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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:01:18,956 --> 00:01:24,795 This city in Ukraine was once home to almost 50,000 people. 2 00:01:25,379 --> 00:01:29,508 It had everything a community would need for a comfortable life. 3 00:01:33,178 --> 00:01:38,850 But on the 26th of April, 1986, it suddenly became uninhabitable. 4 00:01:40,852 --> 00:01:45,148 The nearby nuclear power station of Chernobyl exploded. 5 00:01:49,111 --> 00:01:53,740 And in less than 48 hours, the city was evacuated. 6 00:01:57,244 --> 00:01:59,454 No one has lived here since. 7 00:02:10,299 --> 00:02:16,680 The explosion was a result of bad planning and human error. Mistakes. 8 00:02:17,848 --> 00:02:23,520 It triggered an environmental catastrophe that had an impact across Europe. 9 00:02:24,438 --> 00:02:29,943 Many people regarded it as the most costly in the history of mankind. 10 00:02:32,070 --> 00:02:35,407 But Chernobyl was a single event. 11 00:02:36,199 --> 00:02:40,579 The true tragedy of our time is still unfolding across the globe, 12 00:02:40,662 --> 00:02:42,956 barely noticeable from day to day. 13 00:02:43,790 --> 00:02:47,628 I'm talking about the loss of our planet's wild places, 14 00:02:47,711 --> 00:02:49,630 its biodiversity. 15 00:02:56,887 --> 00:03:00,807 The living world is a unique and spectacular marvel. 16 00:03:02,351 --> 00:03:06,980 Billions of individuals, and millions of kinds of plants and animals... 17 00:03:08,023 --> 00:03:10,942 ...dazzling in their variety and richness. 18 00:03:13,070 --> 00:03:16,990 Working together to benefit from the energy of the sun 19 00:03:17,491 --> 00:03:19,618 and the minerals of the earth. 20 00:03:21,745 --> 00:03:27,167 Leading lives that interlock in such a way that they sustain each other. 21 00:03:29,252 --> 00:03:34,633 We rely entirely on this finely tuned life-support machine. 22 00:03:36,093 --> 00:03:40,931 And it relies on its biodiversity to run smoothly. 23 00:03:46,186 --> 00:03:52,859 Yet the way we humans live on Earth now is sending biodiversity into a decline. 24 00:03:58,407 --> 00:04:02,869 This too is happening as a result of bad planning and human error 25 00:04:03,745 --> 00:04:07,624 and it too will lead to what we see here. 26 00:04:10,877 --> 00:04:14,339 A place in which we cannot live. 27 00:04:19,052 --> 00:04:20,804 The natural world is fading. 28 00:04:20,887 --> 00:04:24,724 The evidence is all around. It's happened in my lifetime. 29 00:04:24,808 --> 00:04:27,018 I've seen it with my own eyes. 30 00:04:27,686 --> 00:04:32,357 This film is my witness statement and my vision for the future, 31 00:04:33,024 --> 00:04:36,737 the story of how we came to make this our greatest mistake, 32 00:04:36,820 --> 00:04:41,241 and how, if we act now, we can yet put it right. 33 00:04:58,884 --> 00:05:03,513 I am David Attenborough, and I am 93. 34 00:05:04,431 --> 00:05:07,017 I've had the most extraordinary life. 35 00:05:07,809 --> 00:05:11,563 It's only now that I appreciate how extraordinary. 36 00:05:17,611 --> 00:05:19,571 I've been lucky enough to spend my life 37 00:05:19,654 --> 00:05:22,073 exploring the wild places of our planet. 38 00:05:25,202 --> 00:05:27,704 I've traveled to every part of the globe. 39 00:05:34,544 --> 00:05:40,383 I've experienced the living world firsthand in all its variety and wonder. 40 00:05:43,303 --> 00:05:47,599 In truth, I couldn't imagine living my life in any other way. 41 00:05:51,061 --> 00:05:56,107 I've always had a passion to explore, to have adventures, 42 00:05:56,608 --> 00:05:59,236 to learn about the wilds beyond. 43 00:06:00,946 --> 00:06:02,197 And I'm still learning. 44 00:06:04,241 --> 00:06:07,744 As much now as I did when I was a boy. 45 00:06:25,345 --> 00:06:27,639 It was a very different world back then. 46 00:06:29,182 --> 00:06:33,812 We had very little understanding of how the living world actually worked. 47 00:06:36,606 --> 00:06:39,234 It was called natural history 48 00:06:39,317 --> 00:06:42,195 because that's essentially what it was all about... 49 00:06:43,655 --> 00:06:44,906 history. 50 00:06:48,743 --> 00:06:50,829 It was a great place to come to as a boy, 51 00:06:50,912 --> 00:06:56,209 because this is, um, ironstone workings, but it was disused. 52 00:06:56,293 --> 00:06:58,295 All this was absolutely clear, it was... 53 00:06:58,378 --> 00:07:00,463 only just stopped being a working quarry. 54 00:07:14,185 --> 00:07:17,897 When I was a boy, I spent all my spare time 55 00:07:17,981 --> 00:07:20,650 searching through rocks in places like this... 56 00:07:22,068 --> 00:07:23,486 for buried treasure. 57 00:07:26,740 --> 00:07:27,740 Fossils. 58 00:07:29,326 --> 00:07:31,578 It's a creature called an ammonite. 59 00:07:31,661 --> 00:07:34,956 And in life the animal itself lived in the chamber here 60 00:07:35,040 --> 00:07:38,126 and spread out its tentacles to catch its prey. 61 00:07:39,753 --> 00:07:43,214 And it lived about 180 million years ago. 62 00:07:44,341 --> 00:07:48,929 This particular one has a scientific name of Tiltonicerus, 63 00:07:49,012 --> 00:07:52,599 because the first one ever was found near this quarry 64 00:07:52,682 --> 00:07:55,477 here in Tilton, in the middle of England. 65 00:07:56,895 --> 00:08:02,359 Over time, I began to learn something about the earth's evolutionary history. 66 00:08:03,234 --> 00:08:07,364 By and large, it's a story of slow, steady change. 67 00:08:10,033 --> 00:08:15,246 Over billions of years, nature has crafted miraculous forms, 68 00:08:15,330 --> 00:08:19,459 each more complex and accomplished than the last. 69 00:08:21,711 --> 00:08:25,173 It's an achingly intricate labor. 70 00:08:29,302 --> 00:08:32,764 And then, every hundred million years or so, 71 00:08:32,847 --> 00:08:36,142 after all those painstaking processes, 72 00:08:36,226 --> 00:08:41,314 something catastrophic happens, a mass extinction. 73 00:08:42,399 --> 00:08:48,029 Great numbers of species disappear and are suddenly replaced by a few. 74 00:08:50,115 --> 00:08:52,409 All that evolution undone. 75 00:08:54,494 --> 00:08:58,039 You can see it. A line in the rock layers. 76 00:08:58,123 --> 00:09:02,877 A boundary that marks a profound, rapid, global change. 77 00:09:03,628 --> 00:09:07,340 Below the line are a multitude of lifeforms. 78 00:09:08,883 --> 00:09:10,885 Above, very few. 79 00:09:13,972 --> 00:09:19,686 A mass extinction has happened five times in life's four-billion-year history. 80 00:09:22,272 --> 00:09:23,732 The last time it happened 81 00:09:23,815 --> 00:09:28,194 was the event that brought the end of the age of the dinosaurs. 82 00:09:29,446 --> 00:09:33,074 A meteorite impact triggered a catastrophic change 83 00:09:33,158 --> 00:09:35,285 in the earth's conditions. 84 00:09:37,996 --> 00:09:42,375 75% of all species were wiped out. 85 00:09:45,378 --> 00:09:49,299 Life had no option but to rebuild. 86 00:09:51,092 --> 00:09:56,681 For 65 million years, it's been at work reconstructing the living world... 87 00:09:58,600 --> 00:10:04,022 until we come to the world we know... our time. 88 00:10:11,863 --> 00:10:15,241 Scientists call it the Holocene. 89 00:10:20,747 --> 00:10:24,084 The Holocene has been one of the most stable periods 90 00:10:24,167 --> 00:10:26,294 in our planet's great history. 91 00:10:28,713 --> 00:10:34,094 For 10,000 years, the average temperature has not wavered up or down 92 00:10:34,177 --> 00:10:36,387 by more than one degree Celsius. 