00:00:09
Hello, everybody.
00:00:10
I am here to welcome you
to the Last Supper.
00:00:13
This menu has been put together
with ingredients
00:00:18
that experts and models predict
00:00:20
will not be around
for our kids and our grandkids.
00:00:25
And you'll see that it's many
of the foods that we that we hold dear.
00:00:30
Now I started off my career as a chef
and then into policy
00:00:34
and now working
on technology and innovation,
00:00:36
trying to build some
of the solutions for the future.
00:00:39
I first came up
with this menu idea in 2015,
00:00:43
around COP21 in Paris.
00:00:46
And the point of this menu
is not to depress you.
00:00:50
(Laughter)
00:00:51
It's not to, you know, make you feel bad.
00:00:54
It's to really talk about what's at stake
when we say the words climate change.
00:00:58
What do the words
climate change actually mean?
00:01:02
What does two degrees' warming
actually mean?
00:01:06
I'm from Chicago,
00:01:07
like, two degrees' warming,
that sounds good.
00:01:09
I'm like, "Let's warm it up
a little bit, what about five?"
00:01:13
And I think we've really failed
to connect what's truly at stake
00:01:17
when we talk about the issues
that we've been discussing today.
00:01:21
So let's get into it.
00:01:22
Let's start with the hors d'oeuvres,
those appetizers.
00:01:25
Let's turn to fruit.
00:01:26
Turns out that trees
are really having a tough time.
00:01:30
And this includes nuts and stone fruit,
00:01:32
like pistachios and almonds or peaches.
00:01:36
Last year, we lost 95 percent
of the Georgia peach crop.
00:01:43
95 percent.
00:01:45
And when you start to look at the models,
00:01:47
and how our environment
is changing in our lifetimes,
00:01:51
I don't believe we'll be growing
peaches in Georgia at all.
00:01:55
Let's talk about the wheat in your bread
or the rice in your salad,
00:01:58
or the chickpeas in one of the dishes --
00:02:00
some of the core commodities,
the core staples that feed the world.
00:02:05
But in the United States,
00:02:06
the models show that about
for every one degree of warming,
00:02:09
we'll lose about 7.5 percent yield.
00:02:13
We'll decline about 7.5 percent,
year over year.
00:02:16
That's only part of the story.
00:02:18
The other challenge is right now,
on a global basis,
00:02:21
15 percent of the world's wheat
00:02:23
is produced in persistent
drought conditions.
00:02:26
But if and when we hit that two degrees,
00:02:29
60 percent will be produced
in persistent drought conditions.
00:02:36
So not only are we going to see
a precipitous decline of yields over time,
00:02:41
we're going to see
much more frequent disruptions
00:02:44
and complete collapses of harvest
in certain regions.
00:02:49
It is impossible to comprehend
the economic upheaval
00:02:55
as we start to see
these core commodities decline,
00:03:00
the food insecurity and malnutrition
that will result of this,
00:03:05
and the political instability of forced
migration and conflict over resource
00:03:10
as these core foods
that feed most of the world
00:03:14
start to decline because of climate.
00:03:16
So let's go to your main course,
let's go to salmon.
00:03:19
Salmon are also having
a really tough time.
00:03:22
We all know their epic journeys
up rivers to spawn.
00:03:26
And those rivers are not only warming
00:03:29
but we're starting to see reduced flows
into them because of reduced snowpack.
00:03:35
And by about 2050,
00:03:37
the models show that we will lose
about half of that flow into those rivers
00:03:41
because of reduced snowpack,
00:03:43
making that journey for those fry
back to the ocean nearly impossible.
00:03:48
But there's also massive heat waves
that are flowing through our oceans now.
00:03:53
Those heat waves lower the oxygen levels
00:03:55
and make the environment really unsuitable
for many of these life-forms.
00:04:01
This past year, just a few weeks ago,
00:04:03
California announced it had closed
the entire commercial fishing
00:04:09
for the whole state, the whole coast,
00:04:12
because, essentially,
there weren't any fish to fish.
