Nature-based solutions in the fight against climate change | Thomas Crowther | TEDxLausanne

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  • Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 41

  • @ankit_ch611
    @ankit_ch611 5 месяцев назад

    The first step in restoring ecosystems should be building water resiliency. If you account for water, everything else can take care of itself.

  • @praveenbeecha
    @praveenbeecha Год назад +1

    Amazing Presentation Prof. Crowther, thank you! I hope we all come together for restoring our ecosystems.

  • @giridharamatya8568
    @giridharamatya8568 Год назад +1

    Prof. Crowther, Thank you! A great eye opening presentation.

  • @b_uppy
    @b_uppy 2 года назад +4

    Ag plowing creates a lot of the airborne carbon we see accumulate in fall, winter and spring. If we switch farming practices by using rainwater harvesting earthworks, planting more site appropriate, diverse trees and promoting healthy soil biota we can drastically cut airborne carbon that way. We can do it and grow more food simultaneously because we'd be reclaiming land for ag use.
    Walter Jehne does a video that points out with a similar, low cost, multiple problem solving approach that attacks it more logically from a *climate approach* (as compared to high tech approaches). He suggests that we start with rainwater harvesting earthworks and techniques. We then do diverse regreening especially with trees and lastly se adopt.
    Anybody says we 'need to cut emissions' is trying to sell expensive products.

  • @benoitlambert8816
    @benoitlambert8816 4 года назад +11

    Hi Thomas, this is Benoit in Québec. We had beer together at a FAO meeting in Rome. Congratulation for the amazing presentation and lab's work I follow. Just to give a reference from Canada (I have planted trees 16 years): British Colombia planted 266 million trees in 2017. I would estimate all provinces plant 800 millions. So a trillion is 1250 times yearly planting in Canada. It can be done, over 50 years, but that is lots of work, a big number. Holistic grazing management, no-till and cover crops, and, biochar I work on (biomass and industrial), will be needed too. I strongly believe in biotic sinks to take control of the carbon cycle, they give multiple co-benefits. Regards, Ben

  • @mitchellbeer8487
    @mitchellbeer8487 4 года назад +10

    What a brilliant talk, Prof. Crowther, thank you! I've focused mostly on the energy transition side of climate work, largely by trying to amplify the same kind of positive, practical solutions you identify. But I've also been looking to learn more about natural climate solutions and carbon drawdown, and this is one of the best (and, absolutely, most hopeful) summaries I've seen.

  • @khwajawalizada2197
    @khwajawalizada2197 Год назад

    I am very much keen to listen to such an amazing presentation.

  • @anjuphilip6517
    @anjuphilip6517 3 года назад +7

    Great presentation. We need to act together combining all the possible solutions to fight climate change.

  • @martinlagerlof6367
    @martinlagerlof6367 2 года назад

    Closing the fossile, bit by bit. Cultivating our crop, livestock and soils. Give more space to sponataneous ecosystem healing, be it grassland , forest, bog or waters. The healing is older than mankind and always working in your body and and the other parts of nature. Resilience.

  • @ovgb222
    @ovgb222 3 месяца назад

    Inspiring talk, thank you! Just highlighting the fact that the drop in CO2e concentration in the Northern hemisphere during spring and summer (seasons with trees leaves) also coincides with warmer temperatures, meaning a considerable drop in the burning of fossil fuels for heating purposes. Now what is the number one / most impactful reason why CO2e emissions drop in that time of the yearr: trees leaves (regardless the exact global number of trees out there) or the much lesser use of heating energy?

  • @emilefarnier614
    @emilefarnier614 3 года назад +3

    Inspiring video, amazing speaker. Starting my last year thesis on the subject of Nbs and just thank you :)
    Go restore and protect the planet!

  • @saranbhatia8809
    @saranbhatia8809 Год назад

    Great talk!

  • @jontrimarco6205
    @jontrimarco6205 5 лет назад +8

    Great talk! Look to Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) as an effective start.

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy 2 года назад

      That was a big omission on his part.

  • @johnmoldavite1091
    @johnmoldavite1091 4 года назад +5

    Brilliant talk, thank you. But what did you miss? The rapidly warming Arctic. Decreasing the temperature differential from the equator to the north pole can create horrifically destabilized jet streams. I don't use the word "horrifically" lightly. This is something that can destroy every forest on Earth. As you say, there is a lot of carbon sequestered in the northern boreal forests. As jet streams progressively destabilize, there is an increase in the; frequency, intensity and duration of extreme weather events, all of which are detrimental to tree health. As soon as there is an ice free Arctic Ocean in a summer solstice, the sequence of warming events would be way too late to be stopped. When this would occur is open to speculation. But just acknowledging that this is the critical clock your racing against would give more urgency to your message.