93 00:10:40,391 --> 00:10:43,853 And the rich and thriving living world around us 94 00:10:44,437 --> 00:10:46,981 has been key to this stability. 95 00:10:51,152 --> 00:10:57,575 Phytoplankton at the ocean's surface and immense forests straddling the north 96 00:10:57,659 --> 00:11:02,705 have helped to balance the atmosphere by locking away carbon. 97 00:11:05,625 --> 00:11:07,460 Huge herds on the plains 98 00:11:07,544 --> 00:11:12,715 have kept the grasslands rich and productive by fertilizing the soils. 99 00:11:18,638 --> 00:11:22,433 Mangroves and coral reefs along thousands of miles of coast 100 00:11:23,017 --> 00:11:25,520 have harbored nurseries of fish species 101 00:11:25,603 --> 00:11:30,233 that, when mature, then range into open waters. 102 00:11:36,865 --> 00:11:41,828 A thick belt of jungles around the equator has piled plant on plant 103 00:11:41,911 --> 00:11:45,123 to capture as much of the sun's energy as possible, 104 00:11:45,707 --> 00:11:49,460 adding moisture and oxygen to the global air currents. 105 00:11:53,798 --> 00:11:56,843 And the extent of the polar ice has been critical, 106 00:11:56,926 --> 00:12:00,096 reflecting sunlight back off its white surface, 107 00:12:00,805 --> 00:12:02,765 cooling the whole earth. 108 00:12:06,728 --> 00:12:11,482 The biodiversity of the Holocene helped to bring stability, 109 00:12:12,609 --> 00:12:19,073 and the entire living world settled into a gentle, reliable rhythm... 110 00:12:20,408 --> 00:12:21,910 the seasons. 111 00:12:29,667 --> 00:12:31,127 On the tropical plains, 112 00:12:31,210 --> 00:12:36,424 the dry and rainy seasons would switch every year like clockwork. 113 00:12:40,178 --> 00:12:44,807 In Asia, the winds would create the monsoon on cue. 114 00:12:52,690 --> 00:12:58,071 In the northern regions, the temperatures would lift in March, triggering spring, 115 00:12:59,238 --> 00:13:04,369 and stay high until they dipped in October and brought about autumn. 116 00:13:08,623 --> 00:13:12,335 The Holocene was our Garden of Eden. 117 00:13:12,418 --> 00:13:15,088 Its rhythm of seasons was so reliable 118 00:13:15,171 --> 00:13:18,841 that it gave our own species a unique opportunity. 119 00:13:21,552 --> 00:13:24,180 We invented farming. 120 00:13:27,100 --> 00:13:32,021 We learnt how to exploit the seasons to produce food crops. 121 00:13:33,898 --> 00:13:37,944 The history of all human civilization followed. 122 00:13:39,862 --> 00:13:43,574 Each generation able to develop and progress 123 00:13:43,658 --> 00:13:47,161 only because the living world could be relied upon 124 00:13:47,245 --> 00:13:49,706 to deliver us the conditions we needed. 125 00:13:53,042 --> 00:13:58,131 The pace of progress was unlike anything to be found in the fossil record. 126 00:14:01,384 --> 00:14:05,930 Our intelligence changed the way in which we evolved. 127 00:14:06,723 --> 00:14:08,016 In the past, 128 00:14:08,099 --> 00:14:14,188 animals had to develop some physical ability to change their lives. 129 00:14:14,981 --> 00:14:18,276 But for us, an idea could do that. 130 00:14:18,359 --> 00:14:22,405 And the idea could be passed from one generation to the next. 131 00:14:24,991 --> 00:14:28,536 We were transforming what a species could achieve. 132 00:14:32,790 --> 00:14:39,047 A few millennia after this began, I grew up at exactly the right moment. 133 00:14:41,507 --> 00:14:44,260 The start of my career in my 20s 134 00:14:44,344 --> 00:14:48,431 coincided with the advent of global air travel. 135 00:14:49,974 --> 00:14:53,436 So, I had the privilege of being amongst the first 136 00:14:53,519 --> 00:14:57,690 to fully experience the bounty of life that had come about 137 00:14:57,774 --> 00:15:00,360 as a result of the Holocene's gentle climate. 138 00:15:20,546 --> 00:15:24,008 Wherever I went, there was wilderness. 139 00:15:24,926 --> 00:15:27,261 Sparkling coastal seas. 140 00:15:28,388 --> 00:15:30,014 Vast forests. 141 00:15:31,599 --> 00:15:33,601 Immense grasslands. 142 00:15:33,684 --> 00:15:37,647 You could fly for hours over the untouched wilderness. 143 00:15:40,400 --> 00:15:44,862 And there I was, actually being asked to explore these places 144 00:15:44,946 --> 00:15:48,574 and record the wonders of the natural world for people back home. 145 00:15:50,701 --> 00:15:52,203 And to begin with, it was quite easy. 146 00:15:52,286 --> 00:15:54,705 People had never seen pangolins before on television. 147 00:15:54,789 --> 00:15:56,499 They'd never seen sloths before. 148 00:15:56,582 --> 00:15:58,793 They had never seen the center of New Guinea before. 149 00:16:04,590 --> 00:16:06,843 It was the best time of my life. 150 00:16:08,094 --> 00:16:10,972 The best time of our lives. 151 00:16:11,681 --> 00:16:15,893 The Second World War was over, technology was making our lives easier. 152 00:16:18,438 --> 00:16:22,191 The pace of change was getting faster and faster. 153 00:16:27,947 --> 00:16:31,117 It felt that nothing would limit our progress. 154 00:16:32,160 --> 00:16:35,246 The future was going to be exciting. 155 00:16:35,329 --> 00:16:38,291 It was going to bring everything we had ever dreamed of. 156 00:16:41,377 --> 00:16:45,756 This was before any of us were aware that there were problems. 157 00:16:59,353 --> 00:17:03,858 My first visit to East Africa was in 1960. 158 00:17:08,154 --> 00:17:13,367 Back then, it seemed inconceivable that we, a single species, 159 00:17:13,450 --> 00:17:18,956 might one day have the power to threaten the very existence of the wilderness. 160 00:17:22,543 --> 00:17:27,131 The Maasai word "Serengeti" means "endless plains." 161 00:17:27,757 --> 00:17:30,468 To those who live here, it's an apt description. 162 00:17:30,551 --> 00:17:33,220 You can be in one spot on the Serengeti, 163 00:17:33,304 --> 00:17:35,973 and the place is totally empty of animals, 164 00:17:36,057 --> 00:17:37,517 and then, the next morning... 165 00:17:39,143 --> 00:17:41,187 ...one million wildebeest. 166 00:17:47,652 --> 00:17:49,904 A quarter of a million zebra. 167 00:17:54,617 --> 00:17:56,410 Half a million gazelle. 168 00:17:59,497 --> 00:18:01,123 A few days after that... 169 00:18:02,458 --> 00:18:05,795 and they're gone... over the horizon. 170 00:18:05,878 --> 00:18:09,966 You can be forgiven for thinking that these plains are endless 171 00:18:10,550 --> 00:18:12,760 when they could swallow up such a herd. 172 00:18:13,844 --> 00:18:15,429 It took a visionary scientist, 173 00:18:15,513 --> 00:18:19,183 Bernhard Grzimek, to explain that this wasn't true. 174 00:18:22,478 --> 00:18:27,900 He and his son used a plane to follow the herds over the horizon. 175 00:18:38,077 --> 00:18:40,997 They charted them as they moved across rivers, 176 00:18:41,080 --> 00:18:44,250 through woodlands, and over national borders. 177 00:18:46,419 --> 00:18:48,838 They discovered that the Serengeti herds 178 00:18:48,921 --> 00:18:53,843 required an enormous area of healthy grassland to function. 179 00:18:55,094 --> 00:18:59,432 That without such an immense space, the herds would diminish 180 00:18:59,515 --> 00:19:03,477 and the entire ecosystem would come crashing down. 181 00:19:05,271 --> 00:19:09,483 The point for me was simple: The wild is far from unlimited. 182 00:19:09,567 --> 00:19:12,486 It's finite. It needs protecting. 