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  • Hello. This is 6 Minute English

  • from BBC Learning English. I'm Neil.

  • And I'm Sam.

  • It's hard to feel positive when you hear about

  • climate change, don't you think, Neil?

  • Yes, according to the UN's Cop26 conference,

  • we're heading for a catastrophic

  • global temperature rise

  • of three degrees by the

  • end of this century...

  • Fires are blazing from the

  • Amazon to the Arctic...

  • And even if we stopped

  • burning all fossil fuels

  • tomorrow, it would take

  • decades to feel the effects.

  • It's all very depressing!

  • I agree, but there is hope

  • that catastrophes can be

  • avoided thanks to some amazing

  • ideas by some very imaginative scientists.

  • In this programme, we'll be

  • discussing geoengineering -

  • the name for a collection

  • of new scientific plans

  • to remove carbon from

  • the atmosphere and

  • stop global warming.

  • Also called 'climate repair', geoengineering

  • is still in the

  • experimental stages.

  • Some technologies are

  • controversial because

  • they interfere with

  • natural climate systems,

  • and others may not

  • even be possible.

  • One ingenious idea to cool the planet

  • involves spraying diamond dust

  • in the sky to deflect

  • the Sun's rays.

  • Amazing! But before we find out more,

  • I have a question for you, Sam.

  • Spraying diamond dust

  • in the sky sounds

  • futuristic, but in

  • the 1960s there was a

  • band who wrote a song

  • called 'Lucy in the

  • Sky with Diamonds'.

  • But which band? Was it:

  • a) The Rolling Stones? b) The Beach Boys? or

  • c) The Beatles?

  • I think most people would say the answer

  • is c) The Beatles.

  • OK, we'll find out the answer later in the

  • programme. Now, throwing

  • diamonds in the sky might

  • sound crazy but it's far

  • from the wildest idea

  • scientists have thought

  • up to decarbonise the planet.

  • Oceans hold sixteen times more

  • carbon than the Earth's

  • atmosphere and could hold even

  • more if the fish and plankton living there

  • had more available

  • nutrients - food that

  • animals and plants

  • need to grow.

  • But how to provide these nutrients? Believe it

  • or not, one answer

  • involves - you guessed

  • it - whale poo!

  • David King chairs the Centre for Climate

  • Repair at Cambridge University.

  • He explained how his

  • unusual idea would work

  • to BBC World Service

  • programme, Discovery:

  • Image now a pod of whales all

  • coming up and pooing in the

  • same area of the ocean.

  • This could be in an eddy

  • current, and it could

  • lead to something like

  • 10,000 to 20,000 square

  • kilometres being covered

  • in nutrients, including iron.

  • And as we know from

  • observations today,

  • within three months that

  • region is chock-a-block with fish.

  • Whales live in groups called

  • pods. They swim up to the

  • ocean surface to poo, and

  • this poo can be spread

  • in an eddy - a large current

  • of water moving in a

  • circular motion, like

  • a giant whirlpool.

  • As a result, huge areas of

  • the ocean are covered in

  • nutrients, and become chock-a-block with

  • fish - an informal way to

  • say 'full of fish'.

  • Another original idea being

  • explored is 'rock weathering'.

  • Carbon is slowly locked into rocks

  • and mountains over thousands of years by

  • natural geological processes.

  • This literally ground-breaking

  • idea would speed up the

  • process by locking carbon

  • into rocks that have been

  • dug up through industrial mining.

  • Listen as geochemist,

  • Professor Rachael James, explains

  • her idea to BBC World Service's, Discovery:

  • For every tonne of rock that's mined, only a

  • very tiny proportion, a

  • couple of grams of that,

  • is actually diamond.

  • The rest of it is

  • effectively waste. So,

  • mine waste material is

  • potentially a really great

  • source of material that

  • could be repurposed for

  • enhanced rock weathering

  • and I think that's really

  • good because it creates

  • a circular economy.

  • Mining for diamonds creates tonnes of waste

  • rock which could be used

  • to capture carbon.

  • Professor James wants

  • to repurpose this rock -

  • to find a new use for it.

  • Not only would this lock more carbon, it also

  • creates a circular

  • economy - an economic

  • model which involves

  • sharing, reusing and

  • recycling products for as

  • long as possible to avoid

  • waste and to reduce

  • levels of carbon.

  • While these ideas might sound

  • strange, they're all theoretically possible.

  • And looking to science

  • for positive solutions

  • reminds some people of

  • the early ecological

  • movement which started in

  • the 1960s and now,

  • fifty years later, is

  • being taken seriously.

  • Speaking of the 1960s, it's time to reveal the

  • answer to my question, Sam.

  • Ah yes, you asked me which sixties band

  • wrote the song, 'Lucy in the

  • Sky with Diamonds'I

  • said, confidently,

  • c) The Beatles.

  • Which was, of course... the correct answer!

  • John Lennon and

  • Paul McCartney

  • wrote the song in 1967

  • but I doubt even they

  • could have predicted

  • that it would inspire

  • a scientific idea to

  • save the planet!

  • OK, let's recap the vocabulary from the

  • programme, starting

  • with nutrients - food

  • that plants and animals

  • need to grow.

  • Whales and other sea mammals like dolphins

  • live in a group

  • called 'a pod'.

  • An eddy is a large current of water moving

  • in a circular motion.

  • Chock-a-block is an informal way to say

  • 'full of something'.

  • If you 'repurpose' something,

  • you find a new use for it - a use other than

  • what was originally intended.

  • And finally, the planet's future

  • might depend on the circular economy - an

  • economic system which

  • values sharing, reusing

  • and recycling over

  • consumption and waste.

  • These incredible scientific

  • innovations might mean that time is not yet

  • up for planet Earth - but

  • time is up for

  • this programme.

  • Join us again soon for more

  • trending topics and related vocabulary here

  • at 6 Minute English.

  • Goodbye for now!

  • Bye!

Hello. This is 6 Minute English

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