David Attenborough: A Life on Our Planet (2020)

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David Attenborough: A Life on Our Planet (2020)

Post by bunniefuu »

This city in Ukraine was once home

to almost 50,000 people.

It had everything a community would need

for a comfortable life.

[indistinct chatter]

But on the 26th of April, 1986,

it suddenly became uninhabitable.

The nearby nuclear power station

of Chernobyl exploded.

[helicopter hovering]

And in less than 48 hours,

the city was evacuated.

No one has lived here since.

The expl*si*n was a result of bad planning

and human error. Mistakes.

It triggered an environmental catastrophe

that had an impact across Europe.

Many people regarded it as the most costly

in the history of mankind.

But Chernobyl was a single event.

The true tragedy of our time

is still unfolding across the globe,

barely noticeable from day to day.

I'm talking about

the loss of our planet's wild places,

its biodiversity.

The living world is a unique

and spectacular marvel.

Billions of individuals, and millions

of kinds of plants and animals...

[birds chirping]

...dazzling in their variety and richness.

Working together to benefit

from the energy of the sun

and the minerals of the earth.

Leading lives that interlock in such a way

that they sustain each other.

We rely entirely on this finely tuned

life-support machine.

And it relies on its biodiversity

to run smoothly.

Yet the way we humans live on Earth now

is sending biodiversity into a decline.

[leaves rustling]

This too is happening as a result

of bad planning and human error

and it too will lead

to what we see here.

A place in which we cannot live.

The natural world is fading.

The evidence is all around.

It's happened in my lifetime.

I've seen it with my own eyes.

This film is my witness statement

and my vision for the future,

the story of how we came to make this

our greatest mistake,

and how, if we act now,

we can yet put it right.

I am David Attenborough, and I am 93.

I've had the most extraordinary life.

It's only now that I appreciate

how extraordinary.

[speaking indistinctly]

[Attenborough] I've been lucky enough

to spend my life

exploring the wild places of our planet.

I've traveled to every part of the globe.

I've experienced the living world

firsthand in all its variety and wonder.

In truth, I couldn't imagine

living my life in any other way.

I've always had a passion to explore,

to have adventures,

to learn about the wilds beyond.

[exclaiming in surprise]

And I'm still learning.

Boo!

As much now as I did when I was a boy.

[birds chirping]

It was a very different world back then.

We had very little understanding

of how the living world actually worked.

It was called natural history

because that's essentially

what it was all about...

history.

It was a great place to come to as a boy,

because this is, um, ironstone workings,

but it was disused.

All this was absolutely clear, it was...

only just stopped being a working quarry.

When I was a boy,

I spent all my spare time

searching through rocks

in places like this...

for buried treasure.

Fossils.

It's a creature called an ammonite.

And in life the animal itself

lived in the chamber here

and spread out its tentacles

to catch its prey.

And it lived about 180 million years ago.

This particular one

has a scientific name of Tiltonicerus,

because the first one ever

was found near this quarry

here in Tilton, in the middle of England.

Over time, I began to learn something

about the earth's evolutionary history.

By and large, it's a story of slow,

steady change.

Over billions of years,

nature has crafted miraculous forms,

each more complex and accomplished

than the last.

It's an achingly intricate labor.

And then,

every hundred million years or so,

after all those painstaking processes,

something catastrophic happens,

a mass extinction.

Great numbers of species disappear

and are suddenly replaced by a few.

All that evolution undone.

You can see it. A line in the rock layers.

A boundary that marks a profound,

rapid, global change.

Below the line

are a multitude of lifeforms.

Above, very few.

A mass extinction has happened five times

in life's four-billion-year history.

The last time it happened

was the event that brought the end

of the age of the dinosaurs.

A meteorite impact triggered

a catastrophic change

in the earth's conditions.

75% of all species were wiped out.

Life had no option but to rebuild.

For 65 million years, it's been at work

reconstructing the living world...

until we come to the world we know...

our time.