183 00:19:12,987 --> 00:19:16,616 And a few years later, that idea became obvious to everyone. 184 00:19:17,408 --> 00:19:22,955 Five, four, three, two one, zero. 185 00:19:24,915 --> 00:19:29,629 I was in a television studio when the Apollo mission launched. 186 00:19:33,716 --> 00:19:35,092 It was the first time 187 00:19:35,176 --> 00:19:38,888 that any human had moved away far enough from the earth 188 00:19:38,971 --> 00:19:40,806 to see the whole planet. 189 00:19:42,183 --> 00:19:44,310 And this is what they saw... 190 00:19:47,021 --> 00:19:48,981 what we all saw. 191 00:19:50,399 --> 00:19:55,321 Our planet, vulnerable and isolated. 192 00:20:01,369 --> 00:20:05,956 One of the extraordinary things about it was that the world 193 00:20:06,040 --> 00:20:08,793 could actually watch it as it happened. 194 00:20:09,377 --> 00:20:15,508 It was extraordinary that you could see what a man out in space could see 195 00:20:15,591 --> 00:20:17,677 as he saw it at the same time. 196 00:20:19,095 --> 00:20:23,307 And I remember very well that first shot. 197 00:20:23,808 --> 00:20:26,560 You saw a blue marble, 198 00:20:26,644 --> 00:20:33,109 a blue sphere in the blackness, and you realized that that was the earth. 199 00:20:33,609 --> 00:20:37,571 And in that one shot, there was the whole of humanity with nothing else 200 00:20:37,655 --> 00:20:42,201 except the person that was in the spacecraft taking that picture. 201 00:20:43,202 --> 00:20:47,998 And that completely changed the mindset of the population, 202 00:20:48,082 --> 00:20:49,709 the human population of the world. 203 00:20:53,337 --> 00:20:55,464 Our home was not limitless. 204 00:20:57,091 --> 00:20:59,719 There was an edge to our existence. 205 00:21:01,262 --> 00:21:05,516 It was a rediscovery of a fundamental truth. 206 00:21:06,726 --> 00:21:10,813 We are ultimately bound by and reliant upon 207 00:21:10,896 --> 00:21:14,108 the finite natural world about us. 208 00:21:16,026 --> 00:21:19,905 This truth defined the life we led in our pre-history, 209 00:21:19,989 --> 00:21:23,534 the time before farming and civilization. 210 00:21:24,118 --> 00:21:27,329 Even as some of us were setting foot on the moon, 211 00:21:27,413 --> 00:21:32,918 others were still leading such a life in the most remote parts of the planet. 212 00:21:40,509 --> 00:21:46,557 In 1971, I set out to find an uncontacted tribe in New Guinea. 213 00:21:50,186 --> 00:21:56,776 These people were hunter-gatherers, as all humankind had been before farming. 214 00:22:00,362 --> 00:22:04,158 They lived in small numbers and didn't take too much. 215 00:22:08,579 --> 00:22:10,915 They ate meat rarely. 216 00:22:11,832 --> 00:22:16,378 The resources they used naturally renewed themselves. 217 00:22:17,338 --> 00:22:22,009 Working with their traditional technology, they were living sustainably, 218 00:22:22,593 --> 00:22:26,472 a lifestyle that could continue effectively forever. 219 00:22:30,017 --> 00:22:32,770 It was a stark contrast to the world I knew. 220 00:22:33,938 --> 00:22:37,191 A world that demanded more every day. 221 00:22:47,201 --> 00:22:51,455 I spent the latter half of the 1970s traveling the world, 222 00:22:51,539 --> 00:22:55,876 making a series I had long dreamed of called Life on Earth, 223 00:22:57,044 --> 00:23:01,382 the story of the evolution of life and its diversity. 224 00:23:03,175 --> 00:23:05,469 It was shot in 39 countries. 225 00:23:06,762 --> 00:23:10,140 We filmed 650 species, 226 00:23:10,224 --> 00:23:13,644 and we traveled one and a half million miles. 227 00:23:14,311 --> 00:23:16,772 That's the sort of commitment you need 228 00:23:16,855 --> 00:23:20,776 if you want to even begin making a portrait of the living world. 229 00:23:22,570 --> 00:23:23,862 But it was noticeable 230 00:23:23,946 --> 00:23:27,116 that some of these animals were becoming harder to find. 231 00:23:43,215 --> 00:23:45,884 When I filmed with the mountain gorillas, 232 00:23:45,968 --> 00:23:50,973 there were only 300 left in a remote jungle in Central Africa. 233 00:23:52,474 --> 00:23:54,893 Baby gorillas were at a premium, 234 00:23:54,977 --> 00:23:58,188 and poachers would kill a dozen adults to get one. 235 00:23:59,940 --> 00:24:04,486 I got as close as I did only because the gorillas were used to people. 236 00:24:06,780 --> 00:24:11,577 The only way to keep them alive was for rangers to be with them every day. 237 00:24:17,833 --> 00:24:23,047 The process of extinction that I'd seen as a boy... in the rocks, 238 00:24:24,048 --> 00:24:28,302 I now became aware was happening right there around me 239 00:24:29,094 --> 00:24:31,513 to animals with which I was familiar. 240 00:24:33,307 --> 00:24:35,017 Our closest relatives. 241 00:24:38,562 --> 00:24:40,564 And we were responsible. 242 00:24:43,400 --> 00:24:45,944 It revealed a cold reality. 243 00:24:47,404 --> 00:24:49,531 Once a species became our target, 244 00:24:50,032 --> 00:24:53,535 there was now nowhere on earth that it could hide. 245 00:25:06,215 --> 00:25:12,763 Whales were being slaughtered by fleets of industrial whaling ships in the 1970s. 246 00:25:16,975 --> 00:25:20,145 The largest whales, the blues, 247 00:25:20,229 --> 00:25:22,856 numbered only a few thousand by then. 248 00:25:27,569 --> 00:25:30,197 They were virtually impossible to find. 249 00:25:33,325 --> 00:25:38,664 We found humpbacks off Hawaii only by listening out for their calls. 250 00:25:39,248 --> 00:25:41,583 A moment ago, we made this recording 251 00:25:41,667 --> 00:25:45,587 with an underwater microphone here in the Pacific near Hawaii. 252 00:25:45,671 --> 00:25:46,839 Just listen to this. 253 00:25:58,809 --> 00:26:02,771 Recordings like these revealed that the songs of the humpbacks 254 00:26:02,855 --> 00:26:04,982 are long and complex. 255 00:26:06,316 --> 00:26:10,195 Humpbacks living in the same area learn their songs from each other. 256 00:26:11,071 --> 00:26:16,744 And the songs have distinct themes and variations which evolve over time. 257 00:26:25,794 --> 00:26:28,464 Their mournful songs were the key 258 00:26:28,547 --> 00:26:31,425 to transforming people's opinions about them. 259 00:26:35,929 --> 00:26:38,682 Hello, Boctok. We are Canadian. 260 00:26:40,267 --> 00:26:42,060 Please stop killing the whales. 261 00:26:44,605 --> 00:26:46,940 Animals that had been viewed 262 00:26:47,024 --> 00:26:50,235 as little more than a source of oil and meat 263 00:26:50,319 --> 00:26:52,988 became personalities. 264 00:26:55,491 --> 00:26:57,993 We are men and women, and we speak for children, 265 00:26:58,744 --> 00:27:02,956 and we're all saying, "Please stop killing the whales." 266 00:27:05,000 --> 00:27:09,338 We have pursued animals to extinction many times in our history, 267 00:27:10,214 --> 00:27:14,676 but now that it was visible, it was no longer acceptable. 268 00:27:22,643 --> 00:27:27,147 The killing of whales turned from a harvest to a crime. 269 00:27:29,066 --> 00:27:32,611 A powerful shared conscience had suddenly appeared. 270 00:27:33,612 --> 00:27:37,157 Nobody wanted animals to become extinct. 271 00:27:38,617 --> 00:27:41,495 People were coming to care for the natural world... 272 00:27:42,496 --> 00:27:46,124 as they were made aware of the natural world. 273 00:27:49,169 --> 00:27:53,757 And we now had the means to make people across the world aware. 