00:04:16
This is not some far-out future challenge.
00:04:20
Now I wish I could tell you, you know,
00:04:22
you're still going to have your dessert
and everything is fine,
00:04:27
but I'm sorry, I have to come
for your chocolate, too.
00:04:29
And in some ways,
chocolate is faring the worst.
00:04:32
You've probably never had
a bite of chocolate
00:04:35
that wasn't grown within
about 10 degrees of the equator
00:04:39
by smallholder farmers.
00:04:40
And there is not a single model that shows
that, if and when we hit two degrees,
00:04:46
that any of that region will be suitable
for chocolate production.
00:04:50
It will be too dry and too hot.
00:04:52
That means those trees
are going to have to walk and move.
00:04:55
They're not very good at that.
00:04:58
And the communities that that will affect
00:05:02
are ones that do not have the resources
to weather storms of that nature.
00:05:08
The economic and social upheaval
that will come from those kind of changes
00:05:13
is profound.
00:05:14
And again, this year, not in 2040 or 2050,
00:05:19
chocolate prices are up by 50 percent,
00:05:22
because those production ecosystems
have been hammered by drought
00:05:27
and extreme weather.
00:05:29
50 percent, this year.
00:05:32
I’m going to give you one more.
00:05:35
And this is where, like,
I just don't even know what to do.
00:05:38
I'm ready to do anything
to solve the problem.
00:05:41
Raise your hand if you’ve had
a cup of coffee today or a cup of tea.
00:05:47
Oh, yeah. I'm sorry, I know.
00:05:49
Let's say, how many of you had two cups?
00:05:53
Three?
00:05:55
Yeah, four?
00:05:57
Alright, guys, we should talk,
00:05:59
because I'm a little worried about you.
00:06:01
(Laughter)
00:06:02
Even for me, and I'm a real coffee person,
00:06:05
that's a little extreme.
00:06:06
I'm not going to ask five, because then --
00:06:09
Yeah, exactly.
00:06:10
I could see it in your face, sir.
00:06:13
(Laughs)
00:06:14
So, yeah, coffee too.
00:06:17
The IDB predicts that,
just similar to wine,
00:06:21
if and when we hit two degrees,
00:06:23
about half of the regions
that are currently growing coffee
00:06:26
will no longer be suitable
for coffee production.
00:06:30
About 75 of the 124
wild varieties of coffee
00:06:35
are on the verge of extinction right now,
00:06:37
and that's really a problem,
00:06:39
because much of the genetic
material that we will need
00:06:42
to try to produce hybrid varieties
00:06:46
that could thrive in much more
volatile climate
00:06:50
are going to be lost.
00:06:52
But the point here is not to depress you
or to scare you, it's not.
00:06:59
No, it's not.
00:07:01
It's to try to make an emotional
connection in a way that only food can,
00:07:05
to understand really what's at stake
00:07:07
when we're having these conversations.
00:07:10
And I believe what's at stake
is, fundamentally, our way of life
00:07:13
on planet Earth.
00:07:15
It's our identities,
00:07:16
both as individuals
and as communities and cultures.
00:07:19
It’s the vibrancy
of our country and of the world.
00:07:25
And fundamentally, as a father
of two young boys aged six and five,
00:07:30
Cy and Rafa,
00:07:31
it is fundamentally our ability
00:07:33
to pass to the next generation
a better life than we were given,
00:07:38
a life that is as rich and delicious
00:07:40
as the one we've been
lucky enough to have.
00:07:42
That is truly at stake now.
00:07:45
The good news is,
on our plates really does hold
00:07:48
some of the biggest both problems
00:07:51
but also potential
to solve these challenges
00:07:53
of anywhere that we have.
00:07:55
And that's the part
that gives me a ton of hope.
00:07:57
We know food is a giant driver
00:08:00
of environmental
and climate-change damage.