Scientists call it the Holocene.

The Holocene has been

one of the most stable periods

in our planet's great history.

[birds chirping]

For 10,000 years, the average temperature

has not wavered up or down

by more than one degree Celsius.

And the rich and thriving

living world around us

has been key to this stability.

Phytoplankton at the ocean's surface

and immense forests straddling the north

have helped to balance the atmosphere

by locking away carbon.

Huge herds on the plains

have kept the grasslands rich

and productive by fertilizing the soils.

Mangroves and coral reefs

along thousands of miles of coast

have harbored nurseries of fish species

that, when mature,

then range into open waters.

A thick belt of jungles around the equator

has piled plant on plant

to capture as much of the sun's energy

as possible,

adding moisture and oxygen

to the global air currents.

And the extent of the polar ice

has been critical,

reflecting sunlight

back off its white surface,

cooling the whole earth.

The biodiversity of the Holocene

helped to bring stability,

and the entire living world settled

into a gentle, reliable rhythm...

the seasons.

[thunder rumbling]

[lowing]

On the tropical plains,

the dry and rainy seasons would switch

every year like clockwork.

In Asia, the winds would create

the monsoon on cue.

[thunder rumbling]

In the northern regions, the temperatures

would lift in March, triggering spring,

and stay high until they dipped in October

and brought about autumn.

[birds chirping and chattering]

The Holocene was our Garden of Eden.

Its rhythm of seasons was so reliable

that it gave our own species

a unique opportunity.

[mooing]

We invented farming.

We learnt how to exploit the seasons

to produce food crops.

The history of

all human civilization followed.

Each generation able

to develop and progress

only because the living world

could be relied upon

to deliver us the conditions we needed.

The pace of progress was unlike anything

to be found in the fossil record.

Our intelligence changed the way

in which we evolved.

In the past,

animals had to develop some

physical ability to change their lives.

But for us, an idea could do that.

And the idea could be passed

from one generation to the next.

We were transforming

what a species could achieve.

A few millennia after this began,

I grew up at exactly the right moment.

The start of my career in my 20s

coincided with the advent

of global air travel.

So, I had the privilege of being

amongst the first

to fully experience the bounty of life

that had come about

as a result of

the Holocene's gentle climate.

Wherever I went, there was wilderness.

Sparkling coastal seas.

Vast forests.

Immense grasslands.

You could fly for hours

over the untouched wilderness.

And there I was, actually being asked

to explore these places

and record the wonders

of the natural world for people back home.

And to begin with, it was quite easy.

People had never seen pangolins

before on television.

They'd never seen sloths before.

They had never seen the center

of New Guinea before.

It was the best time of my life.

The best time of our lives.

The Second World w*r was over,

technology was making our lives easier.

The pace of change

was getting faster and faster.

[indistinct chatter]

[Attenborough] It felt that nothing

would limit our progress.

The future was going to be exciting.

It was going to bring everything

we had ever dreamed of.

This was before any of us were aware

that there were problems.

My first visit to East Africa was in 1960.

Back then, it seemed inconceivable

that we, a single species,

might one day have the power to thr*aten

the very existence of the wilderness.

The Maasai word "Serengeti"

means "endless plains."

To those who live here,

it's an apt description.

You can be in one spot on the Serengeti,

and the place is totally empty of animals,

and then, the next morning...

[bellowing]

...one million wildebeest.

[bellowing]

A quarter of a million zebra.

[snorting]

Half a million gazelle.

A few days after that...

and they're gone... over the horizon.

You can be forgiven for thinking

that these plains are endless

when they could swallow up such a herd.

It took a visionary scientist,

Bernhard Grzimek,

to explain that this wasn't true.

He and his son used a plane

to follow the herds over the horizon.

[grunting]

They charted them

as they moved across rivers,

through woodlands,

and over national borders.

They discovered that the Serengeti herds

required an enormous area

of healthy grassland to function.