274 00:28:01,390 --> 00:28:07,187 By the time Life on Earth aired in 1979, I had entered my 50s. 275 00:28:07,729 --> 00:28:10,816 There were twice the number of people on the planet 276 00:28:10,899 --> 00:28:13,151 as there were when I was born. 277 00:28:14,987 --> 00:28:21,159 You and I belong to the most widespread and dominant species of animal on earth. 278 00:28:21,243 --> 00:28:24,329 We're certainly the most numerous large animal. 279 00:28:24,413 --> 00:28:28,667 There are something like 4,000 million of us today, 280 00:28:28,750 --> 00:28:32,588 and we've reached this position with meteoric speed. 281 00:28:33,255 --> 00:28:37,009 It's all happened within the last 2,000 years or so. 282 00:28:37,092 --> 00:28:41,471 We seem to have broken loose from the restrictions 283 00:28:41,555 --> 00:28:45,475 that have governed the activities and numbers of other animals. 284 00:28:53,275 --> 00:28:55,027 We had broken loose. 285 00:28:55,986 --> 00:28:59,656 We were apart from the rest of life on earth, 286 00:29:01,158 --> 00:29:03,660 living a different kind of life. 287 00:29:07,456 --> 00:29:10,250 Our predators had been eliminated. 288 00:29:12,920 --> 00:29:15,756 Most of our diseases were under control. 289 00:29:17,674 --> 00:29:21,220 We had worked out how to produce food to order. 290 00:29:23,597 --> 00:29:26,850 There was nothing left to restrict us. 291 00:29:27,643 --> 00:29:29,603 Nothing to stop us. 292 00:29:30,854 --> 00:29:32,898 Unless we stopped ourselves... 293 00:29:34,024 --> 00:29:38,654 we would keep consuming the earth until we had used it up. 294 00:29:41,573 --> 00:29:45,160 Saving individual species or even groups of species 295 00:29:45,244 --> 00:29:46,995 would not be enough. 296 00:29:47,079 --> 00:29:50,415 Whole habitats would soon start to disappear. 297 00:30:18,527 --> 00:30:24,574 I first witnessed the destruction of an entire habitat in Southeast Asia. 298 00:30:25,492 --> 00:30:30,664 In the 1950s, Borneo was three-quarters covered with rainforest. 299 00:30:31,248 --> 00:30:33,375 We heard a crashing in the branches ahead. 300 00:30:34,710 --> 00:30:37,379 And there, only a few yards away, 301 00:30:37,462 --> 00:30:42,342 we spotted a great furry red form swaying in the trees. 302 00:30:43,468 --> 00:30:44,636 The orangutan. 303 00:30:48,307 --> 00:30:49,808 By the end of the century, 304 00:30:49,891 --> 00:30:54,062 Borneo's rainforest had been reduced by half. 305 00:31:00,110 --> 00:31:03,780 Rainforests are particularly precious habitats. 306 00:31:05,949 --> 00:31:09,536 More than half of the species on land live here. 307 00:31:14,291 --> 00:31:19,212 They're places in which evolution's talent for design soars. 308 00:32:04,299 --> 00:32:09,846 Many of the millions of species in the forest exist in small numbers. 309 00:32:12,474 --> 00:32:15,811 Every one has a critical role to play. 310 00:32:20,857 --> 00:32:24,903 Orangutan mothers have to spend ten years with their young, 311 00:32:24,986 --> 00:32:28,782 teaching them which fruits are worth eating. 312 00:32:32,119 --> 00:32:33,537 Without this training, 313 00:32:33,620 --> 00:32:37,374 they would not complete their role in dispersing seeds. 314 00:32:38,834 --> 00:32:43,296 The future generations of many tree species would be at risk. 315 00:32:44,256 --> 00:32:48,802 And tree diversity is the key to a rainforest. 316 00:32:52,556 --> 00:32:55,517 In a single small patch of tropical rainforest, 317 00:32:55,600 --> 00:32:58,812 there could be 700 different species of tree, 318 00:32:58,895 --> 00:33:02,566 as many as there are in the whole of North America. 319 00:33:03,525 --> 00:33:09,990 And yet, this is what we've been turning this dizzying diversity into. 320 00:33:11,491 --> 00:33:14,536 A monoculture of oil palm. 321 00:33:18,081 --> 00:33:22,294 A habitat that is dead in comparison. 322 00:33:25,922 --> 00:33:30,427 And you see this curtain of green with occasionally birds in it, 323 00:33:31,887 --> 00:33:34,306 and you think it's perhaps okay. 324 00:33:34,389 --> 00:33:35,807 But if you get in a helicopter, 325 00:33:35,891 --> 00:33:39,227 you see that that is a strip about half a mile wide. 326 00:33:40,061 --> 00:33:41,688 And beyond that strip, 327 00:33:41,771 --> 00:33:47,027 there is nothing but regimented rows of oil palms. 328 00:33:56,119 --> 00:33:59,998 There is a double incentive to cut down forests. 329 00:34:01,958 --> 00:34:03,710 People benefit from the timber... 330 00:34:04,294 --> 00:34:08,590 and then benefit again from farming the land that's left behind. 331 00:34:22,311 --> 00:34:27,943 Which is why we've cut down three trillion trees across the world. 332 00:34:28,026 --> 00:34:32,447 Half of the world's rainforests have already been cleared. 333 00:34:42,123 --> 00:34:43,708 What we see happening today 334 00:34:43,791 --> 00:34:48,838 is just the latest chapter in a global process spanning millennia. 335 00:34:55,220 --> 00:35:00,183 The deforestation of Borneo has reduced the population of orangutan 336 00:35:00,267 --> 00:35:05,647 by two-thirds since I first saw one just over 60 years ago. 337 00:35:12,904 --> 00:35:15,657 We can't cut down rainforests forever, 338 00:35:15,740 --> 00:35:20,412 and anything that we can't do forever is by definition unsustainable. 339 00:35:21,580 --> 00:35:24,541 If we do things that are unsustainable, 340 00:35:24,624 --> 00:35:30,672 the damage accumulates ultimately to a point where the whole system collapses. 341 00:35:32,132 --> 00:35:36,052 No ecosystem, no matter how big, is secure. 342 00:35:38,513 --> 00:35:41,683 Even one as vast as the ocean. 343 00:35:46,438 --> 00:35:51,026 This habitat was the subject of the series The Blue Planet, 344 00:35:51,109 --> 00:35:53,737 which we were filming in the late '90s. 345 00:36:07,667 --> 00:36:13,131 It was... an astonishing vision of a completely unknown world, 346 00:36:13,214 --> 00:36:17,344 a world that had existed since the beginning of time. 347 00:36:25,435 --> 00:36:28,855 All sorts of things that you had no idea had ever existed, 348 00:36:28,938 --> 00:36:33,234 all in a multitude of colors, all unbelievably beautiful. 349 00:36:37,238 --> 00:36:42,035 And all of them completely undisturbed by your presence. 350 00:36:50,251 --> 00:36:54,339 For much of its expanse, the ocean is largely empty. 351 00:36:56,257 --> 00:36:59,594 But in certain places, there are hot spots 352 00:36:59,678 --> 00:37:02,389 where currents bring nutrients to the surface 353 00:37:02,472 --> 00:37:05,725 and trigger an explosion of life. 354 00:37:11,564 --> 00:37:15,568 In such places, huge shoals of fish gather. 355 00:37:23,743 --> 00:37:26,246 The problem is that our fishing fleets 356 00:37:26,329 --> 00:37:30,583 are just as good at finding those hot spots as are the fish. 357 00:37:32,460 --> 00:37:37,924 When they do, they're able to gather the concentrated shoals with ease. 358 00:37:41,928 --> 00:37:45,223 It was only in the '50s that large fleets 359 00:37:45,306 --> 00:37:48,768 first ventured out into international waters... 360 00:37:49,644 --> 00:37:53,273 to reap the open ocean harvest across the globe. 361 00:37:55,525 --> 00:38:00,363 Yet, they've removed 90% of the large fish in the sea. 362 00:38:08,121 --> 00:38:11,666 At first, they caught plenty of fish in their nets. 363 00:38:12,917 --> 00:38:15,545 But within only a few years, 364 00:38:15,628 --> 00:38:19,924 the nets across the globe were coming in empty. 