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<title><![CDATA[英文剧本: 难以忽视的真相 An Inconvenient Truth]]></title>
<link>http://www.130q.com/show.php?tid=1618</link>
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<p>英文剧本: 难以忽视的真相 An Inconvenient Truth</p>
<p><br />
An Inconvenient Truth script</p>
<p>You look at that river</p>
<p>gently flowing by.</p>
<p>You notice the leaves</p>
<p>rustling with the wind.</p>
<p>You hear the birds.</p>
<p>You hear the tree frogs.</p>
<p>In the distance, you hear a cow.</p>
<p>You feel the grass.</p>
<p>The mud gives a little bit on the river bank.</p>
<p>It's quiet. It's peaceful.</p>
<p>And all of a sudden,</p>
<p>it's a gear shift inside you.</p>
<p>And it's like taking a deep breath and going,</p>
<p>&quot;Oh, yeah, I forgot about this.&quot;</p>
<p>This is the first picture of the Earth from space</p>
<p>that any of us ever saw.</p>
<p>It was taken on Christmas Eve, 1968</p>
<p>during the Apollo 8 Mission.</p>
<p>...within relatively comfortable boundaries.</p>
<p>But we are filling up that thin shell of atmosphere with pollution.</p>
<p>Ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Al Gore.</p>
<p>I am Al Gore.</p>
<p>I used to be the next president of the United States Of America.</p>
<p>I don't find that particularly funny.</p>
<p>I've been trying to tell this story for a long time,</p>
<p>and I feel as if I've failed to get the message across.</p>
<p>I was in politics for a long time and I'm proud of my service.</p>
<p>You gotta be kidding me. This is a national disaster.</p>
<p>Get every doggone Greyhound bus line in the country,</p>
<p>and get their... moving to New Orleans.</p>
<p>That's them thinking small, man,</p>
<p>and this is a major, major, major deal.</p>
<p>What do you need right now?</p>
<p>There are good people,</p>
<p>who are in politics in both parties</p>
<p>who hold this at arm's length</p>
<p>because if they acknowledge it and recognize it,</p>
<p>then the moral imperative to make big changes</p>
<p>is inescapable.</p>
<p>...unless you fix the biggest damn crisis in the history of this country.</p>
<p>-=TLF SUB TEAM=- Eng Sub Repack: amengordon</p>
<p>An Inconvenient Truth</p>
<p>...scouted out landing spots and they lost radio contact</p>
<p>when they went around the dark side of the moon.</p>
<p>And there was inevitably some suspense.</p>
<p>Then when they came back in radio contact,</p>
<p>they looked up</p>
<p>and they snapped this picture, and it became known as Earth Rise.</p>
<p>And that one picture exploded</p>
<p>in the consciousness of humankind.</p>
<p>It lead to dramatic changes.</p>
<p>Within 18 months of this picture,</p>
<p>the modern environmental movement had begun.</p>
<p>The next picture was taken on the last of the Apollo missions,</p>
<p>Apollo 17.</p>
<p>This one was taken on December 11, 1972,</p>
<p>and it is the most commonly published photograph in all of history.</p>
<p>And it's the only picture of the Earth from space that we have</p>
<p>where the sun was directly behind the spacecraft</p>
<p>so that the Earth is fully lit up and not partly in darkness.</p>
<p>The next image I'm gonna show you has almost never been seen.</p>
<p>It was taken by a spacecraft called The Galileo</p>
<p>that went out to explore the solar system.</p>
<p>And as it was leaving Earth's gravity, it turned its cameras around</p>
<p>and took a time lapse picture of one day's won'th of rotation,</p>
<p>here compressed into 24 seconds.</p>
<p>Isn't that beautiful?</p>
<p>This image is a magical image in a way.</p>
<p>It was made by a friend of mine, Tom Van Sant.</p>
<p>He took 3,000 separate satellite pictures</p>
<p>taken over a three-year period, digitally stitched together.</p>
<p>And he chose images that would give a cloud-free view</p>
<p>of every square inch of the Earth's surface.</p>
<p>All of the land masses accurately portrayed.</p>
<p>When that's all spread out, it becomes an iconic image.</p>
<p>I show this because I wanna tell you a story about two teachers I had.</p>
<p>One that I didn't like that much, the other who is a real hero to me.</p>
<p>I had a grade school teacher who taught geography</p>
<p>by pulling a map of the world down in front of the blackboard.</p>
<p>I had a classmate in the sixth grade who raised his hand</p>
<p>and he pointed to the outline of the east coast of South America</p>
<p>and he pointed to the west coast of Africa</p>
<p>and he asked, &quot;Did they ever fit together?&quot;</p>
<p>And the teacher said,</p>
<p>&quot;Of course not. That's the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard.&quot;</p>
<p>That student went on to become a drug addict and a ne'er-do-well.</p>
<p>The teacher went on to become science advisor in the current administration.</p>
<p>But, you know, the teacher was actually reflecting</p>
<p>the conclusion of the scientific establishment of that time.</p>
<p>Continents are so big, obviously they don't move.</p>
<p>But, actually, as we now know, they did move.</p>
<p>They moved apart from one another.</p>
<p>But at one time they did, in fact, fit together.</p>
<p>But that assumption was a problem.</p>
<p>It reflected the well-known wisdom</p>
<p>that what gets us into trouble is not what we don't know,</p>
<p>it's what we know for sure that just ain't so.</p>
<p>This is actually an important point, believe it or not,</p>
<p>because there is another such assumption</p>
<p>that a lot of people have in their minds right now about global warming that just ain't so.</p>
<p>The assumption is something like this. The Earth is so big</p>
<p>we can't possibly have any lasting harmful impact</p>
<p>on the Earth's environment.</p>
<p>And maybe that was true at one time, but it's not anymore.</p>
<p>And one of the reasons it's not true anymore</p>
<p>is that the most vulnerable part of the Earth's ecological system</p>
<p>is the atmosphere.</p>
<p>Vulnerable because it's so thin.</p>
<p>My friend, the late Carl Sagan, used to say,</p>
<p>&quot;If you had a big globe with a coat of varnish on it,</p>
<p>&quot;the thickness of that varnish relative to that globe</p>
<p>&quot;is pretty much the same &quot;as the thickness of the Earth's atmosphere &quot;compared to the Earth itself.&quot;</p>
<p>And it's thin enough</p>
<p>that we are capable of changing its composition.</p>
<p>That brings up the basic science of global warming.</p>
<p>And I'm not gonna spend a lot of time on this because you know it well.</p>
<p>The suns radiation comes in in the form of light waves</p>
<p>and that heats up the Earth.</p>
<p>And then some of the radiation that is absorbed and warms the Earth</p>
<p>is reradiated back into space</p>
<p>in the form of infrared radiation.</p>
<p>And some of the outgoing infrared radiation is trapped</p>
<p>by this layer of atmosphere and held inside the atmosphere.</p>
<p>And that's a good thing because it keeps the temperature of the Earth within certain boundaries,</p>
<p>keeps it relatively constant and livable.</p>
<p>But the problem is this thin layer of atmosphere is being thickened</p>
<p>by all of the global warming pollution that's being put up there.</p>
<p>And what that does is it thickens this layer of atmosphere,</p>
<p>more of the outgoing infrared is trapped.</p>
<p>And so the atmosphere heats up worldwide. That's global warming.</p>
<p>Now, that's the traditional explanation.</p>
<p>Here's what I think is a better explanation.</p>
<p>You're probably wondering why your ice cream went away.</p>
<p>Well, Susie, the culprit isn't foreigners.</p>
<p>It's global warming.</p>
<p>- Global... - Yeah.</p>
<p>Meet Mr. Sunbeam.</p>
<p>He comes all the way from the sun to visit Earth.</p>
<p>Hello, Earth. Just popping in to brighten your day.</p>
<p>And now I'll be on my way.</p>
<p>Not so fast, Sunbeam.</p>
<p>We're greenouse gases. You ain't going nowhere.</p>
<p>Oh, God, it hurts.</p>
<p>Pretty soon, Earth is chock-full of Sunbeams.</p>
<p>Their rotting corpses heating our atmosphere.</p>
<p>How do we get rid of the greenouse grasses?</p>
<p>Fortunately, our handsomest politicians</p>
<p>came up with a cheap, last-minute way to combat global warming.</p>
<p>Ever since 2063,</p>
<p>we simply drop a giant ice cube into the ocean every now and then.</p>
<p>Just like Daddy puts in his drink every morning.</p>
<p>And then he gets mad.</p>
<p>Of course, since the greenouse gases are still building up,</p>
<p>it takes more and more ice each time.</p>
<p>Thus, solving the problem once and for all.</p>
<p>- But... - Once and for all!</p>
<p>This is the image that started me</p>
<p>in my interest in this issue.</p>
<p>And I saw it when I was a college student</p>
<p>because I had a professor named Roger Revelle</p>
<p>who was the first person to propose measuring carbon dioxide in the Earth's atmosphere.</p>