That without such an immense space,

the herds would diminish

and the entire ecosystem

would come crashing down.

The point for me was simple:

the wild is far from unlimited.

It's finite. It needs protecting.

And a few years later,

that idea became obvious to everyone.

[NASA technician] Five, four,

three, two one, zero.

[Attenborough] I was in a television

studio when the Apollo mission launched.

It was the first time

that any human had moved away

far enough from the earth

to see the whole planet.

And this is what they saw...

what we all saw.

Our planet, vulnerable and isolated.

One of the extraordinary things about it

was that the world

could actually watch it as it happened.

It was extraordinary that you could see

what a man out in space could see

as he saw it at the same time.

And I remember very well that first sh*t.

You saw a blue marble,

a blue sphere in the blackness,

and you realized that that was the earth.

And in that one sh*t, there was

the whole of humanity with nothing else

except the person that was

in the spacecraft taking that picture.

And that completely changed

the mindset of the population,

the human population of the world.

Our home was not limitless.

There was an edge to our existence.

It was a rediscovery

of a fundamental truth.

We are ultimately bound by

and reliant upon

the finite natural world about us.

This truth defined the life we led

in our pre-history,

the time before farming and civilization.

Even as some of us

were setting foot on the moon,

others were still leading such a life

in the most remote parts of the planet.

In 1971, I set out to find

an uncontacted tribe in New Guinea.

These people were hunter-gatherers,

as all humankind had been before farming.

[speaking tribal language]

[Attenborough] They lived in small numbers

and didn't take too much.

[speaking tribal language]

[Attenborough] They ate meat rarely.

The resources they used

naturally renewed themselves.

Working with their traditional technology,

they were living sustainably,

a lifestyle that could continue

effectively forever.

[speaking native language]

[Attenborough] It was a stark contrast

to the world I knew.

A world that demanded more every day.

I spent the latter half of the 1970s

traveling the world,

making a series I had long dreamed of

called Life on Earth,

the story of the evolution of life

and its diversity.

It was sh*t in 39 countries.

We filmed 650 species,

and we traveled

one and a half million miles.

That's the sort of commitment you need

if you want to even begin

making a portrait of the living world.

But it was noticeable

that some of these animals

were becoming harder to find.

When I filmed with the mountain gorillas,

there were only 300 left

in a remote jungle in Central Africa.

Baby gorillas were at a premium,

and poachers would k*ll

a dozen adults to get one.

I got as close as I did only because

the gorillas were used to people.

The only way to keep them alive

was for rangers to be with them every day.

The process of extinction that I'd seen

as a boy... in the rocks,

I now became aware was happening

right there around me

to animals with which I was familiar.

Our closest relatives.

And we were responsible.

It revealed a cold reality.

Once a species became our target,

there was now nowhere on earth

that it could hide.

Whales were being slaughtered by fleets

of industrial whaling ships in the 1970s.

The largest whales, the blues,

numbered only a few thousand by then.

They were virtually impossible to find.

We found humpbacks off Hawaii

only by listening out for their calls.

A moment ago, we made this recording

with an underwater microphone

here in the Pacific near Hawaii.

Just listen to this.

[whales singing]

[whales continue singing]

Recordings like these revealed

that the songs of the humpbacks

are long and complex.

Humpbacks living in the same area

learn their songs from each other.

And the songs have distinct themes

and variations which evolve over time.

[whales singing]

Their mournful songs were the key

to transforming people's opinions

about them.

[speaking Russian]

[protester in English] Hello, Boctok.

We are Canadian.

[over megaphone]

Please stop k*lling the whales.

[Attenborough] Animals

that had been viewed

as little more than

a source of oil and meat

became personalities.

[protester over megaphone] We are men

and women, and we speak for children,

and we're all saying,

"Please stop k*lling the whales."

We have pursued animals to extinction

many times in our history,

but now that it was visible,

it was no longer acceptable.

The k*lling of whales

turned from a harvest to a crime.