00:08:04
It's the number-one driver
of biodiversity loss, by a lot,
00:08:08
number-one driver of deforestation
and land-use change,
00:08:12
number-one use of the world's
dwindling freshwater.
00:08:15
70 percent of our water
goes into how we feed ourselves.
00:08:18
And it's the number-two driver
of greenhouse-gas emissions, globally.
00:08:21
Now unlike energy and mobility
and transportation,
00:08:26
where we can see a future
where that curve is going to bend,
00:08:29
food and agriculture is going straight up,
00:08:32
with absolutely no end in sight.
00:08:35
So we must figure out
how to reduce the negative impacts
00:08:41
the system is having on our planet.
00:08:43
Full stop.
00:08:44
The second big part of the work
that we collectively have to do
00:08:49
is around adaptation and resilience,
00:08:53
a part that we are simply entirely
unprepared to deal with right now.
00:08:57
We are now about to enter
an age of extreme volatility,
00:09:02
with dwindling resources
of water and soil,
00:09:05
higher energy prices.
00:09:07
And we essentially are unprepared.
00:09:09
So we need much more investment and focus
on preparing a food system
00:09:14
to deal with the reality
that we are entering in today.
00:09:18
But this third part
is the part that gets me excited
00:09:21
and gives me a lot of hope.
00:09:23
Because I firmly believe,
I know it to be true,
00:09:26
that food and agriculture,
nature-based solutions more broadly --
00:09:29
namely, you throw in there
oceans and forestry --
00:09:33
are the only systems on planet Earth
00:09:36
that has the capacity
to sequester enough carbon
00:09:39
in the time horizon --
this is the important part --
00:09:42
110 billion metric tons of carbon
that are in our atmosphere
00:09:46
used to be in our soils.
00:09:47
That's 80 years of our current footprint.
00:09:49
And we are starting to see
tools and technologies
00:09:53
and rediscovering old techniques
that can take a lot of that carbon
00:09:58
and put it back into the soil.
00:10:00
And technologies
that allow our food system
00:10:02
to become much more efficient and vibrant.
00:10:04
I'll give you a couple
that are superexciting to me.
00:10:07
One is a company called Loam Bio
00:10:09
that has discovered fungi microbes
that coat seeds,
00:10:15
that are pulling between one and three
tonnes of carbon per acre per year,
00:10:18
and store that carbon
in more permanent forms in the soil.
00:10:22
When you do the math
on how many acres are under cultivation,
00:10:26
this is a tool that can be
transformational.
00:10:29
Or a company like Inari Agriculture,
00:10:31
using modern breeding techniques
that can dramatically increase yield
00:10:35
while reducing the amount
of fertilizer that’s needed
00:10:38
or pesticides and herbicides
that are needed to protect that plant.
00:10:41
I could go on and on about these tools.
00:10:44
They're out there.
00:10:45
We have the solutions at hand.
00:10:48
The problem is we're just out of time.
00:10:50
So for all of us
who are working on these issues,
00:10:54
or leading in whatever we are doing,
00:10:58
if we have our plan
and we feel comfortable, like,
00:11:00
"This feels about right,
I'm doing my thing,"
00:11:03
then we're simply not doing enough.
00:11:06
We have to get fundamentally out
of our comfort zone
00:11:09
and take on a lot more risk
in terms of our actions.
00:11:12
So I hope that,
as we sit here tonight together
00:11:15
and eat some of the challenges we face,
00:11:18
we understand what's truly at stake.
00:11:21
We understand that we absolutely have
the capacity to solve this challenge,
00:11:25
but that if we don't act now,
we're going to lose time.
00:11:28
But I know that we can look back,
00:11:32
and collectively say to ourselves,
00:11:34
"We stood up and met the moment,
00:11:38
and we ensured that our kids
and that our grandkids
00:11:41
will be able to enjoy a delicious meal
00:11:44
like the one we’re having here tonight.”
00:11:46
So thank you for your work,
00:11:47
and I look forward to seeing
what we can do together.