<p>He saw where the story was going</p>
<p>after the first few chapters.</p>
<p>After the first few years of data,</p>
<p>he intuited what it meant for what was yet to come.</p>
<p>They designed the experiment in 1957.</p>
<p>He hired Charles David Keeling</p>
<p>who was very faithful and precise</p>
<p>in making these measurements for decades.</p>
<p>They started sending these weather balloons up every day</p>
<p>and they chose the middle of the Pacific</p>
<p>because it was the area that was most remote.</p>
<p>And he was a very hard-nosed scientist.</p>
<p>He really emphasized the hard data.</p>
<p>It was a wonderful time for me</p>
<p>because, like a lot of young people,</p>
<p>I came into contact with intellectual ferment,</p>
<p>ideas that I'd never considered</p>
<p>in my wildest dreams before.</p>
<p>And he showed our class</p>
<p>the results of his measurements after only a few years.</p>
<p>It was startling to me.</p>
<p>Now he was startled</p>
<p>and made it clear to our class</p>
<p>what he felt the significance of it was.</p>
<p>And I just soaked it up like a sponge.</p>
<p>He drew the connections between the larger changes in our civilization</p>
<p>and this pattern that was now visible in the atmosphere of the entire planet.</p>
<p>And then he projected into the future where this was headed</p>
<p>unless we made some adjustments.</p>
<p>And it was just as clear as day.</p>
<p>After the first seven, eight, nine years,</p>
<p>you could see the pattern that was developing.</p>
<p>But I asked a question.</p>
<p>Why is it that it goes up and down once each year?</p>
<p>And he explained that if you look at the land mass of the Earth,</p>
<p>very little of it is south of the equator.</p>
<p>The vast majority of it is north of the equator,</p>
<p>and most of the vegetation is north of the equator.</p>
<p>And so, when the Northern Hemisphere is tilted toward the sun,</p>
<p>as it is in our spring and summer,</p>
<p>the leaves come out and they breathe in carbon dioxide,</p>
<p>and the amount in the atmosphere goes down.</p>
<p>But when the Northern Hemisphere is tilted away from the sun,</p>
<p>as it is in our fall and winter,</p>
<p>the leaves fall and exhale carbon dioxide,</p>
<p>and the amount in the atmosphere goes back up again.</p>
<p>And so, it's as if the entire Earth</p>
<p>once each year breathes in and out.</p>
<p>So we started measuring carbon dioxide in 1958.</p>
<p>And you can see</p>
<p>that by the middle '60s, when he showed my class this image,</p>
<p>it was already clear that it was going up.</p>
<p>I respected him and learned from him so much, I followed this.</p>
<p>And when I went to the Congress in the middle 1970s,</p>
<p>I helped to organize the first hearings on global warming</p>
<p>and asked my professor to come and be the leadoff witness.</p>
<p>And I thought that would have such a big impact,</p>
<p>we'd be on the way to solving this problem, but it didn't work that way.</p>
<p>But I kept having hearings. And in 1984 I went to the Senate</p>
<p>and really dug deeply into this issue</p>
<p>with science roundtables and the like.</p>
<p>I wrote a book about it, ran for President in 1988,</p>
<p>partly to try to gain some visibility for that issue.</p>
<p>And in 1992 went to the White House. We passed a version of a carbon tax</p>
<p>and some other measures to try to address this.</p>
<p>Went to Kyoto in 1997 to help get a treaty</p>
<p>that's so controversial, in the US at least.</p>
<p>In 2000,</p>
<p>my opponent pledged to regulate CO2 and then...</p>
<p>That was not a pledge that was kept.</p>
<p>But the point of this is</p>
<p>all this time you can see</p>
<p>what I have seen all these years.</p>
<p>It just keeps going up. It is relentless.</p>
<p>And now we're beginning to see the impact in the real world.</p>
<p>This is Mount Kilimanjaro more than 30 years ago</p>
<p>and more recently.</p>
<p>And a friend of mine just came back from Kilimanjaro</p>
<p>with a picture he took a couple of months ago.</p>
<p>Another friend, Lonnie Thompson, studies glaciers.</p>
<p>Here's Lonnie with a last sliver of one of the once mighty glaciers.</p>
<p>Within the decade there will be no more snows of Kilimanjaro.</p>
<p>This is happening in Glacier National Park.</p>
<p>I climbed to the top of this in 1998 with one of my daughters.</p>
<p>Within 15 years, this will be the park formerly known as Glacier.</p>
<p>Here is what's been happening year by year to the Columbia Glacier.</p>
<p>It just retreats every single year.</p>
<p>And it's a shame 'cause these glaciers are so beautiful.</p>
<p>But those who go up to see them,</p>
<p>here's what they're seeing every day, now.</p>
<p>In the Himalayas there's a particular problem</p>
<p>because 40% of all the people in the world</p>
<p>get their drinking water from rivers and spring systems</p>
<p>that are fed more than half by the melt water coming off the glaciers.</p>
<p>And within this next half century those 40% of the people on Earth</p>
<p>are gonna face a very serious shortage</p>
<p>because of this melting.</p>
<p>Italy, the Italian Alps.</p>
<p>Same sight today.</p>
<p>An old postcard from Switzerland.</p>
<p>Throughout the Alps, we're seeing the same story.</p>
<p>It's also true in South America.</p>
<p>This is Peru 15 years ago.</p>
<p>And the same glacier today.</p>
<p>This is Argentina 20 years ago. Same glacier today.</p>
<p>Seventy-five years ago in Patagonia on the tip of South America.</p>
<p>This vast expanse of ice is now gone.</p>
<p>There's a message in this.</p>
<p>It is worldwide.</p>
<p>And the ice has stories to tell us.</p>
<p>My friend, Lonnie Thompson, digs core drills in the ice.</p>
<p>They dig down</p>
<p>and they bring the core drills back up and they look at the ice and they study it.</p>
<p>When the snow falls, it traps little bubbles of atmosphere</p>
<p>and they can go in and measure</p>
<p>how much CO2 was in the atmosphere the year that that snow fell.</p>
<p>What's even more interesting, I think, is</p>
<p>they can measure the different isotopes of oxygen</p>
<p>and figure out a very precise thermometer</p>
<p>and tell you what the temperature was</p>
<p>the year that that bubble was trapped in the snow as it fell.</p>
<p>When I was in Antarctica, I saw cores like this.</p>
<p>And a guy looked at it. He said,</p>
<p>&quot;Right here is where the US Congress passed the Clean Air Act.&quot;</p>
<p>And I couldn't believe it.</p>
<p>But you can see the difference with the naked eye.</p>
<p>Just a couple of years after that law was passed,</p>
<p>it's very clearly distinguishable.</p>
<p>They can count back year by year</p>
<p>the same way a forester reads tree rings.</p>
<p>And you can see each annual layer from the melting and re-freezing,</p>
<p>so they can go back in a lot of these mountain glaciers 1,000 years.</p>
<p>And they constructed a thermometer of the temperature.</p>
<p>The blue is cold and the red is warm.</p>
<p>Now, I show this for a couple of reasons.</p>
<p>Number one, the so-called skeptics will sometimes say,</p>
<p>&quot;Oh, this whole thing, this is a cyclical phenomenon.</p>
<p>&quot;There was a medieval warming period, after all.&quot;</p>
<p>Well, yeah, there was. There it is, right there.</p>
<p>There are two others.</p>
<p>But compared to what's going on now,</p>
<p>there's just no comparison.</p>
<p>So if you look at 1,000 years' won'th of temperature</p>
<p>and compare it to 1,000 years of CO2,</p>
<p>you can see how closely they fit together.</p>
<p>Now, 1,000 years of CO2 in the mountain glaciers,</p>
<p>that's one thing.</p>
<p>But in Antarctica, they can go back 650,000 years.</p>
<p>This incidentally is the first time</p>
<p>anybody outside of a small group of scientists has seen this image.</p>
<p>This is the present day era,</p>
<p>and that's the last ice age.</p>
<p>Then it goes up. We're going back in time now 650,000 years.</p>
<p>That's the period of warming between the last two ice ages.</p>
<p>That's the second and third ice age back.</p>
<p>Fourth, fifth, sixth</p>
<p>and seventh ice age back.</p>
<p>Now, an important point.</p>
<p>In all of this time, 650,000 years,</p>
<p>the CO2 level has never gone above</p>
<p>300 parts per million.</p>
<p>Now, as I said, they can also measure temperature.</p>
<p>Here's what the temperature has been on our Earth.</p>
<p>Now, one thing that kind of jumps out at you is...</p>
<p>Well, let me put it this way. If my classmate from the sixth grade</p>
<p>that talked about Africa and South America were here,</p>
<p>he would say, &quot;Did they ever fit together?&quot;</p>
<p>&quot;Most ridiculous thing I've ever heard.&quot;</p>
<p>But they did, of course.</p>
<p>And the relationship is actually very complicated.</p>
<p>But there is one relationship that is far more powerful</p>
<p>than all the others and it is this.</p>