365 00:38:21,593 --> 00:38:24,429 The fishing quickly became so poor 366 00:38:24,929 --> 00:38:29,517 that countries began to subsidize the fleets to maintain the industry. 367 00:38:34,647 --> 00:38:38,193 Without large fish and other marine predators, 368 00:38:38,276 --> 00:38:41,529 the oceanic nutrient cycle stutters. 369 00:38:48,328 --> 00:38:52,999 The predators help to keep nutrients in the ocean's sunlit waters, 370 00:38:53,082 --> 00:38:57,712 recycling them so that they can be used again and again by plankton. 371 00:39:02,509 --> 00:39:03,802 Without predators, 372 00:39:03,885 --> 00:39:07,096 nutrients are lost for centuries to the depths 373 00:39:07,180 --> 00:39:10,391 and the hot spots start to diminish. 374 00:39:11,559 --> 00:39:14,062 The ocean starts to die. 375 00:39:19,484 --> 00:39:23,947 Ocean life was also unravelling in the shallows. 376 00:39:29,494 --> 00:39:32,872 In 1998, a Blue Planet film crew 377 00:39:32,956 --> 00:39:36,292 stumbled on an event little known at the time. 378 00:39:39,963 --> 00:39:43,299 Coral reefs were turning white. 379 00:39:47,637 --> 00:39:51,850 The white color is caused by corals expelling algae 380 00:39:51,933 --> 00:39:55,019 that lives symbiotically within their body. 381 00:40:02,235 --> 00:40:03,736 When you first see it, 382 00:40:03,820 --> 00:40:07,949 you think perhaps that it's beautiful, and suddenly you realize it's tragic. 383 00:40:08,575 --> 00:40:11,286 Because what you're looking at is skeletons. 384 00:40:11,369 --> 00:40:13,788 Skeletons of dead creatures. 385 00:40:21,588 --> 00:40:25,550 The white corals are ultimately smothered by seaweed. 386 00:40:26,217 --> 00:40:31,890 And the reef turns from wonderland... to wasteland. 387 00:40:36,811 --> 00:40:40,189 At first, the cause of the bleaching was a mystery. 388 00:40:40,273 --> 00:40:44,986 But scientists started to discover that in many cases where bleaching occurred, 389 00:40:45,570 --> 00:40:47,572 the ocean was warming. 390 00:40:48,573 --> 00:40:49,574 For some time, 391 00:40:49,657 --> 00:40:53,202 climate scientists had warned that the planet would get warmer 392 00:40:53,286 --> 00:40:57,290 as we burned fossil fuels and released carbon dioxide 393 00:40:57,373 --> 00:41:00,752 and other greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere. 394 00:41:04,255 --> 00:41:06,507 A marked change in atmospheric carbon 395 00:41:06,591 --> 00:41:10,136 has always been incompatible with a stable earth. 396 00:41:10,929 --> 00:41:14,766 It was a feature of all five mass extinctions. 397 00:41:19,812 --> 00:41:20,855 In previous events, 398 00:41:20,939 --> 00:41:25,693 it had taken volcanic activity up to one million years 399 00:41:25,777 --> 00:41:28,571 to dredge up enough carbon from within the earth 400 00:41:28,655 --> 00:41:30,531 to trigger a catastrophe. 401 00:41:32,825 --> 00:41:36,329 By burning millions of years' worth of living organisms 402 00:41:36,412 --> 00:41:39,624 all at once as coal and oil, 403 00:41:39,707 --> 00:41:43,753 we had managed to do so in less than 200. 404 00:41:45,755 --> 00:41:50,176 The global air temperature had been relatively stable till the '90s. 405 00:41:50,677 --> 00:41:53,721 But it now appeared this was only because the ocean 406 00:41:53,805 --> 00:41:58,476 was absorbing much of the excess heat, masking our impact. 407 00:42:01,771 --> 00:42:03,940 It was the first indication to me 408 00:42:04,023 --> 00:42:07,652 that the earth was beginning to lose its balance. 409 00:42:15,827 --> 00:42:18,329 The most remote habitat of all 410 00:42:18,413 --> 00:42:22,291 exists at the extreme north and south of the planet. 411 00:42:26,879 --> 00:42:30,758 I've visited the polar regions over many decades. 412 00:42:35,221 --> 00:42:38,766 They've always been a place beyond imagination... 413 00:42:39,350 --> 00:42:42,562 with scenery unlike anything else on earth... 414 00:42:44,230 --> 00:42:49,318 and unique species adapted to a life in the extreme. 415 00:42:53,072 --> 00:42:55,366 But that distant world is changing. 416 00:42:58,453 --> 00:43:03,458 In my time, I've experienced the warming of Arctic summers. 417 00:43:06,127 --> 00:43:08,171 We have arrived at locations 418 00:43:08,254 --> 00:43:12,383 expecting to find expanses of sea ice and found none. 419 00:43:15,595 --> 00:43:17,513 We've managed to travel by boat 420 00:43:17,597 --> 00:43:21,100 to islands that were impossible to get to historically 421 00:43:21,184 --> 00:43:24,145 because they were permanently locked in the ice. 422 00:43:27,148 --> 00:43:32,236 By the time Frozen Planet aired in 2011, 423 00:43:32,320 --> 00:43:35,448 the reasons for these changes was well established. 424 00:43:40,286 --> 00:43:43,915 The ocean has long since become unable to absorb 425 00:43:43,998 --> 00:43:48,169 all the excess heat caused by our activities. 426 00:43:49,045 --> 00:43:52,298 As a result, the average global temperature today 427 00:43:52,381 --> 00:43:56,844 is one degree Celsius warmer than it was when I was born. 428 00:44:02,391 --> 00:44:07,647 A speed of change that exceeds any in the last 10,000 years. 429 00:44:15,071 --> 00:44:20,785 Summer sea ice in the Arctic has reduced by 40% in 40 years. 430 00:44:23,079 --> 00:44:25,748 Our planet is losing its ice. 431 00:44:31,671 --> 00:44:37,552 This most pristine and distant of ecosystems is headed for disaster. 432 00:44:55,653 --> 00:44:58,906 Our imprint is now truly global. 433 00:44:59,699 --> 00:45:02,827 Our impact now truly profound. 434 00:45:03,411 --> 00:45:05,288 Our blind assault on the planet 435 00:45:05,371 --> 00:45:10,001 has finally come to alter the very fundamentals of the living world. 436 00:45:18,509 --> 00:45:23,598 We have overfished 30% of fish stocks to critical levels. 437 00:45:26,142 --> 00:45:30,521 We cut down over 15 billion trees each year. 438 00:45:33,024 --> 00:45:37,778 By damming, polluting, and over-extracting rivers and lakes, 439 00:45:37,862 --> 00:45:43,534 we've reduced the size of freshwater populations by over 80%. 440 00:45:44,327 --> 00:45:47,955 We're replacing the wild with the tame. 441 00:45:52,251 --> 00:45:57,465 Half of the fertile land on earth is now farmland. 442 00:46:04,055 --> 00:46:09,727 70% of the mass of birds on this planet are domestic birds. 443 00:46:10,311 --> 00:46:13,230 The vast majority, chickens. 444 00:46:17,234 --> 00:46:22,406 We account for over one-third of the weight of mammals on earth. 445 00:46:23,366 --> 00:46:27,578 A further 60% are the animals we raise to eat. 446 00:46:32,833 --> 00:46:38,005 The rest, from mice to whales, make up just 4%. 447 00:46:41,384 --> 00:46:44,136 This is now our planet, 448 00:46:44,220 --> 00:46:47,515 run by humankind for humankind. 449 00:46:47,598 --> 00:46:51,185 There is little left for the rest of the living world. 450 00:46:57,566 --> 00:47:00,653 Since I started filming in the 1950s, 451 00:47:00,736 --> 00:47:06,325 on average, wild animal populations have more than halved. 452 00:47:09,120 --> 00:47:12,456 I look at these images now and I realize that, 453 00:47:12,540 --> 00:47:16,043 although as a young man I felt I was out there in the wild 454 00:47:16,127 --> 00:47:19,714 experiencing the untouched natural world... 455 00:47:20,297 --> 00:47:21,424 it was an illusion. 456 00:47:23,759 --> 00:47:28,681 Those forests and plains and seas were already emptying. 