50 years.

The first photo I took

of the glacier was in 1956.

After 1962, I started to worry

about the changes I was seeing

in the glacier.

I went to this glacier on foot in 1965,

to the base of Meru Peak.

When I went back after 15 years,

the glacier had vanished.

When I saw the glacier receding,

I became very worried

and started crying.

If the holy Ganges is not

in existence in the future,

the entire world will seem

like it has become an orphan.

The swami's trove of icescapes

documents 50 years of change

to this magnificent glacier.

Now NASA satellite imagery

confirms the rate of loss.

Side by side, the high

and low-tech images

tell a similar story,

one that spells danger for the future.

This was all glacier once,

before it started shrinking

Just a century ago,

this stone marked the edge

of the ice field

that has retreated

high up the mountain.

If the world warms five degrees,

two massive uninhabitable zones

spread into once-temperate regions

of the northern

and southern hemispheres.

Snow-pack and aquifers

that feed the world's great cities,

Los Angeles, Cairo, Lima, Bombay,

are drying out.

Climate refugees number

in the hundreds of millions.

This could be our world

plus-five degrees.

If we allow global warming

to take off that far,

I really see a situation where we have

conflict across vast areas of the globe

as the people who remain

and the people who survive

fight it out with each other for what

remains of the world's resources.

And it can get even worse.

If the world warms

by six degrees,

from a distance, the oceans

may appear bright blue.

But they are marine wastelands.

Deserts march across continents

like conquering armies.

Natural disasters

become common events.

Some of the world's great cities

are flooded and abandoned.

This could be our world

plus six degrees.

Warmings of six degrees over longer

time periods have been associated

with some of the most devastating mass

extinctions which have ever taken place.

It's fair to assume that

if temperatures soar by six degrees

within less than a century

that we're going to face nothing

less than a global wipeout.

Six degrees of warming has

been called "the doomsday scenario."

Our lives would never be the same again.

But it's not all doom and gloom, yet.

Most experts believe we can

awaken from the nightmare.

Right now, the average temperature

has only risen 0.8 degrees Celsius.

But we don't have much time.

We're talking about turning

around the energy supply

for most of humanity

within the space of a decade.

For anyone looking for solutions,

there's no place like home.

This is the Cohen residence,

a pleasant three-bedroom

in Snowmass, Colorado.

But lurking beneath the surface,

an energy-eating monster.

Many homes waste

more energy than they use.

[Teapot whistling]

A team of eco-detectives is

investigating the Cohen house

for crimes against the climate.

This innocent-looking thing

here, when it is on,

eats a whole lot of money.

When I feel this much cold

on the outside of the freezer,

I know that the insulation

is really not as thick

as we would like.

Oh, what have we here?

Climate change is a problem

we don't need to have,

and it's cheaper not to.

For Amory Lovins,

solutions start with efficiency,

reducing the use of energy

that produces CO2 emissions.

Do you see that little red light

in the corner?

If you have all kinds

of appliances,

your TV, your VCR, your DVD, et cetera,

that have that little light on...

Yes.

... they're using electricity.

It's called '"vampire loads."

Almost 60 bucks a year,

just sitting there, turned off.

Lovins doesn't just talk the talk.

He lives in a house he designed

without a furnace,

in Aspen, Colorado,

where temperatures in winter

routinely drop below -17 Celsius.

We're at 7,100 feet here.

It can go to -47 F.

You can get frost any day of the year,

and we can get 39 days

of continuous mid-winter cloud.

Lovins' house is a mix

of high-technology

and homespun common sense.

Solar units on the roof

produce more electricity

than the house uses.

The entire house runs

on just 120 watts,

slightly more than a single light bulb.

Energy efficiency

is the biggest, fastest, cheapest way

to solve the climate problem,

to save money

and to make a safer, richer,

fairer, cooler world.

Next to our homes,

the second largest source

of emissions we're responsible for

is parked right outside.

Cars produce nearly 20 percent

of global greenhouse gases.

To keep warming below

the critical two-degree threshold,

we need to cut seven billion tons

of greenhouse gas emissions every year.

Doubling the average

fuel efficiency of all cars

from 25 kilometers per gallon to 50

would save one billion tons.

But we would still need

to cut billions more

from our carbon footprint

to stay on the safe side

of plus-two degrees.

We have an arsenal

of solutions already.

It's going to be solar, wind,

going to be solar, wind,

and it's going to be tidal power

and thermal power.

All of these different things

working together

actually give us a pretty good ability

t0 get away from

the fossil fuel economy.

The ultimate answer may be

just over the horizon.

But the problem continues to grow.

With each passing year,

we consume more energy.

The future will test

the best minds in science.

An international team

of Physicists in England

is already started, attempting the

mother of all technological solutions:

Nuclear fusion.

They're building a fusion reactor

modeled on the single best power plant

in the solar system,

the sun.

Harnessing that same power could mean

a virtually limitless

and self-sustaining source of energy

without producing

any greenhouse gases.

This energy

lights up the universe,

powers most of the stars

in the universe.

So, what we're trying to do here

is to replicate

the same process on Earth

and use this amount of energy

to produce electricity.

It won't be easy.

The core of the reactor will be

nearly 10 times hotter than the sun.

A powerful magnetic field

contains the super-hot plasma

and prevents it from melting

through the reactor's walls.

Even if it works,

and there's no guarantee,

the reactor won't produce

commercial electricity

for at least another 30 years.

As ambitious as it may be,

fusion may appear

relatively down-to-Earth.

Imagine outer space filled

with a cosmic fleet of mirrors.

One current research project

estimates that one million mirrors,

each about three feet across,

could block out enough of the sun's heat

to lower the Earth's temperature.

It's no good sitting around

hoping that someone's going to invent

some fantastical new source

of free energy

The reality is that we have

to deal with what we've got,

and have to do it within ten years.

The world's appetite for energy

remains voracious.

Our carbon footprint is staggering.

As global warming escalates,

it also accelerates.

At some point, climate change

could take on a life of its own,

and global warming would

become a runaway train.

The only question is,

now that we know about it,

what are we going to do?

Even the worst-case scenarios

of six degrees

won't mean the end

of all life on Earth.

But the planet after

extreme global warming

would be radically different

from the life we know today.

How bad could it get?

At that point, the best minds

on Earth agree on two things:

They just don't know,

and they hope we'll never find out.
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