<p>When there is more carbon dioxide, the temperature gets warmer</p>
<p>because it traps more heat from the sun inside.</p>
<p>In the parts of the United States that contain the modern cities</p>
<p>of Cleveland, Detroit, New York, in the northern tier,</p>
<p>this is the difference between a nice day</p>
<p>and having a mile of ice over your head.</p>
<p>Keep that in mind when you look at this fact.</p>
<p>Carbon dioxide,</p>
<p>having never gone above 300 parts per million,</p>
<p>here is where CO2 is now.</p>
<p>Way above where it's ever been as far back as this record will measure.</p>
<p>Now, if you'll bear with me, I wanna really emphasize this point.</p>
<p>The crew here</p>
<p>has tried to teach me how to use this contraption here.</p>
<p>So, if I don't kill myself, I'II...</p>
<p>It's already right here.</p>
<p>Look how far above the natural cycle this is,</p>
<p>and we've done that.</p>
<p>But, ladies and gentlemen, in the next 50 years,</p>
<p>really, in less than 50 years,</p>
<p>it's gonna continue to go up.</p>
<p>When some of these children who are here are my age,</p>
<p>here is what it's going to be in less than 50 years.</p>
<p>You've heard of off the charts.</p>
<p>Within less than 50 years, it'll be here.</p>
<p>There's not a single fact or date or number</p>
<p>that's been used to make this up that's in any controversy.</p>
<p>The so-called skeptics look at this and they say,</p>
<p>&quot;So? That seems perfectly okay.&quot;</p>
<p>Well,</p>
<p>again, if on the temperature side,</p>
<p>if this much on the cold side is a mile of ice over our heads,</p>
<p>what would that much on the warm side be?</p>
<p>Ultimately this is really not a political issue</p>
<p>so much as a moral issue.</p>
<p>If we allow that to happen,</p>
<p>it is deeply unethical.</p>
<p>I had such faith in our democratic system,our self-government.</p>
<p>I actually thought and believed</p>
<p>that the story would be compelling enough to cause a real sea change</p>
<p>in the way the Congress reacted to that issue.</p>
<p>I thought they would be startled, too.</p>
<p>And they werert.</p>
<p>The struggles,</p>
<p>the victories that aren't really victories, the defeats that aren't really defeats.</p>
<p>They can serve to magnify the significance</p>
<p>of some trivial step forward,</p>
<p>exaggerate the seeming importance of some massive setback.</p>
<p>April 3, 1989.</p>
<p>My son pulled loose from my hand</p>
<p>and chased his friend across the street.</p>
<p>He was six years old.</p>
<p>The machine was breathing for him.</p>
<p>We were possibly going to lose him.</p>
<p>He finally took a breath.</p>
<p>We stayed in the hospital for a month.</p>
<p>It was almost as if</p>
<p>you could look at that calendar and just go...</p>
<p>And everything just flew off.</p>
<p>Seemed trivial, insignificant.</p>
<p>He was so brave. He was such...</p>
<p>He was such a brave guy.</p>
<p>It just turned my whole world upside down</p>
<p>and then shook it until everything fell out.</p>
<p>My way of being in the world, it just changed everything for me.</p>
<p>How should I spend my time on this Earth?</p>
<p>I really dug in,</p>
<p>trying to learn about it much more deeply.</p>
<p>I went to Antarctica.</p>
<p>Went to the South Pole, the North Pole, the Amazon.</p>
<p>Went to places where scientists could help me understand</p>
<p>parts of the issue that I didn't really understand in depth.</p>
<p>The possibility of losing what was most precious to me.</p>
<p>I gained an ability</p>
<p>that maybe I didn't have before.</p>
<p>But when I felt it,</p>
<p>I felt that we could really lose it,</p>
<p>that what we take for granted might not be here for our children.</p>
<p>These are actual measurements of atmospheric temperatures since our Civil War.</p>
<p>In any given year, it might look like it's going down,</p>
<p>but the overall trend is extremely clear.</p>
<p>And in recent years,</p>
<p>it's uninterrupted and it is intensifying.</p>
<p>In fact, if you look at the 10 hottest years ever measured in this atmospheric record,</p>
<p>they've all occurred in the last 14 years.</p>
<p>And the hottest of all was 2005.</p>
<p>We have already seen some of the heat waves</p>
<p>that are similar to what scientists are saying</p>
<p>are gonna be a lot more common.</p>
<p>Couple of years ago in Europe they had that massive heat wave</p>
<p>that killed 35,000 people.</p>
<p>India didn't get as much attention,</p>
<p>but the same year the temperature there went to 122 degrees Fahreneit.</p>
<p>This past summer in the American West,</p>
<p>there were a lot of cities that broke all-time records for high temperatures</p>
<p>and number of consecutive days with a 100-degree temperature or more.</p>
<p>Two hundred cities and towns in the west set all-time records.</p>
<p>And in the east there were a lot of cities that did the same thing.</p>
<p>Including, incidentally, New Orleans.</p>
<p>So the temperature increases are taking place all over the world,</p>
<p>including in the oceans.</p>
<p>This is the natural range of variability for temperature in the oceans.</p>
<p>You know, people say, &quot;Oh, it's just natural.</p>
<p>&quot;It goes up and down, so don't worry about it.&quot;</p>
<p>This is the range that would be expected over the last 60 years,</p>
<p>but the scientists who specialize in global warming have computer models</p>
<p>that long ago predicted this range of temperature increase.</p>
<p>Now I'm gonna show you, recently released,</p>
<p>the actual ocean temperatures.</p>
<p>And, of course, when the oceans get warmer, that causes stronger storms.</p>
<p>We have seen in the last couple of years</p>
<p>a lot of big hurricanes.</p>
<p>Hurricane Jeanne and Frances and Ivan were among them.</p>
<p>And the same year that we had that string of big hurricanes,</p>
<p>we also set an all-time record for tornadoes in the United States.</p>
<p>Japan again didn't get as much attention in our news media,</p>
<p>but they set an all-time record for typhoons.</p>
<p>Previous record was seven.</p>
<p>Here are all 10 of the ones they had in 2004.</p>
<p>The science textbooks have had to be rewritten</p>
<p>because they say that it's impossible to have a hurricane in the South Atlantic.</p>
<p>But the same year the first one ever hit Brazil.</p>
<p>Summer of 2005 has been one for the books.</p>
<p>The first one was Emily that socked into Yucatan.</p>
<p>Then Hurricane Dennis came along and it did a lot of damage,</p>
<p>including to the oil industry.</p>
<p>This is the largest oil platform in the world after Dennis went through.</p>
<p>This one was driven into the bridge at Mobile.</p>
<p>And then, of course, came Katrina.</p>
<p>It's won'th remembering that when it hit Florida, it was a Category One.</p>
<p>But it killed a lot of people and caused billions of dollars' won'th of damage.</p>
<p>And then what happened?</p>
<p>Before it hit New Orleans,</p>
<p>it went over warmer waters.</p>
<p>As the water temperature increases,</p>
<p>the wind velocity increases</p>
<p>and the moisture content increases.</p>
<p>And you'll see Hurricane Katrina form over Florida.</p>
<p>And then as it comes into the gulf over that warm water,</p>
<p>it picks up that energy and gets stronger and stronger and stronger.</p>
<p>Look at that hurricane's eye.</p>
<p>And, of course, the consequences were so horrendous,</p>
<p>there are no words to describe it.</p>
<p>Yeah, we're getting reports and calls that are just breaking my heart.</p>
<p>From people saying, &quot;I've been in my attic. I can't take it anymore.</p>
<p>&quot;The water is up to my neck. I don't think I can hold out.&quot;</p>
<p>And that's happening as we speak.</p>
<p>We told everybody the importance of the 17th Street Canal issue.</p>
<p>We said, &quot;Please, please, take care of this.</p>
<p>&quot;We don't care what you do. Figure it out.&quot;</p>
<p>Something new for America.</p>
<p>But how in God's name could that happen here?</p>
<p>There had been warnings that hurricanes would get stronger.</p>
<p>There were warnings that this hurricane,</p>
<p>days before it hit, would breach the levees,</p>
<p>would cause the kind of damage that it ultimately did cause.</p>
<p>And one question we as a people need to decide</p>
<p>is how we react when we hear warnings</p>
<p>from the leading scientists in the world.</p>
<p>There was another storm in the 1930s of a different kind.</p>
<p>A horrible, unprecedented storm in continental Europe,</p>
<p>and Winston Churchill warned the people of England</p>
<p>that it was different from anything that had ever happened before</p>
<p>and they had to get ready for it.</p>
<p>And a lot of people did not want to believe it.</p>
<p>And he got real impatient with all the dithering.</p>
<p>And he said this,</p>