A powerful shared conscience

had suddenly appeared.

Nobody wanted animals to become extinct.

People were coming to care

for the natural world...

as they were made aware

of the natural world.

And we now had the means to make

people across the world aware.

[theme music playing]

[Attenborough] By the time Life on Earth

aired in 1979, I had entered my 50s.

There were twice the number

of people on the planet

as there were when I was born.

You and I belong to the most widespread

and dominant species of animal on earth.

We're certainly the most numerous

large animal.

There are something like

4,000 million of us today,

and we've reached this position

with meteoric speed.

It's all happened

within the last 2,000 years or so.

We seem to have broken loose

from the restrictions

that have governed the activities

and numbers of other animals.

[Attenborough] We had broken loose.

We were apart

from the rest of life on earth,

living a different kind of life.

Our predators had been eliminated.

Most of our diseases were under control.

We had worked out

how to produce food to order.

There was nothing left to restrict us.

Nothing to stop us.

Unless we stopped ourselves...

we would keep consuming the earth

until we had used it up.

Saving individual species

or even groups of species

would not be enough.

Whole habitats would soon

start to disappear.

I first witnessed the destruction

of an entire habitat in Southeast Asia.

In the 1950s, Borneo was three-quarters

covered with rainforest.

[young Attenborough] We heard

a crashing in the branches ahead.

And there, only a few yards away,

we spotted a great furry red form

swaying in the trees.

The orangutan.

[Attenborough] By the end of the century,

Borneo's rainforest

had been reduced by half.

Rainforests are particularly

precious habitats.

[birds chirping]

More than half of the species

on land live here.

They're places in which

evolution's talent for design soars.

[birds squawking]

[clicking]

Many of the millions of species

in the forest exist in small numbers.

Every one has a critical role to play.

Orangutan mothers have to spend

ten years with their young,

teaching them which fruits

are worth eating.

Without this training,

they would not complete their role

in dispersing seeds.

The future generations

of many tree species would be at risk.

And tree diversity is the key

to a rainforest.

[birds chirping]

In a single small patch

of tropical rainforest,

there could be

700 different species of tree,

as many as there are

in the whole of North America.

And yet, this is what we've been

turning this dizzying diversity into.

A monoculture of oil palm.

A habitat that is dead in comparison.

And you see this curtain of green

with occasionally birds in it,

and you think it's perhaps okay.

But if you get in a helicopter,

you see that

that is a strip about half a mile wide.

And beyond that strip,

there is nothing but regimented rows

of oil palms.

There is a double incentive

to cut down forests.

People benefit from the timber...

and then benefit again from

farming the land that's left behind.

[chainsaw revs]

Which is why we've cut down

three trillion trees across the world.

Half of the world's rainforests

have already been cleared.

What we see happening today

is just the latest chapter

in a global process spanning millennia.

The deforestation of Borneo

has reduced the population of orangutan

by two-thirds since I first saw one

just over 60 years ago.

We can't cut down rainforests forever,

and anything that we can't do forever is

by definition unsustainable.

If we do things that are unsustainable,

the damage accumulates ultimately to

a point where the whole system collapses.

No ecosystem,

no matter how big, is secure.

Even one as vast as the ocean.

This habitat was the subject

of the series The Blue Planet,

which we were filming in the late '90s.

It was... an astonishing vision

of a completely unknown world,

a world that had existed

since the beginning of time.

All sorts of things that you had no idea

had ever existed,

all in a multitude of colors,

all unbelievably beautiful.

And all of them completely undisturbed

by your presence.

For much of its expanse,

the ocean is largely empty.

But in certain places, there are hot spots

where currents bring nutrients

to the surface

and trigger an expl*si*n of life.

In such places,

huge shoals of fish gather.

The problem is that our fishing fleets

are just as good at finding

those hot spots as are the fish.

When they do, they're able to gather

the concentrated shoals with ease.