457 00:47:33,728 --> 00:47:36,731 Um, so, the world is not as wild as it was. 458 00:47:38,065 --> 00:47:41,527 Well, we've destroyed it. Not just ruined it. 459 00:47:41,610 --> 00:47:45,948 I mean, we have completely... well, destroyed that world. 460 00:47:46,032 --> 00:47:49,243 That non-human world is gone. 461 00:47:49,910 --> 00:47:53,664 Uh... The... Human beings have overrun the world. 462 00:48:35,790 --> 00:48:39,251 That is my witness statement. 463 00:48:39,919 --> 00:48:44,757 A story of global decline during a single lifetime. 464 00:48:49,720 --> 00:48:52,014 But it doesn't end there. 465 00:48:53,766 --> 00:48:56,018 If we continue on our current course, 466 00:48:56,102 --> 00:49:00,231 the damage that has been the defining feature of my lifetime 467 00:49:00,314 --> 00:49:04,735 will be eclipsed by the damage coming in the next. 468 00:49:16,413 --> 00:49:21,001 Science predicts that were I born today, 469 00:49:21,585 --> 00:49:24,296 I would be witness to the following. 470 00:49:29,301 --> 00:49:35,558 The Amazon Rainforest, cut down until it can no longer produce enough moisture, 471 00:49:36,392 --> 00:49:38,853 degrades into a dry savannah, 472 00:49:39,436 --> 00:49:42,231 bringing catastrophic species loss... 473 00:49:43,440 --> 00:49:46,861 and altering the global water cycle. 474 00:49:53,534 --> 00:49:58,414 At the same time, the Arctic becomes ice-free in the summer. 475 00:50:01,041 --> 00:50:03,210 Without the white ice cap, 476 00:50:03,294 --> 00:50:07,006 less of the sun's energy is reflected back out to space. 477 00:50:08,340 --> 00:50:11,886 And the speed of global warming increases. 478 00:50:18,267 --> 00:50:24,148 Throughout the north, frozen soils thaw, releasing methane, 479 00:50:24,648 --> 00:50:29,320 a greenhouse gas many times more potent than carbon dioxide, 480 00:50:30,446 --> 00:50:34,533 accelerating the rate of climate change dramatically. 481 00:50:42,166 --> 00:50:46,086 As the ocean continues to heat and becomes more acidic, 482 00:50:46,170 --> 00:50:49,381 coral reefs around the world die. 483 00:50:53,010 --> 00:50:55,930 Fish populations crash. 484 00:51:04,688 --> 00:51:10,653 Global food production enters a crisis as soils become exhausted by overuse. 485 00:51:19,787 --> 00:51:22,122 Pollinating insects disappear. 486 00:51:24,667 --> 00:51:28,003 And the weather is more and more unpredictable. 487 00:51:33,676 --> 00:51:37,513 Our planet becomes four degrees Celsius warmer. 488 00:51:39,682 --> 00:51:43,894 Large parts of the earth are uninhabitable. 489 00:51:46,730 --> 00:51:49,942 Millions of people rendered homeless. 490 00:51:53,404 --> 00:51:56,282 A sixth mass extinction event... 491 00:51:57,366 --> 00:51:59,118 is well underway. 492 00:52:05,499 --> 00:52:09,336 This is a series of one-way doors... 493 00:52:10,587 --> 00:52:13,173 bringing irreversible change. 494 00:52:15,217 --> 00:52:17,761 Within the span of the next lifetime, 495 00:52:18,637 --> 00:52:21,890 the security and stability of the Holocene, 496 00:52:23,309 --> 00:52:25,394 our Garden of Eden... 497 00:52:27,062 --> 00:52:28,397 will be lost. 498 00:52:37,698 --> 00:52:43,704 Right now, we're facing a manmade disaster of global scale. 499 00:52:44,955 --> 00:52:47,374 Our greatest threat in thousands of years. 500 00:52:48,375 --> 00:52:49,960 If we don't take action, 501 00:52:50,544 --> 00:52:53,047 the collapse of our civilizations 502 00:52:53,797 --> 00:52:59,261 and the extinction of much of the natural world is on the horizon. 503 00:52:59,928 --> 00:53:01,555 But the longer we leave it, 504 00:53:02,056 --> 00:53:05,559 the more difficult it'll be to do something about it. 505 00:53:06,268 --> 00:53:08,187 And you could happily retire. 506 00:53:09,563 --> 00:53:16,028 But you now want to explain to us what peril we are in. 507 00:53:18,447 --> 00:53:23,994 And, in a way, I wish I wasn't involved in this struggle. 508 00:53:25,162 --> 00:53:27,831 Because I wish the struggle wasn't there or necessary. 509 00:53:28,332 --> 00:53:32,586 But I've had unbelievable luck and good fortune. 510 00:53:33,087 --> 00:53:38,133 Um, and I certainly would feel very guilty... 511 00:53:39,093 --> 00:53:44,515 if I saw what the problems are and decided to ignore them. 512 00:53:47,726 --> 00:53:49,937 Climbing over the tightly-packed bodies 513 00:53:50,020 --> 00:53:52,356 is the only way across the crowd. 514 00:53:53,982 --> 00:53:56,527 Those beneath can get crushed to death. 515 00:54:13,961 --> 00:54:19,216 We are facing nothing less than the collapse of the living world. 516 00:54:21,051 --> 00:54:24,471 The very thing that gave birth to our civilization. 517 00:54:25,889 --> 00:54:30,185 The thing we rely upon for every element of the lives we lead. 518 00:54:33,522 --> 00:54:35,649 No one wants this to happen. 519 00:54:36,316 --> 00:54:39,528 None of us can afford for it to happen. 520 00:54:43,031 --> 00:54:44,867 So, what do we do? 521 00:54:47,161 --> 00:54:48,871 It's quite straightforward. 522 00:54:49,830 --> 00:54:52,666 It's been staring us in the face all along. 523 00:54:55,043 --> 00:54:57,337 To restore stability to our planet, 524 00:54:58,255 --> 00:55:00,883 we must restore its biodiversity. 525 00:55:03,218 --> 00:55:05,596 The very thing that we've removed. 526 00:55:09,933 --> 00:55:13,937 It's the only way out of this crisis we have created. 527 00:55:16,773 --> 00:55:20,152 We must rewild the world. 528 00:56:00,067 --> 00:56:03,987 Rewilding the world is simpler than you might think. 529 00:56:04,655 --> 00:56:06,365 And the changes we have to make 530 00:56:06,448 --> 00:56:10,410 will only benefit ourselves and the generations that follow. 531 00:56:11,578 --> 00:56:15,874 A century from now, our planet could be a wild place again. 532 00:56:16,667 --> 00:56:18,544 And I'm going to tell you how. 533 00:56:26,301 --> 00:56:32,224 Every other species on Earth reaches a maximum population after a time. 534 00:56:33,600 --> 00:56:37,813 The number that can be sustained on the natural resources available. 535 00:56:40,732 --> 00:56:42,234 With nothing to restrict us, 536 00:56:42,317 --> 00:56:46,655 our population has been growing dramatically throughout my lifetime. 537 00:56:47,990 --> 00:56:49,616 On current projections, 538 00:56:49,700 --> 00:56:55,414 there will be 11 billion people on Earth by 2100. 539 00:56:56,290 --> 00:56:58,083 But it's possible to slow, 540 00:56:58,166 --> 00:57:03,463 even to stop population growth well before it reaches that point. 541 00:57:08,218 --> 00:57:10,178 Japan's standard of living 542 00:57:10,262 --> 00:57:13,849 climbed rapidly in the latter half of the 20th century. 543 00:57:15,142 --> 00:57:17,978 As healthcare and education improved, 544 00:57:18,061 --> 00:57:21,565 people's expectations and opportunities grew, 545 00:57:21,648 --> 00:57:23,984 and the birth rate fell. 546 00:57:25,611 --> 00:57:31,283 In 1950, a Japanese family was likely to have three or more children. 547 00:57:32,492 --> 00:57:36,455 By 1975, the average was two. 548 00:57:39,583 --> 00:57:43,211 The result is that the population has now stabilized 549 00:57:43,295 --> 00:57:46,506 and has hardly changed since the millennium. 550 00:57:48,383 --> 00:57:52,262 There are signs that this has started to happen across the globe. 551 00:57:55,015 --> 00:57:59,603 As nations develop everywhere, people choose to have fewer children. 