<p>The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays is coming to its close</p>
<p>in its palce we are entering a period of consequences</p>
<p>Making mistakes in generations and centuries past</p>
<p>would have consequences that we could overcome.</p>
<p>We don't have that luxury anymore.</p>
<p>We didn't ask for it, but here it is.</p>
<p>Al Gore is the winner of the national popular vote.</p>
<p>But the state of Florida, whomever wins there wins the White House.</p>
<p>We call Florida, in the Al Gore column...</p>
<p>Bulletin: Florida pulled back into the undecided column.</p>
<p>George Bush is the president elect of the United States. He is...</p>
<p>Florida goes Bush. The presidency is Bush. That's it.</p>
<p>And at 2:18 this morning, we project...</p>
<p>All right, we're officially saying that Florida is too close to call.</p>
<p>While I strongly disagree with the court's decision,</p>
<p>I accept it.</p>
<p>I accept the finality of this outcome.</p>
<p>...do solemnly swear...</p>
<p>I, George Walker Bush, do solemnly swear...</p>
<p>...that I will faithfully execute the Office of President...</p>
<p>Well, that was a hard blow, but...</p>
<p>What do you do? You...</p>
<p>You make the best of it.</p>
<p>It brought into clear focus</p>
<p>the mission that I had been pursuing</p>
<p>for all these years, and</p>
<p>I started giving the slide show again.</p>
<p>One often unnoticed effect of global warming</p>
<p>is it causes more precipitation,</p>
<p>but more of it coming in one-time big storm events.</p>
<p>Because the evaporation off the oceans puts all the moisture up there,</p>
<p>when storm conditions trigger the downpour, more of it falls down.</p>
<p>The insurance industry has actually noticed this.</p>
<p>Their recovered losses are going up.</p>
<p>You see the damage from these severe weather events?</p>
<p>And 2005 is not even on this yet.</p>
<p>When it does, it'll be off that chart.</p>
<p>Europe has just had a year very similar to the one we've had</p>
<p>where they say nature's been going crazy.</p>
<p>All kinds of unusual catastrophes,</p>
<p>like a nature hike through the Book of Revelations.</p>
<p>Flooding in Asia.</p>
<p>Mumbai, India this past July.</p>
<p>Thirty-seven inches of rain in 24 hours.</p>
<p>By far, the largest downpour</p>
<p>that any city in India has ever received.</p>
<p>Lot of flooding in China, also.</p>
<p>Global warming, paradoxically, causes not only more flooding,</p>
<p>but also more drought.</p>
<p>This neighboring province right next door</p>
<p>had a severe drought at the same time these areas were flooding.</p>
<p>One of the reasons for this has to do with the fact</p>
<p>that global warming not only increases precipitation worldwide,</p>
<p>but it also relocates the precipitation.</p>
<p>And focus most of all on this part of Africa</p>
<p>just on the edge of the Sahara.</p>
<p>Unbelievable tragedies have been unfolding there,</p>
<p>and there are a lot of reasons for it.</p>
<p>But Darfur and Niger are among those tragedies.</p>
<p>And one of the factors that has been compounding them</p>
<p>is the lack of rainfall and the increasing drought.</p>
<p>This is Lake Chad, once one of the largest lakes in the world.</p>
<p>It has dried up over the last few decades to almost nothing,</p>
<p>vastly complicating the other problems that they also have.</p>
<p>The second reason</p>
<p>why this is a paradox.</p>
<p>Global warming creates more evaporation off the oceans</p>
<p>to seed the clouds,</p>
<p>but it sucks moisture out of the soil.</p>
<p>Soil evaporation increases dramatically</p>
<p>with higher temperatures.</p>
<p>And that has consequences for us in the United States, as well.</p>
<p>So this is the Carthage exit.</p>
<p>When I was 14 years old, I totaled the family car</p>
<p>right there.</p>
<p>Went off that shoulder, turned it over.</p>
<p>And see this Black Angus bull?</p>
<p>We raised Black Angus.</p>
<p>My father was named Breeder of the Month.</p>
<p>He grew up on a farm.</p>
<p>All through his career in the Senate</p>
<p>he continued to come back here and raise cattle.</p>
<p>Learning it from your dad on the land,</p>
<p>that's really something special.</p>
<p>My childhood upbringing was a little unusual in the sense that</p>
<p>I spent eight months of each year in Washington DC</p>
<p>in a small little hotel apartment.</p>
<p>And then the other four months were spent here on this big, beautiful farm.</p>
<p>I had a dog here.</p>
<p>I had a pony here.</p>
<p>I could shoot my rifle here.</p>
<p>I could go swimming in the river here.</p>
<p>Go out and lay down in the grass.</p>
<p>As a kid, it took me a while</p>
<p>to learn the difference between fun and work.</p>
<p>The places where people live were chosen because of the climate pattern</p>
<p>that has been pretty much the same on Earth</p>
<p>since the end of the last ice age 11,000 years ago.</p>
<p>Here, on this farm, the patterns are changing.</p>
<p>And it seems gradual in the course of a human lifetime</p>
<p>but in the course of time, as defined by this river,</p>
<p>it's happening very, very quickly.</p>
<p>Two canaries in the coal mine.</p>
<p>First one is in the Arctic.</p>
<p>This, of course, is the Arctic Ocean, the floating ice cap.</p>
<p>Greenland, on its side there.</p>
<p>I say canary in the coal mine</p>
<p>because the Arctic is one of the two regions of the world</p>
<p>that is experiencing faster impacts from global warming.</p>
<p>This is the largest ice shelf in the Arctic,</p>
<p>the Ward Hunt Ice Shelf.</p>
<p>It just cracked in half three years ago.</p>
<p>The scientists were astonished.</p>
<p>These are called drunken trees just going every which way.</p>
<p>This is not caused by wind damage or alcohol consumption.</p>
<p>These trees put their roots down in the permafrost,</p>
<p>and the permafrost is thawing.</p>
<p>And so they just go every which way now.</p>
<p>This building was built on the permafrost</p>
<p>and has collapsed as the permafrost thaws.</p>
<p>This womars house has had to be abandoned.</p>
<p>The pipeline is suffering a great deal of structural damage.</p>
<p>And incidentally, the oil that they want to produce in that protected area</p>
<p>in Northern Alaska, which I hope they don't,</p>
<p>they have to depend on trucks to go in and out of there.</p>
<p>And the trucks go over the frozen ground.</p>
<p>This shows the number of days that the tundra in Alaska is</p>
<p>frozen enough to drive on it.</p>
<p>Thirty-five years ago, 225 days a year.</p>
<p>Now it's below 75 days a year</p>
<p>because the spring comes earlier and the fall comes later</p>
<p>and the temperatures just keep on going up.</p>
<p>I went up to the North Pole.</p>
<p>I went under that ice cap in a nuclear submarine</p>
<p>that surfaced through the ice like this.</p>
<p>Since they started patrolling in 1957,</p>
<p>they have gone under the ice</p>
<p>and measured with their radar looking upwards</p>
<p>to measure how thick it is</p>
<p>because they can only surface in areas</p>
<p>where it's three and a half feet thick or less.</p>
<p>So they have kept a meticulous record</p>
<p>and they wouldn't release it because it was national security.</p>
<p>I went up there in order to persuade them to release it, and they did.</p>
<p>And here's what that record shows.</p>
<p>Starting in 1970, there was a precipitous drop-off</p>
<p>in the amount and extent and thickness of the Arctic ice cap.</p>
<p>It has diminished by 40% in 40 years.</p>
<p>And there are now two major studies showing</p>
<p>that within the next 50 to 70 years,</p>
<p>in summertime it will be completely gone.</p>
<p>Now, you might say, &quot;Why is that a problem?&quot;</p>
<p>And &quot;How could the Arctic ice cap actually melt so quickly?&quot;</p>
<p>When the surs rays hit the ice,</p>
<p>more than 90% of it bounces off right back into space like a mirror.</p>
<p>But when it hits the open ocean, more than 90% of it is absorbed.</p>
<p>And so, as the surrounding water gets warmer,</p>
<p>it speeds up the melting of the ice.</p>
<p>Right now, the Arctic ice cap acts like a giant mirror.</p>
<p>All the surs rays bounce off, more than 90%.</p>
<p>It keeps the Earth cooler.</p>
<p>But as it melts</p>
<p>and the open ocean receives that surs energy instead,</p>
<p>more than 90% is absorbed.</p>
<p>So there is a faster buildup of heat here,</p>
<p>at the North Pole, in the Arctic Ocean,</p>
<p>and the Arctic generally than anywhere else on the planet.</p>
<p>That's not good for creatures like polar bears who depend on the ice.</p>
<p>A new scientific study shows that</p>
<p>for the first time they're finding polar bears that have actually drowned,</p>
<p>swimming long distances, up to 60 miles, to find the ice.</p>
<p>And they didn't find that before.</p>
<p>But what does it mean to us?</p>