It was only in the '50s that large fleets

first ventured out

into international waters...

to reap the open ocean harvest

across the globe.

Yet, they've removed

90% of the large fish in the sea.

At first, they caught

plenty of fish in their nets.

But within only a few years,

the nets across the globe

were coming in empty.

The fishing quickly became so poor

that countries began to subsidize

the fleets to maintain the industry.

Without large fish

and other marine predators,

the oceanic nutrient cycle stutters.

The predators help to keep nutrients

in the ocean's sunlit waters,

recycling them so that they can be used

again and again by plankton.

Without predators,

nutrients are lost for centuries

to the depths

and the hot spots start to diminish.

The ocean starts to die.

Ocean life was also

unravelling in the shallows.

In 1998, a Blue Planet film crew

stumbled on an event

little known at the time.

Coral reefs were turning white.

The white color is caused

by corals expelling algae

that lives symbiotically

within their body.

When you first see it,

you think perhaps that it's beautiful,

and suddenly you realize it's tragic.

Because what you're looking at

is skeletons.

Skeletons of dead creatures.

The white corals are ultimately

smothered by seaweed.

And the reef turns from wonderland...

to wasteland.

At first, the cause of the bleaching

was a mystery.

But scientists started to discover that

in many cases where bleaching occurred,

the ocean was warming.

For some time,

climate scientists had warned

that the planet would get warmer

as we b*rned fossil fuels

and released carbon dioxide

and other greenhouse gasses

into the atmosphere.

A marked change in atmospheric carbon

has always been incompatible

with a stable earth.

It was a feature

of all five mass extinctions.

In previous events,

it had taken volcanic activity

up to one million years

to dredge up enough carbon

from within the earth

to trigger a catastrophe.

By burning millions of years' worth

of living organisms

all at once as coal and oil,

we had managed to do so in less than 200.

The global air temperature had been

relatively stable till the '90s.

But it now appeared this was

only because the ocean

was absorbing much of the excess heat,

masking our impact.

It was the first indication to me

that the earth was beginning

to lose its balance.

The most remote habitat of all

exists at the extreme north

and south of the planet.

I've visited the polar regions

over many decades.

[imperceptible]

They've always been a place

beyond imagination...

with scenery unlike

anything else on earth...

and unique species

adapted to a life in the extreme.

But that distant world is changing.

In my time, I've experienced

the warming of Arctic summers.

We have arrived at locations

expecting to find expanses of sea ice

and found none.

We've managed to travel by boat

to islands that were impossible

to get to historically

because they were

permanently locked in the ice.

By the time Frozen Planet aired in 2011,

the reasons for these changes

was well established.

The ocean has long since

become unable to absorb

all the excess heat

caused by our activities.

As a result, the average

global temperature today

is one degree Celsius warmer

than it was when I was born.

A speed of change that exceeds

any in the last 10,000 years.

Summer sea ice in the Arctic

has reduced by 40% in 40 years.

Our planet is losing its ice.

This most pristine and distant

of ecosystems is headed for disaster.

Our imprint is now truly global.

Our impact now truly profound.

Our blind as*ault on the planet

has finally come to alter

the very fundamentals of the living world.

We have overfished 30% of fish stocks

to critical levels.

We cut down

over 15 billion trees each year.

[warbling]

By damming, polluting,

and over-extracting rivers and lakes,

we've reduced the size

of freshwater populations by over 80%.

We're replacing the wild with the tame.

Half of the fertile land on earth

is now farmland.

70% of the mass of birds

on this planet are domestic birds.

The vast majority, chickens.

We account for over one-third

of the weight of mammals on earth.

A further 60% are the animals

we raise to eat.

The rest, from mice to whales,

make up just 4%.

This is now our planet,

run by humankind for humankind.

There is little left

for the rest of the living world.

Since I started filming in the 1950s,

on average, wild animal populations

have more than halved.

I look at these images now

and I realize that,

although as a young man

I felt I was out there in the wild

experiencing the untouched

natural world...

it was an illusion.

