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  • Climate change is just too much.

  • There's never any good news.

  • Only graphs that get more and more red and angry.

  • Almost every year breaks some horrible record,

  • from the harshest heat waves

  • to the most rapid glacier melt.

  • It's endless,

  • and relentless.

  • We've known for decades that rapid climate change has been caused by the release of greenhouse gases.

  • But instead of reducing them, in 2019 the world was emitting 50% more COthan in the year 2000.

  • And emissions are still rising.

  • Why is that? Why is it so hard to just stop emitting these gases?

  • Our collective COemissions can be expressed as a product of four factors and their relationship with each other.

  • Two of them explain why worldwide COemissions are still rising, and two explain how we can stop that.

  • Population Size, Economic Growth, Energy Intensity, and Emissions pere Energy unit produced.

  • Number 1: Population Size

  • People need food, homes, and clothing.

  • And they demand luxury products from iPhones to one dollar cheeseburgers

  • more people = higher COemissions.

  • It's a very simple equation.

  • The global population is growing, and according to the UN it will level off at about 11 billion in 2100, which is 40% more than today.

  • The only way to slow down this growth is investment in healthcare, and access to contraception and education in developing countries.

  • But even with massive investment, it will take a few decades for the effects of lower birthrates to manifest themselves,

  • so the global population will keep growing for the foreseeable future,

  • and, as a consequence, global COemissions rise over the next few decades.

  • Number 2: Growth, or "Getting Richer".

  • But it's not just about our numbers,

  • The richer and more developed we are, the more emissions our lifestyle produces.

  • A programmer in the US has a higher COfootprint than 50 farmers in Uganda.

  • The world's wealth is growing almost everywhere.

  • And although it's far from easily distrubuted, economic growth has led to the highest standards of living, and the largest reduction in extreme poverty in human history.

  • Growth has become the dominant mantra of the world's economies, no matter what kind of political system they have.

  • It's unlikely that rich countries will give up the concept of growth any time soon.

  • But even if they were to, developing countries want to become rich too

  • For billions of people, the end of growth would probably mean staying poor

  • and so developing countries are not willing to stop growing their economies.

  • All in all, we can agree that growth as a guiding economic ideology is not going to go away any time soon.

  • More countries and their citizens around the world will grow and become richer while the rich economies will continue to grow their wealth.

  • There are some signs that growth can be decoupled from COemissions but we're not close to that yet.

  • As a consequence of this growth, COemissions will rise.

  • Ok, so far we've learned that because of population growth and economic growth, humanity's COemissions will increase.

  • ...which is the opposite of what should be happening.

  • We need to slow, peak, and then reduce annual emissions.

  • The next two factors describe how we can actually do this.

  • Number 3: Energy Intensity

  • Energy intensity describes how efficiently we use energy.

  • A street food vendor in rural Brazil might burn coal to cook...

  • while a street food vendor in France might use an induction stove powered by nuclear energy.

  • The latter is way more efficient.

  • The more efficient something is, the less energy we need to do something.

  • Be it powering a metropolitan area, or grilling a kebab.

  • So making our technology more efficient, and coming up with more efficient ways to organise our societies

  • is one of the most important ways to reduce the modern world's COdependancy.

  • This can mean everything from reducing power consumption with A.I.,

  • the electrification of the transportation and industrial sectors,

  • or sustainable concrete production.

  • The opportunities for improvement are almost limitless,

  • and human ingenuity can run wild.

  • But we know that increasing efficiency alone will not be enough,

  • mostly for 3 reasons:

  • 1: Direct Rebound Effects.

  • This means that once something becomes more efficient, it's used more,

  • and so overall, the increased efficiency does not lead to a reduction as impressive as you would first think.

  • ...or worse, sometimes more efficiency makes humans use not *less* of a resource,

  • but *more* of it.

  • When planes became more fuel-efficient, ticket prices decreased, and more people started to travel by plane.

  • So making things more efficient does not automatically mean less energy use in total.

  • It might have the opposite effect.

  • 2: Indirect Rebound Effects.

  • Sometimes when you save money on a thing that becomes more efficient, you might spend it elsewhere.

  • For example, if you buy a more fuel-efficient car,

  • you save money on fuel, and end up with extra funds in your bank account...

  • ...that you might spend on vacation, and take a flight with.

  • So in the end, you might actually emit more CO

  • despite getting a more efficient car.

  • 3: And lastly,

  • the more you optimise for efficiency,

  • the harder and more expensive it becomes to get more efficient.

  • So, over time, the return on investment slows down.

  • And, with many technologies, we are already pretty efficient.

  • But, regardless of how efficient we make our economies,

  • as long as we need at least some energy, we will have emissions.

  • Efficiency alone won't create a zero-carbon world.

  • This brings us to our last factor:

  • Number 4: COemissions per energy unit used, or "Our Global Carbon Footprint".

  • Humanity's global carbon footprint

  • is the COreleased per energy unit generated.

  • For example, coal plants release much much more CO

  • than solar power per unit of energy.

  • This relationship is crystal clear.

  • The more fossil fuels we burn, the higher our COoutput.

  • Fossil fuels are the greatest lever humanity has right now.

  • Of course, it's impossible to shut down coal and oil overnight

  • without throwing society into chaos.

  • But the reality is, that we're not doing nearly enough to keep fossil fuels in the ground

  • and use lower-carbon alternatives

  • We need to do 2 things to speed the transition away from fossil fuels.

  • First, we need to use the real leverage we have today, with today's technology

  • There are a lot of things we can do extremely quickly.

  • We can leave nuclear power plants online longer.

  • We can cut subsidies to the fossil fuel industry,

  • and funnel them into renewables.

  • We can price carbon emissions harshly,

  • and increase the price each year

  • to create strong incentives for the world's industries to transition.

  • We can enforce strict standards for energy efficiency,

  • and for any type of new construction.

  • We can phase out fossil fuel vehicles.

  • Next, we also need to invent new and better technology.

  • Without new technologies and innovation,

  • it will be impossible to achieve a zero COemission world,

  • be it from technologies like carbon capture,

  • or a new generation of nuclear power plants,

  • to new batteries that revolutionise the energy storage from renewables.

  • But innovation takes time: years, and decades...

  • ...and we don't have this time.

  • Every year, we keep adding more carbon to the atmosphere.

  • This means we can't keep relying on innovation alone.

  • We need to find ways to reduce emissions today, while we invent what we will need in the future.

  • The less fossil fuel we burn over the next few years,

  • the more time we give innovation to catch up.

  • The more low-carbon energy infrastructure we build today,

  • the more we can compensate for economic growth, and the people born today.

  • The more coal power plants in construction we stop from being finished,

  • the more COwe save.

  • Neither innovation, nor the alternatives we're using today alone

  • can solve rapid climate change.

  • But, innovation, together with a decisive move away from fossil fuels where it's possible today

  • could do it.

  • Solving climate change will be complicated.

  • We have to account for the needs of billions of people

  • and the reality that right now, society runs mostly on fossil fuels.

  • This will not change overnight,

  • but it needs to change as quickly as possible.

  • And it is still very much possible??

  • We'll look at different aspects of climate change, and how to solve it

  • in more videos.

  • Let us know what kind of stuff you want to know more about

  • Here on YouTube, or join us in our subreddit

  • This video is part of a series about climate change supported by Breakthrough Energy,

  • a coalition founded by Bill Gates, that's working to expand clean energy investment

  • and support the innovations that will lead the world to net-zero carbon emissions

  • Also, a special thanks to the team at Our World in Data, for helping us out with data & research

  • *quack* ?

Climate change is just too much.

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