<p>To look at a vast expanse of open water</p>
<p>at the top of our world that used to be covered by ice.</p>
<p>We ought to care a lot</p>
<p>because it has planetary effects.</p>
<p>The Earth's climate is like a big engine for redistributing heat</p>
<p>from the equator to the poles.</p>
<p>And it does that by means of ocean currents and wind currents.</p>
<p>They tell us, the scientists do, that the Earth's climate is a nonlinear system.</p>
<p>Just a fancy way they have of saying</p>
<p>that the changes are not all just gradual.</p>
<p>Some of them come suddenly, in big jumps.</p>
<p>On a worldwide basis, the annual average temperature is</p>
<p>about 58 degrees Fahreneit.</p>
<p>If we have an increase of five degrees,</p>
<p>which is on the low end of the projections,</p>
<p>look at how that translates globally.</p>
<p>That means an increase of only one degree at the equator,</p>
<p>but more than 12 degrees at the pole.</p>
<p>And so all those wind and ocean current patterns</p>
<p>that have formed since the last ice age and have been relatively stable,</p>
<p>they're all up in the air and they change.</p>
<p>And one of the ones they're most worried about,</p>
<p>where they've spent a lot of time studying the problem,</p>
<p>is in the North Atlantic</p>
<p>where the Gulf Stream comes up and meets the cold winds</p>
<p>coming off the Arctic over Greenland.</p>
<p>And that evaporates so that the heat out of the Gulf Stream</p>
<p>and the steam is carried over to Western Europe</p>
<p>by the prevailing winds and the Earth's rotation.</p>
<p>But isn't it interesting that the whole ocean current system</p>
<p>is all linked together in this loop?</p>
<p>They call it the ocean conveyor.</p>
<p>And the red are the warm surface currents.</p>
<p>The Gulf Stream is the best known of them.</p>
<p>But the blue represent the cold currents</p>
<p>running in the opposite direction,</p>
<p>and we don't see them at all because they run along the bottom of the ocean.</p>
<p>Up in the North Atlantic, after that heat is pulled out,</p>
<p>what's left behind is colder water and saltier water</p>
<p>because the salt doesn't go anywhere.</p>
<p>And so that makes it denser and heavier.</p>
<p>And so that cold, dense, heavy water sinks</p>
<p>at the rate of five billion gallons per second.</p>
<p>And then that pulls that current back south.</p>
<p>At the end of the last ice age,</p>
<p>as the last glacier was receding from North America,</p>
<p>the ice melted and a giant pool of fresh water formed in North America.</p>
<p>And the Great Lakes are the remnants of that huge lake.</p>
<p>An ice dam on the eastern border formed and one day it broke.</p>
<p>And all that fresh water came rushing out,</p>
<p>ripping open the St. Lawrence there,</p>
<p>and it diluted the salty, dense, cold water,</p>
<p>made it fresher and lighter, so it stopped sinking.</p>
<p>And that pump shut off.</p>
<p>And the heat transfer stopped.</p>
<p>And Europe went back into an ice age for another 900 to 1,000 years.</p>
<p>And the change from conditions like we have here today</p>
<p>to an ice age</p>
<p>took place in perhaps as little as 10 years' time.</p>
<p>So that's a sudden jump.</p>
<p>Now, of course that's not gonna happen again</p>
<p>because the glaciers of North America are not there, and...</p>
<p>Is there any other big chunk of ice anywhere near there?</p>
<p>Oh, yeah.</p>
<p>We'll come back to that one.</p>
<p>It's extremely frustrating to me</p>
<p>to communicate over and over again, as clearly as I can.</p>
<p>And we are still, by far, the worst contributor to the problem.</p>
<p>And I look around</p>
<p>and look for really meaningful signs</p>
<p>that we're about to really change.</p>
<p>I don't see it right now.</p>
<p>A number of very reputable scientists have said that one factor of air pollution</p>
<p>is oxides of nitrogen from decaying vegetation.</p>
<p>This is what causes the haze that gave the big Smoky Mountains their name.</p>
<p>Thank you very much, okay.</p>
<p>This guy is so far off in the environmental extreme,</p>
<p>we'll be up to our neck in owls and out of work for every American.</p>
<p>This guy is crazy.</p>
<p>Even if humans were causing global warming, and we are not,</p>
<p>this could be maybe the greatest hoax ever perpetrated</p>
<p>on the American people.</p>
<p>We're dealing with something that's highly emotional.</p>
<p>If an issue is not</p>
<p>on the tips of their constituents' tongues,</p>
<p>it's easy for them to ignore it.</p>
<p>To say, &quot;Well, we'll deal with that tomorrow.&quot;</p>
<p>So the same phenomena of changing all these patterns</p>
<p>is also affecting the seasons.</p>
<p>Here is a study from the Netherlands.</p>
<p>The peak arrival date for migratory birds</p>
<p>25 years ago was April 25th,</p>
<p>and their chicks hatched on June the 3rd.</p>
<p>Just at the time when the caterpillars were coming out.</p>
<p>Nature's plan.</p>
<p>But 20 years of warming later,</p>
<p>the caterpillars peaked two weeks earlier,</p>
<p>and the chicks tried to catch up with it, but they couldn't.</p>
<p>And so, they're in trouble.</p>
<p>And there are millions of ecological niches</p>
<p>that are affected by global warming in just this way.</p>
<p>This is the number of days with frost in Southern Switzerland over the last 100 years.</p>
<p>It has gone down rapidly. But now watch this.</p>
<p>This is the number of invasive exotic species</p>
<p>that have rushed in to fill the new ecological niches that are opening up.</p>
<p>That's happening here in the United States, too.</p>
<p>You've heard of the pine beetle problem?</p>
<p>Those pine beetles used to be killed by the cold winters,</p>
<p>but there are fewer days of frost,</p>
<p>and so the pine trees are being devastated.</p>
<p>This is part of 14 million acres of spruce trees in Alaska</p>
<p>that have been killed by bark beetles. The exact same phenomenon.</p>
<p>There are cities that were founded</p>
<p>because they were just above the mosquito line.</p>
<p>Nairobi is one, Harare is another. There are plenty of others.</p>
<p>Now the mosquitoes, with warming, are climbing to higher altitudes.</p>
<p>There are a lot of vectors for infectious diseases that are worrisome to us</p>
<p>that are also expanding their range.</p>
<p>Not only mosquitoes, but all of these others as well.</p>
<p>And we've had 30 so-called new diseases</p>
<p>that have emerged just in the last quarter century.</p>
<p>And a lot of them, like SARS, have caused tremendous problems.</p>
<p>The resistant forms of tuberculosis. There are others.</p>
<p>And there's been a re-emergence of some diseases</p>
<p>that were once under control.</p>
<p>The avian flu, of course, quite a serious matter, as you know.</p>
<p>West Nile Virus.</p>
<p>It came to the eastern shore of Maryland in 1999.</p>
<p>Two years later, it was across the Mississippi.</p>
<p>And two years after that, it had spread across the continent.</p>
<p>But these are very troubling signs.</p>
<p>Coral reefs all over the world,</p>
<p>because of global warming and other factors,</p>
<p>are bleaching and they end up like this.</p>
<p>And all the fish species that depend on the coral reefs</p>
<p>are also in jeopardy as a result.</p>
<p>Overall, species loss is now occurring</p>
<p>at a rate 1,000 times greater than the natural background rate.</p>
<p>This brings me to the second canary in the coal mine.</p>
<p>Antarctica.</p>
<p>The largest mass of ice on the planet by far.</p>
<p>A friend of mine said in 1978,</p>
<p>&quot;If you see the breakup of ice shelves along the Antarctic peninsula,</p>
<p>&quot;watch out</p>
<p>&quot;because that should be seen as an alarm bell for global warming.&quot;</p>
<p>And actually, if you look at the peninsula up close,</p>
<p>every place where you see one of these green blotches here</p>
<p>is an ice shelf larger than the state of Rhode Island</p>
<p>that has broken up just in the last 15 to 20 years.</p>
<p>I want to focus on just one of them.</p>
<p>It's called Larsen B.</p>
<p>I want you to look at these black pools here.</p>
<p>It makes it seem almost as if we're looking through the ice</p>
<p>to the ocean beneath. But that's an illusion.</p>
<p>This is melting water that forms in pools,</p>
<p>and if you were flying over it in a helicopter,</p>
<p>you'd see it's 700 feet tall.</p>
<p>They are so majestic, so massive.</p>
<p>In the distance are the mountains and just before the mountains</p>
<p>is the shelf of the continent, there.</p>
<p>This is floating ice,</p>
<p>and there's land-based ice on the down slope of those mountains.</p>
<p>From here to the mountains is about 20 to 25 miles.</p>
<p>Now they thought this would be stable for at least 100 years,</p>
<p>even with global warming.</p>
<p>The scientists who study these ice shelves</p>
