Change our buildings, save our planet | Andrew Himes | TEDxSeattle

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  • Опубликовано: 8 июн 2024
  • Andrew Himes’ 2021 TEDxSeattle talk is an impassioned plea for buildings that help solve climate change instead of contributing to it. With a sense of hope, Andrew asserts that working together to solve the climate crisis gives us the opportunity to “regain a sense of our shared humanity.”
    As Andrew explains, the materials used in construction, the movement of those materials, and the current massive building boom combine to make the buildings in which we live and work one of the leading causes of carbon emissions. The good news is that we already know how to create buildings that store carbon and help heal the planet. We can reuse and improve buildings instead of tearing down or using new materials, and we can all demand that the buildings in our community are built to protect us instead of harm us.
    3:52 How buildings contribute to climate change
    8:50 How to design and build smarter, healthier buildings
    10:50 Living Concrete
    More to explore:
    Learn more about Andrew’s work at the Carbon Leadership Forum
    carbonleadershipforum.org/
    Read about the Climate Pledge Arena mentioned in Andrew’s talk
    climatepledgearena.com/
    Listen to Bill Gates discuss the innovations we need to avoid a climate disaster
    www.ted.com/talks/bill_gates_... Meet Andrew Himes: advocate for social justice, co-founder of Microsoft Developer Network, and Director of Collective Impact at Carbon Leadership Forum. To tackle climate change, he wants us to dream big and embrace Goethe’s words: “Whatever you can do or dream you can, begin it.”
    With his passion for addressing climate change and demand for social responsibility, Andrew asserts that where we are now is one of the most dangerous and promising moments in all of human history. Andrew says that many of us may feel that the issue of climate change is massive and global, and that there’s nothing we can do to make a difference.
    But our built environment - the largest overall contributor to greenhouse gas emissions - can be either an existential threat or the source of transformative solutions to climate change. We can radically reduce carbon pollution and even store large amounts of carbon in buildings and infrastructure - permanently. But it will take millions of people demanding and creating solutions, working together in communities, simultaneously, toward one goal. We already have the innovative solutions we need. What happens next, he believes, is up to us.
    Driven by his involvement in the civil rights and anti-war movements of the 1960s and 70s, Andrew believes the number one social justice issue in the world is the climate, because the people most harmed by climate change will be those most marginalized and most deeply disempowered.
    After an accomplished career in tech (Himes was the founding editor of leading Apple technology journal MacTech and co-founder of the Microsoft Developer Network) Andrew was founding director for Charter for Compassion International, then created Carbon Innovations LLC, a social impact consultancy focused on business-based solutions to climate change. In 2018, he was coordinator of Carbon Smart Building Day, a conference affiliated with the Global Climate Action Summit focused on transforming the global building industry to net-zero carbon emissions by 2050. His current role at UW involves leading industry-wide initiatives to reduce embodied carbon emissions in built environments. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at www.ted.com/tedx

Комментарии • 15

  • @scootermacintosh137
    @scootermacintosh137 2 месяца назад

    Cazy this only has 15 comments. Amazing message that really never crosses your mind on the day to day. Thank you, Andrew.

  • @stuartvandenheuvel4098
    @stuartvandenheuvel4098 2 года назад +1

    This gives me life.

  • @JohnRothDesign
    @JohnRothDesign 2 года назад

    Thank you, Andy! Sharing with everyone I know!

  • @joannahimes-murphy6897
    @joannahimes-murphy6897 2 года назад

    Very Well Done! I love the idea of all of us working togather as global community to tackle climate change, indeed, to tackle everything! Some really good ideas! This explains the carbon footprint very well.

  • @johncays2506
    @johncays2506 2 года назад +1

    Great talk, Andrew! You have summed up so much about the challenges, the solutions, and our need to simply be willing to change our habits and practices in 20 engaging and heartfelt minutes. Thank you for bringing the message that you, and the Carbon Leadership Forum have been sharpening for years now to the world. Well done!!

    • @CarbonLeadershipForum
      @CarbonLeadershipForum 2 года назад

      John, your comments are very much appreciated! Let's build this movement together!

  • @veganchaatparty
    @veganchaatparty 2 года назад +1

    Really a deep message....thanks for sharing!!

  • @gunnargil6961
    @gunnargil6961 2 года назад

    Simple and powerful concepts! Thanks Mr. Himes.

  • @bulgieR
    @bulgieR 2 года назад

    Hopeful and encouraging, despite the difficult challenge. Well done!

  • @incapoo
    @incapoo 2 года назад +1

    Truly inspiring, Andy! Bravo!

  • @coloradodad8560
    @coloradodad8560 2 года назад

    This is just fantastic, cheers to making the systemic changes together 🙌🏻

  • @handelweek
    @handelweek Год назад

    Andy, Yes! We can make buildings part of the solution with carbon sequestering materials like hempcrete, NOW approved for US residential building codes.

  • @GaasubaMeskhenet
    @GaasubaMeskhenet 2 года назад

    I know how to grow my own food and build my own home from supplies I can grow myself. I can minimize my burden on the supply chain if I'm just allowed to live without fear of homelessness

  • @yvonnehyatt8353
    @yvonnehyatt8353 3 месяца назад

    TEDx talk -by Ernesto Sirolli he may can help study please thanks.