552 00:58:04,024 --> 00:58:07,402 The number of children being born worldwide every year 553 00:58:07,986 --> 00:58:10,113 is about to level off. 554 00:58:12,199 --> 00:58:14,743 A key reason the population is still growing 555 00:58:15,369 --> 00:58:17,371 is because many of us are living longer. 556 00:58:19,998 --> 00:58:21,667 At some point in the future, 557 00:58:22,167 --> 00:58:26,380 the human population will peak for the very first time. 558 00:58:27,631 --> 00:58:29,132 The sooner it happens, 559 00:58:29,216 --> 00:58:32,803 the easier it makes everything else we have to do. 560 00:58:37,182 --> 00:58:40,143 By working hard to raise people out of poverty, 561 00:58:40,852 --> 00:58:43,563 giving all access to healthcare, 562 00:58:44,231 --> 00:58:49,027 and enabling girls in particular to stay in school as long as possible, 563 00:58:49,111 --> 00:58:53,198 we can make it peak sooner and at a lower level. 564 00:58:55,033 --> 00:58:57,494 Why wouldn't we want to do these things? 565 00:58:57,577 --> 00:58:59,705 Giving people a greater opportunity of life 566 00:58:59,788 --> 00:59:01,915 is what we would want to do anyway. 567 00:59:02,582 --> 00:59:06,753 The trick is to raise the standard of living around the world 568 00:59:06,837 --> 00:59:10,298 without increasing our impact on that world. 569 00:59:10,382 --> 00:59:11,967 That may sound impossible, 570 00:59:12,050 --> 00:59:14,803 but there are ways in which we can do this. 571 00:59:24,229 --> 00:59:28,025 The living world is essentially solar-powered. 572 00:59:30,652 --> 00:59:32,195 The earth's plants 573 00:59:32,279 --> 00:59:37,284 capture three trillion kilowatt-hours of solar energy each day. 574 00:59:38,618 --> 00:59:44,666 That's almost 20 times the energy we need... just from sunlight. 575 00:59:49,171 --> 00:59:52,507 Imagine if we phase out fossil fuels 576 00:59:53,091 --> 00:59:57,971 and run our world on the eternal energies of nature too. 577 00:59:58,972 --> 01:00:04,061 Sunlight, wind, water and geothermal. 578 01:00:10,400 --> 01:00:12,319 At the turn of the century, 579 01:00:12,402 --> 01:00:18,325 Morocco relied on imported oil and gas for almost all of its energy. 580 01:00:19,159 --> 01:00:23,080 Today, it generates 40% of its needs at home 581 01:00:23,830 --> 01:00:30,462 from a network of renewable power plants, including the world's largest solar farm. 582 01:00:34,466 --> 01:00:36,093 Sitting on the edge of the Sahara, 583 01:00:37,177 --> 01:00:39,805 and cabled directly into southern Europe, 584 01:00:40,388 --> 01:00:46,812 Morocco could be an exporter of solar energy by 2050. 585 01:00:53,568 --> 01:01:00,283 Within 20 years, renewables are predicted to be the world's main source of power. 586 01:01:01,618 --> 01:01:04,538 But we can make them the only source. 587 01:01:05,497 --> 01:01:11,878 It's crazy that our banks and our pensions are investing in fossil fuel... 588 01:01:12,838 --> 01:01:14,631 when these are the very things 589 01:01:14,714 --> 01:01:18,343 that are jeopardizing the future that we are saving for. 590 01:01:21,096 --> 01:01:24,599 A renewable future will be full of benefits. 591 01:01:25,350 --> 01:01:28,562 Energy everywhere will be more affordable. 592 01:01:29,855 --> 01:01:32,858 Our cities will be cleaner and quieter. 593 01:01:34,067 --> 01:01:37,237 And renewable energy will never run out. 594 01:01:52,752 --> 01:01:58,383 The living world can't operate without a healthy ocean and neither can we. 595 01:02:04,931 --> 01:02:10,020 The ocean is a critical ally in our battle to reduce carbon in the atmosphere. 596 01:02:12,981 --> 01:02:17,360 The more diverse it is, the better it does that job. 597 01:02:34,920 --> 01:02:40,508 And, of course, the ocean is important to all of us as a source of food. 598 01:02:43,345 --> 01:02:46,723 Fishing is world's greatest wild harvest. 599 01:02:46,806 --> 01:02:50,101 And if we do it right, it can continue... 600 01:02:51,186 --> 01:02:54,564 because there's a win-win at play. 601 01:02:55,565 --> 01:02:57,609 The healthier the marine habitat, 602 01:02:57,692 --> 01:03:01,655 the more fish there will be, and the more there will be to eat. 603 01:03:09,120 --> 01:03:12,832 Palau is a Pacific Island nation 604 01:03:12,916 --> 01:03:17,754 reliant on its coral reefs for fish and tourism. 605 01:03:21,967 --> 01:03:24,302 When fish stocks began to reduce, 606 01:03:24,386 --> 01:03:28,556 the Palauans responded by restricting fishing practices 607 01:03:28,640 --> 01:03:32,477 and banning fishing entirely from many areas. 608 01:03:35,730 --> 01:03:39,526 Protected fish populations soon became so healthy, 609 01:03:39,609 --> 01:03:43,196 they spilt over into the areas open to fishing. 610 01:03:48,785 --> 01:03:49,828 As a result, 611 01:03:49,911 --> 01:03:54,165 the "no fish" zones have increased the catch of the local fishermen, 612 01:03:54,249 --> 01:03:58,420 while at the same time allowing the reefs to recover. 613 01:04:03,300 --> 01:04:07,929 Imagine if we committed to a similar approach across the world. 614 01:04:08,972 --> 01:04:14,102 Estimates suggest that "no fish" zones over a third of our coastal seas 615 01:04:14,185 --> 01:04:19,024 would be sufficient to provide us with all the fish we will ever need. 616 01:04:24,738 --> 01:04:26,614 In international waters, 617 01:04:26,698 --> 01:04:32,329 the UN is attempting to create the biggest "no fish" zone of all. 618 01:04:34,539 --> 01:04:38,209 In one act, this would transform the open ocean 619 01:04:38,293 --> 01:04:42,088 from a place exhausted by subsidized fishing fleets 620 01:04:42,672 --> 01:04:47,886 to a wilderness that will help us all in our efforts to combat climate change. 621 01:04:49,554 --> 01:04:52,265 The world's greatest wildlife reserve. 622 01:05:08,907 --> 01:05:10,992 When it comes to the land, 623 01:05:11,076 --> 01:05:14,746 we must radically reduce the area we use to farm, 624 01:05:14,829 --> 01:05:17,665 so that we can make space for returning wilderness. 625 01:05:17,749 --> 01:05:22,796 And the quickest and most effective way to do that is for us to change our diet. 626 01:05:28,468 --> 01:05:31,137 Large carnivores are rare in nature 627 01:05:31,221 --> 01:05:34,891 because it takes a lot of prey to support each of them. 628 01:05:41,564 --> 01:05:44,651 For every single predator on the Serengeti, 629 01:05:44,734 --> 01:05:47,821 there are more than 100 prey animals. 630 01:05:52,242 --> 01:05:54,202 Whenever we choose a piece of meat, 631 01:05:54,285 --> 01:05:59,416 we too are unwittingly demanding a huge expanse of space. 632 01:06:04,295 --> 01:06:09,342 The planet can't support billions of large meat-eaters. 633 01:06:09,843 --> 01:06:11,594 There just isn't the space. 634 01:06:16,141 --> 01:06:19,227 If we all had a largely plant-based diet, 635 01:06:20,228 --> 01:06:24,023 we would need only half the land we use at the moment. 636 01:06:25,608 --> 01:06:29,612 And because we would be then dedicated to raising plants, 637 01:06:29,696 --> 01:06:33,491 we could increase the yield of this land substantially. 638 01:06:39,330 --> 01:06:44,419 The Netherlands is one of the world's most densely-populated countries. 639 01:06:45,670 --> 01:06:50,842 It's covered with small family-run farms with no room for expansion. 640 01:06:53,761 --> 01:06:59,309 So, Dutch farmers have become expert at getting the most out of every hectare. 641 01:07:02,103 --> 01:07:05,356 Increasingly, they're doing so sustainably. 