<p>were absolutely astonished</p>
<p>when they were looking at these images.</p>
<p>Starting on January 31, 2002</p>
<p>in a period of 35 days</p>
<p>this ice shelf completely disappeared.</p>
<p>They could not figure out how in the world this happened so rapidly.</p>
<p>And they went back to try to figure out where they'd gone wrong.</p>
<p>And that's when they focused on those pools of melting water.</p>
<p>But even before they could figure out what had happened there,</p>
<p>something else started going wrong.</p>
<p>When the floating sea-based ice cracked up,</p>
<p>it no longer held back the ice on the land,</p>
<p>and the land-based ice then started falling into the ocean.</p>
<p>It was like letting the cork out of a bottle.</p>
<p>And there's a difference between floating ice and land-based ice.</p>
<p>That's like the difference between an ice cube floating in a glass of water,</p>
<p>which when it melts doesn't raise the level of water in the glass,</p>
<p>and a cube that's sitting atop a stack of ice cubes</p>
<p>which melts and flows over the edge.</p>
<p>That's why the citizens of these Pacific nations</p>
<p>have all had to evacuate to New Zealand.</p>
<p>But I want to focus on West Antarctica</p>
<p>because it illustrates two factors about land-based ice and sea-based ice.</p>
<p>It's a little of both. It's propped up on tops of islands,</p>
<p>but the ocean comes up underneath it.</p>
<p>So as the ocean gets warmer, it has an impact on it.</p>
<p>If this were to go,</p>
<p>sea level worldwide would go up 20 feet.</p>
<p>They've measured disturbing changes on the underside of this ice sheet.</p>
<p>It's considered relatively more stable, however,</p>
<p>than another big body of ice that's roughly the same size.</p>
<p>Greenland would also raise sea level almost 20 feet if it went.</p>
<p>A friend of mine just brought back some pictures</p>
<p>of what's going on on Greenland right now.</p>
<p>Dramatic changes. These are the same kinds of pools</p>
<p>that formed here, on this ice shelf in Antarctica.</p>
<p>And the scientists thought</p>
<p>that when that water seeped back into the ice, it would just refreeze.</p>
<p>But they found out that actually what happens</p>
<p>is that it just keeps on going. It tunnels to the bottom</p>
<p>and makes the ice like Swiss cheese,</p>
<p>sort of like termites.</p>
<p>This shows what happens to the crevasses,</p>
<p>and when lakes form, they create what are called moulins.</p>
<p>The water goes down to the bottom</p>
<p>and it lubricates where the ice meets the bedrock.</p>
<p>See these people here for scale.</p>
<p>This is not on the edge of Greenland, this is in the middle of the ice mass.</p>
<p>This is a massive rushing torrent of fresh melt water</p>
<p>tunneling straight down through the Greenland ice</p>
<p>to the bedrock below.</p>
<p>Now, to some extent, there has always been seasonal melting</p>
<p>and moulins have formed in the past, but not like now.</p>
<p>In 1992, they measured this amount of melting in Greenland.</p>
<p>Ten years later, this is what happened.</p>
<p>And here is the melting from 2005.</p>
<p>Tony Blair's scientific advisor has said that</p>
<p>because of what's happening in Greenland right now,</p>
<p>the maps of the world will have to be redrawn.</p>
<p>If Greenland broke up and melted,</p>
<p>or if half of Greenland and half of West Antarctica</p>
<p>broke up and melted,</p>
<p>this is what would happen to the sea level in Florida.</p>
<p>This is what would happen to San Francisco Bay.</p>
<p>A lot of people live in these areas.</p>
<p>The Netherlands, one of the low countries.</p>
<p>Absolutely devastating.</p>
<p>The area around Beijing that's home to tens of millions of people.</p>
<p>Even worse, in the area around Shanghai,</p>
<p>there are 40 million people.</p>
<p>Worse still, Calcutta, and to the east, Bangladesh,</p>
<p>the area covered includes 60 million people.</p>
<p>Think of the impact of a couple hundred thousand refugees</p>
<p>when they're displaced by an environmental event.</p>
<p>And then imagine the impact of a hundred million or more.</p>
<p>Here's Manattan.</p>
<p>This is the World Trade Center memorial site.</p>
<p>And after the horrible events of 9/11,</p>
<p>we said, &quot;Never again.&quot;</p>
<p>But this is what would happen to Manattan.</p>
<p>They can measure this precisely,</p>
<p>just as the scientists could predict precisely</p>
<p>how much water would breach the levees in New Orleans.</p>
<p>The area where the World Trade Center Memorial is to be located</p>
<p>would be underwater.</p>
<p>Is it possible that we should prepare against other threats besides terrorists?</p>
<p>Maybe we should be concerned about other problems as well.</p>
<p>1.3 billion people.</p>
<p>An economy that's surging.</p>
<p>More and more energy needs.</p>
<p>Massive coal reserves.</p>
<p>The coal belt in Northern China,</p>
<p>- Inner Mongolia. - Right.</p>
<p>Then there's Shaanxi province.</p>
<p>- And also biggest coal mine here. - Up here.</p>
<p>- Yeah. - Now, is that an open pit mine?</p>
<p>- Yes. - Yes.</p>
<p>Every time I've visited China,</p>
<p>I've learned from their scientists. They're right on the cutting edge.</p>
<p>Give me some sense of the numbers of</p>
<p>new coal fire generating plants.</p>
<p>Well, I have to say that the number is enormous</p>
<p>because it's so profitable.</p>
<p>This issue is really the same for China as it is for the US.</p>
<p>We are both using old technologies that are dirty and polluting.</p>
<p>...more flooding and more drought</p>
<p>and stronger storms is going up,</p>
<p>and global warming is implicated in the pattern.</p>
<p>And if you were to give some suggestions to everybody here</p>
<p>about, like, what we can do for the situation now.</p>
<p>Separating the truth from the fiction</p>
<p>and the accurate connections from the misunderstandings</p>
<p>is part of what you learn here.</p>
<p>But when the warnings are accurate and based on sound science,</p>
<p>then we as human beings, whatever country we live in,</p>
<p>have to find a way to make sure</p>
<p>that the warnings are heard and responded to.</p>
<p>We both have a hard time shaking loose the familiar patterns</p>
<p>that we've relied on in the past.</p>
<p>We both face completely unacceptable consequences.</p>
<p>And there are three factors that are causing this collision,</p>
<p>and the first is population.</p>
<p>When my generation, the baby boom generation, was born after World War II,</p>
<p>the population had just crossed the two billion mark.</p>
<p>Now, I'm in my 50s,</p>
<p>and it's already gone to almost six and a half billion.</p>
<p>And if I reach the demographic expectation for the baby boomers,</p>
<p>it'll go over nine billion.</p>
<p>So if it takes 10,000 generations to reach two billion</p>
<p>and then in one human lifetime, ours,</p>
<p>it goes from two billion to nine billion,</p>
<p>something profoundly different's going on right now.</p>
<p>We're putting more pressure on the Earth.</p>
<p>Most of it's in the poorer nations of the world.</p>
<p>This puts pressure on food demand.</p>
<p>It puts pressure on water demand.</p>
<p>It puts pressure on vulnerable natural resources,</p>
<p>and this pressure's one of the reasons</p>
<p>why we have seen all the devastation of the forest,</p>
<p>not only tropical, but elsewhere.</p>
<p>It is a political issue.</p>
<p>This is the border between Haiti and the Dominican Republic.</p>
<p>One set of policies here, another set of policies here.</p>
<p>Much of it comes not only because of cutting, but also burning.</p>
<p>Almost 30% of all the CO2 that goes up each year into the atmosphere</p>
<p>comes from forest burning.</p>
<p>This is a time-lapse picture of the Earth at night over a six-month period</p>
<p>showing the lights of the cities in white</p>
<p>and the burning forests and brush fires in red.</p>
<p>The yellow areas are the gas flares, like these in Siberia.</p>
<p>And that brings me to the second factor</p>
<p>that has transformed our relationship to the Earth.</p>
<p>The scientific and technological revolution is a great blessing</p>
<p>in that it has given us tremendous benefits</p>
<p>in areas like medicine and communications.</p>
<p>But this new power that we have also brings a responsibility</p>
<p>to think about its consequences.</p>
<p>Here's a formula to think about.</p>
<p>Old habits plus old technology have predictable consequences.</p>
<p>Old habits that are hard to change plus new technology</p>
<p>can have dramatically altered consequences.</p>
<p>Warfare with spears and bows and arrows</p>
<p>and rifles and machine guns, that's one thing.</p>
<p>But then a new technology came.</p>
<p>We have to think differently about war</p>
<p>because the new technologies so completely transformed</p>