Those forests and plains and seas

were already emptying.

Um, so, the world

is not as wild as it was.

Well, we've destroyed it.

Not just ruined it.

I mean, we have completely...

well, destroyed that world.

That non-human world is gone.

Uh... The... Human beings

have overrun the world.

That is my witness statement.

A story of global decline

during a single lifetime.

But it doesn't end there.

If we continue on our current course,

the damage that has been

the defining feature of my lifetime

will be eclipsed by the damage

coming in the next.

Science predicts that were I born today,

I would be witness to the following.

The Amazon Rainforest, cut down until

it can no longer produce enough moisture,

degrades into a dry savannah,

bringing catastrophic species loss...

and altering the global water cycle.

At the same time,

the Arctic becomes ice-free in the summer.

Without the white ice cap,

less of the sun's energy

is reflected back out to space.

And the speed of global warming increases.

Throughout the north,

frozen soils thaw, releasing methane,

a greenhouse gas many times more potent

than carbon dioxide,

accelerating the rate

of climate change dramatically.

As the ocean continues to heat

and becomes more acidic,

coral reefs around the world die.

Fish populations crash.

Global food production enters a crisis

as soils become exhausted by overuse.

Pollinating insects disappear.

[thunder rumbling]

And the weather is

more and more unpredictable.

Our planet becomes

four degrees Celsius warmer.

Large parts of the earth

are uninhabitable.

Millions of people rendered homeless.

A sixth mass extinction event...

is well underway.

This is a series of one-way doors...

bringing irreversible change.

Within the span of the next lifetime,

the security and stability

of the Holocene,

our Garden of Eden...

will be lost.

Right now, we're facing a manmade disaster

of global scale.

Our greatest thr*at in thousands of years.

If we don't take action,

the collapse of our civilizations

and the extinction of much of

the natural world is on the horizon.

But the longer we leave it,

the more difficult it'll be

to do something about it.

And you could happily retire.

But you now want to explain to us

what peril we are in.

Um...

and, in a way, I wish I wasn't

involved in this struggle.

[chuckles]

Because I wish the struggle

wasn't there or necessary.

But I've had unbelievable luck

and good fortune.

Um, and I certainly

would feel very guilty...

if I saw what the problems are

and decided to ignore them.

[audience applauding]

[Attenborough on video]

Climbing over the tightly-packed bodies

is the only way across the crowd.

[groaning]

Those beneath can get crushed to death.

[walruses groaning]

[Attenborough] We are facing nothing less

than the collapse of the living world.

The very thing that gave birth

to our civilization.

The thing we rely upon

for every element of the lives we lead.

No one wants this to happen.

None of us can afford for it to happen.

So, what do we do?

It's quite straightforward.

It's been staring us

in the face all along.

To restore stability to our planet,

we must restore its biodiversity.

The very thing that we've removed.

It's the only way out of this crisis

we have created.

We must rewild the world.

[uplifting music playing]

[reindeer grunting]

[birds hooting]

[buffalo snorting]

[birds cawing]

[elephants trumpeting]

Rewilding the world is simpler

than you might think.

And the changes we have to make

will only benefit ourselves

and the generations that follow.

A century from now,

our planet could be a wild place again.

And I'm going to tell you how.

[cawing and chirping]

Every other species on Earth reaches

a maximum population after a time.

The number that can be sustained

on the natural resources available.

With nothing to restrict us,

our population has been growing

dramatically throughout my lifetime.

[crowd chanting]

On current projections,

there will be 11 billion people

on Earth by 2100.

But it's possible to slow,

even to stop population growth

well before it reaches that point.

Japan's standard of living

climbed rapidly in the latter half

of the 20th century.

As healthcare and education improved,

people's expectations

and opportunities grew,

and the birth rate fell.

In 1950, a Japanese family was likely

to have three or more children.

By 1975, the average was two.

The result is that the population

has now stabilized

and has hardly changed

since the millennium.

