Katharine Hayhoe: The most important thing you can do to fight climate change: talk about it
Katharine Hayhoe studies what climate change means to us in the places where we live. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
as an atmospheric science professor
the second most conservative city
his undergraduate geology class.
the lecture hall was cavernous and dark.
of the carbon cycle
dozing or looking at their phones.
for any questions.
and in a loud voice, he said,
fact of life here in the United States
that climate is changing,
serious and even dangerous,
about science or even how smart we are
on the political spectrum.
a different answer
or conservative?
that the planet is warming,
fossil fuels as soon as possible --
cut off their arm
any further excuse
and tell them what to do.
but I don't want to fix it,"
and nobody wants to be the bad guy.
"It's just a natural cycle."
are just in it for the money."
sciencey-sounding smoke screens,
the real reason for our objections,
with our ideology and our identity.
Where is global warming now?"
who says this thing is real,
like everybody is saying these myths.
on Climate [Change] Communication
the country now for a number of years --
of people in the United States agree
that it will harm plants and animals,
the rubber starts to hit the road.
will affect people in the United States.
think it will affect us personally.
"Do you ever talk about this?"
United States say, "Never."
"Do you hear the media talk about this?"
doom-filled report.
sciencey-sounding myths.
this vicious cycle?
is the exact thing that we're not doing:
about radiative forcing
in climate models?"
about more science;
for over 150 years.
150 years or more since the 1850s,
coal and gas and oil
around the planet?
first formally warned a US president
the social science has taught us
on rejecting a certain set of facts,
is a personal attack.
rather than building a bridge.
about more science,
about more science,
with all the data and facts in our head,
why it matters to us,
hiking, biking, fishing, even hunting?
or national security?
I found to connect with people
this incredible planet that we live on
over every living thing on it.
that we are to care for and love
the impacts of poverty,
the values are that someone has,
figure out what makes them tick.
between the values they already have
about a changing climate.
of conversations that I've had
person in the world
to care about a changing climate.
through our conversation with them.
about a changing climate
about the future of my child.
where water is already scarce,
the availability of that water.
about a changing climate
a "threat multiplier."
and lack of access to clean water
that lead to refugee crises --
and it exacerbates them,
at a Rotary Club,
that had the Four-Way Test on it.
most about climate change,
the least to the problem
would it build goodwill?
into the Four-Way Test,
of conservative businesspeople
with the most bemused look on his face.
about this whole global warming thing,
they have to be genuine.
a number of years ago,
came up and he said,
to get my foot in the door
about why climate change matters."
that you're part of,
with those people.
I'm an atheist," he said.
starting with a faith community
what you are involved in."
a community group
that he could start with.
a liberal tree hugger
living on this planet.
affecting us today.
"sunny-day flooding."
being burned by wildfires.
to the South Pacific,
typhoons and cyclones,
or if we live in Syria,
supersize our droughts,
being affected by a changing climate.
We can talk impacts.
because this thing is serious."
I'm a scientist, I know.
what is going to motivate us
that we need to fix this thing.
run away from the bear.
than the person beside us.
is rational hope.
to recognize what's at stake.
but better than they are today.
thing that we have to talk about
accessible, attractive solutions.
silver bullet, as they say,
that save us money
at the same time.
came with a switch beside the front door,
turn off everything except your fridge.
eating lower down the food chain
which at the global scale,
that we can do to fix this problem.
to talk to people about a changing climate
carbon footprint is my travel.
collect my invitations.
unless I have a critical mass
10 or 15 talks in a given place --
of my carbon footprint
three-quarters of the talks I give
"Well, we've never done that before."
I think it could work."
happening today around the world
of any state in the United States.
what can you talk about in Texas?"
there's over 25,000 jobs
of our electricity
most of that wind,
in the United States, Fort Hood,
by wind and solar energy now,
over 150 million dollars.
the resources that we have?
there are hundreds of millions of people
of energy except kerosine,
of new energy today is solar.
nonprofits, even corporations
new microfinancing schemes,
the power they need in increments,
tens of thousands of units
from Rwanda to Uganda.
over 30 million hours of electricity
of cell phone charging.
economies of China and India?
a little further down the road,
are right here today.
is essential to powering their future.
of billions of dollars in clean energy.
solar panels on the surface.
all the coal plants around Beijing.
incandescent light bulbs with LEDs,
seven billion dollars in energy costs.
their entire vehicle fleet.
to industrialize
sitting at the bottom of a hill,
trying to roll it up the hill.
is already at the top of the hill.
of hands, maybe even billions on it,
so we can fix climate change in time?
right here, right now,
than us climate scientists.
for the hope that we need,
with a conversation today.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Katharine Hayhoe - Climate scientistKatharine Hayhoe studies what climate change means to us in the places where we live.
Why you should listen
As Katharine Hayhoe writes: "I'm a climate scientist: I crunch the data, I analyze the models, and I help people like engineers and city managers and water planners prepare for the ways climate change affects all of us. I'm a professor in political science at Texas Tech University, where I direct the Climate Science Center. I'm also a lead author for the US National Climate Assessment; I host the PBS Digital Series Global Weirding; and I spend a lot of time talking to people about climate science, impacts, solutions and how they connect to our values. I've been named one of TIME's "100 Most Influential People," Fortune's "50 Greatest Leaders" and Foreign Policy's "100 Leading Global Thinkers."
"These are all tremendous honors, for which I'm enormously grateful. What means the most, though, is when just one person tells me sincerely that they had never cared about climate change before, or even thought it was real: but now, because of something they heard me say, they've changed their mind. That's what makes it all worthwhile."
Katharine Hayhoe | Speaker | TED.com