<p>the consequences of that old habit</p>
<p>that we can't just mindlessly continue the patterns of the past.</p>
<p>In the same way, we have always exploited the Earth for sustenance.</p>
<p>For most of our existence, we used relatively simple tools.</p>
<p>The plow, the tractor.</p>
<p>But even tools like shovels are different now.</p>
<p>Shovel used to be this.</p>
<p>Shovels have gotten bigger.</p>
<p>And every year, they get more powerful.</p>
<p>So our ability to have an effect, in this case on the surface of the Earth,</p>
<p>is utterly transformed.</p>
<p>You can say the same thing about irrigation, which is a great thing.</p>
<p>But when we divert rivers without considering the consequences,</p>
<p>then sometimes rivers no longer reach the sea.</p>
<p>There were two rivers in Central Asia</p>
<p>that were used by the former Soviet Union</p>
<p>for irrigating cotton fields unwisely.</p>
<p>The Aral Sea was fed by them.</p>
<p>It used to be the fourth largest inland sea in the world.</p>
<p>When I went there, I saw this strange sight</p>
<p>of an enormous fishing fleet resting in the sand.</p>
<p>This is the canal that the fishing industry desperately tried to build</p>
<p>to get to the receding shoreline.</p>
<p>Making mistakes in our dealings with nature can have</p>
<p>bigger consequences now</p>
<p>because our technologies are often bigger than the human scale.</p>
<p>When you put them all together, they've made us a force of nature.</p>
<p>And this is also a political issue.</p>
<p>This is a computer map of the world</p>
<p>that distorts to show the relative contributions to global warming.</p>
<p>In our country, we are responsible for more than all of South America,</p>
<p>all of Africa, all of the Middle East,</p>
<p>all of Asia, all combined.</p>
<p>The per capita average in Africa, India, China, Japan, EU, Russia.</p>
<p>There's where we are. Way, way above everyone else.</p>
<p>If you take population into account, it's a little bit different.</p>
<p>China's playing a bigger role, so is Europe.</p>
<p>But we are still by all odds the largest contributor.</p>
<p>And so it is up to us to look at how we think about it,</p>
<p>because our way of thinking is the third and final factor</p>
<p>that transforms our relationship to the Earth.</p>
<p>If a frog jumps into a pot of boiling water,</p>
<p>it jumps right out again because it senses the danger.</p>
<p>But the very same frog,</p>
<p>if it jumps into a pot of lukewarm water</p>
<p>that is slowly brought to a boil,</p>
<p>will just sit there and it won't move.</p>
<p>It'll just sit there, even as the temperature continues to go up and up.</p>
<p>It'll stay there, until... Until it's rescued.</p>
<p>It's important to rescue the frog.</p>
<p>But the point is this.</p>
<p>Our collective nervous system is like that frog's nervous system.</p>
<p>It takes a sudden jolt sometimes before we become aware of a danger.</p>
<p>If it seems gradual, even if it really is happening quickly,</p>
<p>we're capable of just sitting there and not responding.</p>
<p>And not reacting.</p>
<p>I don't remember a time when I was a kid</p>
<p>when summertime didn't mean working with tobacco.</p>
<p>It was just... I used to love it. It was during that period</p>
<p>when working with the guys on the farm</p>
<p>seemed like fun to me.</p>
<p>Starting in 1964, with the Surgeon General's report,</p>
<p>the evidence was laid out on the connection</p>
<p>between smoking cigarettes and lung cancer.</p>
<p>We kept growing tobacco.</p>
<p>Nancy was almost 10 years older than me,</p>
<p>and there were only the two of us.</p>
<p>She was my protector</p>
<p>and my friend at the same time.</p>
<p>She started smoking when she was a teenager</p>
<p>and never stopped.</p>
<p>She died of lung cancer.</p>
<p>That's one of the ways you don't want to die.</p>
<p>The idea that we had been</p>
<p>part of that economic pattern</p>
<p>that produced the cigarettes,</p>
<p>that produced the cancer,</p>
<p>it was so...</p>
<p>It was so painful on so many levels.</p>
<p>My father, he had grown tobacco all his life. He stopped.</p>
<p>Whatever explanation</p>
<p>had seemed to make sense in the past, just didn't cut it anymore.</p>
<p>He stopped it.</p>
<p>It's just human nature to take time to connect the dots. I know that.</p>
<p>But I also know that there can be a day of reckoning</p>
<p>when you wish you had connected the dots more quickly.</p>
<p>There are three misconceptions in particular that bedevil our thinking.</p>
<p>First, isn't there a disagreement among scientists</p>
<p>about whether the problem is real or not?</p>
<p>Actually, not really.</p>
<p>There was a massive study of every scientific article</p>
<p>in a peer-reviewed journal written on global warming for the last 10 years.</p>
<p>And they took a big sample of 10%, 928 articles.</p>
<p>And you know the number of those that disagreed with the scientific consensus</p>
<p>that we're causing global warming and that it's a serious problem?</p>
<p>Out of the 928, zero.</p>
<p>The misconception that there's disagreement about the science</p>
<p>has been deliberately created by a relatively small group of people.</p>
<p>One of their internal memos leaked.</p>
<p>And here's what it said, according to the press.</p>
<p>Their objective is to reposition global warming</p>
<p>as theory rather than fact.</p>
<p>This has happened before.</p>
<p>After the Surgeon General's report.</p>
<p>One of their memos leaked 40 years ago. Here's what they said.</p>
<p>&quot;Doubt is our product,</p>
<p>&quot;since it is the best means of creating a controversy in the public's mind.&quot;</p>
<p>But have they succeeded?</p>
<p>You'll remember that there were 928 peer-reviewed articles.</p>
<p>Zero percent disagreed with the consensus.</p>
<p>There was another study of all the articles in the popular press.</p>
<p>Over the last 14 years, they looked at a sample of 636.</p>
<p>More than half of them said,</p>
<p>&quot;Well, we're not sure. It could be a problem, may not be a problem.&quot;</p>
<p>So no wonder people are confused.</p>
<p>Hey.</p>
<p>What did you find out?</p>
<p>Working for who?</p>
<p>Chief of Staff?</p>
<p>I'm gonna...</p>
<p>That's the White House environment office.</p>
<p>American Petroleum Institute. It's fair to say that's the oil and gas lobby.</p>
<p>Is that fair?</p>
<p>Totally fair.</p>
<p>Do a little bit more and see who his clients were.</p>
<p>So he was defending the Exxon Valdez thing.</p>
<p>Uh, very. Thank you.</p>
<p>Scientists have an independent obligation</p>
<p>to respect and present the truth as they see it.</p>
<p>Why do you directly contradict yourself</p>
<p>in the testimony you're giving about this scientific question?</p>
<p>The last paragraph in that section was not a paragraph which I wrote.</p>
<p>That was added to my testimony.</p>
<p>If they force you to change a scientific conclusion,</p>
<p>it's a form of science fraud by them.</p>
<p>You know, in the Soviet Union, ordering scientists</p>
<p>to change their studies to conform with the ideology...</p>
<p>I've seen scientists</p>
<p>who were persecuted,</p>
<p>ridiculed,</p>
<p>deprived of jobs, income,</p>
<p>simply because the facts they discovered</p>
<p>led them to an inconvenient truth</p>
<p>that they insisted on telling.</p>
<p>He worked for the American Petroleum Institute.</p>
<p>And in January of 2001,</p>
<p>he was put by the president in charge of environmental policy.</p>
<p>He received a memo from the EPA</p>
<p>that warned about global warming</p>
<p>and he edited. He has no scientific training whatsoever.</p>
<p>But he took it upon himself to overrule the scientist.</p>
<p>I said, &quot;I want to see what this guy's handwriting looks like.&quot;</p>
<p>This is the memo from the EPA. These are his actual pen strokes.</p>
<p>He says, &quot;No, you can't say this. This is just speculation.&quot;</p>
<p>This was embarrassing to the White House,</p>
<p>so this fellow resigned a few days later.</p>
<p>And the day after he resigned, he went to work for Exxon Mobil.</p>
<p>You know, more than 100 years ago, Upton Sinclair wrote this.</p>
<p>That it's difficult to get a man to understand something</p>
<p>if his salary depends upon his not understanding it.</p>
<p>The second misconception.</p>
<p>Do we have to choose between the economy and the environment?</p>
<p>This is a big one.</p>
<p>Lot of people say we do.</p>
<p>I was trying to convince the previous administration,</p>
<p>the first Bush administration, to go to the Earth Summit.</p>
<p>And they organized a big White House conference</p>
<p>to say, &quot;Oh, we're on top of this.&quot;</p>
<p>And one of these view graphs caught my attention.</p>
<p>And I want to talk to you about it for a minute.</p>
<p>Now here is the choice that we have to make</p>
<p>according to this group.</p>