642 01:07:08,651 --> 01:07:14,908 Raising yields tenfold in two generations while at the same time using less water, 643 01:07:15,575 --> 01:07:21,164 fewer pesticides, less fertilizer and emitting less carbon. 644 01:07:25,960 --> 01:07:27,170 Despite its size, 645 01:07:27,253 --> 01:07:32,717 the Netherlands is now the world's second largest exporter of food. 646 01:07:37,263 --> 01:07:43,228 It's entirely possible for us to apply both low-tech and hi-tech solutions 647 01:07:43,311 --> 01:07:46,981 to produce much more food from much less land. 648 01:07:49,192 --> 01:07:52,779 We can start to produce food in new spaces. 649 01:07:55,240 --> 01:07:58,159 Indoors, within cities. 650 01:08:01,496 --> 01:08:04,832 Even in places where there's no land at all. 651 01:08:18,555 --> 01:08:21,015 As we improve our approach to farming, 652 01:08:21,099 --> 01:08:25,228 we'll start to reverse the land-grab that we've been pursuing 653 01:08:25,311 --> 01:08:27,397 ever since we began to farm, 654 01:08:28,106 --> 01:08:34,195 which is essential because we have an urgent need for all that free land. 655 01:08:41,411 --> 01:08:46,457 Forests are a fundamental component of our planet's recovery. 656 01:08:48,084 --> 01:08:52,797 They are the best technology nature has for locking away carbon. 657 01:08:54,549 --> 01:08:57,468 And they are centers of biodiversity. 658 01:09:01,638 --> 01:09:04,642 Again, the two features work together. 659 01:09:05,183 --> 01:09:08,271 The wilder and more diverse forests are, 660 01:09:08,353 --> 01:09:12,817 the more effective they are at absorbing carbon from the atmosphere. 661 01:09:14,485 --> 01:09:19,240 We must immediately halt deforestation everywhere... 662 01:09:20,116 --> 01:09:26,789 and grow crops like oil palm and soya only on land that was deforested long ago. 663 01:09:27,915 --> 01:09:30,585 After all, there's plenty of it. 664 01:09:32,754 --> 01:09:34,880 But we can do better than that. 665 01:09:38,509 --> 01:09:44,223 A century ago, more than three quarters of Costa Rica was covered with forest. 666 01:09:51,938 --> 01:09:58,196 By the 1980s, uncontrolled logging had reduced this to just one quarter. 667 01:10:01,074 --> 01:10:03,034 The government decided to act, 668 01:10:03,117 --> 01:10:08,039 offering grants to land owners to replant native trees. 669 01:10:12,502 --> 01:10:14,629 In just 25 years, 670 01:10:14,712 --> 01:10:20,093 the forest has returned to cover half of Costa Rica once again. 671 01:10:25,348 --> 01:10:29,560 Just imagine if we achieve this on a global scale. 672 01:10:32,271 --> 01:10:34,607 The return of the trees would absorb 673 01:10:34,691 --> 01:10:37,777 as much as two thirds of the carbon emissions 674 01:10:37,860 --> 01:10:41,989 that have been pumped into the atmosphere by our activities to date. 675 01:10:49,580 --> 01:10:51,290 With all these things, 676 01:10:51,874 --> 01:10:54,544 there is one overriding principle. 677 01:10:57,463 --> 01:11:02,802 Nature is our biggest ally and our greatest inspiration. 678 01:11:05,138 --> 01:11:09,142 We just have to do what nature has always done. 679 01:11:10,768 --> 01:11:15,022 It worked out the secret of life long ago. 680 01:11:20,903 --> 01:11:24,907 In this world, a species can only thrive... 681 01:11:26,325 --> 01:11:30,329 when everything else around it thrives, too. 682 01:11:36,294 --> 01:11:39,130 We can solve the problems we now face 683 01:11:39,213 --> 01:11:42,175 by embracing this reality. 684 01:11:44,844 --> 01:11:47,263 If we take care of nature, 685 01:11:48,765 --> 01:11:51,768 nature will take care of us. 686 01:11:54,562 --> 01:11:59,942 It's now time for our species to stop simply growing. 687 01:12:01,903 --> 01:12:07,241 To establish a life on our planet in balance with nature. 688 01:12:10,077 --> 01:12:12,580 To start to thrive. 689 01:12:16,000 --> 01:12:19,837 When you think about it, we're completing a journey. 690 01:12:21,380 --> 01:12:24,467 Ten thousand years ago, as hunter-gatherers, 691 01:12:25,176 --> 01:12:29,514 we lived a sustainable life because that was the only option. 692 01:12:30,556 --> 01:12:36,020 All these years later, it's once again the only option. 693 01:12:36,103 --> 01:12:38,397 We need to rediscover... 694 01:12:39,482 --> 01:12:41,108 how to be sustainable. 695 01:12:41,192 --> 01:12:45,112 To move from being apart from nature 696 01:12:45,196 --> 01:12:49,784 to becoming a part of nature once again. 697 01:12:54,914 --> 01:12:57,792 Tonight, we've got a rather different program for you. 698 01:13:00,670 --> 01:13:03,923 If we can change the way we live on Earth, 699 01:13:04,924 --> 01:13:07,760 an alternative future comes into view. 700 01:13:11,347 --> 01:13:12,849 In this future, 701 01:13:13,432 --> 01:13:19,897 we discover ways to benefit from our land that help, rather than hinder, wilderness. 702 01:13:21,607 --> 01:13:27,572 Ways to fish our seas that enable them to come quickly back to life. 703 01:13:34,161 --> 01:13:38,666 And ways to harvest our forests sustainably. 704 01:13:42,295 --> 01:13:49,051 We will finally learn how to work with nature rather than against it. 705 01:13:51,721 --> 01:13:56,183 In the end, after a lifetime's exploration of the living world, 706 01:13:56,267 --> 01:13:58,561 I'm certain of one thing. 707 01:13:59,478 --> 01:14:02,440 This is not about saving our planet... 708 01:14:03,316 --> 01:14:05,902 it's about saving ourselves. 709 01:14:10,656 --> 01:14:16,996 The truth is, with or without us, the natural world will rebuild. 710 01:14:26,923 --> 01:14:31,177 In the 30 years since the evacuation of Chernobyl, 711 01:14:31,844 --> 01:14:35,473 the wild has reclaimed the space. 712 01:14:46,734 --> 01:14:50,821 Today, the forest has taken over the city. 713 01:15:04,752 --> 01:15:09,465 It's a sanctuary for wild animals that are very rare elsewhere. 714 01:15:16,180 --> 01:15:21,227 And powerful evidence that however grave our mistakes, 715 01:15:21,310 --> 01:15:24,689 nature will ultimately overcome them. 716 01:15:29,193 --> 01:15:32,071 The living world will endure. 717 01:15:34,115 --> 01:15:37,868 We humans cannot presume the same. 718 01:15:40,705 --> 01:15:42,248 We've come this far 719 01:15:42,331 --> 01:15:46,168 because we are the smartest creatures that have ever lived. 720 01:15:50,923 --> 01:15:55,636 But to continue, we require more than intelligence. 721 01:15:57,680 --> 01:16:00,433 We require wisdom. 722 01:16:13,904 --> 01:16:18,367 There are many differences between humans and the rest of the species on earth, 723 01:16:18,951 --> 01:16:24,248 but one that has been expressed is that we alone are able to imagine the future. 724 01:16:25,583 --> 01:16:29,545 For a long time, I and perhaps you have dreaded that future. 725 01:16:30,546 --> 01:16:35,134 But it's now becoming apparent that it's not all doom and gloom. 726 01:16:36,218 --> 01:16:38,637 There's a chance for us to make amends, 727 01:16:39,388 --> 01:16:43,100 to complete our journey of development, manage our impact, 728 01:16:43,184 --> 01:16:47,855 and once again become a species in balance with nature. 729 01:16:48,939 --> 01:16:51,692 All we need is the will to do so. 730 01:16:52,193 --> 01:16:57,073 We now have the opportunity to create the perfect home for ourselves, 731 01:16:57,615 --> 01:17:03,662 and restore the rich, healthy, and wonderful world that we inherited. 732 01:17:04,997 --> 01:17:06,499 Just imagine that. 63656

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