  • @shrutigoel23
    @shrutigoel23 2 года назад +2

    Brilliant talk and thanks for sharing positive actions for each one of us. Ability to engage each one of us, against this greatest threat is exactly what we need.

  • @KeepthePlanet
    @KeepthePlanet Год назад +1

    I loved this talk, really interesting :)

  • @theodenlucio3223
    @theodenlucio3223 3 года назад +2

    Thanks, great talk...

  • @williammcduff6531
    @williammcduff6531 3 года назад +1

    Great presentation keep up the great work!

  • @leonardneamtu_
    @leonardneamtu_ 2 года назад +1

    really inspiring!

  • @samsonmpueh6380
    @samsonmpueh6380 2 года назад +1

    Nice presentation, quite informative. We need to act quickly and responsively.

  • @jdwright
    @jdwright 3 года назад +1

    5:17 Drawdown, 9:47 cut CO2 emission

  • @reetikasrivastava1478
    @reetikasrivastava1478 2 года назад

    It was great to listen you.

  • @andreashofmeyr9583
    @andreashofmeyr9583 3 года назад

    This is an amazing talk and I will recommend it to everyone I know interested in NbSs.

  • @deanfowles3707
    @deanfowles3707 Год назад

    Drought and intense heatwaves will kill all these nature based solutions. Not convinced that it’s much of a strategy at all. At a certain temperature leaves stop being Able to photosynthesise and the tree starts dying.

  • @Amir-sn6uk
    @Amir-sn6uk 3 года назад +1

    This guy does amazing work and cute. :)

  • @markschuette3770
    @markschuette3770 2 года назад +1

    we need a carbon tax and a wealth tax to bring in the funds and to motivate people to conserve all types of cleaner energy. we also need to do a carbon accounting to find out what alternatives ARE the cleanest- since no energy is without some carbon emissions.

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy 2 года назад +1

      Carbon tax hurts the already stressed poor and middle classes and does nothing to curb the disproportionate waste of resources of the rich.
      Taxing the elitist rich has never been successful because they merely use it to quash unfavorable competition.

    • @markschuette3770
      @markschuette3770 2 года назад

      @@b_uppy yes i agree- so this tax (call it a pollution or an eco tax) needs to effect everyone- and the rich harder than the rest- thus it needs to be linked with a wealth tax. already biden has passed a "wealth" tax on certain sectors- but its not enough. and then use those funds it impliment mass transit, bicycle infrastucture, better urban design- some of that just passed in this biden bill. but everyone needs to feel the pressure otherwise they will not choose "green". in capitalism money rules and thank god they invented taxes to shape our economy.

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy 2 года назад +1

      @@markschuette3770
      And again you keep pushing it on everyone. The only way to keep the rich from further destroying the planet is to turn them into the middle class.

  • @christineeckersley4505
    @christineeckersley4505 4 года назад +2

    Can we highlight the importance of bacteria. We behave like it's bad for us but we are made of bacteria. We can't be us without it. If we upset our microbiom in our guts we suffer many chronic illnesses. We need bacteria. We are killing the microbiom of the earth. The result of this will be a chronically sick planet.... please help us to help bacteria to thrive. Educate us..... change bleaches and detergents etc. Thank you

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy 2 года назад

      The soil biome also includes mycelium. We need plant diversity including trees because they encourage mycelium because mycelium are an important mover of nutrients and moisture...

  • @davidkirk6249
    @davidkirk6249 2 года назад

    The climate is fine, and I certainly don't want it to be cooler.

    • @HealingLifeKwikly
      @HealingLifeKwikly 2 года назад

      "The climate is fine, and I certainly don't want it to be cooler." Humans are currently warming the planet 10-20 times faster then it usually warms when coming out of an ice age, and that is pushing Earth's ecosystems towards collapse.

    • @davidkirk6249
      @davidkirk6249 2 года назад +1

      @@HealingLifeKwikly 1 degree over a hundred years, and that's a problem ? It's freezing where I live, so I'd prefer it to be hotter.
      Record cold temperatures and snow across much of Europe and the eastern US. Ice growing back at the poles.
      Evidence of "Earth's ecosystem collapse" ?

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy 2 года назад

      What this guy proposes is going to mitigate drought and flooding as well as recharge the watertable.
      Additionally look at grand solar minimum...

    • @P-A-X-
      @P-A-X- Год назад

      Climate always changed along the history. Wake up to this scam. Who care this fake problem? UN, European Union, World Bank, Bill Gates, and so on. Wake up, useful i..ots.

  • @P-A-X-
    @P-A-X- Год назад

    Yes co2 is not the food of trees no, it accumulates in the atmosphere. What bs. Was better study more or play with your friends.