There are signs that this has started

to happen across the globe.

As nations develop everywhere,

people choose to have fewer children.

The number of children being born

worldwide every year

is about to level off.

A key reason the population

is still growing

is because many of us are living longer.

At some point in the future,

the human population will peak

for the very first time.

The sooner it happens,

the easier it makes everything else

we have to do.

[crowd cheering]

[Attenborough] By working hard

to raise people out of poverty,

giving all access to healthcare,

and enabling girls in particular

to stay in school as long as possible,

we can make it peak sooner

and at a lower level.

Why wouldn't we want to do these things?

Giving people

a greater opportunity of life

is what we would want to do anyway.

The trick is to raise

the standard of living around the world

without increasing

our impact on that world.

That may sound impossible,

but there are ways

in which we can do this.

The living world

is essentially solar-powered.

The earth's plants

capture three trillion kilowatt-hours

of solar energy each day.

[birds chirping]

That's almost 20 times the energy

we need... just from sunlight.

Imagine if we phase out fossil fuels

and run our world on the eternal energies

of nature too.

Sunlight, wind, water and geothermal.

[indistinct chatter]

[Attenborough] At the turn of the century,

Morocco relied on imported oil and gas

for almost all of its energy.

Today, it generates

40% of its needs at home

from a network of renewable power plants,

including the world's largest solar farm.

Sitting on the edge of the Sahara,

and cabled directly into southern Europe,

Morocco could be an exporter

of solar energy by 2050.

Within 20 years, renewables are predicted

to be the world's main source of power.

But we can make them the only source.

It's crazy that our banks and our pensions

are investing in fossil fuel...

when these are the very things

that are jeopardizing the future

that we are saving for.

[sirens wailing]

A renewable future

will be full of benefits.

Energy everywhere will be more affordable.

Our cities will be cleaner and quieter.

And renewable energy will never run out.

The living world can't operate without

a healthy ocean and neither can we.

The ocean is a critical ally in our battle

to reduce carbon in the atmosphere.

The more diverse it is,

the better it does that job.

[whales singing]

And, of course, the ocean is important

to all of us as a source of food.

Fishing is world's greatest wild harvest.

And if we do it right, it can continue...

because there's a win-win at play.

The healthier the marine habitat,

the more fish there will be,

and the more there will be to eat.

Palau is a Pacific Island nation

reliant on its coral reefs

for fish and tourism.

When fish stocks began to reduce,

the Palauans responded

by restricting fishing practices

and banning fishing

entirely from many areas.

Protected fish populations

soon became so healthy,

they spilt over into the areas

open to fishing.

As a result,

the "no fish" zones have increased

the catch of the local fishermen,

while at the same time

allowing the reefs to recover.

Imagine if we committed to

a similar approach across the world.

Estimates suggest that "no fish" zones

over a third of our coastal seas

would be sufficient to provide us

with all the fish we will ever need.

In international waters,

the UN is attempting to create

the biggest "no fish" zone of all.

In one act,

this would transform the open ocean

from a place exhausted

by subsidized fishing fleets

to a wilderness that will help us all

in our efforts to combat climate change.

The world's greatest wildlife reserve.

When it comes to the land,

we must radically reduce the area

we use to farm,

so that we can make space

for returning wilderness.

And the quickest and most effective way

to do that is for us to change our diet.

[birds chirping]

Large carnivores are rare in nature

because it takes a lot of prey

to support each of them.

[wildebeest snorting]

For every single predator

on the Serengeti,

there are more than 100 prey animals.

[snorting]

Whenever we choose a piece of meat,

we too are unwittingly demanding

a huge expanse of space.

The planet can't support

billions of large meat-eaters.

There just isn't the space.

[dings]

If we all had a largely plant-based diet,

we would need only half the land

we use at the moment.

And because we would be

then dedicated to raising plants,

we could increase the yield

of this land substantially.