<p>We have here a scales that balances two different things.</p>
<p>On one side, we have gold bars.</p>
<p>Don't they look good?</p>
<p>I'd just like to have some of those gold bars.</p>
<p>On the other side of the scales, the entire planet.</p>
<p>I think this is a false choice for two reasons.</p>
<p>Number one, if we don't have a planet...</p>
<p>The other reason is that if we do the right thing,</p>
<p>then we're gonna create a lot of wealth</p>
<p>- and we're gonna create a lot of jobs. - Yes.</p>
<p>Because doing the right thing moves us forward.</p>
<p>I've probably given this slide show 1,000 times.</p>
<p>I would say, at least 1,000 times.</p>
<p>Nashville to Knoxville to Aspen and Sundance.</p>
<p>Los Angeles and San Francisco. Portland, Minneapolis.</p>
<p>Boston, New Haven, London, Brussels, Stockholm, Helsinki,</p>
<p>Vienna, Munich, Italy and Spain</p>
<p>and China, South Korea, Japan.</p>
<p>Thank you.</p>
<p>I guess the thing I've spent more time on than anything else in this slide show</p>
<p>is trying to identify</p>
<p>all those things in people's minds</p>
<p>that serve as obstacles to them understanding this.</p>
<p>And whenever I feel like I've identified an obstacle,</p>
<p>I try to take it apart, roll it away. Move it.</p>
<p>Demolish it, blow it up.</p>
<p>I set myself a goal.</p>
<p>Communicate this real clearly.</p>
<p>The only way I know to do it</p>
<p>is city by city,</p>
<p>person by person,</p>
<p>family by family.</p>
<p>- Bye-bye. Thank you again. - Bye.</p>
<p>And I have faith that pretty soon</p>
<p>enough minds are changed</p>
<p>that we cross a threshold.</p>
<p>Let me give you an example</p>
<p>of the wrong way to balance the economy and the environment.</p>
<p>One part of this issue involves automobiles.</p>
<p>Japan has mileage standards up here.</p>
<p>Europe plans to pass Japan.</p>
<p>Our allies in Australia and Canada are leaving us behind.</p>
<p>Here is where we are.</p>
<p>Now there's a reason for it.</p>
<p>They say that we can't protect the environment too much</p>
<p>without threatening the economy and threatening the automakers.</p>
<p>Because automakers in China might come in and just steal all our markets.</p>
<p>Well, here is where China's auto mileage standards are now.</p>
<p>Way above ours.</p>
<p>We can't sell our cars in China today</p>
<p>because we don't meet the Chinese environmental standards.</p>
<p>California has taken an initiative</p>
<p>to have higher-mileage cars sold in California.</p>
<p>Now the auto companies have sued California</p>
<p>to prevent this law from taking effect</p>
<p>because, as they point out, 11 years from now</p>
<p>this would mean that California would have to have cars for sale</p>
<p>that are as efficient 11 years from now</p>
<p>as China's are today.</p>
<p>Clearly too onerous a provision to comply with.</p>
<p>And is this helping our companies succeed?</p>
<p>Well, actually, if you look at who's doing well in the world,</p>
<p>it's the companies that are building more-efficient cars.</p>
<p>And our companies are in deep trouble.</p>
<p>Final misconception.</p>
<p>If we accept that this problem is real,</p>
<p>maybe it's just too big to do anything about.</p>
<p>And, you know, there are a lot of people who go straight from denial</p>
<p>to despair</p>
<p>without pausing on the intermediate step</p>
<p>of actually doing something about the problem.</p>
<p>And that's what I'd like to finish with. The fact that we already know</p>
<p>everything we need to know to effectively address this problem.</p>
<p>We've got to do a lot of things, not just one.</p>
<p>If we use more efficient</p>
<p>electricity appliances,</p>
<p>we can save this much off of the global warming pollution</p>
<p>that would otherwise be put into the atmosphere.</p>
<p>If we use other end-use efficiency, this much.</p>
<p>If we have higher mileage cars, this much.</p>
<p>And all these begin to add up. Other transport efficiency,</p>
<p>renewable technology,</p>
<p>carbon capture and sequestration.</p>
<p>A big solution that you're gonna be hearing a lot more about.</p>
<p>They all add up,</p>
<p>and pretty soon we are below our 1970 emissions.</p>
<p>We have everything we need,</p>
<p>save perhaps political will.</p>
<p>But you know what? In America, political will is a renewable resource.</p>
<p>We have the ability to do this.</p>
<p>Each one of us is a cause of global warming,</p>
<p>but each of us can make choices to change that.</p>
<p>With the things we buy, the electricity we use, the cars we drive,</p>
<p>we can make choices to bring our individual carbon emissions to zero.</p>
<p>The solutions are in our hands.</p>
<p>We just have to have the determination to make them happen.</p>
<p>Are we gonna be left behind as the rest of the world moves forward?</p>
<p>All of these nations have ratified Kyoto.</p>
<p>There are only two advanced nations in the world that have not ratified Kyoto,</p>
<p>and we are one of them. The other is Australia.</p>
<p>Luckily, several states are taking the initiative.</p>
<p>The nine northeastern states have banded together</p>
<p>on reducing CO2.</p>
<p>California and Oregon are taking the initiative.</p>
<p>Pennsylvania's exercising leadership on solar power and wind power.</p>
<p>And US cities are stepping up to the plate.</p>
<p>One after the other, we have seen</p>
<p>all of these cities pledge to take on global warming.</p>
<p>So what about the rest of us?</p>
<p>Ultimately this question comes down to this.</p>
<p>Are we, as Americans,</p>
<p>capable of doing great things</p>
<p>even though they are difficult?</p>
<p>Are we capable</p>
<p>of rising above ourselves and above history?</p>
<p>Well, the record indicates that we do have that capacity.</p>
<p>We formed a nation, we fought a revolution</p>
<p>and brought something new to this Earth,</p>
<p>a free nation guaranteeing individual liberty.</p>
<p>America made a moral decision. Its slavery was wrong,</p>
<p>and that we could not be half free and half slave.</p>
<p>We, as Americans, decided</p>
<p>that of course women should have the right to vote.</p>
<p>We defeated totalitarianism and won a war</p>
<p>in the Pacific and the Atlantic simultaneously.</p>
<p>We desegregated our schools.</p>
<p>And we cured fearsome diseases like polio.</p>
<p>We landed on the moon.</p>
<p>The very example of what's possible when we are at our best.</p>
<p>We worked together in a completely bipartisan way</p>
<p>to bring down communism.</p>
<p>We have even solved a global environmental crisis before,</p>
<p>the hole in the stratospheric ozone layer.</p>
<p>This was said to be an impossible problem to solve</p>
<p>because it's a global environmental challenge</p>
<p>requiring cooperation from every nation in the world.</p>
<p>But we took it on.</p>
<p>And the United States took the lead in phasing out the chemicals</p>
<p>that caused that problem.</p>
<p>So now we have to use our political processes in our democracy,</p>
<p>and then decide to act together to solve those problems.</p>
<p>But we have to have a different perspective on this one.</p>
<p>It's different from any problem we have ever faced before.</p>
<p>You remember that home movie of the Earth spinning in space?</p>
<p>One of those spacecraft continuing on out into the universe,</p>
<p>when it got four billion miles out in space,</p>
<p>Carl Sagan said, &quot;Let's take another picture of the Earth.&quot;</p>
<p>You see that pale blue dot?</p>
<p>That's us.</p>
<p>Everything that has ever happened in all of human history</p>
<p>has happened on that pixel.</p>
<p>All the triumphs and all the tragedies.</p>
<p>All the wars, all the famines.</p>
<p>All the major advances.</p>
<p>It's our only home.</p>
<p>And that is what is at stake.</p>
<p>Our ability to live on planet Earth,</p>
<p>to have a future as a civilization.</p>
<p>I believe this is a moral issue.</p>
<p>It is your time to seize this issue.</p>
<p>It is our time to rise again, to secure our future.</p>
<p>There's nothing that unusual about what I'm doing with this.</p>
<p>What is unusual is that I had the privilege to be shown it</p>
<p>as a young man.</p>
<p>Ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Al Gore.</p>
<p>It's almost as if a window was opened through which</p>
<p>the future was very clearly visible.</p>
<p>&quot;See that?&quot; he said, &quot;See that?</p>
<p>&quot;That's the future in which you are going to live your life.&quot;</p>
<p>Future generations</p>
<p>may well have occasion to ask themselves,</p>
<p>&quot;What were our parents thinking?</p>
<p>&quot;Why didn't they wake up when they had a chance?&quot;</p>
<p>We have to hear that question from them, now.</p>
]]></description>
<pubDate>2009-01-04 23:43:18</pubDate>
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