The Netherlands is one of the world's

most densely-populated countries.

It's covered with small family-run farms

with no room for expansion.

So, Dutch farmers have become expert

at getting the most out of every hectare.

Increasingly,

they're doing so sustainably.

Raising yields tenfold in two generations

while at the same time using less water,

fewer pesticides, less fertilizer

and emitting less carbon.

Despite its size,

the Netherlands is now the world's

second largest exporter of food.

It's entirely possible for us to apply

both low-tech and hi-tech solutions

to produce much more food

from much less land.

We can start to produce food

in new spaces.

Indoors, within cities.

Even in places

where there's no land at all.

As we improve our approach to farming,

we'll start to reverse the land-grab

that we've been pursuing

ever since we began to farm,

which is essential because we have

an urgent need for all that free land.

Forests are a fundamental component

of our planet's recovery.

They are the best technology nature has

for locking away carbon.

And they are centers of biodiversity.

Again, the two features work together.

The wilder and more diverse forests are,

the more effective they are

at absorbing carbon from the atmosphere.

We must immediately

halt deforestation everywhere...

and grow crops like oil palm and soya

only on land that was deforested long ago.

After all, there's plenty of it.

But we can do better than that.

A century ago, more than three quarters

of Costa Rica was covered with forest.

By the 1980s, uncontrolled logging

had reduced this to just one quarter.

The government decided to act,

offering grants to land owners

to replant native trees.

In just 25 years,

the forest has returned to cover

half of Costa Rica once again.

[birds chirping]

Just imagine if we achieve this

on a global scale.

The return of the trees would absorb

as much as two thirds

of the carbon emissions

that have been pumped into the atmosphere

by our activities to date.

With all these things,

there is one overriding principle.

Nature is our biggest ally

and our greatest inspiration.

We just have to do what nature

has always done.

It worked out the secret of life long ago.

In this world,

a species can only thrive...

when everything else

around it thrives, too.

We can solve the problems we now face

by embracing this reality.

If we take care of nature,

nature will take care of us.

It's now time for our species

to stop simply growing.

To establish a life on our planet

in balance with nature.

To start to thrive.

When you think about it,

we're completing a journey.

Ten thousand years ago,

as hunter-gatherers,

we lived a sustainable life

because that was the only option.

All these years later,

it's once again the only option.

We need to rediscover...

how to be sustainable.

To move from being apart from nature

to becoming a part of nature once again.

Tonight, we've got

a rather different program for you.

[Attenborough] If we can change

the way we live on Earth,

an alternative future comes into view.

In this future,

we discover ways to benefit from our land

that help, rather than hinder, wilderness.

Ways to fish our seas that enable them

to come quickly back to life.

And ways to harvest

our forests sustainably.

We will finally learn how to work

with nature rather than against it.

In the end, after a lifetime's exploration

of the living world,

I'm certain of one thing.

This is not about saving our planet...

it's about saving ourselves.

The truth is, with or without us,

the natural world will rebuild.

In the 30 years

since the evacuation of Chernobyl,

the wild has reclaimed the space.

[birds chirping]

Today, the forest has taken over the city.

It's a sanctuary for wild animals

that are very rare elsewhere.

And powerful evidence

that however grave our mistakes,

nature will ultimately overcome them.

The living world will endure.

We humans cannot presume the same.

We've come this far

because we are the smartest creatures

that have ever lived.

But to continue,

we require more than intelligence.

We require wisdom.

There are many differences between humans

and the rest of the species on earth,

but one that has been expressed is that

we alone are able to imagine the future.

For a long time, I and perhaps you

have dreaded that future.

But it's now becoming apparent

that it's not all doom and gloom.

There's a chance for us to make amends,

to complete our journey of development,

manage our impact,

and once again become a species

in balance with nature.

All we need is the will to do so.

We now have the opportunity to create

the perfect home for ourselves,

and restore the rich, healthy,

and wonderful world that we inherited.

Just imagine that.
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